Viridrigon stood a few paces ahead, his back to them, his hands working the stubborn stone as if it were clay. He was carving a deep hole into the summit’s peak.
"The nature of your seed, and the dark source of its creation, makes it incompatible with my realm," Viridrigon stated, his voice carrying clearly over the howling wind. He did not look up, his movents fluid as he prepared the earth. "It would be a poison to my sanctuary, a corruption I cannot risk for the sake of the life I nurture there."
He finally stood, the seed hovering expectantly between his hands. "However, I gave my word to guard it. It is only right that I plant it here, at the highest point of my mountain. It is isolated enough that its darkness will not bleed into my garden, yet it remains under my constant watch and influence, ensuring it stays tethered to the purpose you have chosen."
Viridrigon glanced back at the pair, a smile spreading across his face. "Besides," he added "I believe that once the seed sprouts and reaches its full maturity, it will add quite a spectacle to the landscape of the western continent."
Erik and Eldrin exchanged a look, their earlier downed energy eclipsed by a surge of renewed purpose. The path forward was finally illuminated. "Then how may we be of help to you, Great One?" Erik asked, his voice steady.
Viridrigon shook his head, his hands already hovering over the hole he had carved into the stone of the summit. "Leave the planting to . My soil or what I can shape from this rock is the only vessel capable of containing such a volatile beginning. Your task is already clear, you are to provide the nutrients for its growth. You both already know what it requires."
Eldrin’s brow furrowed, "If we do that, we’ll be forced to spend most of our ti running back and forth across these lands, hauling the essence the tree demands. It will draw attention, invite scrutiny, and force us into actions that will surely expose our movents."
Viridrigon finished digging, the earth at the peak now perfectly prid. "You do not need to fly as loudly as you did on your way here," the dragon replied "You could take mounts, or simply walk among the common folk. Travel as the world travels. It would be a far more effective way to gather the necessary sustenance without waking the suspicions of those who may want to see this tree wither before it ever sees the sun."
Eldrin shook his head, his brow tight with residual impatience. "That will take forever, traveling back and forth. So much got be get done during those tis"
Viridrigon finally turned to face the young man fully "A half-elf," the dragon mused, his voice trailing off as he studied Eldrin’s aura. "No... the cursed energy has distilled and refined your elvish blood. You are barely distinguishable from a full-blooded elf now. And yet, you worry about ti like a mayfly. That is... a fascinating contradiction."
Erik stepped forward, a flush of embarrassnt on his face "He was raised among humans, Great One. Even with the extended lifespan of a fifth-tier soul, he still perceives ti through a mortal lens. His bloodline has only recently shifted, he has much to learn about the patience required of our kind."
Viridrigon turned his attention back to the seed now resting in his palm "You have a treacherous road ahead of you, Erik," the dragon said, his tone turning somber. "The sa refining fire that changed your son will inevitably consu your people when the tree begins to cast its influence. They will not all be ready for the rebirth of their new selves. I hope you have a plan in place to help them navigate or survive that transition."
Erik went silent, the wind whipping at his simple tunic. He had been so consud by the singular, burning need to see his nation standing once more that he had barely looked past the imdiate horizon. He had envisioned the restoration of the kingdom, but he hadn’t accounted for the psychological and spiritual upheaval of a people suddenly forced to claim a heritage they know nothing of.
He realized he had only focused on getting back his advisors, his generals, and the minds of his inner circle as without them, he was rely a king in na.
Viridrigon carefully tucked the seed into the waiting earth, his hands moving with a gardener’s tenderness. Once the soil was leveled, the ornate watering can manifested in his grasp. With a gentle tilt, a crystal-clear stream bathed the mound, soaking deep into the mountain’s peak.
The dragon stepped back, his posture losing its regal grace. He leaned in, his erald eyes bright with a rare curiosity. He had seen the birthand deaths of the forests and it’s inhabitant, but a tree forged from dark ambition and elvish blood was a new variable in his garden.
The earth did not break apart like it does when a seed grows. From the center of the patch, a fountain of liquid, golden light erupted, pushing back the dimness of the summit. The sprout that surged upward was unlike any oak or pine, it was a twisting braid of pale, translucent tissue. It resembled a vast, living nervous system, a lattice of nerves and fiber that mimicked a complex circulatory structure. With every inch it gained, the bark shimred, a pearlescent skin stretched over a visible, pulsing heartbeat.
Its branches spiraling outward like elongated fingers reaching for the heavens. As it matured, the canopy unfurled in a breathtaking display, crystalline leaves, delicate and razor-sharp, glimring with the luster of refined, hamred gold.
Then, with a sound like a soft sigh of breath, the crowning bud at the tree’s zenith blossod. It shattered open, releasing a dense, glittering cloud of golden pollen. The mist cascaded down the mountain like a golden waterfall. As it settled, a heavy, hypnotic fragrance flooded the air, a complex perfu of sweet honey, the dark, earthen musk of nightshade, and the intoxicating, maddening scent of a love that promises no end.
The mountain peak had transford from a site of cold, hard stone into the epicenter of a miracle. The golden mist swirled around them, clinging to their skin like stardust, while the tree, a living, breathing monunt to Erik’s desperation stood at it’s center.
Viridrigon had abandoned all pretense of being a host. He moved around the pulsating, translucent trunk with the fanatical focus of eting his masterpiece. His large hands traced the vein-like fibers of the bark, his eyes half-closed as he synchronized his own rhythm with the tree’s frantic, gold-lit heartbeat. He was utterly entranced, lost in the delicate complexity of a life force that exuded from the small tree.
Eldrin remained frozen, his senses completely overwheld. The golden pollen coated his robes and skin, and as he drew in a deep, shivering breath, he realized the fragrance wasn’t just surrounding him, it was emanating from his own pores. It was as if his very biology had been rewritten to serve as a conduit for the tree’s influence.
He caught the scent of honeyed nightshade on his own hand, a sll that felt like a comfort "Beautiful," he breathed, the word barely a tremor. He didn’t know if he was marveling at the creation or mourning the loss of the man he had been before the mist touched him.
As for Erik, the beauty of the tree was rely the catalyst. A deeper, seismic shift overtook him as a shackle on his mind, one he had never realized was there finally shattered.
His transformation drew the watchful gaze of Viridrigon, who turned toward him with a solemn, conflicted expression. A flicker of concern crossed Viridrigon’s face, should he intervene? He hesitated, then slowly shook his head. "If I stop him now, he may never reach this state of clarity again," he reasoned, choosing instead to remain a silent guardian of this tamorphosis.
For Erik, the mont the tree erupted into existence before his eyes, his path until now suddenly crystallized. Every step, every choice, and every burden fell into place.
He rembered the nature of his domain, the "Sanctuary of the Fallen." Through the artifact from his last world, he was able to preserve and summon the souls of so of his people, refusing to let them fade, and actively defying the natural order to hold them fast. It was a noble preservation but in truth was an indulgence in disguise.
"I will not accept loss." That had been his mindset at the ti. Yet, after defeating Silas, the blind rage and the hollow pursuit of revenge finally burned out. In its place ca a period of reconstruction, he began to rebuild, organize, and stabilize. He turned his raw grief into rigid structure, a shift that reflected deeply within his domain, transforming it into a place of stark, disciplined order where his mantra beca, "If sothing remains, it must have aning."
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