The Five Spires: The Verdant Cage

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Summary

Five magical Spires rule the world. Everyone believes they are monuments of power, prosperity, and divine order. They are wrong. When a bitter dwarf mercenary, a disgraced paladin, a reckless scholar, a grieving elf, and an overenthusiastic gnome inventor uncover a forbidden Draconic book, they learn the Spires were built from the remains of ancient dragons—and the magic sustaining civilization may be feeding on the living. Their first target is the Verdant Spire, where a beloved ruler keeps an entire region alive through a secret system of sacrifice. To expose him, they will have to survive corrupted marshlands, buried dragon memories, political control, and a truth powerful enough to break minds. But some truths do not set people free. Some wake what was never meant to remember.

Genre
Fantasy
Author
Kerreck
Status
Ongoing
Chapters
16
Rating
n/a
Age Rating
16+

Prologue

THE FIVE SPIRES

The Verdant Cage

The smoke woke the child first.

Not the shouting. Not the heat. The smoke.

It crawled beneath the door in gray fingers and filled the room with the taste of burnt pine, old soil, and something metallic enough to make the tongue ache. The child sat up coughing, blankets twisted around their legs, eyes already watering so badly the room had become a blur of shadow and orange light.

For one foolish moment, they thought it was morning.

Then the roof groaned.

Outside, the forest was burning.

The trees the child had climbed only that afternoon were pillars of fire now, their branches reaching upward as if trying to claw their way out of the flames. Heat pressed against the cottage walls. It came through the cracks around the shutters, through the seams in the wood, through the floorboards themselves, sharp and hungry and close enough to feel like hands.

The child stumbled to the doorway and froze.

The whole valley was lit in red.

People were running between the houses below, small shapes against the blaze, calling names the fire swallowed before they could reach anyone. Goats screamed in their pens. Sparks whirled through the air like burning insects. Beyond the village, the ridge had vanished behind a wall of smoke, and above the smoke, something moved.

At first the child thought it was a storm cloud.

Then the wind struck.

It came down in great, brutal pulses.

Whump.

The flames flattened.

Whump.

The trees bent until their burning crowns almost touched the ground.

Whump.

The child fell to their knees, palms scraping dirt, as the air slammed over the valley again and again. Each pulse carried the stink of rotten eggs, scorched metal, and blood cooked too hot. Not smoke. Not only smoke. Something older. Something vast enough to poison the wind just by breathing.

The child looked up.

A shape blotted out the stars.

It was too large for the sky. Too jagged. Too broken. Vast ragged spans beat the air with a tearing, uneven rhythm, each stroke forcing the fire sideways and driving smoke low across the roofs. The thing did not fly so much as refuse to fall, hauling itself through the night by rage and ruin.

Its body was black against the flames.

No. Not black.

Armored.

The child saw it when the firelight caught its side: dark overlapping plates, each one broad as a cottage door, cracked and smoking, veined with lines of gold-white heat. One immense span dragged lower than the other. Something had torn through it, leaving strips of membrane or shadow snapping behind the creature like banners from a defeated army.

Then the thing screamed.

The sound did not enter through the ears.

It struck the bones.

The child felt it in their ribs, their teeth, the hollow places behind their eyes. It was the sound of a mountain breaking open. The sound of stone remembering it had once been molten. The sound of something that had never feared death discovering it was possible.

The shape clipped the ridge.

For one suspended heartbeat, the world held still.

Stone burst from the mountaintop. Trees exploded into splinters. The wounded span folded wrong, crumpling against the creature’s side, and the rhythm of the wind stopped.

Then it fell.

Not like a bird.

Like a tower.

The valley rose to meet it.

When the vast body struck the earth, the ground leapt. The child was thrown backward through the doorway and hit the floor hard enough to empty their lungs. Outside, white fire erupted from the valley floor, bright as noon, bright as judgment. For a single terrible instant, every house, every tree, every running figure, every lifted hand was carved in light.

And in that light, the child saw an eye.

Open.

Watching.

Not angry. Not even afraid.

Confused.

Then the fire vanished.

Darkness crashed back over the valley. Smoke rolled in thick and choking. Somewhere below, people were crying. Somewhere closer, wood cracked and fell. The child lay on the floor, unable to move, unable to breathe, staring through the open door at the place where the stars had been.

The world had gone silent.

Not peaceful. Not empty.

Listening.

Beneath the valley, far below the burning roots and shattered stone, something began to pulse. Once. Then again. Slow. Deep. Patient.

The child did not know that people would come before dawn with chains, prayers, knives, and measuring rods.

They did not know that the dead would be counted, then forgotten.

They did not know that whatever had fallen would not be buried.

They only knew that the earth had started breathing.

And that nothing would ever be whole again.