LOGINThe chains were taken off, but Elara still didn't feel free.
The throne room of Ashenrealm felt alive, breathing heat and exhaling smoke. Black stone columns rose like jagged teeth toward a ceiling lost in shadow. Rivers of molten light flowed through carved channels in the floor, casting flickering gold across armored guards who stood like statues carved from obsidian. And at the center of it all stood Verath Dravenor. He did not sit on the throne. He leaned against it, one arm resting casually on the armrest as if he owned not just the room but everyone in it. His dark hair fell loosely around his face, and the faint glow beneath his skin pulsed like embers barely contained. The air around him shimmered with heat. Dangerous. Controlled. Predatory. Elara lifted her chin, refusing to look small. “You abduct healers often?” she asked. A ripple moved through the court: shock, amusement, fear, but Verath only watched her. Slowly. Intensely. Like a hunter deciding whether to strike. “I summon what my kingdom requires,” he said. “I’m not yours to summon.” His gaze sharpened. “No,” he murmured. “You’re not.” The words sounded like agreement but felt like possession. Elara’s pulse quickened. She hated that he noticed. Hated that his eyes darkened as if he could hear her heartbeat. She folded her arms, trying to ground herself. “You destroyed my village,” she said. “Your soldiers.” His jaw tightened. For the first time, the mask cracked. “Rebels,” he corrected. “They burned your valley to draw me out.” “Your war still killed them.” His gaze softened barely. “And you still healed one of them while staring down a dragon.” The room fell silent. Elara realized, too late, that she had revealed more than she intended. He remembered. Of course he did. The dragon. Her blood stirred again, warm and unsettling. The memory of molten eyes watching her as she healed, the weight of his presence pressing against her skin, the pull she had tried to ignore. She swallowed hard. “You brought me here to kill me,” she said. “If I wanted you dead,” he replied quietly, “you would not be breathing.” The room's temperature seemed to rise. He stepped down from the dais. One step. Two. Each movement was slow, deliberate. The court shifted uneasily as he approached her. No one spoke. No one breathed. Even the guards looked tense. He stopped inches away. Elara felt it instantly, the dragon inside him. It pulsed like a heartbeat beneath the surface. Hot. Hungry. Curious. And it was focused entirely on her. “You healed a mortal wound,” he said softly. “Without ritual. Without preparation. Without dying.” Her throat tightened. “Luck.” “Magic,” he corrected. “I don’t use magic.” A faint smile touched his lips. “You’re lying.” The words were not accusations; they were fascination. Elara forced herself not to step back. “Why am I here?” His gaze dropped briefly to her hands. To the faint silver veins glowing beneath her skin. Then back to her eyes. “Because,” he said, voice lower now, rougher, “when I stand near you. The dragon is quiet.” Her breath caught. For a moment, the room seemed to disappear. “That's impossible,” she whispered. “Nothing about you is ordinary.” She felt it, then his power brushing against hers, like heat meeting storm. Her magic stirred in response, silver threads flickering in her chest. She clenched her fists. “You should send me away,” she said. “If I’m dangerous.” He leaned closer. “Danger,” he murmured, “has never frightened me.” The dragon surged. She felt it not as flame, but as pressure. His eyes flickered gold, pupils narrowing slightly. The air thickened. A faint crackle of heat licked the floor between them. The guards shifted uneasily. One noble stepped forward. “Your Majesty” Verath raised a hand. Silence slammed back into place. But his focus never left her. “You will stay,” he said. “I won’t.” “You will.” “I don’t take orders from monsters.” The words escaped before she could stop them. The room froze. A dangerous stillness settled. Verath’s expression did not change, but the air grew hotter. Much hotter. A thin line of smoke curled from his fingertips. “You think I don’t know what they call me?” he asked quietly. Elara held his gaze. “Do you?” He stepped even closer. “So say it again.” Her heart pounded. “Monster.” The word barely left her lips before his power snapped. Flame flickered up his arm, fast and violent. Shadows stretched across the