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Zero to warlord: the last blood
Zero to warlord: the last blood
Author: Charlie
The dragon clan heir has awakened
Author: Charlie
last update2026-04-13 10:02:05

The bench was cold.

Alex Stone had been sitting on it for three hours, watching the street-lights flicker over Graystone City's south side, and somewhere between the second and third hour he had stopped feeling his fingers. He tucked them under his arms and stared at the empty road and told himself that this was fine. That this was manageable. That he had survived worse than a cold bench and an empty stomach, because he had, and reminding himself of that was the only tool he had left.

He was twenty years old until midnight.

After that, he would be twenty-one.

Nobody in the history of Alex Stone's life had ever made a birthday feel like something worth celebrating. The Graysons — foster placement number four, the one that lasted longest — used to put a single candle on a store-brand cupcake and sing exactly one verse. He had been grateful. That was what he had learned to do with small things: be grateful before they were taken away.

He pulled his jacket tighter. October, and the wind off the river had real teeth tonight.

His duffel bag sat between his feet. It held everything he owned in the world: three shirts, two pairs of jeans, one pair of backup shoes with the sole coming loose on the left, a phone with a cracked screen and eleven percent battery, and a photograph. The photograph was sealed in a plastic bag to protect it from moisture. It showed a man and a woman, young, smiling, holding a baby in a yellow blanket. He had found it tucked inside a wall panel at his second foster placement, age six, and he had carried it through every placement after that without once showing it to anyone. He could not be completely certain the baby was him. He had no other evidence that anyone had ever held him that way.

He had been staring at the rat investigating a takeout container across the street for ten minutes when he heard the footsteps.

Seven pairs, maybe eight. Moving with the particular unhurried rhythm of people who have decided that the street belongs to them and that everyone else in it knows it. Alex had grown up learning to identify that rhythm. He had learned it the hard way, at age eight, before he understood that running was sometimes an option.

He didn't run anymore.

He stood up slowly, because fast looked like fear, and he turned around.

Derek Huang came through the circle of streetlight with six of his crew behind him. Two of them Alex recognized — Danny Kim and the one they called Brick, who was large and largely empty behind the eyes. The other four were newer faces. Bigger than the usual rotation. Hired for the occasion, maybe. Or borrowed from somewhere that had access to better personnel than Derek Huang's social circle normally produced.

Derek himself looked good, the way he always looked good. He smiled when he saw Alex. It was not a friendly smile. Derek Huang's smiles were instruments, not expressions.

"I heard you got fired," Derek said. He stopped about five feet away. "And evicted. Same week?" He shook his head like someone encountering a particularly sad story. "Man. Some people just can't catch a break."

Alex said nothing. He was counting the new faces, calculating weight and reach, noting that two of them had positioned themselves to his left in a way that looked casual and wasn't.

"You know what's funny?" Derek continued. "I remember back in school, someone told me you were smart. Said you read books and everything. Spent all that time in the library." He tilted his head. "And here you are. Sitting on a bench with a trash bag. Guess books don't fix everything."

"It's a duffel bag," Alex said.

"What?"

"You said trash bag. It's a duffel bag."

Derek stared at him. Then laughed — genuine this time, surprised out of him. "Man, even now you're still—" He gestured, losing the words. "Still doing that thing where you just—" He swung.

Alex's hand came up.

He caught Derek's fist. Not the way he'd caught punches before, absorbing them. He actually caught it — fingers closing around Derek's knuckles, holding them still in the air between them with a steadiness that surprised them both. He felt Derek's pulse against his palm. He held it for one full second and looked at Derek's face while he did it.

The expression on Derek's face in that second was something Alex had never seen there before. It lived between surprise and the beginning of alarm, and it was gone quickly, smothered by ego, but it had been real.

Alex released the fist and stepped back.

The four new faces rushed him.

He fought. He got in four good shots and he took nine or ten bad ones and he went down eventually, because five on one is not a fight, it is arithmetic. He hit the asphalt and a boot connected with his ribs and another caught him in the shoulder and he rolled to take the worst of it and lay still, because stillness was the fastest way to convince people they'd done enough.

They walked away. Derek's voice, drifting back: "Happy birthday, nobody."

Alex listened to the footsteps fade. Then he stayed where he was for another full minute, breathing carefully, assessing damage with the practiced efficiency of someone who had been doing this triage since childhood. Two ribs singing. Left eye starting to swell. Palm scraped from the asphalt. Nothing broken. Nothing that would stop him.

He pushed himself to sitting and put his back against the wall and looked at his hands.

They were glowing.

Faint. Gold. Not a reflection — not light from anywhere nearby. Something was lit beneath the skin, under his knuckles and along the lines of his fingers, like bioluminescence seen through water. He stared at it. The rational part of his brain attempted four different explanations and discarded all of them.

