The streets of Daunturia stretched out before them, bustling with activity and layered with the distinct scents of humanity—sweat, spices, and the faint metallic tang of the city’s industry. Caelan Faelora took the lead, his steps brisk as he navigated through the winding alleys and avenues with practiced ease. The party trailed close behind, their expressions a mix of curiosity and unease as they absorbed the overwhelming grandeur of the capital.
Jannet—or Magnus, as he was known to these humans—walked with his head low, his golden eyes scanning the surroundings with calculated caution. His massive form towered over the throngs of people, drawing gasps and whispers wherever they passed. Children pointed with wide eyes, while merchants fell silent mid-haggle, their goods momentarily forgotten as they stared at the Sovereign Komodo. The guards stationed along the streets tightened their grips on their weapons, their unease palpable despite Caelan’s authoritative presence.
Caelan’s voice broke the silence that had settled over the group. “Keep moving,” he urged, his tone sharp but not unkind. “The guild will honor its word, but the Council...” He trailed off, his expression darkening for a brief moment. “The Council is not fully informed about Magnus—not his actions, nor the nature of his sovereignty. There will be complications.”
Jannet rumbled a low response, his voice carrying the weight of his Sovereign authority. “Complications I can handle. I will not hide who I am.”
Caelan glanced back at him, his lips curling into a tight smile. “Bold words. Just remember, the guild has its own politics, and not everyone will see your presence here as a boon.”
The group pressed onward, the din of the city rising around them. The capital’s adventuring guild branch came into view, a sprawling complex that dominated the surrounding district. Unlike the modest hall in Valos, this guild was an entire subsector of the city, its grounds filled with bustling shops, lively taverns, and guild-affiliated facilities. The main building loomed above them, an architectural marvel of towering spires and intricate carvings that seemed to shimmer under the midday sun.
Jannet paused as they approached, his sharp gaze taking in the sight. The structure reminded him of the castles he had only read about in his human life—fairy tales brought to life in stone and steel. It was a stark contrast to the simpler, more utilitarian design of Newscar, and he couldn’t help but feel a twinge of admiration.
“Impressive, isn’t it?” Caelan said, noticing Jannet’s lingering gaze. “The guild here functions as a hub for adventurers across the kingdom. You’ll find no shortage of talent, resources, or ambition within these walls.”
As they entered, the atmosphere shifted. The hall was a cacophony of activity, filled with adventurers of all shapes and sizes. Tables were laden with maps, contracts, and tankards of ale. The air was thick with the hum of conversations, the occasional burst of laughter, and the clatter of weapons being inspected and repaired. It was a chaotic yet organized space, a testament to the guild’s role as a cornerstone of the adventuring world.
The group’s arrival did not go unnoticed. Conversations faltered, and heads turned as the adventurers took in the sight of Jannet. His massive frame seemed to fill the space, his obsidian scales gleaming under the hall’s enchanted lights. Whispers spread like wildfire, and Jannet caught snippets of their words: “a monster…” “no, a Lizard…” “what’s it doing here?”
Caelan raised a hand, commanding the room’s attention. “Listen up,” he called, his voice cutting through the murmur of voices. “This is Magnus, Sovereign of Newscar and a provisional member of the Adventurer’s Guild. He’s under my jurisdiction, and I expect all of you to treat him with the respect due to any silver-ranked adventurer.”
A murmur of assent rippled through the crowd, though the tension in the room remained palpable. Jannet stood tall, his golden eyes meeting the curious and wary gazes of the adventurers. He knew that respect would not come easily, but he had no intention of shrinking under their scrutiny.
Caelan led the group deeper into the hall, his steps purposeful as he guided them to a quieter corner. “You’ll be staying here for the night,” he said, gesturing to a modest space partitioned by heavy curtains. “It’s not much, but it’s yours. Use this time to rest and prepare. The Council meeting is in two days, and I suspect it will be... challenging.”
Jannet’s tail flicked in quiet irritation, but he inclined his head in acknowledgment. “Very well.”
As the group settled into their temporary quarters, Jannet allowed himself a moment to reflect. The journey to Daunturia had been fraught with danger and uncertainty, but the capital presented challenges of a different kind. The weight of diplomacy, the scrutiny of the guild, and the looming presence of the Council all threatened to test his resolve.
Yet amidst the uncertainty, there was a spark of determination. Jannet had come too far to falter now. The Sovereign Komodo would not bow to fear or doubt. He would face whatever trials lay ahead, not just for himself, but for those who depended on him—the lizards of Newscar, the humans who had placed their trust in him, and the fragile alliances he sought to build.
