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Chapter 122: 122. The Whisperer’s wrath

The celebration was premature.

Sylnara convened the council at midday. Lyraen stood before them and told everything—forty-three years of manipulation, the confrontation, Malachar’s departure. The chamber erupted. Isolationists shouted denial. Moderates demanded proof. Vaelin sat frozen, his face unreadable.

Through it all, Owen watched the edges.

His Mana Sense had been active since dawn. Malachar’s signature had vanished overnight—exactly as Lyraen claid. But sothing felt wrong. The absence was too clean. Too complete.

"He’s gone," Lyraen finished. "I watched him leave. I felt his influence lift. We’re free of him."

The chamber cheered. Mostly. Vaelin and his faction remained silent.

Owen moved closer to Yuki. "Sothing’s off."

"Agreed." Her hand rested on her katana. "Uru’s been agitated since we arrived. It keeps pulsing toward the exits."

Leah appeared at Owen’s shoulder. "My instincts are screaming. Malachar’s not the type to just... leave."

The cheering continued. Sylnara raised her hands for silence.

Then the lights went out.

Not darkness—the heart-tree’s bioluminescence failed simultaneously. Every glow-root, every lantern-fungus, every magical light source in the chamber died at once.

Screaming started.

Owen’s Dragon’s Eye activated, piercing the dark. Figures moved through the chaos—not running randomly, but with purpose. Targeting councilors. Targeting Sylnara. Targeting Lyraen.

"MALACHAR!" Owen’s roar shook the chamber.

The demon’s laugh echoed from everywhere and nowhere. "Did you think I’d just walk away? Forty-three years of work, and you expect

to abandon it because one woman found her spine?"

Owen launched toward the sound. His claws t empty air.

"He’s using the dark to mask his position," Alfred called out. His shield flared with a protective light, creating a small illuminated zone. "Everyone to !"

The party converged. Odessa’s Azure Sky Dragon materialized above, its crystalline scales providing faint illumination. Leah transford—golden light erupting as her lion form took shape, fifteen feet of predatory certainty cutting through the chaos.

"There!" Leah pointed with one massive claw.

Malachar stood near Sylnara’s throne. His elven guise had dissolved. What remained was taller, thinner, a purple skin. His eyes were voids. His mouth stretched too wide.

"Forty-three years," he said, voice layered with harmonics that made thoughts feel unreliable. "I shaped this council. I guided these decisions. I made this city what it is." He raised one hand. "If I can’t have it, no one can."

The hand ca down.

Every elf in the chamber convulsed.

Not dying—rembering. Every doubt Malachar had ever planted, every whisper, every subtle manipulation, all surfacing at once. Councilors clutched their heads. Guards dropped weapons. Vaelin fell to his knees, tears streaming down his face.

"He’s triggering everything at once," Yuki realized. "Decades of accumulated influence, all activated simultaneously."

"How do we stop it?" Odessa shouted.

"Kill him." Owen’s voice was flat. "Before their minds break."

He moved.

Sovereignty of Space-Ti activated. The world slowed—Malachar’s smirk freezing mid-expression, the convulsing elves becoming statues of agony. Owen crossed the distance in three heartbeats, claws extended, aid at the demon’s throat.

Malachar’s eyes tracked him.

In slowed ti.

"Did you think speed would save you?" The demon’s voice ca through distorted, stretched but intelligible. "I’ve been whispering to reality itself for longer than you’ve been alive."

A hand caught Owen’s wrist.

Malachar’s grip was strong. Cold. Certain.

Ti snapped back to normal. Owen hung suspended, one clawed hand inches from the demon’s neck, held fast.

"Azmireth was a soldier," Malachar said conversationally. "She fought with fire and void. Impressive. Brutal. Limited." He squeezed. Owen’s scales creaked. "I fight with certainty. Your certainty that you can win. Your certainty that speed matters. Your certainty that you’re the hero of this story."

Owen’s other hand ca around. Malachar caught that too.

"Let

show you what uncertainty feels like."

The whisper entered Owen’s mind directly. Not through ears—through the bond, through his thoughts, through the fundantal assumption that he was himself.

You’re not the Dragon King’s heir. You’re a convenience store clerk who got lucky. You don’t belong here. You don’t deserve Yuki. You don’t deserve any of this.

Owen’s concentration wavered. His Sovereignty flickered.

