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Not long after Lissy chose to remain within the dungeon, another presence found its way into those depths.

Unlike the others, he did not arrive with confidence, curiosity, or desire. He ca broken.

The dungeon, which had already begun to take shape as more than just a place of fear, received him quietly, almost gently. By then, the dungeon was known across lands, spoken of in hushed voices and fearful warnings. Yet for so, it was not terror that drew them in, but desperation.

That was the case for Vladric Valtore.

He would later be known as the Fifth Commander of the Dungeon.

His na would carry fear.

His title would echo like a curse.

Bloodsucking Nightmare.

But long before that, he was simply a lost vampire with nowhere left to go.

Vladric had not always lived in shadows and blood. Once, he had a ho. A quiet place hidden from the human world, where his family lived carefully, never drawing attention to themselves. They knew how fragile peace was for their kind. Vampires were hunted, feared, and hated, not for what they did, but for what they were.

His parents understood this better than anyone.

They taught Vladric restraint. Control. They taught him how to hide his fangs, his strength, his hunger. More than anything, they taught him to survive. Their love was firm but gentle, shaped by constant fear of discovery.

That fear beca reality.

One day, their existence was exposed. The details never fully remained with Vladric, only fragnts, sharp and painful. Shouts. Chains. The sll of blood. Fear so thick it felt like it burned.

His parents acted without hesitation.

They fought, not to win, but to buy ti. In the chaos, they forced Vladric to flee, pushing him away from danger with strength born of desperation. He resisted at first, confused and terrified, but they did not allow him to look back.

That was the last ti he saw them alive.

In the struggle, Vladric was struck down. His body could not endure the damage, and darkness claid him. When he finally awoke, he was alone. Far away. His body healed, but his mind was fractured.

His mories were incomplete.

He rembered pain.

He rembered screaming.

He rembered love.

But he could not rember who had killed his parents. He did not rember faces, nas, or places. Only the certainty that they were gone, and that they had died protecting him.

That knowledge alone was enough to leave a scar that never healed.

Vladric wandered for a long ti.

He survived on instinct, hiding during the day, moving at night. He avoided people, avoided attention, avoided himself. Every quiet mont was filled with questions he could not answer. Every shadow felt like an enemy he could not see.

Guilt followed him everywhere.

If he had been stronger, maybe they would have lived.

If he had stayed, maybe things would have been different.

Those thoughts never left him.

Eventually, exhaustion caught up with him. His body could regenerate, but his spirit was worn thin. Injured, confused, and on the edge of collapse, he stumbled into the forest where the dungeon lay.

The forest swallowed him.

When Vladric finally reached the dungeon, he did not arrive as a challenger. He did not co to fight or conquer. He ca seeking shelter. A place to rest. A place where no one would hunt him.

That was where he t Zortheus.

The Dungeon Lord did not attack him. He did not question him harshly. He simply watched, calm and unmoving, as Vladric struggled to remain standing. There was sothing in Zortheus's presence, heavy, quiet, and deeply worn, that made Vladric speak.

He told his story.

Not clearly. Not fully. His words were broken, filled with pauses and uncertainty. He spoke of fragnts, of pain he could not explain, of parents whose faces he feared forgetting. He spoke of the desire to avenge them, even though he did not know who to hate.

Zortheus listened.

He did not interrupt. He did not judge.

When Vladric finally fell silent, Zortheus spoke, not as a ruler, but as soone who understood loss too well. He did not dismiss Vladric's desire for revenge, nor did he encourage it. Instead, he spoke of grief. Of how anger could survive even when mories faded. Of how revenge often promised peace but delivered only emptiness.

He told Vladric that perhaps there was a reason his mories were broken. That maybe his parents had not wanted him to live bound by hatred. That their final wish might not have been vengeance, but survival.

Those words lingered.

Vladric did not imdiately accept them. The pain in his chest was too deep, too raw. But for the first ti since waking alone, he felt sothing shift. A doubt, not in his grief, but in the path he had chosen for himself.

With nowhere else to go, Vladric stayed.

The dungeon beca his refuge.

There, he trained. Slowly at first, then with increasing discipline. His vampire abilities grew sharper. His speed beca frightening. His strength refined. He learned to control his regeneration, to manage his blood not as a curse, but as a weapon.

Blood manipulation beca his signature. He shaped his own life force into blades, chains, and flowing weapons that struck with terrifying precision. Shadows obeyed him, bending to his will, hiding his movents, amplifying his presence when he chose to strike.

Yet despite his power, Vladric remained reserved.

He spoke little. Observed much. While others laughed or argued, he remained quiet, reflecting on Zortheus's words and his own fractured past. Revenge still lived within him, but it no longer ruled him.

Instead, it sharpened him.

Over ti, his dedication earned respect. He did not boast. He did not seek recognition. He protected the dungeon without hesitation, standing between danger and those within its walls. His loyalty was not loud, but it was absolute.

That was why he beca the Fifth Commander.

As years passed, Vladric changed. He beca more introspective, more controlled. He began to understand that strength was not defined by hatred alone. That peace did not an forgetting the past, but learning to live alongside it.

Still, the shadow of vengeance never fully disappeared.

He did not forgive those who had taken his family. He simply chose not to let that hatred consu him. Instead, he used it as a reminder, to protect, to endure, and to stand firm when others could not.

To the world, Vladric Valtore beca a nightmare whispered in fear.

To the dungeon, he beca a silent guardian.

And to Zortheus, he was not just a commander, but proof that even broken souls could find a place to belong.

Thus stood the Fifth Commander of the Dungeon.

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