As the curtains closed around their makeshift quarters, Jannet’s thoughts turned to the future. The capital was a place of power and intrigue, a crucible in which his mettle would be tested. He would rise to the challenge, one step at a time.
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Duke Fayeron sat alone in his dimly lit study, his fingers drumming impatiently against the polished wood of his desk. The chamber, lined with shelves of ancient tomes and adorned with faded banners of his once-proud house, felt oppressively small. The air was thick with the scent of parchment and candle wax, a cloying reminder of the stagnant state of his affairs.
Nothing had gone right this year. His mind churned with the litany of failures that had tarnished his standing at court. His cousins had been humiliated, his ventures sabotaged, and now this—the damned lizard that had upended his plans. Reports from his remaining loyal retainers painted a picture of utter humiliation: the Sovereign Komodo had devoured his grain stores, struck down his second cousin with impunity, and now had the audacity to march into the capital under the banner of the Adventurer’s Guild.
The drumming of his fingers ceased as he leaned back in his chair, the weight of his position pressing down on him. The king would not be pleased. Fayeron’s failures were no secret, and the court buzzed with whispers of his diminishing influence. He could already picture the scene: the king seated upon his gilded throne, the ever-present shadow of the void mage Rys lurking nearby. That insufferable mage had the king’s ear, and Fayeron knew well how Rys relished every opportunity to twist the knife of his disdain; the mage seemed to have other plans too.
With a heavy sigh, Fayeron pushed himself to his feet, smoothing the creases of his embroidered tunic. The summons to the royal chamber could not be ignored, and delaying would only worsen the sting of what awaited him. He strode from his study, his boots echoing against the marble floors of his estate as he made his way to the waiting carriage.
The ride to the palace was a somber affair. The streets of Daunturia passed by in a blur, their vibrant energy muted by the weight of his thoughts. By the time he arrived, the grandiose halls of the palace felt more like a mausoleum than a seat of power. The assembled nobles in the antechamber greeted him with cold smiles and thinly veiled contempt, their eyes glinting with the thrill of his downfall.
When the herald announced his presence, Fayeron stepped into the throne room with a practiced air of confidence that barely masked the dread coiling in his stomach. The king sat resplendent upon his throne, his gaze sharp and unreadable. Rys stood at his side, a faint smirk playing at his lips as his dark eyes glimmered with something close to satisfaction.
The tension in the room was palpable as Fayeron approached, his every step a battle against the oppressive weight of his failure. He bowed low, his voice steady despite the turmoil within. “Your Majesty, I stand before you as your loyal servant.”
The king’s gaze bore into him, and Fayeron braced himself for what was to come.
The king’s expression remained impassive as he spoke, his voice resonant and controlled. “Loyalty, Duke Fayeron, is a weighty claim. Yet the borderlands, entrusted to your care, have seen more ruin than order. Reports of corruption, failure, and chaos reach me as frequently as the tide.”
Fayeron straightened slightly, his tone measured but defensive. “Your Majesty, corruption is a grave accusation. I have indeed lost soldiers to the calamities wrought by the beast—but the rampage of the ancient crocodile devastated my lands. My people languish not from neglect, but from catastrophe.”
The king’s sharp gaze bore into him. “And yet, Duke, catastrophe demands leadership. Your duty to protect the kingdom’s borderlands is not diminished by adversity. It is heightened. Instead, I find the lands rife with suffering, grain stores pillaged, and now...” His eyes narrowed. “A Sovereign lizard strides freely into my capital under the guild’s aegis.”
Fayeron clenched his fists, struggling to maintain his composure. Before he could respond, Rys leaned close to the king, his voice a low whisper meant only for the monarch’s ears. Fayeron’s sharp eyes caught the faintest twitch of discomfort in the mage’s posture, a shadow of pain that flickered across his otherwise imperious demeanor. Whatever injury Rys nursed, it did not lessen the venom of his words.
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The king straightened, his voice cutting through the thick silence. “Bring him in.”
The chamber doors opened, and Fayeron’s breath caught as his second cousin was led inside, his once-proud form shackled and hunched in disgrace. The man’s voice, trembling but clear, echoed through the throne room. “I confess to corruption, Your Majesty. Grain meant for the people was sold, the profits... squandered.”
The nobles murmured among themselves, their disdain palpable. Fayeron’s face burned with shame and fury as he turned his gaze to the king his 2nd cousin was supposed to be dead. But the monarch’s expression remained cold, unyielding.
