Fifteen cycles had passed since the last Festival of Creation, and in the fragile quiet that followed, a tenuous peace draped itself over Eos. Ancalagon and Lyra, the dragon-lords who had once strode through ages like titans, now reveled in their mortal roles as parents. Their children—Rena, Caius, and Nira—grew within the fertile warmth of their sanctuary. Their laughter rang like bells through the gardens, a harmony of dragon and human essence intertwined. Yet, while laughter flourished in their hidden world, the murmur of unrest began to stir.
Across the land, in corners where the sun's light seemed weaker, whispers had begun. The God's Light, a new faith, bloomed among the mortals. It spread like a contagion, seeding doubts about the rightful guardianship of the dragons. These whispers, delicate as spidersilk, wound their way through minds and hearts, stoking fears that the dragons had become obsolete, relics of an age past.
In the echoing halls of Elarion, Ancalagon stood beneath the vast, vaulted ceiling that now seemed to close in with the weight of foreboding. Bahamut, the eldest and most revered of dragon-kind, sat before him, his silvered scales dimming with concern. The air between them crackled with unspoken tension.
"Ancalagon," Bahamut's voice rolled like distant thunder, heavy with meaning. "There is a shift, subtle but certain. The mortals turn toward the Celestials. Their light grows, casting shadows over all that we have built."
Ancalagon's eyes, narrowed like a hawk's, betrayed the depth of his unease. "The winds carry tales, Bahamut. Mortals now see us as a hindrance, holding them back from some imagined destiny. They say we have chained them to stagnation."
The great dragon-lord's gaze darkened, a flicker of anger igniting within. "We who have nurtured their civilizations, guided them from fire to the stars—now we are but tyrants in their eyes? They forget that our hands shaped the very foundations of their world."
"They forget," Ancalagon agreed, pacing the cold stone floor. "And now they look to the sky for salvation, to the Celestials who promise power without restraint. They imagine a world without us, free from our oversight. But they see only light and not the abyss it conceals."
Bahamut's wings, vast and shimmering, shifted with the rising storm of his thoughts. "And what would they have instead? A world unprotected from the chaos beyond the stars? They know not what forces press against the edges of reality, forces we have held at bay."
Ancalagon turned, his expression steely. "It is not that they seek our end—they are too blind for that. But they wish to rise beyond us, to sever the bond between dragon and man. The Celestials poison their minds, feeding them visions of false freedom."
Bahamut's voice dropped, heavy with resolve. "Then we must remind them of the truth. We must make them see that the shield we offer is the only thing that stands between them and destruction."
"To confront them would spark war," Ancalagon's voice was edged with caution. "We cannot risk igniting a conflict that may consume all. And yet, we cannot remain idle. If they are convinced we are relics, then they will surely turn their blades upon us."
A silence lingered before Bahamut spoke, his words like iron. "We must walk a path between. Show them the darkness without driving them to fear. Show them what lies beyond their dreams of ascension."
Ancalagon's gaze turned inward, the weight of Bahamut's words sinking into him. "I will return to my brood. If the storm comes, they must be kept safe."
Bahamut nodded, the gravity of their fate settling between them like a mantle. "Go. We will need your strength, but first protect what is dearest. This is a battle of wills as much as of blood."
Ancalagon left the hall, the echoes of Bahamut's words haunting him as he walked toward the light. The world outside still seemed peaceful, the laughter of his children drifting through the air, a fragile reminder of what was worth fighting for.
In the sanctuary of their home, Lyra stood among the verdant trees, watching their children. Rena darted between blossoms, her fiery hair streaming behind her like flame. Caius, ever the dreamer, watched her, distracted by a butterfly that flitted too high. Nira sat by the brook, her brow furrowed in concentration as she sketched the scene with a steady hand.
"Father!" Rena called, her bright voice cutting through the air as she ran toward him. "Come play!"
Ancalagon knelt, feeling the warmth of her embrace. It was a momentary reprieve from the storm brewing on the horizon. "Soon, my star," he murmured, gently pulling away. "But I need to speak with your mother."
