Font Size
15px

Leaving Rindell's Reach felt like shedding a restrictive skin. The need for subtlety and veils dropped away as I lted back into the wilderness. Nyx would handle the shadows of civilization; my path led toward fire and towards the beast's call. The destination wasn't a set of coordinates on a map, but rather the resonant thrum of Saphirax's energy signature. I followed that pulsating, sapphire-blue thread of Essence like a compass needle pointing to true north.

The journey took out of the lush, manicured woodlands surrounding Rindell's Reach and into a far more primal, untad landscape. This part of Aethelgard looked like it had not been touched by an elf's pruning knife for years, if ever. The trees grew into gargantuan spires, their bark thick and deeply fissured, their branches forming a canopy so high and dense that sunlight was reduced to fleeting, hazy columns of green-gold light. The ground beca a treacherous morass of moss-covered roots and hidden gullies, where shadow-lurking beasts with low-level signatures hissed and scattered as I approached. My passage was silent, but the aura of my own leashed power was enough to send lesser predators scrambling for cover.

After three days of relentless travel, the very air began to change. It grew thinner, sharper, carrying the distinct tang of ozone and high-altitude chill. The forest floor tilted upwards, transforming from soft earth to hard, unforgiving granite. I was climbing into the Sky-Needle Peaks, the range of mountains ntioned in the Guild's lower-tier bounties. The terrain beca brutal: sheer cliffs, deep ravines spanned by precarious natural rock bridges, and waterfalls that plumted thousands of feet into mist-filled chasms below.

Through it all, the presence of Saphirax grew stronger. It was no longer a faint hum; it was a deep, resonant chord vibrating through the very rock beneath my feet. It was a feeling of imnse pressure and ancient, static power, like standing at the base of a thunderstorm that had been raging for a century. The closer I drew, the more certain I beca: this creature wasn't just powerful. It was sovereign.

Finally, on the fourth day, I crested a wind-scoured ridge and stopped, all breath driven from my lungs by the sheer spectacle before .

It wasn't a mountain. It was a throne.

The central peak of the range had been hollowed out. A colossal opening, at least five hundred feet high, gaped open like the maw of a sleeping god. The rock around this entrance wasn't natural; it had been lted, shaped, and cooled into a swirling facade of black obsidian and vivid blue crystal that pulsed with its own internal light. The entrance itself was a perfect archway, smooth as polished glass. The air around it shimred with latent heat and a pressure so imnse it created visible distortions in the air. This wasn't a den or a nest. This was a Sanctum, declared with an arrogance and grandeur that made royal palaces pale in comparison.

A sense of profound, almost religious awe washed over . This was the lair of Saphirax. My [Predator's Gaze] told the entire mountain was suffused with Essence, every rock a conduit for the master's power. Any step I took inside without permission would be an act of war, instantly announcing my presence to every corner of its domain.

I stood there for a long mont, my hand hovering near the conceptual trigger for [Glimpse of a Path]. If I sensed even a hint of overwhelming, mindless malice, I would trigger the vision and pull back. But I felt sothing else here. The power was imnse, yes, but it wasn't chaotic or hateful. It was controlled. Disciplined. Confident. There was intelligence here, not just instinct.

Taking a asured risk, I decided to approach openly. I stepped out from the cover of the rocks and walked towards the colossal archway, letting my own aura, my Ashen Song, ripple outwards, undisguised. I didn't project hostility, only presence. A greeting from one Lord to another.

"A new fla approaches the Hearth of Sapphire. Bold. Very bold. Or very foolish. Enter, and state your purpose."

The voice bood inside my head, not as words, but as a direct telepathic transmission that vibrated with the resonance of cracking glaciers and flowing lava. It held no malice, only a deep, bottomless curiosity and an unshakable confidence.

I stepped through the shimring veil of energy at the entrance. The air inside was surprisingly warm and still. The scale of the interior dwarfed the outside. The cavern was a vast natural cathedral, lit by veins of raw, blue Essence that snaked across the ceiling like constellations. Mountains of gold, silver, and quintessence crystals ford glittering hills in the vast space, a hoard that would make a kingdom weep with envy.

But all of it paled in comparison to the creature at its center.

He was coiled upon a throne-like platform of solid, blue crystal. He was a dragon. A true dragon, torn straight from the pages of myth and legend that I grew up with on Earth. He was enormous, easily over a hundred feet long from snout to tail. His scales were a dazzling array of blues, from the deep cobalt of his underbelly to the shimring, electric sapphire of his back ridges and great, folded wings. A faint blue fire, like a ghostly mist, wreathed his nostrils as he breathed. His eyes were orbs of molten sapphire, ancient and impossibly intelligent.

This novel is published on a different platform. Support the original author by finding the official source.

When those eyes focused on , I felt a weight I hadn't felt since my brief contact with the mirror-faced response unit in Akkadia. It was the pressure of a fully actualized Tier 5 being, one who had reached the absolute peak of its current evolution. He was strong. Every bit as strong as I was, perhaps even more so in terms of raw physical power.

