Suddenly, the landscape of the living planet shifted. The colossal form of the world-dragon began to condense, to fold in upon itself with a low, tectonic rumble that vibrated through Nero’s soul. The mountain ranges smoothed into limbs. The continental plates reshaped into a torso. The great, amber eye focused and drew closer.
Where the primordial dragon had been, now stood a figure.
It was a middle-aged man, hovering in the golden-brown light. He had thick, earthy brown hair that fell to his shoulders like a lion’s mane. His eyes were reptilian—slitted pupils in irises the color of rich, wet soil. Two powerful, curved horns, the texture of ancient, polished stone, swept back from his forehead. A long, muscular tail, covered in fine brown scales, swished slowly behind him.
The resemblance was startling. The horns, the tail, the aura of contained, bestial power... he looked like an older, more majestic, and infinitely more ancient version of Nero’s own draconic form.
Even in this humanoid shape, the pressure emanating from him was imnse. It wasn’t aggressive; it was the sheer, passive weight of geological ages, of continents resting on his shoulders. He was density and patience given form.
The being—Terradon—floated forward and stood calmly before Nero’s floating soul. Their eyes locked: Nero’s soul-form filled with shock and confusion, and Terradon’s ancient, knowing gaze.
Then, with a grace that belied his imnse power, Terradon bent one knee in mid-air. He bowed his horned head slightly, his voice a deep, resonant echo that seed to rise from the very core of a planet.
"Terradon greets the heir to the throne," the words rolled out, heavy with formal gravity. "It is... good to see you again, Primordial Heir."
Nero’s soul-form could only stare. All coherent thought montarily shattered.
"...Huh?"
The sound was less a word and more a blunt expulsion of pure bewildernt. Confusion was etched onto every line of his astral face. It was understandable. Imagine a literal embodint of the earth, a myth made flesh, appearing before you, bowing, and calling you by a title that sounded like it belonged in a cosmic legend. The term ’Primordial Heir’ wasn’t entirely new—whispers of it had haunted the edges of his strange life—but never had it been spoken so directly, with such solemn certainty.
He wasn’t a fool. The pieces—the mysterious stars, the sealed vortex, his unnatural abilities—clicked into a terrifying, grander picture. He understood what this implied, even if the full truth was still shrouded. But understanding and accepting were two different things. The sheer scale of the claim left him reeling.
After a long, silent mont where the only sound was the hum of terrestrial energy, Nero’s soul-form managed to gather itself. He cleared his throat, a aningless gesture in this form, but a habit of the living.
"Rise," he said, his voice sounding small in the vastness. "What do you an, ’it’s good to see again?’ Have I... reincarnated or sothing? And what do you an, ’Primordial Heir?’"
The questions tumbled out, one after another. He fired them off knowing, deep in his gut, that he wouldn’t get real answers. The nature of these mysteries seed built on layers of obfuscation.
As expected, Terradon’s next words confird his assumption. The World-Serpent rose from his kneel, his reptilian eyes holding a mixture of respect and profound, unshakable patience.
"Certainly, Heir. But forgive , for I am unable to respond to any of those questions at this ti." His tone was final, like the closing of a granite door. "I believe you will understand everything in due ti. The revelations must co in their proper season."
He paused, allowing the refusal to settle. Then he continued, his voice taking on the cadence of a fundantal teaching.
"For now, you must simply know this: you are the heir to the throne. The absolute ruler of the cosmic energy—what this world calls ’prana.’ By that right, you hold dominion over the laws born from this energy. That ans... us."
Terradon gestured vaguely around them, at the light of the brown star, implying the red and golden ones as well.
"To be the heir ans you are capable of wielding us to our absolute limits. Of ruling over us. Of bending the very laws of the universe by using us as your instrunts. That is what it ans to sit upon that throne."
His gaze intensified, boring into Nero’s soul.
"Until now, you have simply been using us. The red star of Fire. The golden star of Lightning. You have not yet conquered us. You have not forced our full submission to your will. You must, Heir. If you wish to wield our true power, and not just borrowed sparks and flas... you must conquer us."
The explanation hung in the vibrant air. It was vast, terrifying, and yet, it made a brutal kind of sense. The struggles, the limits he hit, the feeling of his laws being just out of reach... it wasn’t about practice. It was about dominion.
Nero understood. The path forward was no longer just about training. It was about a coronation. And the first steps were a series of conquests, starting with the very powers he thought were his own.
Nero took a deep, centering breath, a reflex that held no air but helped settle the storm of frustration and awe in his soul. The monuntal implications were dizzying, but the practical next step was what mattered. He pushed the cosmic questions aside and focused on the imdiate "how."
Calming the whirlwind inside, he asked, his voice asured, "So, how do I exactly conquer each law? Is it through a trial?"
As he spoke, his mind was a blur of activity, running countless scenarios. Would it be a battle? A test of will? A puzzle etched into the fabric of reality itself?
"Exactly," Terradon confird with a slow, grave nod. The single word carried the weight of epochs. He continued, his voice shaping the concept into clearer form. "You must first accept the owner of the law—its true essence, its spirit, its will—wholeheartedly.
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