Lyra turned to him, her expression softening with concern as she read the seriousness in his gaze. "You've heard the rumors, haven't you?"
"They're more than rumors," Ancalagon's voice was low, heavy. "The mortals are beginning to turn. The Celestials twist their thoughts, fill their hearts with promises of a future without us."
Lyra's brow furrowed. "I felt the change, but I had hoped it would pass. What do we do now?"
Ancalagon sighed, the weight of the question hanging between them. "We prepare. We cannot let fear guide us, but neither can we stand idly by as they prepare to cast us aside. We must be vigilant, show them our worth without igniting a fire that cannot be quenched."
Nira, ever the quiet observer, spoke from her perch, her voice steady. "They don't understand, do they? What you do for them. Why would they turn away?"
"Because power blinds," Ancalagon replied, kneeling beside her. "They believe they can stand without us, that the Celestials will guide them to some higher plane. But they do not see the darkness that comes with the light."
Lyra's hand rested on his shoulder, grounding him. "We must protect our children, above all."
"And we will," Ancalagon said, his voice firm with resolve. "The storm is coming, but we will stand against it."
In the deepest recesses of the obsidian forest, where sunlight dared not tread, a different gathering took place. Among the twisted trees and the shadowed paths, the hunters of Eos gathered. Cloaked in darkness, they were the elite—S-rank mortals, warriors honed by years of blood and battle. They awaited their patrons with a reverence that bordered on fear.
At the heart of the gathering, a shimmering figure emerged from the shadows, a Celestial emissary cloaked in radiant light. The hunters, their faces veiled, bowed before the being, their heads low in submission.
"Warriors of Eos," the Celestial's voice rippled through the silence like a silver blade. "The time has come to cast aside your chains. You stand at the cusp of destiny."
A tall hunter, Kael, stepped forward, his scarred face lit by the flickering torches. "We are ready to serve. What must be done?"
The Celestial's light flared, cold and distant. "Slay the children of Bahamut. Their death will be the spark that ignites the downfall of the dragons."
Kael's eyes narrowed. "Their young? What glory is there in slaying children?"
"Do not let your compassion blind you," the Celestial's voice cut like a blade, sharp and unyielding. "The fate of Eos is poised on a precipice. Sacrifice, brutal and necessary, must pave the way for the greater good. The dragons have long believed themselves untouchable. You will demonstrate otherwise."
Kael stepped forward, the weight of the words settling over him like a mantle of iron. "Then it is done. For Eos, and for our freedom. Their reign ends here." His voice carried the gravity of a decision beyond return.
A flicker of satisfaction crossed the Celestial's luminous features. "Good," they murmured, as though savoring the moment. "Prepare yourselves. We will arm you with the light, sharpen your blades with our will. Bahamut's children will tremble at your approach."
The hunters exchanged glances, a dark energy building among them. Destiny pressed upon them as if the very air in the clearing had thickened, a palpable force drawing them toward a singular, unforgiving purpose.
"Go now," the Celestial gestured with a hand that shimmered like the first light of dawn. "Return to your homes. Gather your weapons. The hour of reckoning is close."
Resolute, the hunters dispersed into the forest shadows, their minds consumed with the mission. Kael lingered for a moment, glancing back at the Celestial, fire smoldering in his gaze.
"Eos will fall," he whispered to the wind, a quiet oath that hung in the night air long after he had gone.
In the abyssal depths of the obsidian forest, another Celestial watched, a smile curling at their lips. The intricate design had been set in motion, and soon, the dragons' dominion would crumble under the weight of whispers, not of steel but of light.
Three moons later
Beneath the expanse of stars, the hunters gathered once more, their eyes hardened by the fanatic light of their devotion. The night clung to the scent of pine and smoldering earth, thick with tension and the anticipation of blood. They moved as shadows, bent on a singular purpose: to deceive and destroy.
Their plan was cunning. They would set the eastern forest ablaze, drawing Bahamut from his lair. Fire, that ancient harbinger of chaos, would serve as their herald.
