319 Bearer of Dragons
[POV: Ren Xun]
Ren Xun had prepared himself for hard negotiations, but this⊠this he had not foreseen. He sat on the governorâs throne, posture steady, though deep within his chest his heart drummed like war drums.
âI dare ask, why seek me now?â he said evenly, his voice carrying across the hall.
Deng Chanâs emerald gaze sharpened like a dragonâs claw. âDonât play me for a fool, prince. Surely, youâve anticipated this. After sending so many of your agents looking for us, they were bound to make enough noise for us to hear.â
She got it right.
It had been Ren Xunâs intention to be loud and be heard, a way to tempt the enemy to do something or anything. Maybe in their ignorance of the dragonsâ hatred for a certain faction, they would do something to piss them off and advance Ren Xunâs agenda.
Deng Chan continued. âAs for why I sought you now? It is to claim what we are owed. The late Emperor Nongmin promised us a home⊠this, he achieved. But more than that, he promised us a Dragon King to rule us and continue our bloodline. The latter he has yet to accomplish. With your Empire on the brink of destruction, we shall now take what we are due.â
Ren Xun folded his hands before him, his voice calm yet sharp as a drawn blade. âFine⊠But understand this. I shall provide you with a method to propagate your race and ensure the survival of your species, but there will be no love, no affection⊠only the responsibility born of a binding contract. This relationship is nothing more than a transaction.â
Deng Chanâs lips curved, but there was no warmth in the expression. âWe are fine with that. We are dragons. We care not for transient things when the future of all dragonkind is at stake. So, who is it going to be?â
Her eyes narrowed. âIâve heard a great many things about this existence called Da Weiââ
âItâs me.â
The words cut through the chamber like thunder. Silence fell heavy and absolute. To borrow a certain Da Weiâs vocabulary, awkward silence dominated the halls.
Deng Chan blinked, her composure cracking just enough to show genuine surprise. âExcuse me?â
Ren Xun straightened, his voice low but firm. âI am willing to offer myself to you in exchange for the dragonsâ might.â
For a heartbeat, no one moved. The white-robed attendantâs mouth opened slightly. Hei Yuan looked at him as though heâd grown another head. Even the air seemed to thicken, as if the hall itself was waiting for someone to break the spell.
From Ren Xunâs left, came a sound, sharp, bright, and utterly out of place.
Ren Jingyi threw her small hands into the air and doubled over laughing, her golden hair falling over her eyes. Her laughter rolled across the hall like a wild stream over stones.
âPffft⊠HAHAHAHA!â she gasped between fits. âYou? Youâre going to⊠to⊠HAAAHAHAHA!â
The tension cracked, and for a moment, even the dragonsâ expressions shifted, one of mild confusion, and another of faint amusement.
Hei Yuanâs eyes narrowed into daggers as he turned to the little blond girl by Ren Xunâs side. His glare was enough to silence most men, but Ren Jingyi was far from most.
She only slapped her knees and howled even harder. âHa ha ha ha ha ha
! Thatâs so funny! You are like a twig at best, Ren Xun!â she gasped, her voice carrying through the throne room. âThey said immense cultivation and strength that would match dragons⊠but you? They might crush you under their waist⊠Ha ha ha ha ha
!â
Ren Xunâs jaw tightened, his teeth grinding against one another. He immediately regretted bringing her here. A prince negotiating for survival and power should have had gravitas, not a childâs jeering commentary. But worse than the mockery was the realization that her jab might not be so far from the truth. However, the truth was Ren Xun have a plan and he intend to see it through, no matter how strange it sounded.
Deng Chan tilted her head, her lips curling into an amused, predatory smile. âI am afraid the goldfish was right. I donât mean offense, prince, but you would be crushed in between my thighs if we were to do the deed right now from where you sit.â
The chamber went silent for a beat, then Ren Jingyi puffed her cheeks and stomped her little foot.
âGoldfish? Did you just call me goldfish, like an insult?â
Before Jingyi could escalate further, a tall shadow loomed behind her. Hei Mao reached down with one hand and pinched the scruff of her collar as though she were no heavier than a kitten.
Her limbs flailed, and her voice turned into muffled indignation. âMfff-luflflf-! Put me down, you brute!â
Hei Mao bowed his head toward the dragons with solemn grace. âApologies for the behavior of my sister-disciple. She grew up spoiled by our master and thinks of everyone as inferior to her.â
Deng Chanâs emerald eyes glimmered as she studied Hei Mao. Her attendants exchanged whispers behind her, scales shimmering in faint light. She licked her lips just slightly, but enough for Ren Xun to notice.
