Chapter 180: "I don’t need you anymore."
The battlefield stank of blood and smoke.
Lucian lay half-crushed against broken stone, his cloak torn, blood pouring from his chest. His eyes were half shut, but still they glowed faint with that stubborn light of space. He coughed, tried to rise, and collapsed again.
Lucy’s heart froze.
Her blade trembled in her one good hand, her other arm hanging useless, bones snapped. Her body shook with every breath. But none of that hurt as much as the sight of him. Her brother. Younger than her, weaker once, the one she had sworn to shield.
It was supposed to be her. Always her.
When their world had burned, when they had stumbled into chaos, she had sworn she would be his wall. His guard. But since the day he entered the Academy, everything had shifted. It was Lucian saving her. Lucian cutting through danger, Lucian dragging her back from the brink. He bore the weight that should have been hers.
Her chest tightened. Shame dug deeper than any wound.
She looked at Karl, still forcing himself upright, his scales broken, his body a ruin of fire and blood. He was not family, not by blood, but he stood as though he was—unbroken in will, shielding them even as his father tried to erase him.
Her gaze snapped back to Lucian, and something inside her cracked.
It would not be him anymore. It could not.
She took a step forward.
The sound echoed louder than it should have, the cracked street shuddering under her foot. Her aura shifted. Not the steady burn of her black flame, not the tired heat she had carried until now. It bent, twisted, deepened.
The Dragon King’s eyes narrowed.
Lucy took another step. Her breath came steady now, pain fading from her body. Lines etched faint across her skin, glowing marks that spread from her wrist up her arm. They crawled like fire given shape, each pulse carving into her flesh, rewriting it.
Her wounds sealed as the markings spread. Blood flaked to ash, bruises faded, broken bone snapped back into place with a sharp crack. She didn’t falter. She walked through the agony, through the reshaping of her body, her eyes locked only on her brother lying in the dirt.
Lucian’s lips moved faint, whispering her name, but she didn’t hear him. She couldn’t.
The markings climbed her neck, burned across her face, then pulsed once more. Her head bowed, her body trembling, and then—
A horn tore through her brow.
Black at the base, fading into violet light, it curved sharp and proud. Her hair whipped in the surge of power, her aura exploding outward.
The Dragon King staggered back a step. His golden eyes widened, his voice breaking low. "...An Ancient."
Even Kaelis high above shifted, his massive wings slowing, his gaze narrowing as he looked down through fire and smoke.
Lucy raised her head. Her eyes glowed now, molten violet, her horn gleaming. The markings across her body pulsed with her heartbeat, each thrum sending her aura higher. The air bent. The stone cracked. The battlefield shook beneath her presence.
Lucian stared, breath caught in his throat. His sister—his protector—no, something more, something far older.
Karl coughed blood, his grin twisting despite it. "Heh. Finally."
The Dragon King’s fury surged, but beneath it there was something else now. Not hate. Not scorn. Fear. His golden aura wavered at its edges.
Lucy lifted her blade. Black fire erupted once more, but it wasn’t the same. It crawled up her arm, wove with the markings, fused with the horn. It didn’t just burn. It erased.
Her voice was low, steady, filled with resolve. "I will protect him. No matter what. I will protect all of them."
The ground split beneath her. Her aura spiked again, surging beyond the limits of Beta, beyond the threshold she had known. The weight of her presence pressed even Karl down, forced Lucian’s breath short.
The Dragon King braced, his fists curling, his golden cloak burning brighter. Yet his eyes never left the horn.
Lucy stepped again, faster now. Her blade swept once, black flame cutting the golden wave he hurled at her. It split like paper, collapsing into sparks.
She didn’t slow.
Her resolve carried her forward, markings glowing, her aura tearing at the sky. Every step she took was a vow carved into the earth.
She had been late to it. Too late. But now, finally, she stood where she was meant to stand.
Before her brother.
Between them and the Omega.
An Ancient had awakened.
Elsewhere.
The sound of laughter carried through the air—thin, fragile. A child ran across the grass, small feet brushing the dew. Behind him, a man followed at an easy pace, his hand lazily twirling a wooden stick as if the game meant nothing to him.
"Faster," the man said, though his tone was flat, not playful.
The boy laughed, looking over his shoulder, eyes bright. "You’ll never catch me!"
The man’s lips pulled into something that might have been a smile, though it never reached his eyes. He raised the stick, swung it lightly, let the boy dodge. Again, and again. The child’s laughter filled the space, but the man’s gaze wasn’t on him.
It shifted.
His head turned slightly, eyes narrowing. The stick stilled in his hand. His body froze as if the world itself had paused around him.
Far away, across distance and ruin, an aura had bloomed. Old. Heavy. One that should have been gone forever. His chest rose once, and a faint chuckle slipped from him.
"The seed... has borne fruit," he murmured.
The boy slowed, confused by the sudden silence. He tilted his head, small chest heaving from the running. "What’s wrong?"
The man looked down at him at last. The faint smile on his face widened, but there was no warmth in it now.
"It means," he said softly, "I don’t need you anymore."
The child blinked, eyes wide, not yet understanding.
The stick shifted. A flash of steel slid from its length, hidden until now. The blade whispered through the air in a single arc.
The boy’s laugh never had time to fade.
Blood splattered across the grass. The child crumpled, lifeless, his small hand still curled as if he meant to keep running.
The man exhaled, flicked the blade clean, and looked back toward the horizon where the aura pulsed. Stronger. Older. Calling him.
"Your sister," he said, voice quiet but certain, "is the one I want now."
He stepped away from the body without a second glance.
The garden was silent again.