Chapter 175: “It’s over.”
The street glowed red.
Karl rose from the dirt slow, every breath spilling fire. His body had changed — scales gleamed black edged in molten gold, his claws burned like blades pulled fresh from a forge, and his eyes... his eyes burned molten, deeper than any flame he’d carried before. Wings of fire unfurled behind him, shadows bending in their light.
The wolf, the serpent, the boar froze where they stood. Their bodies tensed, jaws clenched, but their eyes betrayed them. Fear.
Karl grinned, his voice rough but steady, layered with a rumble that wasn’t human anymore. "Scared? Good. You should be."
The serpent hissed, coils tightening. "What are you?"
Karl stepped forward, fire cracking the stone with each pace. "What I always was. What father tried to bury. What Kael could never be." He raised his claws, flames spilling higher. "Dragon."
The wolf snarled, forcing his fear into rage. He lunged, claws slashing for Karl’s throat.
Karl didn’t move aside. He caught the strike midair. The wolf’s claws scraped uselessly against his scales. Karl’s grin widened as he squeezed. Bones cracked. The wolf howled.
With his other claw, Karl slashed across his chest, molten fire tearing armor like paper. Blood sprayed, sizzling before it touched the ground. He threw the wolf back, the body crashing into a broken wall hard enough to shatter it.
The serpent struck next. Her coils snapped around Karl’s arm, her green glow burning, digging deep. But his flames surged hotter, gold streaks racing up his scales. The heat was unbearable. She shrieked, smoke curling from her flesh as her grip melted away.
Karl yanked her forward, claws closing around her throat. He lifted her into the air, eyes burning into hers. "You wanted to taste fire?" His grin sharpened. "Choke on it."
Flames erupted from his hand. They swallowed her whole, blackening her scales, twisting her scream into ash. He tossed what was left aside, nothing more than a smoldering husk collapsing against the rubble.
The boar roared, fury drowning his fear. He charged, tusks gleaming, fists like boulders. He swung wide, his strength enough to crush stone.
Karl blocked with a single arm. The impact thundered, shaking the road, but Karl didn’t move an inch. His wings flared, fire blasting outward, forcing the boar back a step.
Karl laughed, deep and harsh. "Is that all?"
He grabbed the boar’s tusk, snapped it clean, and drove it through the beast’s own shoulder. The boar screamed, staggering. Karl followed with a burning fist to his chest. The strike caved his armor, flames pouring into the wound. The boar stumbled back, clutching at the fire eating through him from the inside, his roar breaking into a gargle.
Karl stood over them, fire licking across his wings, his aura rolling through the street like a storm. His voice thundered with it. "Do you see it now? You thought me a castoff. A failure. But this—" he spread his arms, fire twisting into a storm above him, "—this is what a true dragon is."
The wolf dragged himself from the rubble, his chest torn open, blood pouring. He coughed, eyes wild. "Impossible... Alpha rank—"
Karl’s gaze snapped to him, molten eyes narrowing. "Peak Alpha." He stepped forward, every movement dripping with heat and power. "One step from Omega. And you? You’re nothing but kindling."
The wolf tried to rise, but Karl was already there. His claw pierced straight through his chest. The wolf’s eyes widened, his breath breaking into silence. Karl ripped his claw free, flames consuming the body before it touched the ground.
The serpent’s husk twitched faint in the dirt. The boar writhed, trying to smother the fire inside him. Karl walked between their bodies, his wings trailing heat that cracked the stone. His grin twisted, sharp and savage.
"You thought you cornered me." His voice echoed with fire. "But you were only feeding me."
He raised his claws, flames bursting skyward, painting the night red-gold. For a moment the burning city seemed to still. Even Kaelis’s roar above faltered.
The boar lifted his head, his voice weak, broken. "Monster..."
Karl knelt low, his grin cruel. "No. Dragon."
He slammed his claw into the boar’s chest, flames erupting outward in a wave that turned the street into a furnace. When the fire dimmed, there was nothing left but ash.
Karl rose again, his chest heaving, his aura still burning stronger than ever. His flames no longer sputtered or cracked — they pulsed steady, molten, like rivers flowing through his veins. His bloodline wasn’t just awake. It was raging.
He tilted his head back, roaring into the burning night. The sound wasn’t human anymore. It was deeper, sharper, a dragon’s roar that shook the city to its bones. Windows shattered, walls cracked, monsters across the capital froze in terror.
Karl lowered his head slowly, molten eyes scanning the street. The wolf was gone, burned to ash. The serpent was nothing but a husk. The boar was scattered, pieces lost to fire.
He stood alone, wings spread, fire curling higher.
His grin returned, sharp and savage. "Omega waits. And I’ll burn through anyone to reach it."
The capital burned around him, but in that moment, it was clear — Karl wasn’t just a castoff anymore.
He was a god among monsters.
At the far end, Kael still knelt. His body was broken—blood painting his chest, golden aura flickering like a dying candle. His head was bowed, his breath ragged. Yet his eyes, when they lifted, still held that same maddening calm.
Karl’s claws tightened. His steps echoed heavy on the cracked stone as he began to walk.
Each step closer made the fire rise higher. His wings flared wide, sparks raining from their edges. The night itself bent under his heat.
Kael tried to straighten, but his body refused him. His hands pressed to the dirt, trembling. His jaw set, his golden eyes burning with defiance even now.
Karl stopped before him. For a moment, silence hung, broken only by the crackle of fire.
Then Karl laughed—low, ragged, bitter. "You know... all these years, I thought it was father. I thought he was the one who ruined me. Cast me out. Called me failure." His claws flexed, flames dripping like blood. "But it was you. Always you."
Kael’s lips parted, his voice hoarse. "You were weak."
Karl crouched, his grin sharp and cruel, eyes glowing red-gold inches from his brother’s. "Weak? I was starving. Broken. And you stood there, smiling. Calm. Like you were better than me. Like you deserved everything I never had."
He leaned closer, his voice raw, shaking with rage. "You took my home. You took her. And even now, half-dead, you dare look at me with that same face—calm, untouchable. As if I’m still beneath you."
His claw gripped Kael’s throat, lifting him slowly from the ground. Kael choked, blood spilling from his mouth, his hands weakly clutching at Karl’s wrist.
Karl’s wings flared brighter, the fire searing. "You were father’s perfect son. His golden heir. But look at you now." He tilted Kael’s face up, forcing him to meet his gaze. "Broken. Ash in my hands."
Kael’s breath rattled, his voice faint but steady. "You’ll never... escape it. You’ll be his shadow forever."
Karl’s smirk faltered for a heartbeat. Then it sharpened into something vicious. "No, brother. I am not his shadow. I am his mistake. And mistakes..." He raised his free claw, fire curling along its edge, molten light dripping to the ground. "...burn everything."
Kael’s eyes widened faintly as the fire flared brighter, searing through the night.
Karl’s voice thundered with his final words, a roar layered with the dragon blood in his veins:
"You should have killed me when you had the chance."
His claw plunged through Kael’s chest.
The golden aura shattered, breaking apart like glass. Kael’s body convulsed once, blood bursting in a crimson spray. His eyes, calm even to the end, dimmed as the fire consumed him.
Karl ripped his claw free. Flames erupted outward, swallowing Kael’s body in an inferno so hot the stone itself melted. When the blaze died, nothing remained but blackened ash carried off in the wind.
Karl stood there, chest heaving, wings spread wide. His molten eyes burned into the dark horizon, his voice a low growl.
"It’s over."
He turned, fire trailing in his wake, leaving nothing of his brother behind but silence and smoke.