By sunrise, the sky bled orange and red across the eastern horizon. The light painted the stone of Veilspire in gold and fire, casting long shadows across its towering walls. The city had transformed into a fortress overnight—every battlement lined with archers, every blind spot sealed. There would be no easy way in.
Inside the walls, the air was thick with tension. The people of Veilspire moved in silence. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.
Everyone knew what was coming.
King Zafayr’s army, led by the infamous warlord Drenak, was on the march.
On the training grounds near the inner keep, Veilspire’s leaders stood gathered in grim assembly. King Velyra watched from a raised platform, his cloak fluttering gently in the breeze. Beside him stood his generals and the commanders of allied houses, armor gleaming beneath the rising sun.
General Tharic stepped forward. Broad-shouldered, iron-eyed, he raised his voice so all could hear.
“My king, my lords,” he began.
The gathering turned toward him, silent and attentive.
“We have fortified the city,” he said, pausing just long enough for the weight of his words to settle. “The main gate is secure.”
He turned to General Eliral. “General Eliral will lead the defense at the gate.”
Eliral gave a sharp nod. “It will not fall while I stand,” he said.
Tharic turned again. “General Kaelen will hold the southern wall.”
Kaelen nodded calmly, his face unreadable behind his helm.
“I will defend the north.”
Then his gaze shifted to a younger warrior—his son, General Corlan.
“Corlan. The heart of the city is yours.”
Corlan straightened. “It will not be breached, my lord.”
Tharic looked to King Velyra for final approval. The king returned a single nod, slow and firm. The plan was set
Just then, the earth trembled—soft at first, then stronger, a distant drumbeat echoing across the plains.
Tharic’s voice rang out like a clarion bell. “To your positions. Today, we protect our city. We protect Veilspire.”
With that, the assembly broke.
King Velyra turned and moved quickly toward the great hall, his royal guard forming a tight circle around him. The doors of the citadel opened to receive him. Behind him, the city braced for war.
And then, from beyond the veil of morning mist, they came.
The Velmorian army appeared like a storm on the horizon.
Row upon row of soldiers surged forward, iron-clad, disciplined, unstoppable, stretching into the misty dawn.
At the front marched their elite: broad-shouldered warriors clad in blackened armor, their faces masked, their eyes devoid of mercy.
Behind them, archers stood in formation, arrows notched, waiting for the signal to rain death.
Riders on dark horses darted through the ranks, delivering commands, circling like wolves before a kill.
Then came the war machines, huge and heavy. Battering rams with G from a long sleep.
The Velmorian army answered with a deafening roar.
At the front, Drenak lifted his black, jagged sword. His eyes burned beneath his helmet. He held the blade high for a moment, then swung it down like a falling star.
The battle had begun.
His two trusted captains, Kaaryon and Shavric, moved quickly. Kaaryon charged toward the main gate. Shavric guided the siege engines to attack the southern walls.
“Push forward!” Kaaryon shouted as his men pulled a huge battering ram. It was carved from an old tree, its head covered in black steel.
The gate shook and groaned as the first hit landed.
From the high walls, Thalvryn’s archers fired. Dozens of arrows screamed through the air.
The first line of Velmorians fell, shields smashed, throats pierced, bodies hitting the grass.
At the southern wall, Shavric’s siege weapons struck hard. Massive stones crashed into the stone walls. Dust fell from cracks, but the walls held strong, old, solid, unbroken.
Velmorian’s archers tried to fight back, but they had no cover. They were exposed in the open field. One arrow brought one scream, then ten more followed. They died by the dozens.
The Velmorians threw ropes and ladders, trying to climb the walls. But defenders met them with boiling oil, fire, and fast blades. The walls became a place of death.
At the gate, Kaaryon raised his hand. His men rolled forward a huge wooden shield, tall, wide, and reinforced with iron. Hidden beneath it, they moved closer and struck the gate again and again, refusing to stop.
