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I rember Eldris as a country of beauty and plenty—a land where even the simplest days felt like a holiday. Under the attentive care of our guardians, the dragons, everything seed possible.

The dragons weren't just massive, fire-breathing legends who were masters at ethercraft; they were our protectors, our symbols of hope. Their graceful flight overhead and the gentle rumble of their wings provided a sense of joy and comfort to our everyday lives. I used to take pride in being the ruler of these magnificent beings, ensuring that our country thrived in peace and prosperity.

But then, life threw us a curveball. It started on an ordinary day, one that should have been filled with the usual hum of daily routines, only to be marred by a betrayal I never saw coming.

I trusted my closest friend—soone I considered almost a brother—and he poisoned . Yes, of all the things that could go wrong in our golden age, I got poisoned by a friend. It was as if fate decided to mix a cocktail of treachery and irony. I still wonder if he ever considered a career in stand-up cody, because that mont was as absurd as it was tragic.

The betrayal set off a chain reaction that no one could have predicted. The dragons, our once gentle guardians, were not about to sit idly by. They transford from serene protectors into furious beasts, their eyes blazing with an anger that could set the skies alight.

It was like watching a bunch of overgrown children throwing a tantrum—except these tantrums involved burning villages and reducing towns to piles of rubble. In the wake of my poisoning, the dragons took to the skies, their once orderly patrols replaced by a wild, rampaging fury that tore through Eldris with brutal efficiency.

And then there was Lyra. Ah, Lyra—the love of my life, my confidante, and the one person who made this turbulent existence bearable. She was as radiant as the sunrise and as fierce as the dragons themselves. I had always admired how she could blend strength with compassion, and I trusted her with everything I had.

But fate, it seems, was determined to have a laugh at my expense. Just when she learned of my poisoning—a mont that should have been filled with determination and rescue plans—she was struck down. It happened so fast, with a blow from behind that left her gasping in disbelief.

I still rember the shock in her eyes as I watched it— I was just a soul roaming through the world after death, the look of soone who had been utterly blindsided. It wasn't just a taphorical backstab; it was literal, and it left an emptiness that even ti struggles to fill.

The result of these betrayals was a country transford. Eldris, once a beacon of hope and prosperity, turned into a landscape of devastation. The dragons' rage was not spontaneous; it was a relentless, burning fury that consud everything in its path.

Villages that had once been lively communities were now nothing more than smoldering ruins. The forests, which had whispered stories of ancient tis, lay charred and silent.

Even the rivers seed to mourn, their waters colored with the red of spilled blood and lost dreams. It was a sight so grim and surreal that, despite everything, I couldn't help but find a bitter sort of humor in the absurdity of it all.

I an, who would have thought that the very creatures we celebrated as noble guardians would transform into such terrible, destructive forces? It was like watching a well-rehearsed play suddenly descend into chaos because the lead actor forgot his lines.

The dragons, in all their fiery glory, were now symbols of a broken promise. Every burst of fla and every crash of wings was a reminder that even the strongest bonds could be shattered by deceit and rage.

Amidst all this chaos, there was a small group of individuals who tried to restore so order to the madness. The Eleven Sealers, my most trusted advisors and loyal followers, stepped forward when things reached a critical point.

These were not your typical wise elders; they were a motley crew with a knack for diplomacy and a surprising sense of humor in the darkest of tis.

They gathered the raging dragons and spoke to them in calm, steady voices.

They reminded the mighty beasts of one simple truth: I had always despised violence. It wasn't just a political stance or a line in a manifesto—it was the very essence of who I was.

The sealers' words worked like a charm. Slowly, the dragons' fiery rampage began to subside. It was as if they rembered who they once were—a proud and noble race of guardians—and felt a pang of remorse for the destruction they had wrought.

One by one, the dragons turned away from the devastated lands and retreated to Terra Draconum, their ancestral ho. There, in the quiet solitude of their retreat, they would have to face the consequences of their actions. Gone were the days of unchallenged pride; now, they carried the heavy burden of their own mistakes.

I watched all of this unfold, my mind swirling with mories of happier tis and the bitter taste of betrayal. It was a lot to process—a prosperous country reduced to ashes, a friendship shattered by treachery, and the loss of the person I loved most.

Yet, amid the chaos, there was an undeniable undercurrent of dark humor. Sotis I thought about the absurdity of it all, like a poorly scripted drama where every twist was both tragic and laughably ironic. It was as if life was trying to tell , "Hey, even in your darkest monts, try to find a reason to smile."

And then, just as I was drifting in this sea of reminiscence and regret, I heard sothing—a faint voice cutting through the din of my thoughts. It was soft, almost as if it were carried by a gentle breeze.

"Rey..." the voice called out to , her voice was that of the winter sun, calming yet distant, a promise of warmth where cold had reigned.

I do not know the voice, nor do I know the na, yet I can tell... It was calling , urging to go—but where do I go? Should I pursue that voice?

Slowly, Judge opened his eyes, it was yet another dream too realistic to be one—but he did not know who's mories were that dream.

"Rey..." He said half asleep, and the voice that called him echoed in his mind—jolting his mind awake. "Clio?"

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