Chapter 127: 127. The Only One
The dungeon’s light swallowed them whole.
Owen felt the transition—that familiar twist of reality, the montary disorientation as space rearranged itself around them. Beside him, Yuki’s hand gripped his. Leah’s presence at his flank. Odessa’s sharp inhale. Alfred’s steady breath. Caelen’s quiet wonder.
Then the dungeon rejected them.
One mont, Yuki was there. The next, she wasn’t. Owen spun, claws extended, but the space where she’d stood was empty. Leah —gone. Odessa —gone. Alfred, Caelen —all vanished.
Only Owen remained.
He stood alone in a corridor of light and shadow. The dungeon’s architecture pressed close, walls that breathed, a ceiling that stretched into infinity, a floor that humd with ancient power. His Mana Sense spread wide, desperate, searching.
Nothing.
No signatures. No life. Just him and the pulsing heartbeat of the Rembering.
"Yuki!" He pushed through the bond. Silence. "Leah! Anyone!?"
Nothing.
He moved forward. The corridor stretched. The light shifted. And then he stepped through...
Into Drak’thar.
The sky was wrong.
Purple shot through with veins of red, like bruises on living flesh. Fires burned in the distance— not the controlled flas of dragon forges, but the uncontrolled devastation of war. Smoke rose in pillars that twisted as they climbed. The Tower of Royals stood, but its surface was scarred, blackened, cracked.
And the dragons...
Fewer than there should be. So many fewer.
Where the skies should have been thick with wings—hundreds of dragons in flight, dragonkin moving between islands, the constant motion of a mystic living civilization—only scattered silhouettes circled. Lone figures against a wounded sky. The fields where dragonkin had gathered were almost empty. The palace where families had lived stood dark.
Owen’s breath caught.
"Is it still Beautiful?" A voice behind him. "What’s left of it?."
He turned.
Dominus stood ten ters away. Older than Owen rembered, not physically, but in his eyes. Those golden eyes held weight now. Centuries of it. The weight of a war that wouldn’t end, wouldn’t bend, wouldn’t break. His scales were duller, his fra leaner. He moved like soone who had forgotten what rest felt like.
"This is the final story..." Dominus said. "The one you ca to witness."
Owen’s jaw tightened. "The others—"
"Rejected. The final Story is for you alone... Only you." Dominus spread his wings—they caught the wrong-colored light, casting shadows that stretched too far. "Co. There’s little ti, and less than you think."
He launched skyward without waiting.
Owen followed.
---
They flew over a dying kingdom...
Below, Owen saw the scars of war. Cratered fields where sothing had impacted with devastating force—craters so large they held lakes of churned earth and stone. Collapsed structures that had once housed families, their walls broken, their roofs gone. A Hatchery—the sa Hatchery Owen had touched in the present, the sa structure that now pulsed with potential in his own Drak’thar—stood partially collapsed, its walls blackened, its heart silent.
"How long has it been?" Owen asked.
"Three years since the war began." Dominus’s voice carried over the wind, steady despite everything. "Two since Vorthraxx embraced the miasma. One since he claid the demon throne." A pause. "Six months since we started losing."
The palace rose ahead. Its doors stood open, not in welco, but because they had been forced, repaired, forced again. The stone around them was pitted with weapon strikes.
They landed in the courtyard. Guards—dragons in humanoid form, armor scarred, eyes tired—nodded as Dominus passed. They looked at Owen with curiosity but asked nothing. There was no ti for questions. There hadn’t been ti for anything in months.
Inside, the war chamber.
Chronara stood at the map table, her ancient form sohow diminished. Still sharp, still seeing futures, but those futures grew shorter every day. Her scales had lost their luster. Her hands trembled slightly on her staff.
Zephron leaned against a pillar, one arm in a sling, lightning crackling weakly across his shoulders— spasms, not controlled power. His eyes were hollow.
Verida sat on a bench, her toxic green aura dim, a wound across her torso barely healed. She breathed too carefully, favoring her injured side.
Four Greater Dragons. What remained of them.
Chronara looked up as Owen entered. Her violet eyes held recognition— not of him specifically, but of what he represented. "The Prodigal Son, We wondered when you’d arrive."
Owen stared at them and thought of how far their story had gone, Fey’rath and Glacius were Dead now. Their absence scread from the empty spaces at the table, from the grief etched into every face.