walls. The guards tensed, hands on weapons. Elara didn’t move. She should have. But she didn’t. And that was what broke him. The fire died instantly. His breath came out slow, controlled. His eyes softened not with kindness, but with something darker. Respect. Interest. Hunger. “You don’t fear me,” he said. “I do,” she replied. “I just don’t run.” Something inside him shifted. “Good,” he whispered. Because the dragon liked prey that fought back. He turned away suddenly, pacing once like a caged predator trying to regain control. The court exhaled quietly. “You will remain in the palace,” he announced. “As royal healer.” “I didn’t agree.” “You don’t need to.” She stepped forward. “You can’t keep me here.” He turned back, eyes blazing. “I can,” he said. “And I will.” The force of his words echoed like thunder. Elara felt anger flare. “I’m not your prisoner.” “No,” he said slowly. “You’re my solution.” That chilled her more than chains ever could. Before she could respond, a scream echoed down the corridor outside. Steel clashed. Guards burst through the doors. “Assassins!” Everything exploded into motion. Arrows flew from the shadows. One sliced toward Verath’s chest. Elara reacted without thinking. She lunged forward. The arrow struck her shoulder instead. Pain tore through her, hot and blinding. She staggered, blood spilling down her arm. The room erupted, guards shouting, Verath roaring in fury. His power detonated. Flames burst across the floor, shadows snapping like whips. The assassins screamed as heat engulfed them. Verath moved like death incarnate, swift, brutal, unstoppable. Within seconds, it was over. Bodies lay still. Smoke curled into the air. And then he turned to her. The fury vanished, replaced by something far more dangerous. Fear. “Elara,” he said, voice rough. He crossed the distance instantly, catching her as her knees buckled. His hands were hot against her skin, too hot, but she didn’t pull away. “You’re bleeding.” “I noticed,” she muttered. His jaw tightened. “Why would you?” “You were going to die.” “I would not.” “You don’t know that.” He stared at her. The dragon stirred, sensing her pain, her blood. His grip tightened. “Heal yourself.” She tried. Silver light flickered weakly, but she was already drained. “Can’t,” she whispered. For the first time, real panic crossed his face. “Then I will,” he said. “You can’t.” His hand covered the wound. Dragon magic surged. Fire met silver. Elara gasped as power slammed through her hot, overwhelming, intimate. Their magic tangled, twisting together like two storms colliding. Her breath hitched. The wound sealed. But neither of them moved. His hand remained on her shoulder. Her pulse thundered. His eyes darkened. Something deeper than magic snapped into place. The dragon purred. And for the first time, Verath Dravenor realized he didn’t just need her to survive He wanted her. And that would destroy them both.The crack spread. A thin line at first, then a jagged seam racing across the surface of the cocoon. Light bled through it, not bright, but sharp, like something cutting through darkness from the inside out. Elara stepped back, pulse hammering. The chamber responded. Roots along the walls tightened, their faint glow intensifying as though feeding whatever struggled to emerge. The spiral symbols carved into them pulsed in unison, faster now like a heartbeat accelerating toward something inevitable. “This wasn’t supposed to happen yet,” Elara said under her breath. The shadowed figure tilted its head. “It was always going to happen.” “You said I was meant to witness,” she shot back. “Not trigger it.” “You misunderstand your role.” The cocoon split further. A low sound echoed from within, deep and resonant, almost like a breath drawn after centuries of silence. Elara’s magic surged in response, flaring brighter than before. This time, she didn’t fight it. She let it expand, for
Cold earth pressed in from every direction. Elara struggled against the tightening roots, but the deeper she was dragged, the weaker her magic felt. The soil around her wasn’t ordinary ground; it pulsed faintly, absorbing her energy each time she tried to fight back. She forced herself to stay calm. Panic would only waste what little strength she had. The roots loosened suddenly, dropping her onto solid ground. She stumbled forward, catching herself before falling. Darkness surrounded her, thick and suffocating, yet faint violet veins glowed along the cavern walls, casting dim, eerie light. She wasn’t buried. She was inside something. The air was still, heavy with ancient magic. Elara straightened slowly, her senses alert. The voice she had heard echoed faintly in her memory. “She finally descends.” “Who’s there?” she called. Her voice carried farther than expected, bouncing off unseen surfaces. Silence answered. She raised her hand, summoning a small sphere of silver-viol
