Blood of the dragon I :Dark encounter
Blood of the dragon I :Dark encounter
Author: Eddy best
Chapter 1
Author: Eddy best
last update2026-01-27 05:32:28

The Forest That Swallowed Men

*****

The forest had no name anymore.

Maps refused to hold it. Travelers avoided it. Even animals walked its edges and turned back, as if something inside the trees breathed too deeply, too patiently.

Kael moved through it anyway.

Fog clung to his cloak, soaking the leather, muting sound. His hand rested on the hilt of his sword—not from fear, but habit. Fear came later.

He was tracking a stag. At least, that was what he told himself.

The truth was uglier: he was running. From hunger. From soldiers. From a life that had collapsed in fire and steel.

The ambush came without warning.

A snap of branches.

A whistle of steel.

Pain exploded in his side.

Kael stumbled, crashing into the roots of a dead tree. Blood soaked his tunic, hot and fast. He tried to stand—failed.

Figures emerged from the fog. Five of them. Armored. The sigil of the Severed Flame burned into their chest plates.

“Dragon-marked,” one of them said softly, almost reverently.

Kael spat blood. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

The leader raised his sword. “You will.”

The blade fell.

It should have ended there.

Instead—

the blood on the ground ignited.

Fire spiraled upward, not wild, not random—controlled. Alive.

The soldiers screamed.

Kael screamed louder.

Heat tore through his veins like molten iron. His vision filled with gold and crimson. He felt something wake up inside him—ancient, furious, starving.

When the fire died, the forest stood silent.

The soldiers were ash.

Kael knelt alone, smoke rising from his hands. Beneath torn skin, something hard shifted—scales, dark and gleaming.

Behind him, deep within the fog, two massive eyes opened.

And a voice older than empires whispered:

“At last… my blood remembers.”

Scales Beneath the Skin

Kael did not sleep.

He lay against the burned roots of the tree, staring at the fog as it drifted and curled like a living thing, afraid to touch him. Every time he closed his eyes, heat surged through his veins and the scream of burning men rang in his skull.

When dawn finally came, it did not bring light—only a thinner shade of darkness.

He pushed himself upright.

Pain answered… but not the pain he expected.

The wound in his side—where the sword had pierced him—was gone.

No blood.

No torn flesh.

Only faint, dark lines beneath the skin, like the shadow of scales just below the surface.

Kael sucked in a sharp breath and tore open his tunic.

His skin looked wrong.

It shimmered faintly when the light struck it, as though something beneath it was catching the dawn. He pressed his fingers into his ribs. Instead of softness, there was resistance—hardness, like layered stone.“No,” he whispered.

The memories came rushing back: the ambush, the blade, the fire answering his blood as if it had been waiting for permission.

He staggered to his feet.

The forest reacted.

Branches creaked. Birds took flight all at once. Somewhere deep within the trees, something massive shifted its weight.

Kael froze.

“You did this,” he said aloud, unsure who he was speaking to. “Whatever you are… you did this to me.”

The fog thickened.

Then came the voice—not from the air, not from the trees, but from inside his bones.

Not done. Awakened.

Kael clutched his head and fell to one knee. “Get out of my head.”

A low, rumbling sound followed—not laughter, not quite—but something close.

Your head?

Child, I have slept in your blood since before your first breath.

Images slammed into him.A sky on fire.

Mountains splitting beneath wings.

Cities melting like wax under dragonflame.

Kael gasped, choking as the visions tore through him.

“I’m not yours,” he snarled. “I didn’t ask for this.”

None of us did.

Yet here you stand. Alive.

Kael looked down at his hands.

Ash clung to his fingers—ash that had once been men.

The thought twisted his stomach.

“I killed them.”

They hunted you.

“They were human.”

So were the ones they burned in my name.

Silence fell heavy between them.

Kael rose slowly, his legs steady despite the chaos roaring inside him. “What are you?”

The fog parted.

Between the trees, something vast shifted—too large to see fully, too real to deny. A shape of blackened scales and ember-lit eyes, half-hidden in shadow, watching him with something disturbingly close to familiarity.

am what remains of a god.

And you are my last breath.

Kael’s heart pounded. “Then take it back.”

The dragon’s eyes burned brighter.

If I could, I would.

But blood once awakened does not return to sleep.

A sharp pain flared along Kael’s spine. He cried out as heat surged again, stronger this time. His nails darkened, sharpening. His breath steamed in the cold air.

The Order will come.

They felt the fire.

Kael clenched his fists. “Let them.”

The dragon’s gaze narrowed.

Brave. Foolish. Human.

You have one chance to remain so.

“How?”

A pause.

Run.

Or learn to burn.

Kael stared into the fog where the dragon loomed—where destiny waited with teeth and flame.

Then, from far beyond the forest, a horn sounded.