The fragnt inside you? Stolen. Not earned. Dominus made a mistake. You’re not Vorthraxx’s brother. You’re not even a real dragon. Just a human wearing scales.

"NO!"

Yuki’s voice cut through the whispers like a blade.

She was airborne, both katanas extended, Verida’s venomous blade glowing with corrosive light. Malachar released Owen to block—too slow. The blade took him across the chest.

Purple-black blood sprayed.

Malachar scread. Not in pain but fury. "You dare—"

Leah hit him from the side.

Fifteen feet of golden lion, all muscle and claw and absolute certainty. Her jaws closed on Malachar’s shoulder. Her weight drove him into the heart-tree’s trunk.

The tree responded. Roots animated, wrapping around the demon, responding to the ancient elven magic woven into its core. Malachar struggled. The roots tightened.

"Forty-three years," Lyraen said, stepping forward. Her voice was steady now. Certain. "You made

doubt everything. You made

question every victory. But you know what you couldn’t touch?"

She pressed her hand against the tree.

"The truth. The real . The woman who kept fighting even when she didn’t know why."

The heart-tree blazed with light.

Malachar scread again—this ti with real fear. The roots weren’t just holding him. They were draining him. Decades of accumulated whisper-energy flowing back into the tree that had witnessed everything.

"No—NO—I built this—I MADE this city—"

"You borrowed it," Lyraen said. "Ti to pay interest."

The light intensified. Malachar’s form began dissolving. Not into death—into absorption. The heart-tree was taking back what was stolen.

His void-eyes found Owen one last ti.

"Vorthraxx... will finish... what I started..."

Then he was gone.

The lights returned.

The council chamber was wrecked. Councilors lay gasping on the floor. Guards struggled to their feet. Sylnara stood frozen behind her throne, expression unreadable.

Lyraen collapsed.

Leah caught her before she hit ground, transforming back to humanoid form mid-catch. "She’s alive. Exhausted, but alive."

Owen picked himself up. His wrist ached where Malachar had gripped it. His mind still echoed with whispers he couldn’t quite shake.

Yuki was at his side imdiately. "Owen. Look at ."

He looked.

"You’re real. You’re mine. You’re exactly who you’re supposed to be."

The whispers faded.

"I know." He pulled her close. "I know."

---

Sylnara addressed the council an hour later.

The chamber had been restored—magically, by elves who specialized in such things. Councilors sat in their places, shaken but present. Vaelin was notably absent.

"Malachar the Whisperer is dead," Sylnara announced. "His influence is ended. The heart-tree has confird it—every trace of his corruption has been absorbed and neutralized."

Murmurs of relief.

"This victory belongs not to elves alone." Sylnara’s gaze found the party. "Outsiders ca to our shores seeking help. Instead, they gave it. They saw what we could not. They fought what we could not. They reminded us that isolation is not strength—it is fear wearing armor."

She descended from her throne. Walked directly to Owen.

"The dungeon you seek. The Rembering containing your fragnt." She placed a hand on his shoulder. "You will have everything you need. Scouts. Supplies. Safe passage. And when you return—if you return—you will have the gratitude of the elven people."

Owen nodded. "Thank you."

"No. Thank you." She looked at each of them in turn. "Rest tonight. Tomorrow, we prepare you for what cos next."

---

They returned to their quarters as evening fell.

Leah imdiately collapsed onto a bench. "I’m never transforming that long again. My everything hurts."

"You were magnificent," Odessa said. "The way you just bit him—"

"I bit a demon and he tasted like ...blerghhh." Leah groaned. "I need to rethink my choices."

Alfred produced tea. "You chose well. All of you." He poured. "Malachar is dead. The elves are allies. The dungeon awaits." He handed cups around. "We’re making progress."

Yuki sat beside Owen. Uru pulsed contentedly on her shoulder.

"How’s your wrist?" she asked.

"Healing. The whispers are harder."

"You want to talk about it?"

"No." He paused. "Yes. I don’t know."

"Then don’t decide now." She leaned against him. "We have tonight. Tomorrow we start preparing for the dungeon. The day after, we go in." She looked up at him. "Whatever happens in there, we face it together."

Owen looked at the woman who had tad him, trusted him, loved him. At the friends who had followed him across continents and into dungeons. At the family he’d built from strangers.

"Together," he agreed.

Outside, Lythandar glowed with a renewed light. The heart-tree pulsed with steady rhythm. And sowhere in the distance, the third Story Dungeon waited for their arrival.

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