The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System-Chapter 171: The Will to Protect

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Chapter 171: The Will to Protect

The ancient being’s golden eyes flickered with something between amusement and disappointment as Adam’s attacks continued to rain down upon him—each one deflected, absorbed, or simply ignored.

"Get away from her, old man!" Adam snarled, launching another barrage of Abyssal Piercer that shattered against an invisible barrier inches from the ancient’s skin.

"Young ones are so arrogantly loud these days," the ancient murmured, brushing a speck of dust from his robe as if Adam’s assault were no more than a mild inconvenience.

Adam pressed the attack. Fire Breath—a cone of searing flame that should have turned stone to slag. The ancient walked through it untouched. Pressurized Spines—a volley of high-velocity projectiles aimed at every vital point. They stopped mid-air and clattered to the ground. Venom of the Void—a concentrated cloud of necrotic poison that would have killed anything living in seconds. The ancient breathed it in, then exhaled with a slight frown.

"Unpleasant. But ineffective."

Adam’s chest heaved, his reserves plummeting toward empty. ’Nothing’s working. He’s not even trying.’

The ancient raised one hand, palm open. Light gathered there—not the harsh brightness of fire or the cold gleam of ice, but something softer. Water-like. Flowing. And threaded through it, barely visible, veins of absolute darkness that seemed to drink the light around them.

"This," the ancient said calmly, "is what an attack looks like."

He pressed his palm forward.

The light—if it could be called that—shot from his hand in a concentrated stream that crossed the distance in an instant. It struck Adam square in the chest, and for a moment, nothing happened.

Then Adam felt it.

Every cell in his body screamed at once. The attack wasn’t burning or freezing or tearing—it was simply unmaking. His scales, his flesh, his very existence seemed to rebel against itself, molecules forgetting how to hold together. He flew backward, a ragdoll propelled by forces he couldn’t comprehend, crashing through trees and rocks and earth until finally, mercifully, he stopped.

He couldn’t move.

His body lay in a crater of his own making, shattered in ways he couldn’t fully process. His regeneration, usually so reliable, sputtered uselessly against damage that felt wrong—like trying to heal a wound that kept reopening itself.

’Ignis... run...’ He tried to shout, but only blood bubbled from his lips.

Ignis saw him fall.

’No... Adam...’

The thought was pure anguish, cutting through her own pain like a blade. She had crashed hard, her body screaming with injuries that would have felled anything less than a drake. But Adam was worse. Adam was down. Adam was dying.

’I have to get up. I have to move. I can’t be weak.’

The ancient was already walking toward Adam’s broken form, his steps unhurried, inevitable.

"Stop!" Ignis’s voice tore from her throat as she forced herself upright, flames guttering weakly around her fists. She staggered forward, each step agony, but she moved. "Don’t touch him!"

The ancient glanced back, one eyebrow raised. "You wish to be struck as well? Very well."

He didn’t even turn. A flick of his wrist sent a wave of force that lifted Ignis off her feet and hurled her into a massive tree trunk. Wood exploded, and she crumpled at its base, gasping.

But she didn’t stay down.

’No... Adam could die... I have to help him. I HAVE TO!’

She pushed herself up again, ignoring the blood running down her face, the bones that grated with every movement. Her legs shook beneath her, but she stood. She took a step. Another.

"I said... STOP!"

The ancient paused, genuine interest flickering in those golden eyes. The girl was broken—he could see it, feel it in her flickering life force. And yet she moved. She advanced. She refused to yield.

’Why?’ The thought surfaced unbidden, ancient curiosity stirring. ’What drives such desperate loyalty?’

Ignis stumbled, fell to one knee. The world swam before her eyes, darkness creeping at the edges of her vision. She was failing. Her body was failing. And Adam was still down there, helpless, at this monster’s mercy.

’I’m weak...’ The realization hit harder than any physical blow. ’This is my fault. If I were stronger... if I could protect him...’

Tears mixed with blood on her cheeks. Her flames flickered, dimmed, threatened to go out entirely.

And then—

Something ignited inside her.

Not the flames she usually commanded. Something deeper. Older. A fire that burned not in her blood, but in her very soul. It erupted without warning, without control—a cascade of heat and light that burst from her core and flooded every cell of her being.

[Draconic Will — Awakened]

Ignis rose.

The flames around her were no longer orange or red or even white. They were something else—a color that didn’t exist in normal light, a heat that defied measurement. Her wounds didn’t heal, but they stopped mattering. Her exhaustion didn’t vanish, but it became irrelevant. For this moment, this single, desperate moment, she was more than flesh and blood. She was will given form.

The ancient’s eyes widened slightly. His head tilted, that detached curiosity sharpening into something more focused.

"Dragon’s Will," he murmured, almost to himself. "How fascinating. A Blazeheart with enough determination to awaken it." His gaze swept over her transformed state, cataloging, analyzing. "You would burn yourself out in minutes, child. Your body cannot sustain this."

Ignis’s voice came out layered with resonance, the sound of something far older than her years. "I don’t care."

She lunged.

The ancient moved to block—and for the first time, he actually moved, not just flicked or gestured. His hand came up, catching her blazing fist with more force than before. The impact sent shockwaves rippling through the forest, felling trees in a expanding circle.

Ignis pressed forward, her other fist already swinging. She was faster now, stronger, her body pushed far beyond its limits by the raw power of her awakened will. Each strike carried the weight of a falling star, the heat of a newborn sun.

The ancient blocked, deflected, absorbed—but he was engaging now, not just dismissing. His golden eyes held a new expression: interested.

"Extraordinary," he breathed, catching another punch that would have vaporized a mountain. "But unsustainable. You’re killing yourself with every moment."

"Shut up!"

Her fist connected with his guard—and for just an instant, she saw it. A flicker of impact reaching him. Not damage, not injury, but something. A acknowledgment that she could, at least, make him feel her presence.

Then her body gave out.

The Dragon’s Will flickered, sputtered, and died. Ignis crumpled, her flames extinguishing, her form collapsing into a heap at the ancient’s feet. She tried to move, to rise, to do something—but her body had nothing left.

’Sorry... Adam... I tried...’

The ancient looked down at her, then at Adam’s broken form in the distance. For a long moment, he simply stood there, ancient and still, his golden eyes unwavering.

Then he walked toward Adam.

Ignis saw him moving through the haze of her fading consciousness. Saw him stop beside the crater where Adam lay. Saw him raise his hand, that same terrible light beginning to gather in his palm.

’No... please...’

She tried to scream, but no sound came out. Tried to move, but her body refused. All she could do was watch as the ancient being prepared to deliver the final blow.

But the strike never came.

Instead, the ancient lowered his hand. The light faded. He studied Adam’s unconscious form for a long moment, then glanced back at Ignis with those impenetrable golden eyes.

"You would die for him," he stated. Not a question.

Ignis couldn’t answer. But her eyes—her eyes said everything.

The ancient being looked down at Ignis, reading the fear and defiance warring in her fading consciousness. His voice, when he spoke, carried an unexpected gentleness—not warmth, exactly, but something that might have been patience born of millennia.

"Calm yourself, child. I am not going to kill you."

Ignis’s eyes, barely open, still blazed with suspicion. Her lips moved, but no sound came out—just a whisper of air that might have been words or might have been her last breath leaving her body.

The ancient’s golden eyes softened almost imperceptibly. "I see you do not believe me. That is... understandable." He glanced at Adam’s broken form, then back at Ignis. "You trespassed in my territory. I defended it. That is all. This was... a misunderstanding."

Ignis’s hand twitched—a pathetic attempt to rise, to fight, to do something. