The situation looked hopeless for either side.
Dagur's smile returned—a cold, calculated expression of anticipation.
It was the smile of soone who knew sothing others did not, a smile that suggested the current chaos was rely a prelude to sothing more significant.
Then a figure materialized beside him.
Yilar was unmistakably a Nynthrall—a race known for their wicked and vile nature. His pale skin seed to shimr with an inner light, angular features that looked carved from alabaster, and most striking of all: eyes of the deepest violet, eyes that seed to hold centuries of untold stories.
Dagur raised an eyebrow, his annoyance flickered. "What are you doing here?"
Yilar's gaze swept across the battlefield, but his attention was fixed on one individual—Jolthar. There was a recognition in his eyes, a depth of understanding that suggested their paths had crossed before.
Yes, I have seen that young man before.
Tribal valley
He had seen Jolthar with the Blue Rose and had witnessed his capabilities during a previous encounter.
Finally, he turned to Dagur.
"You have wasted so much ti," Yilar said, his voice a soft, dangerous whisper that seed to carry more weight than re words.
The arrival of this mysterious Nynthrall marked a potential turning point. The balance of power, already precarious, seed poised to shift once more.
The battle was far from over.
-
The conversation between Dagur and Yilar unfolded against the backdrop of utter devastation. The battlefield—a canvas painted in shades of blood and grey—stretched out before them, a testant to the brutal efficiency of Jolthar's earlier attack.
A massive cut cleaved the landscape, a geographical scar that extended from the town square far into the surrounding terrain, lined with the broken bodies of Dagur's fallen soldiers.
Dagur's voice carried a cold certainty.
"They will die. It's just a matter of ti."
Yilar's gaze swept across the carnage, his violet eyes reflecting a depth of understanding that transcended the imdiate conflict. His pale skin seed almost to shimr with an inner light, a characteristic of the mysterious Nynthrall race.
He shook his head, a gesture of mild reproach.
"You should have attacked them directly," Yilar said, "giving them less ti to prepare, to vacate." There was a strategic wisdom in his words, a suggestion of a more nuanced approach to warfare.
Dagur's annoyance flared imdiately. His response was sharp, edged with a mixture of frustration and barely contained rage.
"Did you co here to lecture ?"
Yilar waved his hands, "I wouldn't dare. I was rely suggesting."
Dagur breathed a sigh of frustration. "If not for our deity, we wouldn't even be listening to your shit of nonsense."
The ntion of their deity hung in the air—a loaded reference that suggested deeper, more complex motivations behind their conflict. Whatever drove them went far beyond simple military strategy.
Yilar's response was a grin that didn't quite reach his eyes—a predatory expression that hinted at layers of aning.
"We go hand in hand," he said. "We should cooperate. If you do, we will help you with your revenge against the empire."
The word "revenge" carried a weight that suggested old wounds, deep-seated hatred that had been festering for generations.
This was not just a battle but part of a much larger narrative of conflict and retribution.
Dagur dismissed the suggestion with a wave of his hand. "We will be done with it. Don't worry."
But Yilar was not convinced. "It's not that simple," he replied, his voice dropping to almost a whisper as he looked upwards, into the far distant sky.
And then everything changed.
Kuueerrrkkkk!!!
A roar erupted from the sky—not just a sound, but a physical force that seed to shake the very clouds themselves. The screeching roar ca from the distant skies.
The battlefield fell silent; every combatant—Jolthar, the Barony soldiers, the Chitterea forces—looked upward in collective shock and terror. As they saw a shadow of a dragon piercing the clouds, they descended towards the square.
It was dium sized, its scales a complex mosaic of dark tallic hues that seed to absorb and reflect light simultaneously. Its wings fluttered as it landed; its body was slender with a long neck. Its wings outline its arms, and its muscular legs with claws pressed into the ground allow it to easily dig holes.
Atop this magnificent creature sat a man in his fifties. His posture spoke of authority, of a lifeti spent commanding and conquering.
Despite being seated, he radiated a presence that demanded attention—a power that suggested he was far more than a re rider.
The arrival changed everything.
The balance of power that had been so precariously maintained—Jolthar's remarkable resistance, the Barony's desperate defence, Chitterea's relentless assault—now teetered on the brink of sothing entirely unexpected.
-
The sky transford with the arrival of Remin—a spectacle that was both terrifying and magnificent. The one who ca just now was one of the great generals of Arashiks, the heavenly General Remin.
The Arashiks an the five great generals of the empire, loyal and in devotion towards the throne of the empire. They were like pillars of the empire, and the fact that the Kaezhlar clan or Naemarys clan don't raise their voice against the empire was because of them. It was like the generals kept both of the clans in check, ensuring stability and order within the empire.
The generals are the powerhouses behind the throne, known for their great armies and power.
A single general could easily decimate a kingdom, showcasing the might and influence they held over the empire.
And one of them, the heavenly General Remin, rode a dragon unlike any typically imagined.
This was no massive, lumbering beast, but a creature of elegant destruction. Discover hidden tales at My Virtual Library Empire
Slender and serpentine, with a neck that stretched impossibly long, the dragon moved with a grace that suggested speed was its primary weapon.
Behind Remin ca the Grosbek knights—a renowned unit whispered about in military circles with a mixture of fear and reverence.
Hundred riders mounted on magical birds that defied natural classification
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