He slowly uncoiled, raising his great head to regard . I expected hostility. I expected a challenge. What I got was… respect.

"A Fla-Bearer," he mused, his voice less of a boom now, more of a deep rumble. His sapphire eyes road over , seeing not just my physical form, but the nature of my Soulfire. "I have not seen your kind in many cycles. The Primordial Fla. The fire that both ends and begins. It is an honor to receive such a high guest. Most who co here do so with greed in their hearts and steel in their hands. They do not last long. You... you sing a different tune."

I let out a breath I hadn't realized I was holding. The giddiness that I had suppressed in the Guild returned in full force. I was talking to a dragon. A real, sentient, imnsely powerful dragon who seed to recognize as an equal.

"And it is an honor to et a Sapphire Sovereign," I replied, a grin spreading across my face. I couldn't help it. The sheer cool factor of the mont overwheld every strategic protocol in my brain. "Many myths back in my world spoke of your kind. I never truly believed they were true."

He tilted his massive head, a gesture of curiosity. "Myths? So you are one of them. A seed from the world before. Interesting. Your lineage is older than mine, perhaps, but this world... this world remade ."

"Remade you?" I asked, taking a few steps deeper into the cavern, emboldened by his peaceful reception. "You weren't always... like this?"

A sound rumbled deep in his chest, the draconic equivalent of a chuckle. "Hardly. Before the Rhythm of the World changed, before the Essence returned, my ancestors were small things. Blue-scaled lizards, skittering amongst the rocks, hunted by birds of prey and slithering serpents. We were insignificant. Barely sentient. We survived on cunning and scraps."

He stretched a massive wing, the mbrane unfolding like a ship's sail, catching the blue light of the cavern. "Then ca the Changing. The world woke up, and so did the fire within our blood. The hidden potential, dormant for ten thousand generations, exploded forth. I was among the first. I rember the pain of the transformation, my bones breaking and reshaping, my hide thickening into armor, the fire igniting in my throat. I evolved. I devoured beasts that once hunted , claid this mountain, and carved out my domain. I am Saphirax, First of the Blue Fla, and Lord of this Hearth."

His pride was a palpable force, as real as the heat from his scales. He had earned his power, clawed his way up from the bottom of the food chain to beco an apex predator, a king in his own right. He was everything Faelus pretended to be.

My gaze assessed him again. Peak Tier 5, without question. His mana and body signatures were massive, far denser than mine, a natural result of his physiology. My spirit attribute was likely superior due to my unique heritage, but in a straight fight... it would be close. Very close.

"Your Sanctum," I gestured to the cavern, "it's magnificent. You've clearly integrated fully with its core."

"The Mountain itself chose . Or rather, I forced it to acknowledge ," Saphirax corrected. "When I claid this territory, the sleeping heart within the rock awoke. It tested . It threw horrors from forgotten ages at . I endured. I conquered. And in doing so, I proved my worthiness. The mountain beca my hoard, and I beca its Guardian. Now, its power flows through , and my fire strengthens its wards. A symbiosis."

Here was the path I was just beginning to walk with the Cradle, partially realized in this ancient, powerful being. He was a potential goal, made manifest in sapphire scales and blue fla.

I realized I was staring, and a question bubbled up, born of pure, unadulterated curiosity and combat instinct. "So, all those quests in Rindell's Reach... they send hopeful adventurers here to die?"

Saphirax let out another deep rumble. "The little elves are ambitious. They see my power as a challenge, or a treasure trove. Every few seasons, a particularly arrogant or foolish group tries their luck. I give them a choice: turn back, or offer tribute to the Hearth. Most choose poorly. Their remains make fine fertilizer for the crystal growths." He turned his massive head to pin with a keen gaze. "But you did not co for treasure. And you did not co with arrogance. You ca... as an equal. It has been a long ti since I spoke to one whose Soul did not tremble. It is… boring."

A spark ignited between us. A shared understanding between two predators at the top of their respective food chains. The air crackled with anticipation.

He lowered his head slightly, a subtle shift from host to challenger. "Fla-Bearer. Your fire sings a song of battle and rebirth. Mine a lody of unyielding stone and biting frost. I wonder... which is stronger?"

The grin returned to my face, wide and eager. A real spar. A chance to test myself against a being of equal power, with no lives on the line or kingdoms at stake. Just pure, unadulterated combat for its own sake. The adrenaline reminded of the feeling I missed from my ordeal with Kharonus, and a welco challenge that I desperately needed.

"I've been wondering the sa thing, Saphirax," I said, rolling my shoulders and letting a flicker of my own Ashen Fla dance across my knuckles.

A magnificent, toothy grin spread across the dragon's face. "Then let us play, Fla-bearer. Let us see if your fla can lt my ice, or if my ice can smother your embers!"

You are reading Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG] Chapter 136: The Sapphire Sovereign on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.