“I know,” Hiccup said, too quiet for anyone but the queen to hear. “I know you’ve lost hatchlings. I know you’ve been hunted. But this doesn’t end in fire. It ends when someone puts the fire out.”
The wind rose. They flew.
But Hiccup grew sideways. Lanky. Tilted. More charcoal sketches than axe-swings. By eight, he could name every dragon species by the sound of its snore. By twelve, he’d designed a bolas that could trip a Terrible Terror from fifty yards. His father saw none of this. What Stoick saw was a boy who dropped his shield during dragon drills. Who apologized to the sheep after accidentally singeing their wool. How To Train Your Dragon
The dragon closed its eyes.
The queen blinked. Trembled. Then, slowly, lowered her head. “I know,” Hiccup said, too quiet for anyone
Stoick had spent fifteen years trying to hammer the world into shape. Maybe it was time to let his son build a new one. The war ended not with a bang, but with a boy on a black dragon landing in the middle of a battlefield. Hiccup stood between the Viking line and the Green Death—a monstrous queen the size of a mountain. Toothless roared, not in threat, but in warning. She’s scared , Hiccup realized. They’re all scared. But this doesn’t end in fire