On the other side
General Eliral narrowed his eyes. “Signal Kaelen,” he said.
A red banner dropped from the north tower.
Kaelen saw it and acted.
A barrel tipped. Oil poured. A torch dropped.
Fire exploded.
The Velmorian siege shield burst into flames. The fire spread fast, burning the wood and the soldiers hiding under it. Their screams filled the air. The battering ram stopped.
Shavric’s attack started to fall apart. His men climbed ladders, only to be cut down or thrown off.
But Kaaryon didn’t give up.
He walked through the flames and put his armored hand on the burnt gate. His eyes narrowed. Then he turned.
“Bring me the blacksmith,” he said.
Soon, two heavy iron rods were brought to him. Under his orders, his men started hammering the rods into the middle of the gate.
Up above, Thalvryn’s soldiers grew nervous.
“What are they doing?” one asked.
Then came the horses, seven of them, black and wild. Chains connected them to the iron rods.
“Pull!” shouted the horse master, snapping the reins.
The ground trembled.
The horses pulled hard. Muscles bulged, chains groaned, and the gate creaked under the strain.
Kaaryon’s soldiers pulled too, adding to the force.
It was a storm of effort.
With a deafening crack, the gate split open.
A second horn sounded, this one sharp and victorious.
The Velmorian army charged.
They stormed through the broken gate like a flood of death, screaming, weapons raised, eyes wild with rage. The ground shook under their boots. Dust and smoke filled the air.
Thalvryn’s front line, already weak, collapsed quickly. Shields broke. Spears snapped. Warriors screamed as they were trampled, cut down, and crushed by the incoming horde.
“Protect the king!” General Eliral shouted, his voice raw over the chaos.
But fate didn’t listen.
An arrow whistled through the air and struck him in the throat. His shout turned into a gurgle. Blood sprayed from his mouth in heavy bursts, splashing the walls. He dropped to his knees, gasping, then fell face-first into the blood-soaked ground.
Kaaryon led the charge, unstoppable. His huge sword tore through enemies with every swing, sending blood flying across the stone walls.
His helmet was gone. His face was twisted with rage, his silver-streaked beard soaked in blood. He didn’t fight like a man, he fought like vengeance itself.
Soon after, Shavric came inside the city like a deadly dancer, with his troops. His sword flashed in the firelight. He struck with speed and precision, cutting throats, severing limbs, ending lives in moments.
General Corlan fought like a storm, his axe carving vicious arcs through the chaos. Two Velmorian soldiers fell at his feet before a massive warrior crashed a hammer onto his helm, staggering him.
Then came Kaaryon.
Without hesitation, he drove his sword deep into Corlan’s shoulder and cleaved down through his chest. The young general dropped to his knees, his body torn in two.
On the wall, General Tharic saw it all. His son—slaughtered before his eyes. But there was no time to grieve.
Another commander gone. Only Tharic and Kaelen remained.
“Go!” Kaelen shouted, blood on his face. “Protect the king!”
Tharic hesitated, but only for a heartbeat. Then he turned.
Wounded. Limping. Heart pounding.
He ran.
Through the smoke, past burning banners and broken bodies, he pushed on toward the citadel.
Toward the king.
Behind him, the Velmorians poured into the city like a wildfire.
Shavric was approaching General Kaelen
General Kaelen shouted, “Hold the line!”, but there was no line left.
General Kaelen turned to regroup his men, but a black sword stabbed through his back. His eyes went wide. Blood bubbled from his mouth as he fell, lifeless, to the ground.
The proud streets of Veilspire became a scene of chaos and slaughter.
People screamed. Some tried to escape. Others begged for their lives. But mercy didn’t exist here.
Children sobbed in alleyways. Fires burst from shattered windows. Stone walls cracked and fell. Riderless horses ran through blood-soaked streets.
A wounded soldier crawled to help a friend, but a boot crushed his hand, then his skull.