His phone said 11:59 PM.

Then midnight hit.

It was not a metaphor. Something that had been building in his chest for weeks — building since the fight where he'd first noticed he was hitting harder than he should be, since the morning he'd woken up from a beating with barely any bruising, since the strange headaches that came with a sound he thought was tinnitus but increasingly sounded like words — broke open.

The energy hit every cell at once.

Alex did not make a sound. He had trained himself out of screaming at age nine, in a kitchen in a foster home he didn't think about if he could help it, and the lesson had gone deep enough that even now, with his entire nervous system detonating, he compressed the scream into a single locked-jaw silent thing and let it burn through him. His muscles seized. His back arched. His head struck the wall behind him hard enough to blur his vision. He tasted blood from his cheek.

The burning became restructuring. He could feel things changing — not metaphorically. Actually changing. The rib that was close to fracturing sealed. The swelling around his eye began to recede. The cells of his body were moving at a pace that should not have been possible, directed by something that seemed to know exactly what it was doing.

After what felt like an hour and was probably ninety seconds, it stopped.

The gold light faded. The street was just the street again.

And in the air in front of him — visible only to his eyes, he somehow knew this with the same certainty he knew his own name — a screen appeared.

[DING!]

LEGACY WARRIOR SYSTEM — ONLINE

Host: Alex Stone

Age: 21

Bloodline: Dragon Clan — Tier SSS

Bloodline Activation: 2%

Current Level: 1

Strength: F-Rank (12)

Agility: F-Rank (14)

Vitality: F-Rank (11)

Chi Capacity: F-Rank (8)

Intelligence: C-Rank (41)

Status: Last Surviving Heir

Below the stats, a line he hadn't expected:

*CAUTION: This system's activation has been detected by at least one external monitoring party. Threat level: Moderate. Begin threat assessment immediately.*

He stared at that last line for a long time.

Then a voice spoke inside his head — female, calm, precise, and carrying the particular quality of something that had been waiting a very long time to finally be heard.

*"Hello, Alex. My name is Juno. I am the system intelligence assigned to the Legacy Warrior System, which activated in your bloodline forty-three seconds ago. I have a great deal to tell you. But first — that rib needs another four minutes to fully seal. Please stop moving aggressively."*

Alex sat very still.

"Who built this?" he said, quietly, lips barely moving.

*"Your father. We'll get to that."*

"And the warning? External monitoring?"

A pause. Brief, but he caught it.

*"When a bloodline of your tier activates, it produces a detectable energy signature. There are people in this city who maintain equipment specifically designed to detect this kind of event. They have resources. They will begin moving within twenty-four hours, possibly less."*

"Moving toward me."

*"Moving toward everyone you care about. That is typically how they work, Alex. They look for leverage first."*

Alex thought about Marcus. Room 14. The monitors. The particular smell of the care facility's cleaning fluid that hit you in the face when you walked through the main door.

He picked up his duffel bag. He stood up.

"Start from the beginning," he said, and started walking. "And don't skip anything."

*"Gladly. Though I should tell you something first — something your father recorded in the system's opening message, to be delivered the moment you activated."* A pause. *"He said: 'I'm sorry it took this long. And I'm sorry for what finding this out is going to cost you. But I believe in you. I always have. That has to be enough for now.'"*

Alex stopped walking.

He stood on an empty street at midnight with a cracked phone in his pocket and a duffel bag over one shoulder and no home to go to, and he did something he had not done since he was nine years old: he felt the sting of tears at the corners of his eyes.

He did not let them fall.

He pressed his thumb against the bridge of his nose, hard, for three seconds. Then he kept walking.

"Okay," he said. His voice was steady. "Tell me everything."

Across the city, in the penthouse of Zhao Tower, a soft alarm sounded on the desk of Commander Zhao Rong. He was awake — he slept lightly and rarely past 4 AM, a habit built over forty years of operating in a world where sleeping deeply was how careers ended. He set down the tea he had been holding and looked at the alert.

*Dragon Clan energy signature detected. South Graystone sector. Strength: Tier S, possibly higher. Activation event: approximately forty minutes ago.*

He read it twice. He picked up his phone and dialed a number from memory.

When the call connected he said: "The Dragon Clan heir has awakened." He listened. "Yes. Tonight." He listened again. "No. Do not go near the heir yet. Find what he cares about first. You have twenty-four hours to identify it, and forty-eight to act on it." He hung up.

He sat in the dark for a moment. Then he poured his tea down the drain because it had gone cold, made fresh, and went back to work.

Zhao Rong was a man who had built a forty-year empire on a single governing principle: the fastest way to control a dangerous person is not to threaten them directly. It is to hold the thing they would die for and let them come to you.

He had used this principle three times in his career.

It had worked every time.

---

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