Chapter 502 BLOODLINE SUPERIORITY
Chapter 502: Chapter 502 BLOODLINE SUPERIORITY
KIERAN’S POV
Jack did not fall the way he was supposed to.
There was no clean end to it, no moment of surrender that made anything feel settled or justified.
There was only resistance that slowly decayed into something less coherent, as though his rage had begun to forget the shape it was meant to hold, until he crumpled to the floor.
Ashar stood over him in the aftermath, massive golden form still bristling with residual power, chest rising and falling in heavy, controlled breaths.
The corridor around us was ruined beyond recognition—reinforced steel warped and split, black scorch marks burned into surfaces never meant to carry heat, and fragments of corrupted flame still drifting in the air like dying embers, refusing to accept their own extinction.
Jack lay in the center of it all.
Or what was left of him.
The darkness that had once consumed him was gone. Not defeated so much as expelled, forced out in violent rupture until there was nothing left to sustain it.
What remained was a man reduced to something skeletal and hollow, skin pale beneath smeared ash-like residue, hair matted and damp with sweat and blood.
His chest stuttered for air. Each rasping breath sounded like a negotiation between survival and collapse.
Golden fur retracted into muscle and bone as I shifted back to human form.
My specialized combat clothing—woven from adaptive fiber—changed shape with me, adjusting to fit my human frame without so much as a snag in the fabric.
I rolled my shoulders, feeling the residual strain of Ashar’s dominance settle beneath my skin like a fading echo.
Jack’s lips twisted in a sneer as his gaze dragged over me, slow and contemptuous, bitter pride flickering even in his ruined state.
“Congratulations,” he rasped, voice hoarse and uneven, as if his words scraped against broken glass inside his throat. “The all-powerful Alpha bags another win.”
I did not answer immediately, studying him instead.
Not the monster he had become during the fight, not the corrupted wolf that had tried to erase everything in its path, but what remained when that layer of imposed darkness finally burned away.
There was something almost worse in seeing him like this. Not powerful. Not terrifying. Just...stripped.
He shifted, forcing himself upright against the fractured wall behind him. That tiny movement looked like it took enough effort to fell an elephant.
His eyes strained up to meet mine, stubborn defiance barely holding back the tide of humiliation.
“You got lucky, you know,” he said slowly, each word sharpened by bitterness. “If not for bloodline superiority, you wouldn’t have stood a chance against me.”
A pause pressed in, heavy and stifling, the air thick with the bitter tang of scorched metal and lingering corruption.
“Who could win a fight against an Alpha with royal blood?” he spat, eyes narrowing with hatred.
For a moment, I simply looked at him.
There had been a time when I might have responded differently. A time when provocation like this would have meant something personal, something worth attacking just to prove a point.
But that version of me had died the moment I understood that there were bigger things than myself to fight for.
I didn’t even care that he knew the truth about me—no doubt, Catherine had done extensive homework on her opponents.
Now, I only saw the pattern.
The refusal to accept responsibility.
The need to externalize failure.
The belief that power was to be inherited rather than earned.
I stepped closer. My voice came out calm, almost detached. “Do you know why you lost?”
“Enlighten me,” Jack sneered.
“Borrowed power never lasts.”
His expression tightened, though he didn’t interrupt.
I continued evenly, “Not bloodline. Not circumstance. Not strength. You lost because what you were using was never yours to begin with.”
A flicker passed through his eyes at that. Not doubt. Not acceptance. Something closer to irritation at being forced to hear a truth he had no framework to reject.
For a second, there was silence.
Then he laughed, sharp and strained at the edges.
“It’s easy to give lessons sitting atop your fucking high horse.”
I didn’t respond because arguing with him was no longer necessary.
Instead, I reached for my belt.
The combat rig I wore was designed for situations exactly like this—adaptive field equipment integrated into the suit, built to deploy restraints, anchors, and suppression bindings.
My fingers closed around a compact spool unit, and with a short pull and twist, a thin, reinforced binding cable unspooled into my hand with a quiet mechanical click that sounded too loud in the tense silence.
Jack tried to shift again, forcing himself into some semblance of dignity, but the movement collapsed halfway through.
Whatever remnants of corrupted reinforcement had sustained him were gone now. What remained was purely human weakness, raw and unprotected.
“Don’t touch me,” he rasped.
I closed the distance in a single step, secured the first restraint around his wrist, and locked it to a fractured metal beam behind him.
The anchor point engaged instantly, magnetized reinforcement biting into the structure and sealing itself with a dull pulse of energy.
Jack jerked once, sharply.
It did nothing.
I secured the second restraint, locking his other wrist to a separate structural strut that had survived the corridor’s collapse. The bindings automatically tightened, adjusting to his reduced strength.
“Do you think this changes anything?” Jack muttered, voice trembling around a bitter edge as his hands flexed against the cold restraints. “You think restraining me changes anything?”
I scoffed. “You overestimate your importance in the grand scheme of things.”
His jaw tightened, but there was nothing behind it anymore. No corruption to feed rage into power. No instability to push him beyond limits he could not naturally reach.
Just a man tied to consequences he could no longer outrun.
I turned away before he could speak again.
The corridor behind me still trembled faintly with residual energy from the fight, but it no longer mattered. Jack was contained. The variable was removed.
The elevator stood at the far end of the corridor, having returned after Sera’s descent. Its interior lights pulsed erratically, reflecting the unstable energy bleeding upward from below.
I stepped inside without slowing, my hand already pressing the control panel before the doors had fully acknowledged my presence.
As the lift began to descend, I exhaled once, steady and controlled, forcing my mind forward.
During the fight, I had seen enough.
Not just Jack’s pattern of corruption, but the architecture behind it.
The instability in his corruption, the external reinforcement that had never fully integrated with his core identity, the way his power surged and collapsed in patterns that did not originate from him.
Catherine was powerful, but it was no secret that most, if not all, of her power was stolen. She alone was not responsible for the scale of what I had felt beneath the surface.
And I had an inkling of where she had gotten Jack’s power from.
The elevator continued downward. I tightened my fist as the numbers dropped floor by floor into darkness, willing it to go faster.
If I was right, Sera had walked directly into the center of something far larger and more powerful than any of us had initially believed.
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