The Severed Flame was already searching. Keal turned , teeth clenched , and began to run.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 18

    Embers and Dawn *********** The valley burned once more—this time, not by fire, but by choice. Kael had turned the Order away, negotiated their retreat through carefully planted evidence of his power and restraint. The city would not forget him, nor would the Order, but he had won freedom—for now. Mira stood beside him as dawn rose, golden light spilling across the hills. For once, the dragon was quiet. It rested in his chest, patient, observing, waiting. Kael could feel its presence as strength, not threat. He looked at her, truly looked. Not the healer. Not the observer. Not the cautious voice in the storm. Mira. Human. Solid. Real. And he realized he could carry her forward, as he carried fire—not as destruction, but as choice. “You could walk away,” she said softly. “Be like the rest of them.” Kael shook his head. “I can’t unsee what I’ve seen. I can’t undo what I’ve done. But I can choose what I become next.” She smiled faintly. Hand in his. The warmth between them

  • Chapter 17

    The Choice**********Kael knew what had to be done. The dragon’s presence pressed constantly, reminding him that power demanded decision. And the world beyond the valley waited with consequences he could not avoid.They reached the edge of the city where the Order’s influence ran deepest. Mira’s hands brushed his as they passed under watchful eyes, a small comfort in the shadow of judgment. “Do you ever think you could have been ordinary?” she asked quietly.Kael shook his head. “Ordinary didn’t survive the fire.”The Order confronted him once more, this time with captives—innocent villagers coerced to draw him out. Anger surged, but Kael held it back. The dragon whispered in his mind, urging total annihilation. He refused.He acted with precision. Controlled fire, not to kill, but to warn, to destroy only what threatened the innocents. Soldiers fell back, stumbling over charred ground, smoke curling in arcs. The dragon hummed, hungry and frustrated, but Kael’s will remained intact.

  • Chapter 16

    The Hunter Becomes the HuntedThe next dawn brought a storm—not of weather, but of pursuit. The Order had regrouped, their banners scarred and blackened by rumors of Kael’s dragon-blood. Soldiers poured into the valley, moving with precision, their commander a shadow behind the front ranks.Kael and Mira had planned nothing except to survive. He moved silently along a ridge, the dragon’s presence humming low in his chest. Mira followed, her pace steady, eyes sharp. For the first time, they were not hiding merely from fire—they were hiding from certainty.“Do they know what you are?” Mira asked.Kael didn’t answer at once. He didn’t need to. The storm in the distance answered for him. Smoke drifted from the soldiers’ torches as they pushed forward, a signal of inevitability.The first clash came near a ruined stone wall. Kael stepped forward, heat rising just enough to warn, not to burn. Soldiers faltered. Steel bent and shields warped under the subtle pressure of the dragon within him

  • Chapter 15

    Fire, Held BackThey didn’t have long.The first sound came just after dawn—a horn, low and distant, carried on the morning air. Kael felt it in his bones before his ears caught it.The Order.Mira looked up sharply. “That’s not a trader’s call.”“No,” Kael said. “It’s a boundary signal.”He stood, already scanning the ridgeline. Movement. Too coordinated to be bandits. White cloaks broken by steel. Six—no, eight.“They tracked you,” Mira said.“They always do.”The dragon stirred, pleased.At last,it said.Do not starve me now.Kael’s jaw tightened. “I won’t burn them all.”You may not have a choice.The soldiers descended the slope in a practiced arc. Not rushing. Confident. They believed they had him cornered.Mira stepped closer to Kael. “Tell me what you can do.”He glanced at her. “You already saw.”“Not enough.”Kael inhaled deeply.“I can call it,” he said. “Fully. It won’t leave my body—but it will act through me. Fire. Force. Fear.”“And afterward?”He didn’t answer.That w

  • Chapter 14

    What She Saw********Kael woke before the danger announced itself.It wasn’t sound that stirred him. It was pressure—like the air had thickened while he slept.The fire had burned low. Gray ash pulsed faintly red at its center. Mira lay a few steps away, wrapped in her cloak, one hand tucked beneath her chin. She looked peaceful in a way that made Kael hesitate to breathe too loudly.Then the dragon shifted.Not a voice this time. A presence rising. Heavy. Awake.Kael stood slowly and stepped away from the fire.The night was wrong. Too still. Even the rain had stopped, leaving the world damp and holding its breath.You are being measured,the dragon said.Do not flinch.“I didn’t ask for this,” Kael whispered.The air warmed.It started in his chest, then spread outward, subtle but unmistakable. His heartbeat deepened, slower, heavier. The scars along his ribs burned, not painfully, but insistently—like something knocking from the inside.Kael clenched his fists.He did not notice M

  • Chapter 13

    The Space Between Steps******** They left before sunrise. Not because they were in a hurry, but because neither of them said otherwise. The land was cool and gray, the kind of morning where the world felt unfinished. Dew clung to the grass. Mira walked a few paces ahead, her cloak brushing softly against her boots. Kael followed, keeping his distance without really meaning to. They didn’t talk much at first. The path narrowed as it climbed, cutting between low stone ridges. Kael stayed alert, senses stretched thin. He felt the dragon awake but calm, like a presence watching from behind his eyes rather than pushing forward. She steadies you, it murmured. Be wary of anchors. Kael ignored it. After an hour, Mira slowed. “You favor your left side,” she said. Kael blinked. “I don’t.” “You do,” she replied gently. “It’s subtle. But it’s there.” He considered denying it. Then shrugged. “Old injury.” “May I?” He hesitated, then nodded. She examined his side with care, fingers

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App