Summoner Online: I Became the Tutorial Boss with a 999+ Villainess-Chapter 99: A dragon’s freedom.
"I am not proposing anything. I am telling you how things will be." Kai turned to face the dragon fully.
"You will serve me of your own volition and no other reason more."
He held up a single finger.
"Purpose."
The word hung in the air.
"Under me, you are not a weapon to be pointed at an enemy and discarded when the battle is over. You are not a trophy to sit in a dungeon and look menacing. You are a soldier in my army, a monster under the banner of the Nameless Dungeon. And if you prove yourself, you will be far more than that."
He lowered his hand.
"I intend to build something in this world. A kingdom, if you will. A domain where monsters are not slaves and humans are not prey. A place where power is the only law, and loyalty is the only currency."
His glowing eyes locked onto the dragon’s golden ones.
"Your kind once ruled this world. I cannot give that back to you. But I can give you a place in the world that replaces it. Under me, the name of dragons will mean something again. Not as pets of kings, but as pillars of my dominion."
The Blue Dragon was motionless. Its chest rose and fell with deep, measured breaths. Its golden eyes never left Kai’s face.
Then, slowly, it lowered its head.
This time, it was deliberate. The massive skull descended until the dragon’s snout was pressed against the cold stone floor, directly at Kai’s feet.
"I accept."
The words came out low and steady. There was no hesitation in them.
"I have lived my entire life as a slave who believed he was free. I fought battles for masters who saw me as nothing more than a tool. And when the truth of my existence was laid bare, the only freedom I found was in the moments before my death."
The dragon raised its head just enough to look up at Kai.
"You killed me. And then you brought me back. You could have turned my body into armor and weapons like the others, but instead, you chose to give me a chance to live again."
Its golden eyes burned with a fire that had nothing to do with its Draconic nature.
"I do not fully understand you, human. I do not know if your words are sincere or if you are simply a more skilled master than the ones who came before. But it does not matter. Because for the first time in my life, I was given a choice."
It pressed its head to the floor once more.
"And I choose you."
The moment the words left the dragon’s mouth, the dungeon responded.
[The Nameless Dungeon has detected a voluntary submission.]
[Assessing loyalty... Loyalty Index: Genuine.]
[The Blue Dragon has been registered as a permanent resident of the Nameless Dungeon.]
[Status updated: Loyal.]
Kai stared at the system windows that appeared before his eyes. A faint smirk tugged at the corner of his lips behind the mask, though no one could see it.
’The dungeon judged it on its own. It sensed the dragon’s sincerity and registered it without my input. Interesting. The dungeon’s intelligence continues to grow in ways I did not anticipate.’
He dismissed the notification and looked down at the dragon.
"Rise."
The Blue Dragon obeyed, lifting its massive head from the floor and looking at Kai with eyes that no longer held fear.
There was still respect there, a deep and immovable respect born from the knowledge that the man before it could end its existence with a thought. But the terror was gone. In its place was something steadier.
Something that looked almost like hope.
Kai stared at the dragon for a long moment.
Then he spoke.
"You will need a name."
The dragon blinked.
"A... name?"
"You were never given one, were you? Under the royal families, dragons are identified by their color and their rank. Blue Dragon. Red Dragon. Designations, not names. That changes now."
He paused, and the air in the chamber seemed to thicken. The mana around Kai’s body stirred, pulsing in sync with the dungeon core deep below.
Fanny’s eyes widened. She recognized what was happening.
She had seen it before, felt it before, when Kai had named the other Pillars.
The act of naming was not merely giving a title. When the Lord of the Nameless Dungeon bestowed a name, it carried power. Real, tangible power that could reshape the very essence of the one receiving it.
Kai raised his hand and placed it on the dragon’s snout. The sapphire scales were warm beneath his palm, thrumming with the steady pulse of the creature’s heartbeat.
"From this moment forward, your name is Verendel."
The effect was instantaneous.
A blinding pulse of light erupted from the point where Kai’s hand met the dragon’s scales. It was not the soft glow of a blessing or the gentle shimmer of a healing spell.
This was raw, unfiltered power pouring directly from the dungeon’s core through Kai and into the dragon’s body.
The light expanded, filling the entire chamber in an instant. Fanny shielded her eyes with her arm, the teddy bear pressed tightly against her chest.
Even through her closed eyelids, the brightness was overwhelming.
The Blue Dragon, now Verendel, let out a sound that was somewhere between a roar and a cry. Not of pain, but of transformation.
Every cell in its body was being rewritten. Every scale, every bone, every drop of blood was being unmade and remade at the molecular level.
