Book One of The Caldera Throne
THE STILL AND THE BURNING
For thirty years, the volcanic island kingdom of Mor Vallas has survived on a managed lie: a controlled prophecy, an altered history of royal legitimacy, and the belief that the mainland powers across the sea will never return.
Adrian, a royal-blooded blacksmith, has spent years avoiding the palace and the inheritance attached to his name. In the coastal garrison town of Tyrellos, he chooses iron over politics, the forge over court intrigue, and work that tells the truth over institutions built to conceal it.
But the island is beginning to fail.
A minor market incident draws Adrian, Greger the baker, and Tomas the butcher into imprisonment and punishment, exposing how fragile order has become. In Mor Vallas, King Aurelius rules a system he knows is weakening. His authority depends on records altered in transit, history softened for public use, and a prophecy stripped of its most dangerous clause: the cost.
His son Marcus inherits power without restraint. Intelligent, insecure, and hungry for control, Marcus mistakes obedience for legitimacy. Around him, Ashbourne turns access and information into quiet leverage, shaping the palace from behind soft words and careful procedures.
Beyond the capital, the Varkans of the volcanic crags preserve their own version of the mountain’s truth. Their control of the Corridor gives them more than territory; it gives them the island’s throat.
When a Varkan operative reaches the king’s study and Aurelius is assassinated, the illusion of control collapses. Marcus seizes the throne and tightens the island through surveillance, hunger, fear, and administrative command.
Adrian sees what others cannot: not chaos, but system failure. Food chains weaken. Competing authorities rise. The palace confuses force with governance. As the suppressed prophecy spreads through markets, villages, and garrisons, the version controlled by the throne loses its power.
Adrian does not seek leadership. But people begin to depend on his ability to read pressure, anticipate collapse, and act before structures break.
By the end, Marcus still holds Mor Vallas, but his rule is unstable. Adrian is no longer safely distant from power. The Corridor becomes a strategic fault line. The island’s internal conflict can no longer be contained.
And across the sea, the old assumption fails.
The fleet is coming.
The novel ends with the collapse of illusion: the island is no longer isolated, the system that governed it is no longer stable, and Adrian stands at the threshold of the role he has spent his life avoiding.
Word Count: 148,000 words
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