The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System-Chapter 149: The Space Between

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Chapter 149: The Space Between

The moonlight filtered through the canopy in silver shards, painting the clearing in patches of pale light and deep shadow. Adam stood relaxed, hands loose at his sides, his crimson eyes tracking Seraphina’s every movement.

"You can attack first," he offered, a hint of challenge in his voice.

Seraphina’s blade whispered free of its sheath, the steel catching the moonlight like liquid silver. "Don’t regret this."

She moved.

There was no flashy skill, no aura flare—just pure, disciplined swordsmanship honed over years of relentless practice. Her first strike was a textbook horizontal slash, aimed at Adam’s ribs with perfect form and terrifying speed.

Adam didn’t dodge. He wanted to measure her. His hand shot up, fingers closing around the blade—or trying to. At the last instant, dark scales rippled across his palm and forearm, the hardened surface grinding against Seraphina’s edge with a harsh screech of metal on organic armor. Sparks flew.

CRUNCH-SHRIEK.

Adam caught the blade. His hand held firm, the scales holding against the enchanted steel. "Not bad—"

Seraphina didn’t pause for commentary. Her sword twisted in his grip, not to break free, but to change the angle. She flowed into her next technique seamlessly, the blade reversing direction in a blinding arc aimed at Adam’s exposed side.

Adam’s other hand snapped up, scales already formed. CLANG. He caught that strike too, but this time the force behind it made him grunt. Her Oath-light flickered at the edge of his vision—she was already tapping into it, pushing beyond normal limits.

"Not bad," Adam repeated, this time with genuine acknowledgment. He planted his foot and launched a kick at her midsection, not to injure, but to create space.

Seraphina twisted, bringing her sword down in a sharp diagonal block. The flat of her blade met his shin with a solid THWACK, the impact jarring up both their limbs. She slid back a step, her boots carving furrows in the soft earth, but her stance remained perfect—balanced, ready, her eyes blazing with focused fire.

They separated, breathing the cool night air. Adam shook out his hand, the scales receding. A faint red mark crossed his palm where her blade had pressed hardest—not a wound, but proof she could at least make him feel the pressure.

"Your form is solid," Adam said, rolling his shoulder. "You’ve trained hard."

Seraphina reset her stance, sword held in a middle guard. "That was only the beginning. I meant what I said—I will not lose."

The moonlight caught the determination in her eyes, and for a moment, Adam saw past the rigid knight to the warrior beneath. Someone who had spent her life dedicated to a single purpose, and who now saw a chance to grow beyond it.

"Alright then," Adam said, dropping into a loose fighting stance of his own. "Show me what that oath of yours can really do. Don’t hold back."

Seraphina’s lips curved into something that wasn’t quite a smile—more like a predator acknowledging worthy prey. "As you wish."

The night air itself seemed to tremble as Seraphina’s aura erupted to full life. Silver-gold light, pure and unwavering, blazed from her form like a second skin, pushing back the shadows and painting the clearing in ethereal radiance. The grass at her feet bent outward from the pressure, and even the distant whisper of the Ghostwind seemed to pause, acknowledging the presence of something extraordinary.

Adam’s eyes widened slightly, a genuine flicker of surprise crossing his features. "That’s... a dense aura." A slow, appreciative smile spread across his face. "Now I’m interested."

Seraphina didn’t wait for further commentary. She moved—not with the disciplined precision of before, but with something far more dangerous. Her speed had nearly doubled, her blade becoming a silver blur that left afterimages in the moonlight. The strike came not as a single slash, but as a cascade of them, each aimed with lethal intent.

Adam raised his scaled arm to block. SHHRRRIIIIIEEK—!

The sound was horrific—metal grinding against dragon-scale, sparks showering like fireworks. But this time, Adam felt it. The scales on his forearm cracked, tiny fissures spreading across their surface as Seraphina’s aura-enhanced blade carved through his natural armor. He withdrew his arm sharply, examining the damage with genuine surprise.

"My scales..." He looked up at her, and there was no anger in his eyes—only dawning respect. "Those are hard to come by, you know."

Seraphina’s lips curved into a thin, determined smile. "I know." She didn’t give him time to recover. Her next attack was a blur of motion—a feint low that became a rising diagonal slash, then twisted mid-strike into a thrust aimed directly at his throat.

Adam’s body reacted on pure instinct. His core muscles contracted, twisting his torso in a fluid, controlled motion that looked extreme but was well within the capabilities of a being with his Serpent physiology and enhanced agility. The blade passed less than a centimeter from his throat, close enough that he felt the cold kiss of displaced air. His feet left the ground in a controlled backflip—a maneuver his Aerial Dominance trait made almost effortless—landing him several paces away in a low crouch.

