I Received System to Become Dragonborn-Chapter 1274: Few Days Later
The days that followed were anything but idle. Even though no open threat had yet emerged none of them treated the warning lightly. The shadow of the 'big bad guy' lingered in their thoughts like a distant storm cloud.
—
In he Elf Kingdom.
Within the radiant capital of the Elves, preparation began quietly but decisively. There was no public alarm or proclamations of impending disaster.
The Elves did not move with panic but with calm foresight. Under King Gulben's command, every effort was measured, calculated, and precise.
The metal constructs that could be said were the creations born from the controversial knowledge left behind by Laston the traitor, uncle to Aurdis and Aerchon, were brought forth once more.
They were once viewed with distrust but those constructs had proven their worth during Zerathul's assault. Without them, the devastation would have been far worse.
More towers would have crumbled. More lives would have been lost. The city itself might not have endured.
Now the artisans and Mages did more than repair them. They improved them.
Their joints were reinforced. Their internal Magical cores were recalibrated for greater efficiency.
They were given new plating layered with both metal and enchantment. It was forged to withstand prolonged Magical bombardment.
Their defensive barriers were refined, and the mobility for the bigger designs adjusted for rapid response within the city's narrow marble avenues.
Testing grounds beneath layered wards echoed day and night with the controlled clashes of construct against construct and various spells against reinforced plating.
The Elves did not intend merely to survive the next calamity. They intended to endure it even better.
Yet they were careful not to allow metal to redefine who they were.
The city remained luminous with their white marble walls, elegant arches, and crystalline towers catching the light. The metal was never exposed crudely. It was woven into foundations and sealed beneath stone, hidden within pillars and support beams. Like an invisible strength.
But King Gulben, in his wisdom, understood that concealment alone would not suffice. After careful deliberation, he ordered a significant change.
The thick outer walls of the capital would be rebuilt from within. Beneath their traditional white stone exterior, a continuous lattice of the metal would form a secondary skeleton, an unbroken internal barrier capable of absorbing both siege engines and Magical assault.
The king insisted on one condition: the city's appearance would not change.
The white brilliance of the walls would remain untouched. The metal would lie hidden beneath stone, unseen by citizens and visitors alike.
The Elves would not live behind iron. They would live behind light with strength concealed within beauty.
Construction began immediately. Sections of wall were dismantled in careful stages, reinforced internally, then restored to their former appearance.
Enchantment teams followed behind the craftsmen, sealing seams and masking the transformation completely.
Aurdis oversaw portions of the process personally. She did so not out of pride, but responsibility. The legacy of her uncle had once been a shadow over their house. Now, that same knowledge became their shield.
—
The Kingdom of Astoria.
Far from the silver-white spires of the Elves, the Kingdom of Astoria moved with equal seriousness.
Archmage Adrius opened the big library within his tower. Ancient tomes concerning dimensional theory, planar fractures, and the nature of the Creations were brought down from restricted vaults again.
Records of the Zerathul conflict were reexamined in meticulous detail in them.
Beside him worked Lysander. He assisted in refining detection spells capable of sensing disturbances in the fabric of reality. They would try to make the detection spells not need to be activated with additional devices.
Together, they strengthened long-range Magical arrays designed to warn of interdimensional breaches even more. Defensive sigils were updated and redistributed to key fortresses across the kingdom.
But knowledge alone was not their priority. Astoria's greatest strength had always been its disciplined military.
Under Adrius' recommendation and the king Aethor's approval, efforts focused on reinforcing their armed forces.
Elite battalions underwent intensified training. Formations were redesigned specifically to counter massive Magical entities. Mages studied the mistakes made during Zerathul's ancient storm god assault and rewrote battlefield doctrine accordingly.
Siege weapons were modified to channel enchanted payloads capable of disrupting corrupted energy now. Armor and shields were embedded with anti-corruption wards.
Mages detachments were assigned directly to military units rather than remaining isolated within towers.
Coordination drills became relentless.
Infantry learned to move in harmony with the Mage spellcasters. Signal crystals were distributed to improve battlefield communication. Border fortresses reinforced their watch rotations, and patrol routes expanded deeper into vulnerable territories.
Astoria prepared not with clear structure.
