Safira: Drak |top|

What makes Safira compelling is not her competence, which is terrifying, nor her cruelty, which is surgical. It is her tenderness—carefully hidden, like a spare key under a stone. She keeps a cracked locket behind her breastplate, containing a dried sprig of lavender from her mother’s garden. She hums old valley lullabies to the hatchlings in the rookery. And once, when a village child wandered into the dragon yards, she did not shout or strike. She knelt, eye-level, and whispered: “The fire does not hate you. It simply does not know you. Let me teach you how to be known.”

This is Safira’s paradox: she would raze a city to protect a single bond. She has. And she would weep for the city afterward—alone, in the dark, where no one can see. safira drak

She does not enter a room so much as she recalibrates it. The air tightens. Conversations stumble, then re-form themselves around her silence. It is not beauty that does this—though she possesses a severe, architectural handsomeness, all sharp angles and eyes the color of a winter sea. It is presence. She carries herself like a blade still warm from the forge: useful, dangerous, and never to be mistaken for a mere ornament. What makes Safira compelling is not her competence,

Safira Drak has always understood that a name is both a cage and a key. Safira —sapphire, the stone of truth and royalty. Drak —from the old tongue’s drakon , serpent or star. Together, they form a woman caught between two gravities: the cold clarity of what is, and the ancient fire of what could be. She hums old valley lullabies to the hatchlings

Her enemies call her the Sapphire Tyrant. Her allies call her the Drakoness. Those who truly know her—a short list, shrinking every year—call her by a childhood name she has never told anyone outside the valley. It means little storm .

And like a storm, she does not ask permission to arrive. She simply gathers. She darkens. And when she breaks, the world is never quite the same shape afterward.

Born to a lineage of dragon-keepers in the last free valley before the Scorch, Safira learned early that love and leverage are the same muscle. Her mother taught her how to read the heat in a dragon’s throat; her father taught her how to read the hunger in a politician’s smile. By twelve, she had negotiated her first treaty—a water-rights accord sealed not with ink, but with a single shed scale from the emerald wyrm Velyx. By sixteen, she had watched her family’s enemies burn. By twenty, she had become the enemy.