"Hey!" He straightened, one hand touching his neck where the wind of her passage had left a faint chill. "You’re not actually trying to kill me here, are you?"

Seraphina’s smile widened—and there was something different in it now. Something almost playful, a glint in her eyes that he’d never seen before. "I cannot guarantee that," she said, her voice carrying a warmth that seemed wildly inappropriate for someone holding a sword.

Adam stared at her for a heartbeat. Then, slowly, a matching grin spread across his own features. It wasn’t his usual predatory smirk or cold battle-smile. This one was... genuine. Amused.

"I see how it is." He rolled his shoulders, and this time, when he settled into his stance, there was no casual looseness. His weight shifted forward, his crimson eyes sharpening to points of focused light. Dark energy began to coalesce around his hands—not enough to harm, but enough to show he meant business.

"Alright then," Adam said, his voice dropping to a low, eager rumble. "Seems like I’ll have to get serious too."

He didn’t unleash his full arsenal—just controlled, measured strikes designed to test rather than destroy.

A Pressurized Spine launched from his scaled forearm, streaking toward Seraphina’s shoulder. Her aura flared, and her blade came up in a perfect arc, deflecting the projectile into the darkness. She followed through with the momentum, spinning into a devastating horizontal slash aimed at his ribs.

Adam twisted, the blade passing close enough to stir his hair. His feet left the ground in a controlled leap, carrying him over the strike and landing silently behind her.

"Too slow," he murmured, already forming an Ember Shard Shot in his palm, the obsidian projectile glowing with contained heat.

Seraphina’s instincts screamed. She didn’t turn—she flowed, her entire body rotating with the grace of a dancer and the speed of a striking serpent. Her sword completed a full circle, the aura-enhanced edge meeting Adam’s shard mid-flight.

CRACKLE-FWOOM!

The shard detonated against her blade, but Seraphina had overcommitted. The force of her swing, combined with the explosion, sent her momentum spiraling out of control. Her sword continued its arc—straight toward Adam’s unprotected side.

’Oh no!’ Her eyes widened in horror. ’I put too much power into that! He’ll be hurt!’

Adam saw it coming. He didn’t dodge—there wasn’t time. Instead, he shifted. Dark scales erupted across his forearm in a heartbeat, reinforced by the layered defenses of Monarch’s Aegis. He brought his arm up, catching the full force of Seraphina’s blade against his living shield.

CRAAAAASH!

The impact was thunderous. Sparks showered between them, illuminating their faces in sharp, strobing light. Adam’s feet dug trenches in the earth as he absorbed the blow, his scales groaning under the pressure but holding firm.

Seraphina stumbled from the rebound, her balance compromised. Adam’s free hand shot out, catching her arm—not to attack, but to steady her. He pulled her closer, his other hand instinctively finding her hip to brace her against the sudden movement.

For a frozen moment, they stood locked together in the moonlight. Adam’s crimson eyes met Seraphina’s silver-blue. Her face was inches from his. He could feel her rapid breath against his skin, see the faint tremble in her aura as it slowly dimmed.

"Close one," Adam said, his voice quieter than he intended. "Are you okay?"

Seraphina’s eyes widened. A flush crept up her neck, spreading to her cheeks. The warrior’s focus in her gaze wavered, replaced by something softer—more flustered. She pulled back sharply, extracting herself from his grip with movements that were far less graceful than her usual precision.

"I—I’m fine!" Her voice came out higher than normal. She sheathed her sword with a clumsy clack and turned half-away, one hand pressing against her chest as if to calm her racing heart. "Forgive me. I nearly injured you. That was reckless of me." 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝒆𝙬𝙚𝒃𝙣𝙤𝒗𝓮𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢

Adam lowered his still-scaled arm, the dark plates slowly receding into his skin. He rubbed the back of his neck, suddenly finding the moon very interesting. "It’s fine. You didn’t. And I blocked it. So... no harm done."

Seraphina stole a glance at him, then quickly looked away. "Your... your scales. They’re incredibly durable. I didn’t expect to be able to push you that hard."

"Neither did I," Adam admitted. A faint smirk tugged at his lips. "You’re stronger than you look, knight."

The flush on Seraphina’s cheeks deepened. "I... thank you. For the training. I should return to camp. To ensure Her Highness is safe."

"Right. Yeah. Good idea."

Then Seraphina turned and began walking back toward the distant glow of the campfire, her steps slightly too rigid, too deliberate.

Adam watched her go. His hand unconsciously drifted to the spot on his hip where he’d braced her—warmth still lingering there, or maybe that was just his imagination.