LOGIN
The screams tore through the valley before the fire even touched it.
Elara Nightvale stumbled over blackened roots, her cloak shredded, lungs burning as she carried the boy in her arms. His arm was gone from the elbow to the fingertips, a jagged crimson ruin. The village lay in ruin behind her, smoke curling into a sky already heavy with ash, the smell of burned wood and death stinging her nose. “Hold on,” she whispered, pressing her hands to the wound. Her own magic flared like molten silver beneath her skin, warm and dangerous. It would save him, but every pulse pulled pieces of her away, leaving shadows behind in her mind. She could already feel them creeping cold, whispering, demanding. A scream echoed again, long, guttural, and unnatural. Elara froze. The forest around the Shattered Vale had always been quiet, secretive, alive in ways humans rarely understood. But this was different. Deep in the trees, something moved with impossible speed. Something burning with power. Something that smelled of smoke and old iron. Her grandmother’s warnings rang in her ears: Never be seen by what you cannot tame. Never feed the fire you do not understand. But she had no choice. Not anymore. Not with the boy’s life fading beneath her hands. A shadow dropped from the sky. Massive. Scales black as night, eyes like molten gold wings spanning wider than the valley itself. A roar rattled the mountains, shaking the ash from the trees and throwing her to the ground. Elara’s blood screamed in recognition. Something deep, old, raw. Her grandmother had whispered stories of a time when humans and dragons shared blood, a bond lost to greed, betrayal, and magic forbidden. She had told them stories to scare children. But as the dragon landed, molten fire licking its claws, she knew the truth. And she knew she was the only one who could survive him. ⸻ The boy’s blood burned her hands, but she could not stop. Her magic flowed, silver threads weaving through the wound, knitting flesh, sealing bones. The dragon’s eyes never left her. And though fear screamed in her chest, something else rose: defiance. She would not cower. She would not beg. “You,” she said, voice sharp despite the blood and smoke. “Do not touch him.” A low, rumbling growl rolled from the dragon, or rather, the man within him. The creature shifted, scales rippling, and a deep, commanding voice filled the valley. “You are not afraid.” Her heart skipped, and something darker, more dangerous than fear, stirred in her chest. “I should be,” she whispered. “You should be dead,” he said. The flames licking his claws were not meant to burn her. They were curiosity, warning, and desire. And in that moment, Elara Nightvale understood the first truth of her fate: nothing she had learned, nothing she had survived, could prepare her for him. Not for the Dragon King. Not for the fire that would consume her. Not for the forbidden desire that would bind them.The Heavens disappeared. Dragons were everywhere. They poured across the sky in endless waves black, white, silver, emerald, crimson, sapphire, and gold. Some were no larger than houses, while others were so immense that their wings cast entire sections of the forest into shadow. The air thundered with thousands of wingbeats. The soldiers below could only stare. Kael removed his helmet entirely, as though he no longer trusted his own eyes. “This…” he whispered. “This isn’t possible.” Elara could hardly breathe. The stories had never spoken of numbers like this. An entire race, sleeping beneath mountains and seas, hidden for centuries, is now awakening all at once. Another roar rolled across the sky. Then another. The dragons were answering. Not to the dead kings. To the First King. The enormous dragon of golden fire lifted its head, ancient eyes sweeping across the endless host. Then every dragon in the sky did something unexpected. They bowed. Thousands of dragons.
The world seemed to stop. The enormous dragon of golden fire stood behind Verath, its form towering above the forest and piercing the clouds. Its scales were not truly scales but living flames, shifting and blazing like sunlight given shape. Its eyes opened fully. Ancient. Endless. Powerful. Every dragon remained kneeling. No one dared move. Even the battle above faltered. Rhazion looked down. The dead Dragon Kings looked down. Everything paused. Elara could feel it through the bond. Power. Not ordinary magic. Not dragon fire. Something older. The air vibrated around Verath. Golden embers circled him, lifting his dark hair as though a storm had gathered around him alone. Kael stared in disbelief. “What is that?” The black dragon lowered its head even further. “The First King.” Verath remained motionless. He looked at his hands. Golden light flowed beneath his skin like liquid sunlight. “I don’t understand.” Neither did Elara. But she could feel the truth of
Rhazion soared upward like a blazing comet. Golden fire streamed behind him, illuminating the darkened sky. The higher he climbed, the larger he became. His wings expanded first, stretching impossibly wide. Then his body lengthened, scales brightening until they looked like molten gold. The dragons below stared in stunned silence. Elara could barely breathe. “He’s growing,” she whispered. “He’s shedding his restraints,” the black dragon said quietly. Verath’s eyes never left his father. Golden scales had spread along his own neck and arms, responding instinctively to the transformation above. Rhazion roared. The sound shook the heavens. The dead Dragon King pushing through the fracture paused. For the first time, the creature’s glowing eyes widened in recognition “No” the black dragon breathed. The emerald dragon lowered its head. “He remembers.” Above the forest, Rhazion continued to rise. His body expanded again. And again. Until he eclipsed the clouds themselves.