Its sapphire scales, which had already regained their luster from the revival, began to darken.
The blue deepened from sky to ocean to midnight and then kept going, until the scales were a blue so deep they appeared almost black.
Veins of silver light ran through them like cracks in a gemstone, pulsing with the rhythm of the dungeon’s heartbeat.
The dragon’s body began to grow.
Its already massive frame expanded further, muscles thickening, bones lengthening, wings stretching wider and wider until they scraped against the chamber walls on both sides.
The single horn that had been cracked and healed twice now split into two, spiraling upward from the dragon’s skull like a crown, each one glowing with faint silver light at the tip.
The transformation lasted for what felt like an eternity but was, in reality, no more than thirty seconds.
When the light finally died, the chamber was silent.
Fanny slowly lowered her arm and opened her eyes.
Her jaw dropped.
Where the Blue Calamity Dragon had once been, something entirely different now stood. The creature before her was larger, sleeker, and radiated an aura so dense that the air around it seemed to warp and shimmer like heat rising from a desert road.
It was no longer a Calamity Dragon.
It was a True Dragon.
[Naming Ceremony Complete.]
[The Blue Calamity Dragon has evolved.]
[New Designation: Verendel, True Dragon of the Nameless Dungeon.]
[Species: True Dragon]
[Level: 777]
[Status: Loyal. Bound to the Nameless Dungeon.]
[Title: Dragon Slayer - New attribute unlocked.]
[Dragon Slayer Update: The act of naming and evolving a dragon through the Dragon Slayer title has revealed a hidden progression path. Further attributes will be unlocked upon additional dragon contracts.]
Kai read through the system windows one by one, his expression hidden behind his mask. But internally, he was grinning.
’Level 777. That is more than double its original level. And it has evolved into a True Dragon, which means its base stats, resistances, and abilities have all been overhauled. On top of that, the Dragon Slayer title has started to reveal its progression. This is the path. Naming dragons, forming contracts, evolving them. That is how I unlock the rest of the title’s power.’
He dismissed the windows and looked at the newly transformed Verendel.
The True Dragon stood tall, its midnight-blue scales glistening under the dim torchlight.
Silver veins of light pulsed gently across its body, giving it an otherworldly, almost ethereal appearance.
Its golden eyes, once wide with fear, were now calm and clear, burning with a quiet intensity that spoke of power fully realized.
Verendel lowered its head toward Kai, and this time, it was not submission.
"Master."
The word came out in a voice that was completely different from before.
"Thank you for giving me a second chance."
Verendel’s silver-veined wings unfurled slightly, casting a shadow that stretched across the entire chamber.
"I shall cherish this name for as long as i live."
Kai looked up at the dragon, the towering form looming above him, and he felt no intimidation.
"Freedom is earned, Verendel. You earned it by choosing correctly."
He turned on his heel and began walking toward the chamber exit.
Fanny immediately fell into step behind him, though her eyes kept drifting back to Verendel with an expression that was equal parts awe and barely concealed emotion.
"Fanny."
"Y-yes, Master?"
"Show Verendel around the dungeon. Introduce him to the others. He is one of us now."
Fanny’s eyes widened, and then, for the first time since the conversation about the dragon massacre had begun, a genuine smile broke across her face.
"Yes, Master. I will."
Kai paused at the doorway and looked back over his shoulder at the True Dragon standing in the chamber.
"Welcome to the Nameless Dungeon, Verendel. Do not make me regret choosing you."
Verendel dipped his head once more, the silver light in his horns pulsing brightly.
"I would sooner die again than allow that to happen."
Kai smirked behind his mask and walked out.
As his footsteps faded down the corridor, Fanny turned to Verendel.
She looked up at the dragon that was now, technically, her kin. A True Dragon, just like her. The first new one in centuries.
She opened her mouth to say something. Then closed it. Then opened it again.
The teddy bear in her arms beat her to it.
"She wants to say she is happy she is not the last one anymore, but she is too emotionally constipated to form the words. Give her a minute."
"S-shut up!" Fanny’s face turned crimson as she wrestled with the bear. "I was going to say it! I was building up to it!"
Verendel, despite everything that had just happened, despite the weight of his past and the enormity of his transformation, let out a low rumble from deep within his chest.
It took Fanny a moment to realize the dragon was laughing.
"I see," Verendel said, his deep voice carrying a warmth that had not been there before. "So this is what freedom feels like."
He looked at Fanny, at the teddy bear, and at the absurdity of it all, and something in his ancient, weary soul finally settled.
"It is strange. But I think I could get used to it."







