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"The Dragon King’s Human Mate" The King Returns

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Chapter 37

The King Returns

When Kael finally landed atop Black Citadel, the entire fortress fell silent.

Not ordinary silence.

Reverent silence.

The kind soldiers carried after surviving something they never expected to live through.

Massive black wings folded slowly against the storm-dark sky while dragonfire drifted in controlled spirals around the towers instead of destroying them. Below the landing platform, hundreds of dragons remained gathered across rooftops and battlements, all watching their king.

Watching to see what returned from the fire.

Evelynn still stood carefully within Kael’s claws as the Dragon King lowered himself onto the highest platform of the fortress. The stone beneath his weight cracked instantly, spiderweb fractures spreading through ancient black rock.

But the city no longer burned.

That alone felt miraculous.

The soulbond pulsed warm and steady now. Exhaustion moved through it heavily, but no madness remained. No uncontrollable rage. No drowning dragonfire clawing against his mind.

Just him.

Finally him.

Then the transformation began.

Black dragonfire swept across Kael’s massive body in waves while scales dissolved slowly into smoke and ember-light. The enormous dragon form shrank piece by piece until claws became hands again and wings folded back into human shape beneath swirling fire.

Kael staggered the second his feet hit the stone platform.

Evelynn caught him automatically.

That startled both of them.

Mostly because Kael had never stumbled before.

Not once.

The Dragon King leaned heavily against her for half a second before regaining balance, breathing rough beneath smoke-stained armor. His face looked pale beneath soot and exhaustion while traces of black scales still flickered faintly beneath his skin.

Weak.

Actually weak.

The realization hit Evelynn harder than expected.

Kael noticed her expression immediately through the bond.

“I am not dying.”

“That’s a strangely specific reassurance.”

His mouth almost twitched.

Almost.

Then his knees nearly gave out again.

Evelynn grabbed his arm instantly. “Okay, that one was less reassuring.”

The surrounding dragon soldiers looked deeply alarmed now.

Reasonable reaction.

Their terrifying immortal king had apparently reached the shocking conclusion that repeatedly turning into an apocalyptic dragon while poisoned and emotionally unstable might have physical consequences.

Kael straightened stubbornly despite the obvious exhaustion dragging at him. “I’m fine.”

Evelynn stared at him flatly. “You destroyed weather systems.”

“That is unrelated.”

“It absolutely is not.”

A few nearby soldiers immediately looked downward pretending not to hear the argument.

Cowards.

Or survivors.

Probably both.

The older dragon commander from the launch platform approached carefully, still carrying visible scorch marks across his armor from earlier battles.

“My king.”

Kael looked toward him calmly now, fully in control again despite exhaustion pulling heavily through the soulbond.

“Report.”

The commander visibly relaxed hearing that tone again.

“The human armies retreated after the flamestorm.” He hesitated slightly. “Most fled before reaching the outer city.”

Kael’s expression remained unreadable.

“Civilian casualties?”

“Minimal within Black Citadel.” The commander lowered his head slightly. “Your Majesty redirected the final dragonfire wave away from the lower districts.”

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Evelynn blinked.

She hadn’t known that.

The soulbond immediately answered for him.

Instinct.

Even lost inside the dragonfire, Kael still protected the city.

The commander continued carefully. “The southern border remains unstable, but the armies are retreating.”

War over.

Or at least paused.

The commander’s eyes shifted briefly toward Evelynn before returning carefully to Kael.

“And the dragons…”

Silence stretched briefly across the platform.

Then another dragon nearby lowered himself slowly.

After him—

every dragon on the fortress followed.

One by one.

Heads lowered.

Wings folding inward.

Submission.

Not just to Kael.

To both of them.

Evelynn looked around slowly. “Oh no.”

Kael sounded tired already. “That reaction concerns me.”

“They’re bowing.”

“Yes.”

“I don’t think I’m emotionally prepared for dragon politics.”

That finally earned a faint laugh from him.

Small.

Exhausted.

But real.

The bond warmed instantly in response.

The older commander straightened carefully. “The dragons recognize the completed bond.”

Evelynn immediately pointed at him. “You people keep saying things in ways that feel threatening.”

The commander wisely chose not to answer.

Several healers rushed onto the platform moments later carrying supplies and enough panic to qualify as an organized emergency.

One took a single look at Kael and visibly lost emotional stability.

“Your Majesty!”

Kael looked deeply unimpressed already. “I am alive.”

“For now,” the healer muttered darkly.

Evelynn liked him immediately.

The healer grabbed Kael’s arm before the Dragon King could protest and pulled back torn armor blackened by poison burns.

Evelynn froze.

The wounds beneath looked horrible.

Silver-black veins spread outward from deep punctures along Kael’s shoulder and ribs where the poisoned chains struck him earlier. Even dragon healing hadn’t fully repaired the damage.

The soulbond flared sharply with pain.

Kael felt her reaction immediately.

“It looks worse than it is.”

“That is another terrible reassurance.”

The healer snorted. “He nearly burned out his own heart channeling dragonfire at that scale.”

Evelynn stared at Kael slowly. “You left that part out.”

Kael looked away.

Guilty.

Interesting.

The healer continued aggressively. “And whatever happened in the flamebond stabilized the corruption somehow.”

Flamebond.

Another emotionally threatening dragon word.

The healer glanced between them suspiciously. “What exactly did you two do?”

Evelynn answered immediately. “Emotionally unresolved trauma.”

Kael closed his eyes briefly.

The healer looked exhausted already. “I preferred when the king only fought wars.”

Fair.

Eventually the soldiers and healers guided them back toward the upper palace halls while dawn slowly broke beyond the mountains. Smoke still drifted through the distant valleys, but the skies above Black Citadel had finally stopped burning.

Inside the ruined western throne hall, the damage from Kael’s earlier rage remained everywhere. Melted stone. Burn marks. Cracked pillars. The throne itself partially shattered beneath dragonfire scars.

Kael stopped walking once they entered.

The soulbond shifted quietly.

Memory.

Guilt.

Evelynn stepped beside him.

“You came back.”

He looked at the ruined hall silently for several seconds before answering.

“I almost didn’t.”

The honesty in his voice hurt.

Evelynn reached for his hand automatically.

The bond warmed instantly.

Kael looked down at their joined hands before speaking again, quieter this time.

“When I lost control…” He paused slightly. “I heard you calling me.”

Evelynn smiled faintly. “Unfortunately for you, I’m extremely stubborn.”

That earned another near-smile.

Then suddenly Kael swayed again.

Evelynn immediately tightened her grip. “Okay, now you’re sitting down before you collapse dramatically.”

“I do not collapse dramatically.”

The sentence ended with him nearly falling against the broken throne platform.

Evelynn looked deeply unimpressed. “Spectacular timing.”

For the first time since she met him, the Dragon King actually looked embarrassed.

And somehow—

seeing Kael exhausted, wounded, human again beneath all the fire and myth—

felt far more intimate than witnessing the dragon ever had.

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