Run for your lives or freeze to death, it makes no difference to me, the spirit Vaelen hissed, his voice echoing inside Lennon’s skull like wind through a cracked tomb.
Lennon stumbled over a jagged shard of rib, his breath hitching in his chest. He clutched his side, feeling the bite of the unnatural cold that radiated from the very ground he walked on. The graveyard was shifting again, the bone pillars twisting and turning like the gnarled fingers of a giant. He looked back, but the path he had taken just moments ago had vanished behind a wall of swirling gray mist.
I told you to keep moving, Vaelen snapped, his ghostly form flickering into view just above Lennon’s shoulder. Do you want to be a permanent part of the scenery, boy? Because you are making an excellent case for becoming a statue.
Lennon grit his teeth, forcing his leaden legs to push forward. Where am I supposed to go? Everything looks the same in this nightmare!
The graveyard does not obey your feeble human perspective, Vaelen said, drifting casually through a solid pile of vertebrae. It follows the hunger. And right now, you are the main course for something that has been starving for an eternity.
Lennon skidded to a halt. Something that has been starving? What are you talking about?
Something slithered in the shadows ahead, a sound like dry scales rasping against ancient dust. A shadow beast, Vaelen murmured, and his voice lacked any hint of pity. They are the leftovers of the void, creatures that feed on the essence of the dead. And since you are full of that essence, they are very eager to meet you.
A low, guttural growl vibrated through the ground, shaking the very teeth in Lennon’s head. He grabbed the rusted sword from his belt, his knuckles white. Show yourself!
A massive, multi-limbed shape detached itself from the darkness. It had no face, only a gaping maw filled with rows of needle-thin teeth that dripped with a black, oily substance. It lunged with terrifying speed, a blur of shadow and malice.
Lennon ducked, the beast’s claws whistling inches over his head. He swung the blade, but it sliced through empty space as the creature dissolved into smoke, only to reappear behind him.
You are moving like a slug, Vaelen mocked, circling Lennon in the air. The mark on your hand is a doorway, not a decoration. Open it!
I do not know how! Lennon yelled, spinning around to parry a strike that sent a jarring shock up his arm.
Then you will die, and I will find a host with more backbone, Vaelen replied. Focus on the cold. Draw it from the bones beneath your feet.
Lennon planted his boots in the dirt. He closed his eyes for a split second, trying to find that reservoir of power he had felt before. The graveyard pulsed, a rhythmic thumping that echoed his own racing heart. He reached into that darkness, grasping for the icy current.
He felt it. A rush of freezing energy surged up his arm, turning his skin pale and his veins a stark, electric blue. He screamed as the power flooded his muscles, and he swung the rusted sword with a strength he had never possessed. The blade caught the creature mid-air, a flash of white light erupting as metal met shadow.
The beast let out a soundless shriek and disintegrated into ash. Lennon fell to his knees, his hands trembling violently as the blue glow on his skin faded.
That was sloppy, Vaelen sighed, hovering down to inspect the spot where the creature had died. But it will suffice for a beginner.
Lennon wiped sweat and grime from his forehead, his breathing ragged. That was sloppy? I almost lost my arm!
You are a fragile creature, Vaelen said, his spectral face unreadable. If you cannot master the basics of channeling, the next one will not just take your arm. It will take your spirit, and you will become just another whisper in the wind.
Lennon looked around at the towering, silent bones. Why are you helping me? If I am so fragile, why not let me die and be done with it?
Because, Vaelen replied, a flicker of something ancient and mournful crossing his features, I have seen the end of my kind. I would prefer that the story does not end with our bones being picked clean by vermin. You are the only vessel left.
Lennon stood up, leaning on his sword. I am not a vessel. I am a survivor.
Survival is the first step, Vaelen agreed. Now, tell me, do you hear that?
Lennon stilled, tilting his head. He heard it. A faint, rhythmic clicking sound, like thousands of tiny claws tapping on stone. It was coming from all directions.
They are hunting in a pack, Vaelen whispered, and for the first time, there was a hint of urgency in his tone. You have drawn blood, and now the entire graveyard knows you are weak.
Lennon turned in a circle, his grip tightening on the sword. How many of them?
Does it matter? Vaelen asked. If it is ten or a thousand, the outcome remains the same if you do not fight.
Lennon watched as the shadows began to detach from the bones. They were everywhere. Hundreds of pairs of glowing eyes blinked to life in the darkness, circling him in a tightening ring.
I need a weapon, Lennon said, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous register. This rusted thing will not last against this many.
Vaelen gestured toward a massive fossil jutting out of the ground nearby. That is not a grave, boy. That is an armory.