"Fey’rath fell at the Shadowgrave," Verida said quietly as if acknowledging his thoughts. "Saving the egg." Her voice cracked on the last word. "Glacius died fighting the Arbiter with Vorthraxx..."
Zephron’s jaw tightened. His lightning spasd, once, twice. "And after everything, Vorthraxx led demonic forces to destroy our hatchery, stunting Drak’thar growth! every egg has been destroyed except one..."
Owen absorbed this. The Greater Dragons he’d t in the first dungeon— vibrant, powerful, certain— reduced to mories and grief. Three years of war had done what millennia of peace could not.
"Waiy, except one?" he asked.
"It is Safe." Dominus moved to the map table. "Hidden where even Vorthraxx can’t reach it." He looked at Owen with those knowing eyes. "Waiting for soone who doesn’t exist yet."
. Owen realized it with a chill. In the real world, centuries from now, that egg would hatch. Would beco him. Would carry forward everything these dragons were fighting to preserve.
"What’s the situation?" he asked.
Chronara gestured at the map. Markers showed dragon positions— fewer than there should be, clustered around Drak’thar and a few redoubts. Demon positions— too many, spreading across the map like a stain. And at the center, a single point pulsing with dark light.
"The Nether Throne," she said. "Vorthraxx’s seat. He’s consolidated demonkind under his rule. What was once a fractured, squabbling race is now an army. United. Disciplined. Directed."
"Toward what?"
"Everything." Zephron’s voice was flat. Empty. "Gods, mortals, dragons— he doesn’t discriminate. The mark the Arbiter placed on him— he burned it out with miasma. But the process changed him. Made him sothing new. Sothing that doesn’t fit any category we have."
Verida stood, wincing. One hand pressed to her wounded side. "He’s not Vorthraxx anymore. Not really. That na died with the dragon who bore it. What’s left calls itself the Desecrator."
The word landed like a physical blow.
Owen had heard it In prophecies. In warnings. In the fearful whispers of those who knew what was coming. But hearing it here, now, from dragons who’d fought him, who’d watched friends die at his hands, who bore the scars of his war— it carried weight. Crushing weight.
"He’s coming," Chronara said quietly. Her voice was barely a whisper, but it filled the chamber. "In seven days, he’ll bring everything. Every demon. Every corrupted creature. Every weapon he’s forged in the Nether. He’ll hit Drak’thar with everything he has, and if we fall—"
"The mortal realms are next," Dominus finished. "Then the gods themselves."
Owen looked at the map. At the markers. At the four remaining Greater Dragons and the kingdom dying around them. At the sky visible through the chamber’s windows —that wounded, bleeding sky.
Seven days.
In seven days, the battle that would end the war would begin.
And he was here to witness it.
"Why ?" The question ca out before he could stop it. "Why show
this? I can’t fight in your war. I can’t change what happens. I’m just—"
"A witness." Dominus t his eyes. "But witnesses matter. When this is over —when the Will wakes and does what it will do —soone needs to rember. Soone needs to carry forward what we were. What we fought for. What it cost."
He stepped closer.
"And when you wake —when you take the third fragnt and Drak’thar becos yours— you’ll need to know what you’re rebuilding. What was lost. What it cost." He paused. "And you’ll need to understand your brother. The dragon he was. The choices that led him here."
"You want
to understand Vorthraxx."
"I want you to understand yourself." Dominus turned to the window. Outside, the wounded sky darkened further. "Because the sa blood flows in both of you. The sa capacity for love, for grief, for rage. The question isn’t whether you could beco him. It’s whether you’ll choose differently when the mont cos."
The chamber fell silent.
Seven days.
Owen looked at the map again. At the markers. At the four dragons who would stand against an army.
He thought about Yuki, waiting outside this dungeon, trusting him to return. About Leah, who’d survived fourteen months in a cell and still chose to fight. About Odessa and Alfred, who’d followed him across continents. About the family he’d built.
He thought about Vorthraxx, who’d lost everything and beco a monster.
"I’ll rember," he said. "Everything."
Dominus nodded. Sothing like relief crossed his features— gone as quickly as it appeared.
"Then rest tonight," he said. "Tomorrow, the war begins in earnest."
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