Men were burned alive in boiling oil. Some tried to fight with broken weapons or their bare hands.
No one survived.
Faces smashed. Helmets dented. Arrows stuck out of backs like spikes.
The streets ran red with blood. Ash covered everything. Severed limbs lay scattered.
The walls, once a symbol of strength, now dripped with blood.
Veilspire, the Jewel of the Thalvryn, had fallen.
And as the sun rose higher, it cast long shadows over a city lost to death
Only General Tharic, King Velyra, and four royal guards were left in the great hall.
The Great Hall, once grand and beautiful, now smelled of smoke and blood.
Tapestries had burned to ashes. The stained-glass windows were shattered, their pieces scattered like bones across the marble floor.
King Velyra sat on his throne, an obsidian seat trimmed with gold. It looked powerful but felt empty.
His red cloak was torn. His crown was crooked, dull, and cracked. His hands hung limp at his sides. His eyes, once bright and full of fire, were now dim and lifeless.
He didn’t speak. He barely breathed.
The royal guards stood around him. Their backs were straight, but their faces were pale.
They had sworn to protect him until death, and that moment was near.
Their armor was burned. Their shields were dented. Their swords shook in hands slick with blood.
In front of them stood Tharic, still on his feet somehow. He breathed in short, shaky gasps.
His armor was broken in places, revealing bruises and bleeding wounds. Blood soaked his clothes, dripped from his hands, and stained his boots.
Still, he held his sword, just barely. His knuckles were white. His jaw clenched tightly.
Then the throne room doors burst open.
A wave of ash and heat swept in as Drenak stepped through.
He moved like a conqueror, tall, broad, and calm, as if he had all the time in the world. His cloak, blowing in the wind, trailed behind him like a funeral banner.
His gauntlets were spotless, clean, and precise.
The sword at his side, made of blackened steel and marked with old symbols, stayed in its sheath. He hadn’t used it. He didn’t need to. Others had done the killing for him.
Kaaryon followed, resting his sword on one shoulder. Shavric came next, his sword glowing faint red. Their armor was scratched and dented, but they stood tall. Their faces gave nothing away.
Behind them came twelve Velmorian soldiers, scarred, silent, and grinning. Their boots hit the stone floor in perfect rhythm, filling the room with quiet menace.
The air grew heavy.
Then came the cheers:
“Hail to the King Zafyar!”
“Hail to the Warlord Drenak, the Breaker of Veilspire!”
“Hail the Velmorian Empire!”
The shouts echoed like war drums, bouncing off the burned pillars and shattered murals.
But across the hall, everything was silent.
Behind the throne, the banners of Thalvryn, ripped and burning, hung like forgotten relics.
King Velyra didn’t move.
He stared straight ahead, maybe at Drenak, maybe through him.
His crown sat crooked, no longer a symbol of power. He looked less like a king and more like a ghost wrapped in velvet.
Tharic stepped forward once, his sword dragging on the floor. His voice was low, sharp with anger.
“This is sacred ground.”
Drenak lifted a gloved hand, and the cheering stopped.
He stepped forward slowly. Each step echoed through the hall, heavy and final, like a bell tolling for the dead.
“We didn’t come just to conquer,” he said, his voice cold, his lips curled in a hint of a smile.
“We came for the Ancient Red Pearl of the Solarian Crown.”
The words hit like a shock.
Tharic’s jaw tightened. A muscle near his eye twitched. His grip on the sword slipped, just for a moment.
Velyra’s face changed. His lips parted as if to speak, then closed again.
He looked down toward the carved symbol at the center of the dais, the sigil of Solaria.
A sun inside a circle.
Maybe that was where the pearl was hidden.
The guards looked at each other, they didn’t understand. Not yet.
A silent question filled the room, heavy and unspoken, like the last breath of a dying god:
What power lies inside the Ancient Red Pearl of the Solarian Crown…
…that Zafyar would burn the world to get it?