There was no visible enemy on the horizon. But if the Dragonborn were stepping beyond their world in pursuit of a Creation tied to the Void Architect, then retaliation—direct or indirect—could come at any time.
Both kingdoms braced themselves.
—
During those same days of preparation across the kingdoms, the three Dragonborn were not idle.
Erend, Eccar, and Aesa had already acted on the first and most crucial step of their plan.
They returned to the Dungeon World.
Specifically to the fifty-ninth level, where Khepra-Ankh, the Psychopomp Dragon, had chosen to reside.
The descent through the Dungeon was familiar now, yet it never lost its oppressive weight. Each level carried its own atmosphere, its own lingering remnants of past trials. But Level 59 was different. It felt older and quieter. As though time moved more slowly there. That was because of Khepra-Ankh presence.
Khepra-Ankh awaited them there. He had known they would come.
The conversation that followed was long and unguarded in a way the Dragon rarely allowed. This time, he did not speak in riddles.
He told them of the world he once guarded again in more detail.
Long before he entered the Dungeon World, Khepra-Ankh had served as that realm's guardian. In its far reaches stood a spawning gate, an ancient rupture in reality that continuously birthed monsters into existence. Creatures not native to that world pouring endlessly from beyond.
He had sealed it with his own power.
But power invites suspicion and suspicion breeds resentment.
The people he protected did not see salvation alone in them. They saw domination. They feared what they did not understand. Over time, distrust turned to rejection. Accusations replaced gratitude. And eventually, they drove him away.
He left without resistance.
After his departure the city built around that gate fell into decline. Without its guardian, without maintenance of the seal, abandonment followed. Time consumed the streets. Structures crumbled. Civilization withdrew.
Now, with no one reinforcing the binding, the spawning gate could awaken again.
That abandoned city—the sealed gate within it—had become their target.
If the Void Architect spoke of a missing Creation, and if Khepra-Ankh believed the disturbance was tied to that world, then that was where they would begin.
After the meeting, the three Dragonborn did not remain within the Dungeon for long.
They returned to the surface, to Aesa's ice domain.
Erend and Eccar activated their Dragon scales. Shimmering patterns spread faintly across their skin. Heat radiated subtly from beneath the scales, neutralizing the cold that would have crippled an ordinary body.
Aesa needed no such defense.
They had only just returned from speaking with Khepra-Ankh. The weight of what they had learned lingered heavily between them.
Now, they sat in silence. The wind howled past them, yet none of them spoke.
"Do you think that gate is really where the missing Creation is?" Eccar's voice cut through the cold air.
Erend did not answer immediately. He stood with his arms folded.
"Most likely," he said at last. "Khepra-Ankh is certain about it."
He paused, thinking.
"Still… maybe I should contact the Void Architect again. Ask it directly about the direction."
Eccar turned his head slightly. "You want to confirm it through the one who started this?"
"Yes," Erend replied. "If the gate truly is the missing Creation, we go there. If it isn't, then we ignore it for now and focus on the real issue."
Aesa's expression grew tense. Her worry was visible.
"Why would the Void Architect give you direction at all?" she asked. "What does it want from you?"
That question lingered in the air.
Erend looked down briefly.
"I don't know," he admitted. "That's what makes me uneasy. What if I'm just being used? What if it's guiding me toward something that benefits it?"
No one answered.
The three of them fell silent again, each considering the risks. Contacting the Void Architect meant opening a door that might not close easily. But walking blindly into another world carried its own danger and they could be trapped.
Before Erend could speak again, a faint glow formed in front of him.
A rectangular panel appeared in midair. His eyes narrowed instantly. For a second, he assumed it was the Void Architect reaching out again.
But it wasn't. The interface was cleaner and more structured.
It was Veyrun. The program that now acted as administrator of the true System while the Creator remained missing.
Text appeared across the panel.
[We have detected suspicious activity from you. Is something occurring?]
Eccar noticed Erend's reaction. "What happened?"
"The administrator of my power just contacted me," Erend said seriously.
Aesa and Eccar exchanged a glance but remained quiet.
Erend focused on the panel and responded through his mind. "Yes. The Void Architect contacted me."
There was a brief pause. Then the response appeared.
[That was within our expectation.]
Erend's expression hardened slightly. Expectation. So the System had anticipated this contact.
—