With wordless precision, they fanned out among the trees, igniting flames in the dry underbrush. The fire spread swiftly, an eager beast devouring its prey. Sparks shot into the sky, now painted in hues of crimson and orange, a cruel beacon for the dragon lord.
High above, Bahamut sensed the disturbance. His immense wings cut through the night as he descended from the heavens, drawn to the inferno below. His heart tightened, dread gripping his chest. The forest, once a sanctuary, now burned like an offering to the gods of destruction.
The hunters seized their moment. With Bahamut distracted, they slipped into his lair, their movements silent as death itself. The cavern, warm with the glow of hidden treasures, housed the young dragons, nestled in sleep, unaware of the doom that had come.
The hunters' blades moved with terrifying precision. Each stroke silenced another life. The cries of the younglings were short-lived, snuffed out by the cold efficiency of the intruders. The lair echoed with the hollow sound of death.
But their slaughter was interrupted by a roar—Licata, the great dragoness, awoken by the carnage, emerged with the fury of a storm. She unleashed a torrent of flame, her wrath scorching the walls of the cavern. The hunters dodged, striking back with spells of lightning and water. The battle was swift but brutal, the air thick with the tang of magic and burning flesh.
Licata fell, her great body collapsing under the weight of a hundred wounds. The ground shook with her final breath. The hunters stood victorious, but their triumph tasted of ash. They had won, but the cost had yet to reveal itself.
In the distance, the flames continued their relentless march through the eastern forest. And then, Bahamut returned.
He landed amidst the devastation, his massive form dark against the burning sky. The sight of the forest—a smoldering ruin—gripped him, but it was the absence in his lair that shattered him. His brood, his beloved Licata—gone. His heart, once steady and kind, twisted into a void of fury.
With a roar that sundered the heavens, Bahamut unleashed his rage. He rose into the sky, his wings blotting out the stars, casting a shadow over the entire land. His power rippled through the air, a storm of energy that shook the foundations of Eos itself. The hunters, emboldened by their earlier victory, now cowered beneath the weight of the dragon lord's fury. They had provoked a force far greater than they had imagined.
Far above, three Celestials hovered, their forms flickering like distant stars. They watched with cool detachment, their glowing eyes fixed on Bahamut as he tore through the skies.
"It begins," the central figure murmured, her voice soft yet laden with ancient malice. Her golden eyes gleamed with cruel satisfaction. "The dragon lord, blinded by grief, will burn his world to the ground. They will see him as the monster they feared."
The second figure, tall and regal, nodded, their wings of radiant light unfurling. "Dragons, humans, all are slaves to their passions. They will destroy each other, as was always intended."
The third figure, spectral and insubstantial, smiled, their voice a mere whisper. "If we cannot rule this world, no one shall."
The three Celestials watched as Bahamut's roar split the sky. His massive wings churned the storm clouds, his claws tearing through the heavens. Below, the hunters fled, their triumph turned to terror. The earth trembled beneath the dragon's wrath, the very air thickening with the weight of his grief.
Bahamut ascended, his form growing immense, his body crackling with a terrifying energy. His heart, hollowed by loss, now seethed with uncontrollable power. A light, blinding and terrible, began to gather around him, brighter than any star.
With a final, soul-shattering roar, Bahamut unleashed his fury upon the world.
The explosion was cataclysmic, a wave of destruction that swept across Eos, turning forests to ash, mountains to rubble, and seas to boiling wastelands. The hunters, the land, even the sky—everything was consumed in an instant. The planet cracked and splintered under the sheer force of his rage.
From the stars, the Celestials watched in silence, their designs fulfilled as Eos crumbled beneath the might of a god undone by grief.