“For your family’s betrayal, for the failures to protect this kingdom, and for the chaos you have allowed to flourish,” the king declared, his voice like steel, “your title is forfeit. You are stripped of your lands, your privileges, and your standing. Rys, step forward.”
Fayeron’s heart sank as the void mage approached, his smirk now a full grin. The king continued, “For your service to the crown in our time of need and your unyielding loyalty to me since our meeting, I name you the new Duke of the Borderlands.”
The chamber erupted in whispers as Fayeron stood frozen, his world crumbling around him. The weight of his failures bore down on him, and the last vestiges of his pride shattered beneath the king’s decree.
Rys stood motionless in the grand hall, the weight of the king’s decree settling upon him like a mantle of iron. The assembled nobles around him, still murmuring in quiet shock, cast sidelong glances that bristled with a mixture of curiosity and fear. He barely noticed. His attention was focused inward, on the relentless pulse of pain that throbbed in his head like a drumbeat of failure. It had been weeks since the agony began, weeks since the seed had been severed from the font in the northern wilds, and yet the echoes of that catastrophic loss lingered within him, refusing to fade.
The king’s voice called him back to the present. “Duke Rys,” the monarch intoned, his words heavy with ceremonial finality, “you bear the responsibility of the borderlands now. Serve this kingdom well, and ensure no further calamity befalls it.”
Rys inclined his head, his expression perfectly measured. “I am honored, Your Majesty. Your faith in me will not be misplaced.”
Beneath the calm façade, Rys’s thoughts churned. The king’s faith was irrelevant; it was the power granted to him as duke that mattered. His control over the borderlands, the resources of the ducal palace, and the strategic position it afforded were the keys to his next attempt. Failure was not an option this time.
As the meeting dragged on with the mundanities of court politics, Rys played his part with precision. He feigned interest in the king’s declarations, interjected with carefully measured words that carried the weight of deference and insight. The courtiers’ eyes were on him now, assessing the man who had been elevated so suddenly, and he gave them nothing to exploit. The pain in his head flared periodically, a jagged reminder of the price he had paid, but Rys’s focus never wavered. He had survived worse.
When the court was dismissed, Rys strode from the throne room with measured steps, his new title heavy but not unwelcome. The ducal palace awaited him, a fortress of stone and intrigue nestled at the kingdom’s frontier. It would serve his purposes well. Plans within plans unfurled in his mind as he navigated the palace corridors, his thoughts a labyrinth of contingencies and ambitions.
By the time he reached the privacy of his chambers, the mask of composure cracked. He sank into a high-backed chair, one hand pressing against his temple as he summoned his will to suppress the pain. It was not merely physical; the ache was a reminder of his failure, a lingering echo of the severed seed and the destroyed font. The elders of the clans had warned him of the cost, but he had underestimated the extent of his hubris. His overconfidence had led to ruin, and now the debt had to be paid.
Rys let out a slow breath, forcing his thoughts to settle. He could not allow himself to dwell on the past; the future demanded his full attention. The seed had been a shard of voidbound darkness, a relic cultivated in the far northern wilds by the great work of the clans. It had been everything to them, their most precious creation, and Rys had failed to protect it. He could still hear the elders’ words, their voices laden with quiet fury and disappointment.
“The font must endure, Rys. The seed’s power is not a gift; it is a trust. Guard it, or all will be for naught.”
He had guarded it, but not well enough. When the font was destroyed, the pain had nearly shattered his mind. The force of the severance had left him incapacitated for days, and the realization of what he had lost had been a wound far deeper than the physical agony. Yet in the midst of that despair, Rys had begun to piece together the truth. The adventuring group that had destroyed the font was no ordinary band of mercenaries. They had been prepared, their strength and coordination far beyond what he had expected. And when he arrived at the site days later, he saw the evidence of their true weapon: a beast of immense size and vitality, its claw marks etched into the shattered remnants of the font.
Another huge fucking lizard. A creature of such rare power that even the blighting drain of the font had failed to incapacitate it. The implications had been staggering, but they also provided clarity. Rys had underestimated his enemies once. He would not make the same mistake again.
He leaned back in his chair, his fingers tapping against the armrest as he contemplated his next move. The ducal palace would serve as the nexus for his new plan. The vast estate, with its labyrinthine halls and secluded chambers, offered the perfect environment for cultivating another seed. The font’s destruction had taught him that caution was paramount. This time, the defenses would be impenetrable and he wouldn't rely on the leyline to accelerate things out of control. The palace itself would become a fortress of darkness, a bastion of power that no adventurer or beast could breach.
