Font Size
15px

Despite this being a training regi—a competition to see who could obtain the finest monster core—this was still a righteous sect.

There were lines that could not be crossed.

No matter how fierce the rivalry was, they were still a part of the orthodox alliance.

They were cultivators bound by discipline and honor, not cutthroats scrambling for scraps.

Helping others when needed, not harming them out of greed or spite, was part of what separated them from the demonic paths.

Hei Long pressed deeper into the forests.

He wasn’t here to sabotage anyone.

Besides the protagonist...

But nobody had to know that...

Eventually, Hei Long arrived where his instincts and the faint claw marks along the cliffside told him to go.

A shadowed cave opened ahead, its mouth wide and jagged like a beast’s jaw.

Hei Long didn’t hesitate.

He stepped inside.

Cool air greeted him at first, brushing past his skin like a whisper from the underworld.

The deeper Hei Long walked, the less light there was, until only the soft glow of his spirit energy provided illumination.

His hand trailed along the damp, jagged wall, fingers brushing against the occasional crystal or fungus.

Every few steps, a subtle tremor moved through the stone around him, like a slumbering breath echoing from sothing deep within.

Then ca the heat.

A wave of it, subtle at first.

The kind of creeping warmth that builds behind the neck, that beads sweat across the brow.

The deeper Hei Long went, the more intense it beca.

Soon, he could feel sweat trailing down his spine.

His breathing slowed instinctively, every footstep light.

He was close.

The tunnel opened into a wider chamber, and there—lying amidst a scorched bed of rock and broken stalagmites—was the target.

The fla-veined tiger.

It was enormous, easily the size of a carriage, its broad fra covered in sleek, charred fur traced with glowing crimson lines like lava flowing beneath obsidian.

But its most striking feature was its legs—no flesh, no bone—just writhing, ever-burning flas shaped into massive paws.

With each slow breath, heat pulsed from its body, warping the air and making the ground beneath it shimr.

It was asleep, or at least appeared to be.

Hei Long narrowed his eyes:

’This is my chance. Take it down quickly. No drawn-out battle. Don’t give it a chance to roar or lash out. A clean hit. Take the eye. Disorient it. Then finish it off.’

He crept forward, controlling every breath, every motion.

His muscles tensed, not with panic, but with coiled discipline.

Years of training were etched into his limbs, his body a tool honed for monts like this.

Hei Long raised his fist, gathering Qi silently:

’Wait until the last possible second. Don’t let the crackle give away.’

The Lightning Fist technique flickered into existence, sparking across his knuckles like a snake of raw voltage.

He could feel it—barely contained power dancing beneath his skin, hungry to be unleashed.

In one fluid motion, Hei Long surged forward.

The lightning flared.

The fla-veined tiger’s eyes snapped open, molten gold blazing with primal fury.

But it was a fraction too late.

Crack!

Hei Long’s fist slamd into the monster’s eye with a thunderous crash, the lightning exploding on impact.

The force sent shockwaves down the fla-veined tiger’s spine, its head snapping back violently.

A guttural, enraged roar burst from its throat as it stumbled sideways, half-blind and snarling.

Hei Long didn’t give it ti to recover:

"You’re not getting up!"

He lunged again.

Another Lightning Fist crackled into being, brighter this ti, wild arcs whipping around his wrist.

With a feral yell, Hei Long drove the blow into the fla-veined tiger’s chest just as it tried to rise.

The impact sent it hurtling backward, crashing into the far wall of the cave with a deafening boom.

Rock split, rubble fell, and the entire cavern shook as the fla-veined tiger’s massive body imprinted into the stone like a cot had struck it.

Chunks of debris fell from the ceiling, clattering around them.

The monster roared again—this ti in fury, pain, and humiliation.

Smoke curled from the cratered wall.

Hei Long dropped into a crouch, panting, his fists still crackling with residual sparks.

The heat in the chamber was unbearable now, his robes sticking to his skin, his hair damp with sweat.

The fla-veined tiger writhed and thrashed, trying to regain its footing—but it was dazed, blood and fla dripping from the ruined socket of one eye.

Hei Long tightened his stance.

With a sharp exhale, he launched himself forward, a blur of movent cutting through the heat and smoke.