Lennon scrambled toward the fossil. It was a dragon’s claw, massive and curved like a scythe. He reached for it, and as his fingers brushed the bone, the black mark on his hand flared so bright it hurt his eyes. The bone groaned, shifting as if waking from a long sleep.
Pull it, Vaelen commanded.
Lennon grabbed the base of the claw and heaved with all his might. It did not budge. The clicking sound grew louder, the shadow beasts inching closer, their forms becoming more solid, more predatory.
Pull, you coward! Vaelen roared.
Lennon poured every ounce of his anger, his betrayal, and his fear into the mark. He felt the cold energy explode outward, bonding with the ancient bone. With a deafening crack, the claw tore free, glowing with a fierce, silver luminescence. He swung it, the blade cutting a wide arc through the air, leaving a trail of shimmering frost in its wake.
The beasts recoiled, hissing as the silver light touched their oily skin.
Now, show them why the grave has a sovereign, Vaelen shouted.
Lennon charged into the center of the ring. He was no longer thinking about his clan or his exile. He was only thinking about the next strike, the next movement, the next kill. He moved with a grace he had never known, his body becoming a conduit for the spectral power of the dragon.
Strike, pivot, slash, freeze.
The shadow beasts fell one by one, shattered into nothingness by the silver blade. Lennon felt no fatigue, only a cold, exhilarating rush of power that surged through him with every swing. He was in his element, a storm of ice and bone in the middle of a dying world.
When the last beast vanished, the silence returned, heavier than before. Lennon stood in the center of the clearing, his chest heaving, the silver claw in his hand still pulsing with a faint, rhythmic heartbeat.
Is that all of them? he asked, his voice echoing in the vast, hollow space.
For now, Vaelen replied, emerging from the shadows. You have earned a moment of respite. But do not grow comfortable. The graveyard is never truly quiet.
Lennon dropped the claw, his hands shaking. I felt them. I felt their hunger. It was like I was part of it.
That is the price of the power, Vaelen said, his voice low. You are tethered to the graveyard. Its hunger is your hunger. Its enemies are your enemies.
Lennon looked at the black mark on his hand. It was no longer just a mark. It was a brand.
I will survive, Lennon said, his voice hard as iron. And I will find out who is responsible for all of this.
Vaelen drifted closer, his eyes fixed on Lennon’s face. You have the heart for it, I will give you that. But remember, the path to the truth is buried under a lot of dead things.
Lennon turned and began walking into the depths of the graveyard, toward a cluster of ruins that looked like a shattered throne.
Are you coming? Lennon asked, not looking back.
Vaelen followed, a trail of frost lingering in his wake. I have nowhere else to be, Keeper.
They walked in silence for a while, the only sound the crunch of bone dust under Lennon’s boots. The graveyard was vast, an endless expanse of tragedy, and Lennon knew he had only scratched the surface of what was hidden here.
What happened to them, Vaelen? Lennon asked eventually, gesturing to the landscape. How did they all die?
Vaelen did not answer immediately. He drifted over a pile of skulls, his form transparent against the dark sky. It was not a battle, he said at last. It was a harvest.
A harvest? Lennon repeated. Who would harvest dragons?
The same force that you will eventually have to face, Vaelen replied. The Judge.
Lennon felt a shiver run down his spine that had nothing to do with the cold. The Judge. I have heard the elders talk about that name in whispers. They said it was a myth.
The elders were either fools or cowards, Vaelen said. They knew exactly what was happening. They just chose to look the other way to preserve their own pathetic lives.
Lennon clenched his fists. They sold us out. They traded our future for a seat at the table of a monster.
It is the way of the world, Vaelen said. The strong consume the weak. And until now, you were the weakest of the weak.
Lennon stopped and looked the spirit directly in the eyes. I am not weak anymore.
We shall see, Vaelen replied, and there was a strange, almost proud, inflection in his voice. We shall see.
Lennon looked ahead, the ruins of the throne room beckoning him. He felt a sudden, sharp pain in his chest, a memory that was not his own. It was a flash of a woman, her face obscured by shadows, standing over a cradle. She was singing a song in a language he did not understand, but the melody felt like home.
Who was that? Lennon whispered, his voice trembling.
Vaelen did not speak, but Lennon could feel the spirit’s hesitation. That is a memory better left in the grave, boy.
Lennon ignored him. It was a memory of love. Why would that be buried here?
Everything is buried here, Vaelen said, his voice turning cold. Even the things you think are yours. Especially those.
Lennon shook his head, pushing the image away. He could not afford to get distracted by ghosts of his own life. He had a mission. He had to uncover the truth, no matter what it cost him.
