Wind stung Ivana’s eyes as moonlight skittered across Trsat’s battlements; torches guttered, and the sea’s hush trembled with distant war drums—ships like ink blotting the horizon. She pressed a hand to the cold stone, feeling the castle’s heartbeat beneath her palm, knowing the ancient guardian below might be their salvation or their gravest peril.
Nestled high above the sparkling waters of the Adriatic, Trsat Castle was more than a fortress; it was the spine of the town’s history. Its ramparts caught the salt-laden breeze, the stones worn smooth by generations of feet. In quiet hours the old walls seemed to breathe, carrying whispers of forgotten battles, noble households, and a story that villagers told in hushes: Valmar, the dragon who slumbered under the castle’s bedrock, bound by an oath to protect the land in its darkest hour.
Legends painted Valmar as both sentinel and enigma. He was not a mindless beast but an intelligent, calculating force bound by ancient bargains. The people of Trsat spoke of him as a presence at the edge of memory—something to call on when hope thinned. When messengers returned from the coast with tales of black sails and burning villages, the legend stopped being a bedtime tale and became a brittle promise they could no longer ignore.
Lady Ivana, the last scion of her house, was a narrow figure against the dawn, both resolute and wearied by command. Barely into her twenties, she carried the gravity of leadership like a cloak. Sharp of mind and steady of hand, she had commanded men and mended rations, but Marko the Black’s mercenaries were a strain beyond martial skill. They brought with them a new brutality: siege engines, scorched earth tactics, and a leader whose name alone chilled souls.
The raiders had already burned two hamlets on the road to Trsat. Survivors came with singed hair and empty baskets; children asked for bread and fathers had no answer. The men who once laughed and sang in the taverns now sharpened tools in silence. In council, Ivana listened to every voice and weighed every risk. Maps, patrol reports, and prayers lay scattered across the long table in the keep; none offered a clear path to safety.
Shadows on the Horizon
Trsat stood watch over the town of Rijeka, its walls weathered but resolute. For years the castle’s defenses discouraged smaller threats, but the late thirteenth century had changed the rules: bands of mercenaries answered no banner but coin. Marko the Black, a banished noble whose cruelty had become reputation, led such men. Rumors followed him like crows—pillaged monasteries, blood-debt paid in terror. When his fleet was first sighted, the town’s dogs went quiet and the priests lit extra candles.
Ivana had lost a father to the hard lessons of statecraft, and she had learned to command without the advantage of history’s indulgence. Yet even with courage and cunning, she knew bricks and men could not hold against ships, trebuchets, and men who had nothing to lose. She needed more than tactics—she needed the miracle the old stories promised.
Unearthing the Legend
The legend of Valmar lived in children’s songs and the worn tapestries of the great hall. Most dismissed it as superstition, but desperation sharpens belief into action. After long nights of consulting ancient texts with Father Luka—whose knowledge of rites and old tongues had kept some old truths alive—Ivana chose the path few leaders would.
“We have no choice,” she said in the dimness, voice steady yet threaded with uncertainty. “If the dragon exists, we must wake him.”
Father Luka’s fingers hovered over brittle parchment. “My lady, the manuscripts warn. The bargain binds both parties. The dragon’s loyalty is earned, not granted.”
Ivana’s jaw set. “If we stand idle, Trsat will burn. I will bear the risk.”
She gathered a small, trusted company: her captain of the guard, a blacksmith who knew how to coax the finest metal from poor ore, and Father Luka. They descended into the labyrinth beneath the castle, where the air cooled and the torchlight threw tall, trembling shadows on the stone. The farther they went, the more the tunnel smell changed—from mold and minerals to a faint, metallic scent as if the ground itself remembered flame.
At the cavern’s heart, an altar sat ringed in runes that pulsed faintly like a watchful pulse. Father Luka murmured the invocation, words that seemed to vibrate against the bone. Ivana sliced her palm, letting a ribbon of blood fall into a waiting chalice. The air tightened; the runes flared.
And then, he came.
Valmar’s Awakening
The dragon emerged like a slow storm. Scales of molten silver caught the torchlight, throwing shards of light across the cavern. His wings unfurled with the hush of drapery and the distant crack of thunder. His eyes were molten coal, intelligent and ancient. When he spoke, the vibration of his voice seemed to settle in the bones of those present.
“Who dares disturb my slumber?” he rumbled.
Ivana stepped forward, steady despite the quake in her hands. “I am Ivana of Trsat. Our land is threatened. I seek your aid.”
Valmar peered at her as a judge might peer through a defendant’s history, weighing arrogance and need. “Many seek my power. Few are worthy.”
“I will pay whatever price,” Ivana said, though both of them knew she meant more than gold.


