âI wouldnât mind,â she purred, her voice velvet and steel, âeven if it was the young Shadow King himself.â
Just going according to planâŠ
Wit had always been Ren Xunâs sharpest blade, and now he unsheathed it with all the flair of a seasoned duelist. Rising from the governorâs throne, his voice rang clear through the hall.
âHow dare you so indolently and insolently refer to his venerable Hei Mao, as some mere and young Shadow King!â His finger jabbed forward like a spear, and his tone carried the full weight of righteous indignation. âDo you not see? He is an Immortal Ghost of immense power! Disciple of Da Wei! The Ancestor of the enigmatic Abyss Clan!â
The words cracked like thunder through the chamber.
Deng Chan, proud and poised a heartbeat before, stiffened. A flicker of unease crossed her eyes. Her green-robed attendants whispered hurriedly, their faces paling as they clutched at their sleeves, their draconic scales shimmering faintly in agitation.
âApologies!â Deng Chan blurted, her voice tight though she struggled to keep her mask intact. âI didnât mean to offend.â
Ren Xun suppressed a smirk. He didnât even know where to begin imagining how a ghost could possibly help dragons reproduce, but that didnât matter. What mattered was that his gambit had struck home.
They had underestimated Hei Mao. Their senses had failed them; of course, they couldnât measure his true depth. Dragons were powerful, yes, but perception could still be fooled by the unfathomable. To them, Hei Mao must have seemed merely formidable, not the dangerous ghost he truly was.
And yet, Ren Xun knew it wasnât just Hei Maoâs cultivation that shook them. It was the half-truth he had dropped, the one word that carried the weight of ancient nightmares: Abyss Clan.
Long ago, the Abyss Clan had stood shoulder to shoulder with dragons as equals, even rivals. For Hei Mao to be tied to that era, to that bloodstained legend, was enough to rattle even the proudest dragon princess.
Hei Mao, until now silent as stone, finally stirred. His spiritual pressure surged outward like an invisible tidal wave, flooding the throne room.
The air itself quivered. Torches guttered. The walls of the chamber groaned under the sudden weight of his presence.
The three dragons gasped in unison. Scales erupted across their skin in an uncontrollable reflex, their bodies trembling as if preparing for battle or flight.
For a heartbeat, the throne room became a battlefield without weapons.
With a blink, Hei Mao withdrew his pressure. The weight vanished, leaving only silence and ragged breathing behind.
Hei Maoâs voice was deep, hollow, yet undeniably commanding. âYou are forgiven.â
The dragons bowed their heads.
It was time for Ren Xun to unleash his trick, less of a strategy and more of a con.
âI understand your misgivings with myself offering to you, Princess Deng Chan,â he began solemnly. âBut know this, it was neither a jest nor an attempt at insult. The blood of the Final Emperor Nongmin and the Dragon God of Riverfall both flows in me. Give me time to grow, and I will bear the strength enough to fulfill my duties to you in due time. But for now⊠for now, I need the might of the dragons to repel my enemies.â
His declaration was bold, audacious even, but laced with the undeniable echo of lineage.
Deng Chanâs emerald eyes narrowed, her green scales along her jaw shimmering faintly as if stirred by emotion. She stepped forward, her presence filling the chamber, and her answer came sharp and decisive.
âFine! Then you have a deal. In a thousand yearsâ time, we shall have your seed!â
The words resounded like a bell toll.
Ren Xun inclined his head, hiding the twitch of a smirk beneath his calm facade. Inwardly, he exhaled in relief. He had bought himself time, a thousand yearsâ worth of it. That was more than enough. By then, after their enemies were dust, after their Empire rebuilt itself anew, surely he would have found a way to wriggle free. Surely Nongmin or someone else could take his place when the moment came. One way or another, he would slither out of this draconic bargain.
But for now, he had secured the dragonsâ strength. That was victory enough.
Deng Chanâs gaze softened, though hunger still lingered in her expression, both for power and for what his bloodline promised.
âI shall have my dragonkin return to the land of dragons to bring more of us,â she said with a proud lift of her chin. âWhile I myself shall attend to you, oh, new Dragon King!â
The words struck like a thunderclap.
Hei Mao raised a single brow. Hei Yuan couldnât hide the way his jaw tightened in shock. And Ren Jingyi⊠oh, she simply gaped before breaking into a grin wide enough to split her face, delight and disbelief mingling all at once.
