
by AshTrideep
When Silas Ardyn — royal knight of Solmara — slays the dragon terrorizing a village, he should've got a reward worthy of the deed. What he receives is Evely Atsuko. A woman the village considers its most expendable person. Sent not as honor, but as disposal. Ardyn is insulted. Atsuko has heard worse. What begins as a transaction between a dismissive knight and a woman who has spent thirty years learning to make herself invisible becomes something neither of them prepared for — a confrontation with the corruption buried at the roots of a village, the political machinery hiding behind sacred tradition, and the question that neither power nor survival has ever answered cleanly: What does justice actually look like? And who gets to decide? As Ardyn's methods grow sharper and Atsuko's voice grows harder to silence, a third figure enters the collision — Shana, the girl the village calls its fortune, who has been protected from everything except the truth about her own life. Three people shaped by the same destruction — and the very different things they build from it — moving toward a war that none of them started. Ashes Of The First Dragon is a high fantasy story about moral architecture. The kind built by people who survived something. And the very different structures they construct from the same wreckage. It is not a love story. It is the story of what happens before people become the versions of themselves that love stories are written about.