Disclaimer: Rohan Online is not mine, but YNK Interactive and -- I guess to a degree -- Level Up! Games let me use it as a playground. I am not making money out of this, so please don't sue me. Also, the order of which the story should be read is as follows:
001 PROLOGUE: WITHOUT A NAME
002 CHAPTER 01: OF GODS AND MONSTERS
003 CHAPTER 02: AN UNLIKELY EMISSARY
004 CHAPTER 03: AN ADVENT TO SHADOWS
005 INTERMEZZO: WHITE NOISE
006 CHAPTER 04: SEEDS OF DESTRUCTION, THE BOY-AVATAR AWAKENS
007 CHAPTER 05: STORM ON THE CELESTIAL CASTLE
008 CHAPTER 06: THE PATH TO DECIMATION
009 INTERMEZZO: THE LAST PAWN
010 CHAPTER 07: EIGHT YEARS AGO
011 FINAL CHAPTER: THE WISDOM FROM FRIENDS

We are at war, that much cannot be denied. I have learned so many things, and I have been made privy to so many secrets since the Ceremony of Severance opened my crimson-cerulean eyes. I, and a great number of my peers, have been thrust in the middle of an ancient and cruel game of Gods and Monsters: Flox, the creator of our noble race whom I have been taught to respect my whole life, his twin sister Marea, and the rest of their wretched otherworldly kin, plan to kill us all.

Dark Elves have neither Mother nor Father. Rather, our concept of a "Mother" or a "Father" differ much greatly from that of other races. We are all of us, quite literally, born of flame. The molten, volcanic rocks of Ignis are the framework from which the ethereal spirits of flame and shadow coalesce into pale corporeal flesh. Our distinctly mismatched eyes represent the dual command we have over both the Crimson Fire of Life and the Cerulean Weave of Magic. Any other Dark Elf whom we refer to as Mother or Father are merely our mentors in mastering the arcane arts and harnessing the power of flame. Kinship therefore, for us, encompasses all Dark Elves in existence -- yes, including the murderous, scheming, incestuous Flox.
The Ceremony of Severance does exactly what it says it would do. It severs our ties from Flox, the madness he represents that taints the Weave, and the kinship embedded into us from our time of emergence. The Severance reveals that each Dark Elf, after being ensconced for a specific amount of time within his or her own corporeal form, develops an ethereal spirit akin to, putting it simply,
Gods. Indeed, each individual Dark Elf possesses the inert potential to create life -- to create
worlds -- as Flox had done with us, and as Ohn had done with Flox and his siblings.
The Fire and the Weave that mature together inside our pale forms will be the twofold key to unlocking the mystery of creation, and it is this exact same mystery His Grand Majesty George Lyonan had been working on his whole life.
The Academy of Blue Flames, before its fall to the plague of monsters, was dedicated to this research -- to unravel the various secrets of the Weave. Fortunately, the fruits of research have been well-preserved, even after the Academy has been overrun by the aberrant Worms and Golems. Flox's one great mistake was that he made us too much like him -- meticulous, down to the very last hair's-breadth detail.
What I do not understand however, is the reason why His Grand Majesty decides to hide this from the fledgling Dark Elves. He keeps them in the shadows and lets them mindlessly mouth exultations to Flox until he decides it is time to wrench them from blissful ignorance.
Perhaps his wisdom is beyond my understanding, but now that I have gone through The Severance, I am speculating it was necessary for us fledglings to completely understand our divine origins first and foremost. Perhaps he meant for us to understand this divine bond we had with Flox, and in turn, Flox's divine bonds with us, and how those selfsame bonds were painfully severed in rage and madness. Perhaps he meant for us to understand that as Flox, a God, severed himself from his children, we, logically, can sever ourselves from him.
This understanding, coupled with the knowledge that we are ourselves divine, catalyzed by our innate powers over the Flame and the Weave, both evolving over time and memory, in effect, turn us into Gods.
But enough philosophizing. Us Dark Elves might have been created with superior intellect surpassing any and all the other races, but overestimating could yet be our downfall. That is a mistake which should never happen. What I do understand is yes, my power is my own, and Flox, Marea, and their equally disdainful siblings, are raising hell on my home. Ohn must have seen this -- which makes it unsurprising why he decided to leave without a trace.

The Gathering Hall at Ehres Harbor was quiet, or at least, as quiet as it could get before first light. Nevertheless, I awoke from my reverie. My staff was humming with resonant, ambient magic, signaling my brothers-in-arms nearby. I stood up from where I was seated, dusted myself off, and lightly tapped my staff to the ground twice to dispel the magical cloaking I cast on myself the night before. I strode silently and leisurely through the closed stalls, past the cargoes being unloaded from the port, past the wounded, the sick, and the dying, and onto the nearest bindstone.
An unmoving form, silhouetted by the mana-blue light pillar before him, stood in response to my approach. "Brother," the silhouette voiced. Sharp and clear as the zhen it bore, the voice pierced through the dawn mist.
And in response, countless shadows moved in every corner of the forest, stepping into the light of the bindstone. To those I knew, I gave a nod. To those I did not know, I rendered the same courtesy. These are my brothers and sisters. These are my kin. Dark Elf I may be, noble and proud and esteemed of all races, but in a war of Gods and Monsters, us Gods must belong to one side.
The strongest among us, the Dekan silhouette, raised his zhen. The first dawn light seemed to split in two as it kissed the edge of the ancient draconic blade. "Dark Elves!" he shouted. His voice a deep, booming war drum rumbling the earth we were standing on.
I and my Dark Elf brethren raised our staves as one, channeling a mounting light from the Weave, portal spells ready to be cast at a word from our Guild Master.
We are at war, a single mantra, a prayer, marched through my mind.
"To Siemech!" And before the radiant blanket of light engulfed the entire assemblage, I figured out who I was praying to. I smiled.
We are at war. "And we will win," I breathed.