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Reborn as a Dragon:Rise of The Draconic King-Chapter 44 - 40 — When the Noise Finally Faded
The first thing John noticed when he woke up was the quiet.
Not the uneasy silence of predators waiting to strike. Not the oppressive stillness that followed a battle where death lingered in the air.
This quiet was... normal.
The forest breathed again.
Leaves rustled softly as wind passed through the canopy. Somewhere far away, something small scurried through undergrowth. Birds—actual birds—called out in cautious, tentative notes, as if testing whether it was safe to exist again.
John lay still, eyes closed, letting the sounds wash over him.
His body felt heavy.
Not injured-heavy. Not broken.
Just... large.
He shifted slightly and felt the ground press back against him more firmly than he remembered. Stone that would’ve once been hard and unyielding now felt almost soft beneath his weight.
"...Right," he murmured. "That happened."
When he finally opened his eyes, the world looked different.
Not distorted. Sharper.
He could see farther into the forest, details standing out with startling clarity—the subtle movement of leaves, the texture of bark, the faint trails of mana still lingering in the air like footprints left behind by the battle.
John slowly pushed himself upright.
The movement was smooth. Effortless. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
That alone made him pause.
Before, getting up after a fight like that would’ve been a struggle. Muscles would scream. Joints would protest. Balance would feel off.
Now?
His body responded instantly, like it was waiting for the command.
He looked down at himself.
His claws were larger, thicker, the edges darker and more refined. The scales along his forearms overlapped more tightly, forming natural reinforcement without sacrificing flexibility. His chest was broader, deeper, the muscles beneath his scales moving with coiled strength.
When he flexed his wings, they spread wider than before—far wider.
John inhaled slowly.
The air filled his lungs easily, deeply. Mana flowed with the breath, circulating through his core in a steady, controlled rhythm instead of the turbulent surges he’d grown used to managing.
"...I really did change," he said quietly.
He stood there for a long moment, grounding himself.
Then he felt it.
A pressure—but not hostile.
*Recognition.*
The forest knew him now.
Not as an intruder. Not as prey.
As something that *belonged*.
John closed his eyes and focused, extending his awareness outward.
His territory answered.
It stretched far beyond what it had before—rolling outward in all directions like an invisible tide. Places that had once been contested now lay empty, abandoned by monsters that had either fled or been erased during the chaos.
He could feel it clearly: broken landmarks, former nests, hunting grounds left untouched.
"...This is bigger," he muttered.
Much bigger.
What had once been a dangerous pocket of land had become something else entirely—a core. A place others avoided instinctively, even without knowing why.
John exhaled slowly.
"That’s going to be a problem later," he said, then added with a faint huff, "but not today."
Today, he needed to recover.
He moved carefully through the clearing, choosing a spot where the ground dipped naturally and the canopy overhead remained intact. The air there was cooler, shaded, untouched by the worst of the battle.
As he settled down, his body instinctively shifted—posture adjusting, wings folding in a way that protected vulnerable areas while still allowing airflow. It wasn’t something he consciously decided.
His body just... knew.
John rested his head against the stone and let himself relax for the first time since entering the hot zone.
Sleep came fast.
---
He woke again hours later.
This time, hunger hit him first.
A deep, gnawing need that went beyond simple food—it was his body demanding fuel to finish what the evolution had started.
John rose and moved through his territory with practiced ease. His steps were quieter now despite his increased size, weight distributed perfectly. He barely disturbed the forest floor as he moved.
It didn’t take long to find prey.
A large horned beast froze the moment it sensed him. It didn’t run. Didn’t even try.
John ended it quickly.
As he fed, he could feel the difference immediately. Nutrients and mana were absorbed more efficiently, routed cleanly through his system instead of overwhelming it. His muscles warmed, strengthened, tightening into something more refined with every bite.
By the time he finished, the lingering stiffness in his wings was gone.
He tested them.
One powerful beat sent him airborne effortlessly.
John climbed higher than he ever had before, breaking through the canopy in seconds. The forest spread beneath him—vast, scarred in places, but healing.
From this height, he could see just how much land had quietly become his.
"...I didn’t mean to take all of this," he said softly.
But intention didn’t matter.
Power did.
He circled once, then landed atop a high stone outcrop that overlooked much of the territory. From here, he could watch without being seen.
The system stirred.
This time, it didn’t interrupt.
It *waited*.
John focused inward.
Changes unfolded naturally.
Skills he’d relied on instinctively now felt clearer, sharper—less like tools he grabbed blindly and more like extensions of his body.
His flight control had improved drastically. He could feel minute shifts in air pressure, adjusting wing angles subconsciously. His breath attacks—though he didn’t test them—felt heavier, denser, like they carried intent rather than raw force.
Dark mana, once volatile and difficult to rein in, now flowed smoothly from his core, responding instantly to thought instead of emotion.
The system finally spoke.
[Skill proficiency increased.]
[Multiple abilities refined through combat.]
[Control and efficiency improved.]
John nodded slowly.
"...Yeah," he said. "That tracks."
He didn’t feel excited.
He felt... settled.
That surprised him more than the level-ups.
Usually, growth came with adrenaline. With hunger. With the urge to test himself immediately.
Now?
There was restraint.
Awareness.
The understanding that rushing forward without thought would eventually get him killed—no matter how strong he became.
John watched the forest until the light shifted and shadows grew longer.
"I can’t stay like this forever," he said quietly. "Someone’s going to notice."
Tier 8 wasn’t subtle.
The battle hadn’t been subtle.
Whatever lived beyond this forest—whatever watched from farther away—would eventually turn its attention here.
John curled his tail around himself and settled back against the stone.
"But today," he added, closing his eyes, "I rest."
The forest accepted that.
For now.







