
The Ashes of Dragon
Chapter 3
The council chamber spun around me as I struggled to remain standing. My legs threatened to give way, but I refused to fall—not here, not with Sophia's triumphant eyes watching my every move. The blackened scales beneath my skin felt like lead weights, my newly awakened dragon essence convulsing in agony.
"Did he tell you about our first time, Victoria?" Sophia's voice cut through the murmurs of the gathered clan members. She stood beside Adrian now, her fingers possessively intertwined with his.
I tried to look away, but she stepped closer, ensuring I couldn't escape her words.
"It was months ago, right after that charity gala." Her voice carried throughout the chamber, deliberately pitched to maximize my humiliation. "You were so busy with your little human projects, you never even noticed."
Every syllable was a calculated strike. The charity gala—where I'd left early to finalize the Sterling-Blackthorn merger documents. Where Adrian had insisted I go home to rest while he "networked" with important clan allies. Where Sophia had offered to "keep an eye on him" for me.
"He likes it when you trace the pattern of his scales," she continued, her voice dropping to a stage whisper that somehow carried to every corner of the vault. "The ones along his spine. Did you know that? Of course not. You never could bring out his true nature the way I can."
The watching clan members shifted uncomfortably, some looking away in secondhand embarrassment, others leaning forward with undisguised interest in this public evisceration.
Sophia stepped closer still, close enough that only I could hear her next words.
"I've been planning this for so long," she whispered, her breath hot against my ear. "Taking everything that was yours. And you made it so easy, trusting me with all your little secrets."
Memories flashed through my mind—Sophia consoling me when Adrian was distant, Sophia suggesting I focus on my career while she helped plan clan events with Adrian, Sophia always there, always watching, always waiting.
Something deep inside me—something primal and wounded—twisted violently. The pain was immediate and overwhelming. I felt my newly awakened dragon essence convulse, the silver scales beneath my skin darkening to charcoal, then to pitch black.
I gasped, clutching at my chest as the ice-fire that had erupted so violently the night before flickered weakly, then extinguished completely. The cold emptiness that replaced it was worse than any pain I'd ever known.
"Victoria?" Elder Vance's voice seemed to come from miles away.
The stone floor rushed up to meet me as my legs finally gave way. Through rapidly dimming vision, I saw Adrian's face—not concerned, but coldly curious, as if observing a failed experiment rather than watching the collapse of the woman who had loved him for five years.
Whispers rippled through the ancestral vault as darkness claimed me:
"Her dragon spirit is dying."
---
I awoke to the glow of torchlight on stone walls. The infirmary beneath the vault was rarely used—a relic from times when dragon clan disputes often ended in bloodshed. The air smelled of ancient herbs and something metallic.
A sharp cramp tore through my abdomen, and I curled inward with a gasp. Something was wrong—deeply, fundamentally wrong.
"Don't move," instructed a stern voice. An older woman I recognized as the clan's healer bent over me, her hands glowing with diagnostic magic. "Your body is rejecting something."
Another wave of pain crashed through me, more intense than the last. I cried out, my back arching off the stone table.
"What's happening to me?" I managed through clenched teeth.
The healer's expression shifted from clinical detachment to something like pity.
"You were carrying a dragon heir," she said quietly. "The stress and trauma... your body is rejecting the pregnancy."
The words didn't make sense at first. Pregnancy? A child? Adrian's child?
"No," I whispered, as understanding dawned with horrific clarity. "No, please..."
But my body was already betraying me, purging the tiny life I hadn't known existed. The pain was excruciating, but nothing compared to the howling void that opened in my chest as I realized what I was losing—what had been taken from me.
Tears streamed down my face as I turned away from the healer's pitying gaze. In the shadows of the infirmary doorway, I caught a glimpse of Sophia watching, her expression unreadable before she slipped away.
I closed my eyes, surrendering to the darkness, wondering how much more I could possibly lose.
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