The forest no longer felt like a forest. As Ashenrealm’s forces advanced toward the scorched villages, the treeline ahead grew denser, darker, and unnaturally still. No birds called. No wind moved the leaves. Even the sound of marching boots seemed to be swallowed before it could echo. Elara slowed slightly. “This isn’t natural,” she murmured. Verath rode beside her, eyes narrowed. “It’s been altered.” Kael raised a hand, signaling the army to halt. “Scouts ahead.” Two riders moved into the forest and vanished between the trees. Minutes passed. No return. A cold unease spread through the ranks. “They should have signaled by now,” Kael said. Verath’s voice dropped. “We don’t wait.” He raised his hand. “Advance carefully. Formation V.” The army moved in a tighter formation, shields raised. Elara stepped forward, her magic already building beneath her skin, cautious and alert. The forest swallowed them quickly, branches forming a thick canopy overhead. The deep
The march began immediately. There was no time to debate strategy, no moment to mourn the wounded beyond basic triage. Verath issued orders with swift precision, and within minutes, the army began pulling back from Black Ridge. Scouts rode ahead, disappearing into the gray morning, while the rest followed in tense silence. Elara walked beside Verath, her thoughts racing. The distant rumble still echoed in her mind. If the enemy had shifted their focus toward Ashenrealm, then the war would have entered a far more dangerous phase. “They wouldn’t abandon this position unless they had something bigger planned,” she said. Verath nodded grimly. “Black Ridge was a distraction.” Kael rode up from the rear, his horse lathered with sweat. “We’ve sent messengers ahead to warn the capital, but if the enemy is already moving.” “They’ll reach the outer villages first,” Elara finished quietly. The idea twisted painfully in her chest. They pushed harder. By midday, smoke appeared on the hori
Dawn never truly came. The sky remained a dull gray, as though the sun itself struggled to pierce through the thick blanket of clouds. A faint violet hue lingered along the horizon, subtle yet unsettling. Soldiers moved quietly across the ridge, fatigue etched into their faces. The repeated skirmishes had drained them, but the anticipation of something worse kept them alert. Elara had not slept. She stood near the ridge’s highest point, her gaze fixed on the distant plains. The fracture in the sky from the night before replayed in her thoughts. Her magic remained restless, like a tide refusing to settle. “You’re feeling it again,” Verath said, approaching her. “Yes.” She didn’t look at him. “Stronger now.” The ground beneath her boots felt hollow. Verath crouched, pressing his palm against the stone. His expression darkened. “Something is moving below us.” Kael joined them quickly. “Scouts report no enemy movement on the surface.” “Because they aren’t coming from the surface,
The tremor did not return. But the silence that followed felt worse. Night settled slowly over Black Ridge, bringing with it a thick, unnatural stillness—torches burned along the defensive lines, casting flickering shadows that stretched across the scarred stone. Soldiers rotated shifts, though few actually slept. Everyone sensed the tension hanging in the air. Elara remained awake. She stood near the command fire, watching the dark horizon. The earlier tremor lingered in her mind. Her magic felt unusually sensitive, as though reacting to something buried deep beneath the earth. “You should try to rest,” Verath said quietly, approaching her. She shook her head. “I tried. Every time I close my eyes, I feel movement.” “From the enemy?” “No,” she replied. “From the ground. Like something pushing upward.” Verath’s expression hardened. “Veyrathis is known for underground summoning rituals.” “This doesn’t feel like him,” she whispered. Before he could respond, a soldier rushed to