He reached the threshold of the throne room. The air here was different, thick with an ancient energy that pressed against his skin. He stepped inside, the light from his hand illuminating a vast chamber filled with relics of a forgotten empire.
What is this place? Lennon asked.
The archive, Vaelen said, his voice filled with reverence. The final record of all that was lost.
Lennon walked to a central pedestal. A heavy, leather-bound book sat on it, its pages yellowed and brittle. He touched it, and the same surge of memories hit him, but this time they were organized, structured. He saw maps, strategies, and the names of every dragon that had ever called this place home.
It is all here, Lennon whispered, overwhelmed. Everything.
Yes, Vaelen said. And it is yours to command. But be warned. Knowledge is a weapon, and like any weapon, it can be turned against the one who wields it.
Lennon opened the book. The pages were filled with intricate diagrams and notes in a language that began to make sense the longer he stared at them. He felt the knowledge seeping into his mind, an ocean of information that threatened to drown him.
I can do this, Lennon said, his voice firm. I am ready.
Vaelen drifted to the side, his form merging with the shadows. Then begin, Keeper. You have much to learn before the dawn.
Lennon sat down at the pedestal and began to read. Outside, the graveyard remained silent, the bones of the gods watching over their new master as he started his journey into the dark, hidden heart of history. He did not know how long he sat there, but as he turned the pages, he felt himself changing. The boy who had been abandoned in the dust was gone, replaced by something colder, sharper, and far more dangerous.
He was the Sovereign of the Graveyard, and he was finally ready to make the world pay for everything it had taken from him. He read through the night, his mind absorbing the secrets of the ancients. With every chapter, his resolve hardened. The hunger inside him grew, but it was no longer just for survival. It was for vengeance. And he knew, with the certainty of the dead, that his vengeance would be absolute.
He looked up from the book as the first light of a distant, dying star crept over the horizon. He had read enough for now. He stood up, his joints popping, and felt the power humming through his veins.
Vaelen, Lennon called out, his voice echoing through the chamber. Are you there?
The spirit appeared, his face illuminated by the growing light. I am always here, boy.
What is our next move? Lennon asked.
Vaelen looked toward the horizon, where the void rift still smoldered like a fresh wound. We go to the heart of the graveyard. We go to the chamber of hearts.
Lennon nodded, his eyes fixed on the distant, dark dunes. Let us go.
They set off, a man and a shadow walking through a land of skeletons. Every step took them further away from the life Lennon had known, and closer to a destiny that was written in stone and blood. The graveyard was vast, a labyrinth of death and forgotten dreams, but for the first time in his life, Lennon felt like he was exactly where he was meant to be.
He was the keeper, the protector, and the avenger. And the world was about to learn that when you bury a dragon, you are not killing it. You are simply waiting for it to wake up.
As they walked, the ground began to vibrate again. The clicking was back, but this time, it was different. It was not the sound of hunting beasts. It was the sound of something waking up. Something big.
Lennon stopped, his hand going to his sword. Do you hear that?
Vaelen’s expression turned grim. I hear it. And I suggest you prepare yourself, Keeper. Because what is coming is not just another shadow beast.
Lennon drew his blade, the silver light flaring to life. What is it?
Vaelen looked at the shifting ground, his voice barely a whisper. That, my boy, is the gatekeeper. And he does not take kindly to intruders.
Lennon braced himself, his feet planted firmly in the bone dust. He took a deep breath, the cold air filling his lungs, and felt the power in his veins rise to meet the challenge. He was ready. He was waiting. And he would not fall. Not here, not now, not ever.
The ground erupted, sending plumes of dust and bone into the air. A massive, towering figure emerged from the earth, its eyes burning with a fierce, violet fire. It was a guardian, armored in plates of ancient steel, holding a weapon that glowed with the same light as the mark on Lennon’s hand.
Lennon looked up at the guardian, his heart steady, his mind clear. He was the Sovereign of the Graveyard, and he would show this giant exactly what it meant to stand in his way. He raised his sword, the silver light reflecting in the guardian’s violet eyes, and he smiled. A cold, hard smile that promised only one thing.
The end of the silence.