Silence consumed the clearing. No one moved. No one breathed. Beyond the fracture, enormous shadows drifted through the pale violet light. They were unmistakable now dragons. But wrong. Their shapes were twisted, their wings unnaturally long, their scales glimmering like shards of obsidian. Their eyes burned with the same pale violet glow as the creatures from the forest. The Dragon Kings. Dead dragons that should have remained legends. Elara felt cold. “That’s impossible,” Kael whispered. Rhazion’s gaze never left the sky. “I watched the last of them fall.” The black dragon beside him lowered its head. “We buried them ourselves.” “Apparently” Rhazion said grimly, “they did not remain buried.” One of the shadows moved closer to the fracture. Its face became visible. An enormous dragon with silver horns and black scales streaked with gold. Time and death had not diminished its majesty. And yet its eyes held nothing. No life. No warmth. Only endless violet light. Th
The crack in the sky spread like lightning across glass. Pale violet light bled through the widening seam, staining the clouds in eerie hues of silver and purple. The dragons in the clearing shifted uneasily, their wings partially unfurling. Elara’s heart pounded. Not again. The black dragon stepped forward, placing itself between the fracture and the gathered soldiers. “Take cover!” it thundered. The command snapped everyone into motion. Soldiers retreated behind rocks and fallen trees, shields raised. Kael barked orders while healers hurried the injured farther back. But Elara couldn’t move. Her gaze remained fixed on the sky. The roar came again. This time, it wasn’t distant. It was close. Very close. Verath stepped beside her, his eyes narrowed. “That’s not coming from beyond the fracture.” “No,” the black dragon agreed grimly. “It’s already here.” The clouds churned violently. A massive shape emerged. At first, Elara could make out only enormous wings. Then sca
The forest fell silent. No one moved. No one breathed. The enormous black dragon remained bowed before Elara, its silver-edged scales gleaming beneath the dim morning light. Steam curled from its nostrils as it slowly raised its head. Elara could only stare. She had seen dragons before through visions, through Verath’s memories, and in the stories whispered throughout Ashenrealm but standing before one in the flesh was entirely different. Its presence was overwhelming. Ancient. Powerful. Alive. “You can speak?” she finally managed. The dragon blinked, and a deep rumbling sound escaped it. “Of course I can speak.” Kael nearly dropped his sword. The soldiers exchanged nervous glances, some taking another step backward. The dragon’s golden eyes shifted toward Verath. For a long moment, neither moved. Then the dragon inclined its head. “Dragon Heir.” Verath’s expression hardened. “I know you.” The dragon’s gaze sharpened. “And I know you.” “You disappeared centuries
They reached the Shattered Plateau by late afternoon. The land rose sharply into jagged stone formations, and at its center stood a towering structure unlike anything they had seen before. The Crystal Spire pierced the sky, its dark, translucent surface reflecting flashes of violet lightning trapp
The gates of Ashenrealm opened at dawn. A cold wind swept down from the northern mountains, carrying with it the faint scent of smoke and decay. Elara sat astride a dark-coated horse beside Verath, her cloak pulled tightly around her shoulders. Behind them, a small elite unit assembled twelve of A
The forest watched them.Elara felt it the moment they crossed the outer gates of the capital. The air shifted, growing cooler despite the ash drifting from the mountains. The trees of the Evershadow Forest twisted toward the sky like blackened fingers, their leaves whispering in a language older t
Elara did not step back. Neither did he. The silence stretched between them, thick with heat and unspoken desire. The chamber felt smaller, the air heavier. Verath stood only a breath away, his gaze locked on hers like he was memorizing every detail, every hesitation, every flicker of emotion.







