Wings wide as citadels, etched with ridges like the walls of forgotten fortresses. Scales the color of burnished bronze, dulled by soot, by age, by memory. His eyes, deep and gold, held a molten stillness that spoke not of wrath, but of understanding too vast for speech.
Vaelrith.
The First Flame. The eldest of the fire-born. The dragon whose breath had shaped the northern rivers into their courses and whose silence once held back the war-banners of kings. He descended not with haste, nor with anger, but with a deliberate grace that denied all urgency. The certainty of stone. Of time itself.
He did not roar, his sheer presence superceded such shows of dominance.
When Vaelrith touched the edge of Elbaran’s ruin, the earth recoiled. Cracked stone buckled beneath his claws. A wave of ash burst outward in a violent halo, but the wind that followed his wings was clean. It swept the smoke from shattered homes, from toppled gates, from the scorched remnants of pride. The breach above him sealed slowly, and in its place, the sun returned, pale behind a veil of steam. Its rays bent around his form, casting a long and monstrous shadow over the town’s broken square.
A silence followed. A silence that clenched the heart and stilled the mind.
Even Kaelen, wreathed in the lingering fire of the Ashramir’s bond, felt small, like a single spark drifting too close to an ancient pyre. His body stood firm, but something inside him bowed.
All eyes turned as Vaelrith’s gaze fell on Zyra.
The corrupted medallion at her chest gave a sickly pulse. Once. Twice. Then it began to writhe, a serpent of forged falsehood caught in truth’s unyielding stare. A final shudder passed through
it, and it broke.
Not with an explosion. Not with a scream. With a sigh. A dry crackle.
The relic disintegrated in her palms, its power gone like mist under the morning sun.
Zyra staggered.
Her veil lifted slightly, caught by the breeze like a breath trying to flee. Her hands remained frozen in front of her, still curved as if they held something. As if denial could hold shape. She looked up—not at Kaelen, not at the dragon—but at the empty space above them,
eyes wide, mouth parted, waiting for something. A voice. A command. Anything.
Nothing came.
Alone. For the first time, truly alone.
Her boots scraped backward across the stone. She turned. Her once-elegant robes dragged through the soot and ruin, their hems no longer symbols of authority but of desperation. She ran. No words. No warning. Just the slap of her steps fading toward the eastern woods.
Rhaelor watched her vanish, the fire gone from his face, his lips thin and colorless. He let his blade fall—it struck the stone with a dull clang, no spark, no defiance. He looked at Kaelen.
There was a moment.
A space in which he could have spoken. Where repentance, or defiance, or even some bitter truth might have surfaced. His jaw tensed. But whatever words gathered inside him died behind clenched teeth.
He turned.
Not east. West. Toward the lowlands
The spell broke.
The soldiers—those still loyal to the Church of the Radiant Dawn—stood suspended in disbelief. One dropped his halberd, metal clattering over broken cobble. Another simply sat, blinking,
muttering something no one could hear. Then the movement rippled through them like wind through dry leaves. Some fled. Others fell to their knees, not in prayer, but in collapse. A few stared at the sky, lips trembling, as if some truth too large had caved in the vaults of their minds.
Indoctrination cracked like old plaster, piece by piece.
Faith, once armor, became dust.
Only the villagers remained.
Their faces were streaked with soot and fear, but they did not run. They looked at Kaelen, at the dragon behind him, at
the remnants of a church that had promised light but delivered only shadow. They stood uncertain, hollowed.
Until one elder moved.
Bent of back and twisted at the knee, with hands blackened by the forge or field, he limped forward. He paused before Kaelen and bowed his head, not low, not in worship. Just enough. His hand went to his chest. A quiet gesture. A promise.
Hope.
Others followed. A mother with a child clutching her leg. A shepherd with ash in his beard. A girl who carried a broken flute in her belt
Vaelrith lowered his head then, his massive snout hovering above Kaelen, close enough for the boy to feel the heat of his breath. Steam curled from the dragon’s nostrils, dissipating in slow
coils.
Kaelen took a step forward. Each movement felt like it weighed the world. His boots crunched over broken stone and shattered ornament. The flame within his medallion flickered, soft now, not burning but glowing—alive.
The ring of fire that had once surrounded him faded into the air. The heat lingered. The light remained.
He drew a breath and opened his mouth.
And when he spoke, it was not entirely his voice that answered.
It was deeper. Older. Like stone speaking
through fire. The sound did not echo—it resonated. It passed through bone and
soil and sky.
“The Covenant of Flame is renewed.”
His eyes blazed gold for a single heartbeat.
“Not to rule. Not to conquer. But to guard.”
He turned toward the villagers, his voice quieter but no less powerful.
“This flame is not for thrones. Not for temples. It belongs to those who remember the principles of what it takes to achieve and maintain balance. Those who stand between destruction and greed and can still rebuff it’s hedonistic appeal. Those who endure.”
A murmur spread through the crowd. Not fear. Not worship. Recognition.
Kaelen raised his hand, a clenched fist with the outer palm facing away from him.
“Let this covenant bind not by chain, but by choice. Let it bear no banners. Only memory. We are not the first. We will not be the last. But we will remember.”
Then Vaelrith lifted his head.
And he sang.
With essence. A deep, resonant note rolled from his chest, vibrating not just in his ears but in his marrow. A sound that called to the bedrock of the mountains and the roots of trees.
It was joined.
One by one, the other dragons took to the air and began circling high above, wings like drifting islands—answered. Some sang sharply and piercingly, others softly and low, but all together. The sky filled with a harmony of power older than kingdoms.
The Covenant was not peace.
It was vigilance.
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