Latest Chapter
THE PRICE OF ROOTS
You have to kill the ground before the void creatures claim it, Elara shouted, her silver eyes locked on the horizon where the darkness was literally crawling over the bone dunes like a tidal wave of ink.Lennon stood at the edge of his new garden, his boots digging into the rich, glowing soil he had spent the last day cultivating. The flowers he had planted, the shimmering crystalline blooms born from the memories of the fallen, were beginning to wilt. The air had turned foul, smelling of wet iron and rot, as the rift in the sky deepened.What are you talking about? Lennon yelled back, his hand gripped tightly around the hilt of his sword. I just brought this place to life. You told me to make it grow. Now you want me to burn it?Elara scrambled up the ridge to stand beside him, her robes fluttering in the freezing wind that preceded the void creatures. The garden is a magnet, Lennon. The Judge does not just want to prune the weeds. It wants the energy you have gathered here. Eve
THE GARDEN OF BONE
Do not touch that soil, Elara commanded, her voice slicing through the heavy, stagnant air of the graveyard like a whip.Lennon froze, his fingers inches from the gray, powdery dirt near the base of a massive, fossilized ribcage. He looked up at her, his brow furrowed in confusion. The dust looked just like all the other dirt in this godforsaken place, but the way Elara was staring at it, one would think it was made of liquid fire.Why? Lennon asked, pulling his hand back and dusting off his palms. It looks like everything else here. Just dead stuff waiting to blow away in the wind.Elara stepped closer, the hem of her robe brushing against the ground without making a sound. That is exactly what they want you to think, she said, her eyes shifting to a brilliant, predatory silver. This is not dirt, Lennon. This is residue. It is the concentrated decay of a thousand years of broken dreams. If you touch it without the proper warding, it will start to eat your memories. You will forget
THE HEARTBEAT OF BETRAYAL
Get that stone away from the vault, Lennon roared, his voice amplified by the raw, surging energy of a thousand dead dragons echoing in his lungs.The ground beneath the north ridge erupted, sending chunks of fossilized bone and frozen soil flying into the air like lethal shrapnel. Lennon did not wait for the dust to settle. He moved with a speed that blurred his edges, his boots barely skimming the surface of the permafrost as he charged directly at the hooded figures huddled around the makeshift containment device. The device was a nightmare of brass gears and pulsing red ley lines, feeding greedily off the faint, rhythmic glow emanating from the underground vault.You are too late, Vale, the lead figure shouted, his face obscured by a mask of tarnished iron. The process has started. Once the resonance is broken, the hearts will wither into nothing but gray sand.Lennon skidded to a halt, the silver claw in his hand humming with a high-pitched, angry vibration. He did not care ab
THE PULSE OF BETRAYAL
Blood is a heavy price to pay for a secret, Lennon whispered as he watched the crimson droplets stain the pristine white bone floor of the heart chamber.The room throbbed with a low, agonizing hum. Lennon’s hands were slick with his own vitality, the energy leaking from his palms like molten silver. He stood before the central pedestal, his chest heaving, his eyes burning with the cold fire of the dragon echoes he had recently claimed. Vaelen hovered in the corner, his translucent form flickering violently as if the very air in the chamber was rejecting his presence.You are playing a dangerous game, Vaelen said, his voice strained and thin. You are binding your own lifeforce to these spirits. If they break, you break with them.Lennon wiped his hands on his tunic, ignoring the sharp, stinging pain that pulsed through his veins. They will not break, he replied, his voice raspy. I will not let them. I felt the Judge out there, Vaelen. That thing does not just want to win. It wants
THE PRICE OF SILENCE
Talk, or your final sound will be the snapping of your own neck, Lennon said, his voice as cold as the frost clinging to the ribcage towering above them.The assassin hung in the air, his feet dangling inches above the swirling bone dust that Lennon had stirred up with a mere thought. The man’s face was a mask of terror, his eyes darting toward the shadows where Vaelen lurked, invisible but felt. The hunter struggled, but the invisible grip of the graveyard held him tight, pinning him against the massive fossilized spine of a long dead beast.I was promised a simple cleanup job, the assassin choked out, his hands clawing at the air. They told me you were just a boy, an exile with no soul and no spine.Lennon narrowed his eyes, the white light pulsing in his palms. Who promised you that? Was it the captain of the scouting party? Or did the council itself reach out into this wasteland to silence me?The assassin let out a wet, rattling laugh. You think the council cares about an ex
THE FIRST LESSON
Yield your weapon or yield your soul, the massive stone guardian boomed, his voice sounding like two mountains grinding together.Lennon Vale did not yield. He stood his ground as the giant swung a hammer that looked like it had been forged from the heart of a fallen star. The air hissed as the weapon passed, missing Lennon by a fraction of an inch and cratering the solid bone floor beneath his feet. Lennon leaped back, his breath coming in sharp, ragged gasps.You are not listening, Vaelen warned from the safety of the shadows, though his voice was closer than usual. This is not a brawl in a tavern. This is a duel of echoes. Do not fight him with your arms. Fight him with the history that flows through those bones.Lennon parried a downward strike, his silver claw singing as it collided with the guardian’s heavy metal plate. The impact vibrated through his entire skeletal structure, and for a second, he saw flashes of a forgotten war. He saw shields breaking and spears shattering.
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