Peace is a fragile thing. It sits lightly on the edge of a blade, waiting for the slightest tremor to send it bleeding into chaos.
While Aidenâs world basked in a rare calmâthe soft warmth of victory, the quiet hum of new power gainedâelsewhere, far from the marbled halls of Leonidus, that blade had already fallen.
The Slayer Guild â Dawn of Panic
The Slayer Guild stood at the heart of northembriaâs inner city, its towers of dark stone reaching into the clouds like the ribs of a godâs corpse.
For centuries, it had been the silent guardian of humanityâthe shield against the things that slithered beneath earth and sky. But tonight, those same walls trembled.
Within the Guildâs council chamber, light flickered from crystal torches that lined the roomâs circular expanse.
Shadows danced across faces etched with worry, anger, and age. The five elders of the Guildâeach a name whispered in both reverence and fearâhad gathered for an emergency meeting.
At the far end of the table sat
Arina
, her white hair like a bladeâs gleam in the dim light.
Her crimson eyesâthose infamous blood eyesâwatched the others in silence, their depths unreadable.
Her black cloak hung loosely around her shoulders, revealing the faint shimmer of the runic tattoos carved into her skin.
No one spoke at first. Only the faint hum of the barrier wards filled the air.
The eldest among them, Elder Vorn, his beard silver as winter frost, slammed his fist against the table. "This cannot be true," he hissed. "No creature has
ever
escaped the Sky Dungeon."
Across from him, Elder Mirra, thin and sharp as a blade herself, replied coldly, "The caretakerâs report is verified.
The outer seal was ruptured from
within
. The guardsâevery one of themâwere found dead. Their mana drained to husks."
A murmur rippled through the room.
"Impossible."
"Sky- dungeons are divine constructs. They all were sealed..."
"It would take a being of immense powerâ"
"Or something worse," Arina said softly.
Her voice cut through the noise like frost through fog. The others turned toward her, the room falling back into uneasy silence.
Arina leaned forward, fingers interlaced. "The caretaker sent a notice alert to all regional guilds. Whatever broke free wasnât a normal entity. It was labeled as a hybrid."
Elder Vorn frowned. "A hybrid of what?"
Her eyes flickered with crimson light. "Elf and ....a dragon. A creature born of both mana and flesh, neither holy nor damned. An abomination."
The room erupted.
Elder Tormâmassive, scarred, his left arm a prosthetic forged of enchanted steelâsnarled, "You mean to tell us one of those ancient horrors really
exists
? I thought the archives of the Great Purge destroyed every trace of them!"
Arina met his gaze calmly. "So did I."
Silence returned, heavy as stone.
Then, Elder Mirra spoke again, voice trembling for the first time. "Public safety. We must alert the cities. Issue an evacuation order, at least to the northern territories, the lands of Wessex, Saxon, leonidus. If that thing moves freelyâ"
"No!" Vorn cut her off. "Do you understand what panic that will cause? Weâll tear the realm apart before the creature even moves a finger. We cannot expose the Guildâs failure."
"Failure?" Mirra spat. "You call this pride? The guild was built to
protect
the people, not to bury them in silence!"
"Enough."
The word came from Arina again, cold and absolute. Her voice held the quiet authority of one who had killed kings and wept for none.
She rose from her seat. "Both of you are rightâand both of you are wrong."
The torches flared slightly, reacting to the surge of her mana.
"This is no ordinary escape. This beingâthis abominationâhas purpose. It isnât wandering aimlessly.
The caretakerâs last divination before his death confirmed it was moving south, toward the territories of.. Leonidus."
"Leonidus?" Elder Torm frowned. "The Viscountâs lands?"
"Yes," Arina replied. "House Augustus."
A ripple of unease passed through her. For the briefest instant, her eyes softened, though she quickly masked it.
None of the elders knew what she knew.
None of them knew that the being which escaped the Sky Dungeon was not a nameless monster.
She had seen it onceâdays agoâdeep within the lands of the elves. It had worn dragons horns , and eleven face, only a voice. A voice that whispered his name.
Aiden.
Back then, they had escaped. Aidenâs words and promises holding the abomination back
That person was now in Leonidus.
And the creature... might be coming for him, trying to fulfill his promise.
Arina exhaled, forcing her heartbeat to slow.
"We will not announce this publicly," she said finally. "Not yet. We cannot afford chaos. But we
will
act."
Elder Mirra slammed a palm against the table. "And what will you do, Arina? Pray? Trap it with another seal? Youâve seen what theyâre capable of."
Arinaâs expression did not change. "Then Iâll see it again."
The air grew colder. Even the crystals dimmed.
"Iâll lead a covert unit. No banners, no fanfare. We track it before it reaches Leonidus. We end it before it reaches himâbefore it reaches
anyone
."
"Why Leonidus?" Vorn asked, narrowing his eyes. "Whatâs in that province worth a hybridâs attention?"
Arina stayed silent.
When the meeting ended, the elders dispersed in silence. Only Arina remained.
She stood by the window, staring out at the storm clouds gathering beyond the city.
Her reflection looked back at herâa woman who had once been the Guildâs brightest star, now haunted by a shadow of her own making.
He had helped him heal, joining their souls. She had to save him, one way or another. Cause if he does...she dies.
Her hand drifted to the her lips, missing that fruitful kiss.
She licked her lips. Once. Twice. To remember his taste, to remember his touch.
"Damn you," she whispered, not sure if she spoke to the creature... or to Aiden.
Then she turned away, her cloak flaring behind her like a black wing.
While the Guild prepared for shadows, Leonidus basked in light.
The morning sun gilded the manorâs towers in gold. The banners of the Viscount fluttered proudly in the breeze. To anyone passing by, it was a picture of serenityâwealth and peace standing hand in hand.
Aidenâs carriage rolled through the gates, wheels crunching over cobblestone. The guards saluted, servants hurried forward, and the air filled with the sound of bells.
He stepped down, cloak damp from the previous nightâs storm, boots gleaming with travel dust.
His gaze swept across the familiar courtyardâthe gardens, the fountain, the statues of past Leonidus rulers. It all looked the same. But he knew better. Nothing ever stayed the same.
"Welcome home, lady Flora, Sir Aiden!" one of the servants cried.
He nodded politely, but his eyes were already drawn to the entrance where three figures waited.
Augustus, the Viscount, stood tall despite his age, his smile bright with both relief and pride. Beside him stood Catherine, her elegance untouched by time, her golden hair catching the sunlight like a halo.
"Flora...Aiden!" Augustus strode forward, clapping a hand on his shoulder. "By the gods, itâs good to see you alive."
Aiden bowed his head. "My lord."
"Youâve done well," Augustus said, voice swelling with satisfaction. "The Wessex matter is settled. The gold traced, the culprits exposed. The Duke himself sent a letter commending your efficiency. I knew...oh I knew I could trust you."
Aiden smiled faintly, the kind of smile that hid more than it revealed. "I only did my duty."
Catherineâs gaze lingered on him a heartbeat too long. Her eyes, blue and knowing. As her tongue licked her own lips as she bit it. Her eyes hungry like a starving dragon.