The fla-veined tiger, now fully roused and thrashing in fury, raised one of its massive paws and swiped at him.

Flas burst along the edges of its attack, tongues of fire erupting in thin cracks across the cavern floor.

The air hissed where they passed.

But Hei Long was faster.

He leapt—soaring over the fiery strike, the heat licking at his ankles mid-air.

As he descended, his fist coiled again, lightning crackling violently across his arm.

This ti, he didn’t hold back.

He pulled every last thread of Qi and put it into his fist.

The technique flared to life—Lightning Fist.

The surge of power overwheld Hei Long’s ridians instantly, and a burst of blood splattered from his lips as he forced his body to comply.

His vision trembled at the edges.

His muscles scread.

But his aim was clear.

The fla-veined tiger opened its mouth, unleashing a blast of fla, desperate to burn him.

Fiery spit scattered into the air—searing droplets landing across Hei Long’s robe and singeing holes into the fabric.

The cloth blackened and curled, smoke trailing behind him.

But Hei Long didn’t flinch.

With a roar of his own, he swung his lightning-charged fist upward, just as the monster lunged, its fangs glinting inches from his face.

The blow struck true.

Right under the chin.

The impact cracked like a thunderclap, echoing through the cave like divine punishnt.

The fla-veined tiger’s entire head snapped back violently, and for a mont—its entire body was lifted clean off the ground.

Lightning exploded in every direction, coursing through its spine, bursting through fur and fla alike.

The sound of shattering bone—a grotesque orchestra of cracking and splintering—filled the air.

Then silence.

The fla-veined tiger hit the ground with a crash, its body now still, limp, and charred.

Smoke drifted lazily from its mouth.

Its once-glowing legs of fire slowly dimd and extinguished, turning to solid stone-like limbs as the spiritual flas dispersed.

It was dead.

Hei Long stumbled, barely catching himself before he collapsed.

His knees trembled, his fists still buzzing faintly.

He sucked in deep, ragged breaths.

"Holy shit..." Hei Long muttered between gulps of air, dragging a sleeve across his mouth:

"That was close. Way too close."

He turned to the corpse of the fallen monster.

"..." Hei Long approached it slowly, his arms heavy and body trembling with the aftershocks of overexertion.

He knelt beside the monstrous body, now cooling fast, and pressed his hands against its side.

The fur was coarse, matted with blood and soot, and stank of burnt spirit essence.

Without hesitation, Hei Long dug in with his bare hands.

It wasn’t clean work.

Flesh tore under his fingers, hot blood spilling over his hands and wrists as he ripped open the fla-veined tiger’s hide, his breath hissing through clenched teeth.

Pain shot up his arm with every tug, but he ignored it, biting his lip until he tasted copper.

Then—Hei Long saw it.

Nestled deep within the chest cavity, surrounded by shattered ribs and glowing tissue, was the monster core.

It pulsed with a crimson light, its surface smooth and glossy like polished glass.

The center of it was darker—a rich, deep red almost black, like cooled magma, and branded across its center was a distinct fla-shaped rune, the symbol of its affinity.

"..." Hei Long stared at it for a mont, breathless.

Despite being soaked in gore—

The heat of it still lingered faintly.

"I’ll be taking this," Hei Long muttered under his breath, voice hoarse.

And he did.

His blood-covered fingers closed around the core, lifting it free from the corpse’s chest.

It was heavier than he expected.

Despite Hei Long’s exhaustion, a small grin tugged at the corner of his mouth:

"This... was worth it."

You are reading NTR Villain: All the Heroines Belong to Me! Chapter 37: Lightning Over Flame on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

I Quit Being The Villain cover
Same author

I Quit Being The Villain

Kurupts ·Fantasy

Transmigratingintothenovel,[TheEmperorofLuck]GuXiareceivedthedespairvillainsystemandbecameasmallvillainwhoisdestinedtobefaceslappedbytheprotagonist...

My Three Yandere Wives cover
Same author

My Three Yandere Wives

Kurupts ·Fantasy

“Whoareyoulady?”“HowrudeIamthegoddessofreincarnation!”Anormalyoungmanfoundhimselfsurroundedbythousandsofgodswhowereobservinghimsilently.“Shit...did...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.