The dragon lay dying in a field of
ash and shattered stone. Its great body, once a mountain of muscle and magic,
trembled with each shallow breath. The golden fire in its eyes had dulled to
embers.
Sir Aldric had never seen a dragon so close before—never
without a sword raised, never without the intention to kill. Yet here he stood,
weaponless, staring at the magnificent creature crumbling before him.
The dragon’s voice rumbled like distant thunder. “I ask of you
one favour.”
Aldric hesitated. He had come here to slay the beast, to
return to the kingdom as a hero. But there was no victory in this. Not now.
“What do you ask of me?” he said at last.
The dragon lifted a claw, barely able to keep it aloft.
Clutched within was a smooth oval stone, black as starless midnight.
“Take this,” said the dragon. “Carry it to the highest peak beyond
the Valley of Echoes… There, place it beneath the moonlight and speak my name…
Vorthalax.”
Aldric took the stone. It was warm to the touch, pulsing
with something that felt almost like a heartbeat.
With a final sigh, Vorthalax’s great eyes slid shut. The
ground trembled as the last dragon of the realm took its final breath.
The journey to the Valley of Echoes was perilous, but Aldric
had faced worse. He climbed the jagged cliffs, his hands bloodied and raw,
until at last he reached the highest peak. The moon hung high, silver light
washing over the land.
He knelt and placed the stone upon the frostbitten rock. The
wind stilled. The world fell into an eerie silence.
Aldric steadied himself. “Vorthalax,” he proclaimed into the
sky above.
The air shimmered. Shadows coiled like smoke. Then, from the
darkness, an enormous creature emerged, rocks cracking under its weight.
It was another dragon, slightly smaller than Vorthalax, and
with scales the colour of the night sky. Its golden eyes burned with a sense of
something between sorrow and hope.
“You have brought him… home,” the dragon rumbled.
Aldric didn’t understand, but he didn’t need to. The stone
at his feet split open, and from within, a warm golden light spilled forth,
rising like mist.
The dragon leaned forward, pressing its forehead to the
light. A sound filled the air—something between a sigh and a melody.
Then, just as quickly as it had begun, the light faded.
The dragon looked at Aldric, eyes shimmering with the intensity
of flame.
“Thank you,” it said, bowing its head. Then, with a great
beat of its wings, the dragon soared into the sky, disappearing into the stars.
Aldric remained on the mountain for a long while, watching
the night, the wind carrying a name he now understood.
Vorthalax had only ever wanted to go home.
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