Even Ren Xun, who had uttered the gambit himself, was left momentarily stunned. He, a Dragon King? That had not been part of the plan. He only wanted their strength⊠Not their crown! Yet here he stood, now saddled with a title that carried the weight of destiny itself.
Deng Chanâs voice rang out again, clear and commanding, sealing the matter before any could question it further.
âOnce my kin arrive, we shall begin the crowning rites. You will be our monarch in name and in destiny.â
Ren Xunâs heart hammered. He forced a composed smile, but inside, all he could think was: âWhat in the heavens have I just gotten myself into?â
Never had Ren Xun imagined a scheme to backfire so miserably. He had thought of dragons as aloof, aloft, and untouchable, creatures who would scoff at mortals like him. Yet here they were, practically throwing themselves at his feet, eager to bind themselves under his rule.
âAre they so desperate?â he wondered bitterly. âTo expand their bloodline now, of all times, when war presses on every border?â
For a fleeting moment, he was tempted to drag his grandfather, Nongmin, before them and have him serve as their stud. But Ren Xun knew better. His grandfather would never abide by such a humiliation, nor relinquish his dignity. Nongmin had already made his intentions clear that he would relinquish the crown entirely to raise Da Wei to the throne. Ren Xun had no plans to confront the Final Emperorâs decision.
He couldnât truly complain either. With this, the strength of dragons was his to command, or at least tethered to him. The problem now lay in the bonds themselves; how easily could he extricate himself from this role once the war ended?
Days passed. Above Yellow Dragon, great serpentine forms soared through the skies, there forms blotting out the sun and tails cracking against clouds. Dragons had gathered to witness his rise. The city, awestruck, trembled beneath their shadows, yet cheered all the same.
Ren Xun sat upon an elevated platform, the throne beneath him forged of sharp dragon scales, each jagged enough to slice his skin if he so much as leaned wrong. It was a throne meant to remind him: power was never without pain.
To his right stood Da Wei, clad in armor of gold, blue, and gray. Though Ren Xun knew it was merely Da Weiâs Human Soul projection, it still weighed heavily. To his left stood Deng Chan, radiant in green, her scales catching the sun like emerald fire.
The ceremony began.
Deng Chanâs voice echoed across the square, her words less ritualistic and more primal, for dragons were beasts at their core. She raised her hand, and silence fell over mortals and dragons alike.
âRen Xun, blood of Emperor Nongmin and heir of the Dragon Godâs vein. Do you vow to fulfill your responsibility to us⊠to spread your seed into our wombs, so that our kind may continue?â
Ren Xunâs jaw tightened. Heat touched his ears, yet he forced himself to answer. âI will.â
âDo you vow to give your life, if need be, to ensure the survival of our kind?â
His hands curled around the throneâs arms until his knuckles whitened. âI will.â
âDo you vow to care for our future as though it were your own, to see us not as beasts but as kin, and to protect us with the authority granted to you?â
Ren Xunâs voice rang louder this time, resounding with authority. âI will.â
Deng Chan stepped closer, her tone final, her words as literal as her draconic nature.
âThen, from now on⊠You are our king, our fiancĂ©, and the bearer of dragons.â
The crowd murmured in awe. Some cheered already, though others shifted uncomfortably. To many, this was beyond strange.
Da Weiâs voice cut through the murmurs, steady and powerful.
âI, Da Wei, believe in this man. Ren Xun will be a great king, not only of dragons, but of men. He will strive for mutual prosperity between your kind and ours. He will put the welfare of others before his own, and with his wit, he will labor to help the world become a better place. He is flawed, yes, as all of us are, but he will not let those flaws rule him. He will overcome them.â
Da Wei turned, his gaze meeting Ren Xunâs, fierce yet kind. âThat is the faith I place in him. That is the faith you must place as well.â
From beneath his cloak, Da Wei lifted a crown wrought of gold and black jade, encrusted with jewels carved in the likeness of dragons. He raised it high and, with solemn dignity, lowered it upon Ren Xunâs brow.
The crown settled heavily, the weight of destiny pressing down on his skull. The dragons roared in unison, shaking the very skies. The people cheered, voices rising in a tide of adoration, awe, and hope.
Ren Xun sat crowned, his lips curved in a faint smile, yet deep within his heart, he whispered a truth that no roar nor cheer could shake.
âThe only woman I will ever cherish is Lin Lim. My bride, my beloved⊠no matter what crown they place upon me, my heart belongs to you alone.â
Too abruptly, deep in his heart, a painful searing sensation made itself known. For the first time, Ren Xun became aware of the formations etched in his heart... and he didnât like what he sawâŠ