The pain flared again, sharper this time, and Rys’s hand clenched into a fist. He had endured this long; he would endure until the work was complete. The drug he had introduced to the king’s regimen—a subtle but insidious concoction—had ensured his influence at court. The king’s dependence on Rys’s counsel was now absolute, and it had given him the leverage he needed to claim the ducal title. But even that victory paled in comparison to what lay ahead. The next seed would not fail. It would grow, and its power would elevate Rys beyond the confines of this wretched world.
Rys’s thoughts turned to the beast once more. The massive lizard and its tamer had destroyed his hope, but they had also revealed the flaws in his defenses. Their presence in the capital was a complication, but it was also an opportunity. He would study them, learn their weaknesses, and ensure they could not interfere again.
The night deepened, and the shadows within Rys’s chambers seemed to thicken, drawn to him like moths to a flame. His resolve hardened, the pain in his head now a distant echo drowned out by the clarity of his purpose. Plans within plans, layers of deception and ambition—they coiled around him like a serpent, waiting to strike.
Rys would not fail again. He would defend his next attempt to the end. And when the work was complete, the borders of this kingdom would no longer bind him. The void’s whispers promised something greater, a destiny that awaited beyond the stars. He closed his eyes, the shadows embracing him as the first threads of his new web began to weave.
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Jannet sat quietly on the edge of the camp space, his massive tail curled protectively around the meager privacy the thick curtain offered. The guild’s accommodations, while functional, felt confining compared to the open plains or the dense jungles of Newscar. Around him, his companions moved with the practiced ease of seasoned adventurers, unpacking supplies and setting up for the night’s rest. Torren adjusted his gear before slinging his satchel over his shoulder. "I’ll grab some food and be back in a while," he said, his tone light but purposeful. Without waiting for a reply, he strode out into the evening streets, leaving the rest of the group to their preparations.
Fialla, ever curious, settled beside Jannet, her sharp eyes fixed on the strange artifact that had become a fixture of their travels: the compass-bracelet.
The compass gleamed faintly on Jannet’s thick wrist, its intricate engravings shimmering with an otherworldly light. Since its appearance, it had been a source of both intrigue and frustration. Nightly, they had inspected it, turning it this way and that, testing its reactions to different stimuli. But tonight was different. As Jannet held it aloft, the device seemed to stir, its mechanisms clicking softly before unfolding with a fluid grace.
Fialla leaned closer, her breath hitching as the compass opened further than it ever had before. It unfurled like an astrolabe, delicate rings of light extending outward in a mesmerizing display. A narrow beam of starlight emerged, forming a path that shimmered faintly in the dim light of the camp.
“What is it doing?” Fialla whispered, her voice tinged with awe.
Jannet tilted his head, his golden eyes narrowing as he studied the projection. “It’s... showing me something. A path.”
The beam extended beyond the confines of their tent, angling toward the guild hall’s door. It pulsed faintly, as though urging him to follow. Jannet rose to his full height, the motion drawing the attention of the others. Leth, Calis, and Gerrin gathered quickly, their expressions ranging from curiosity to wariness.
“Where’s it leading?” Gerrin asked, his hand instinctively resting on the hilt of his sword.
“I don’t know,” Jannet replied, his voice low and contemplative. “But I intend to find out.”
The beam retracted into the bracelet as Jannet stepped into the streets, but the faint glimmer of its path lingered in his mind. His companions followed without hesitation, their trust in the Sovereign evident in their swift movements. The evening air was cool, the streets of Daunturia quieter than during the day but still alive with the murmur of life. The group weaved through the alleys and avenues, the starlight path guiding them ever onward.
As they ventured deeper into the city, the opulence of the guild district gave way to the stark realities of the poorer quarters. The cobblestones grew uneven, the buildings more dilapidated, their windows boarded up and doors hanging ajar. The starlight led them unerringly, its glow unwavering even as the surroundings became increasingly desolate.
Finally, the path ended before a house that appeared abandoned, its facade worn and weathered. The windows were shuttered, and the door was reinforced with crude planks nailed haphazardly across its frame. Jannet stopped, his massive form casting a long shadow over the structure.
“This is it,” he said, his voice a rumbling whisper. He crouched slightly, peering at the entrance. It would be a tight fit if he attempted to enter, but the compass’s guidance was unmistakable.
The group exchanged uneasy glances, the tension palpable. Fialla stepped forward, her hand resting lightly on Jannet’s forearm. “What do we do now?”
Jannet’s golden eyes gleamed faintly as he considered their next move. “We see what the compass wants us to find. Together.”