The world trembled as Bahamut's fury reached its peak. High above the planet, the stars seemed to flicker, as if recoiling from the sheer force of his rage. Ancalagon felt it before it came, a deep resonance coursing through him, like the echo of a great force awakening. Standing at the edge of the city, he transformed into his dragon form his massive wings unfurled, he watched as the horizon darkened, and the sky above Eos seemed to fold inward. He had known Bahamut's wrath would come, but the scale, the sheer magnitude, was something beyond even his imagining. The air itself trembled, thick with the weight of impending annihilation.
The stars flicker.
A shift in the cosmos, subtle but unmistakable, as if they recoiled from what Bahamut had unleashed. High above, the stars dimmed. Ancalagon's heart quickened. His thoughts raced to those within the city—Lyra, Elowen, Caius, Nira—unaware, perhaps, of the storm that now bore down upon them.
Then, from the distant horizon, it began.
A blast, not of mere fire but something ancient, primordial. A wave of light and energy tore through the heavens, racing across the plains with unstoppable force. Mountains crumbled; forests ignited in an instant. The landscape of Eos, once teeming with life, was unmade in the blink of an eye.
Ancalagon! Lyra's voice echoed in his mind, urgent and afraid. She was far within the city walls, tending to their children, the bond between them humming with the tension of what was about to unfold.
Stay inside! His roar was carried on the wind as he surged toward the outer wall, his massive form blotting out the fading light. The towers of stone and crystal loomed beneath him, but they offered no protection from what approached.
The time has come.
The horizon vanished in a wave of fire and blinding light. The great blast moved with the inexorability of fate, reducing everything in its path to ash and ruin. Ancalagon's talons dug deep into the earth as he landed at the city's edge, his wings unfurled to their full span. His ancient power surged, his blood alive with the strength of his ancestors. With a mighty roar, he summoned forth a shield—an invisible wall of energy that encompassed the city, standing between his people and the end of the world.
Father! Elowen's voice, faint but clear. But he could not answer. His focus was absolute, every fiber of his being strained to hold the barrier against Bahamut's fury.
The ground shook. The sky screamed. The power of the blast was overwhelming, crashing against Ancalagon's shield with the force of a collapsing star. The world trembled beneath it, the shield rippling as if it would fail. Beyond the walls, the land was torn apart—oceans boiled away, valleys were reduced to molten craters, and the forests became deserts of charred earth.
Inside the city, the people of the five dragon clans stood silent, their eyes wide with terror and disbelief. They felt the tremors but were untouched, spared by Ancalagon's sacrifice.
The shield flickered. Ancalagon's strength faltered as the strain took its toll. His wings sagged, his once-brilliant scales dulled, and his breath came in ragged gasps. Yet still, he held. He drew upon everything—his love for his family, his duty to his people. He would not let them fall, no matter the cost.
My friend... why? Ancalagon's voice was barely a whisper, his eyes dim with exhaustion as the last remnants of his strength ebbed away.
The shield held.
But Ancalagon could hold no more. His massive form collapsed to the ground, his wings folding around him as he fell. His heart slowed, and his vision faded into darkness. The shield remained intact, but the last great protector of Eos was no more.
Within the city, Lyra felt the bond between them sever. She fell to her knees, her breath caught in her throat, unable to comprehend the weight of what had just happened.
"No... Ancalagon, no..." Her whispered plea was carried away by the wind.
And high above, in the cold, distant void of space, the three Celestials watched. Their luminous forms hovered, shimmering with cruel indifference. The planet below them was a ruin, its surface scorched, its life extinguished save for the single city spared by Ancalagon's final act.
"The dragons have been humbled," said the central Celestial, her voice smooth, devoid of pity. "Bahamut's wrath has done what we could not."
The second figure, radiant with light, spoke with cold finality. "They will cower now, bound by their fear and the knowledge of their fragility."
The third Celestial, more shadow than light, flickered in the starlight. He smiled, a dark, knowing smile. "Eos belongs to no one now."
Without another word, the three beings vanished into the endless night.
And below, on the scarred and broken world, the last city of Eos stood, a beacon of life in a desolate wasteland. Ancalagon, the final dragon, had given everything to preserve what little remained. His sacrifice echoed in the silence of a world that was no more.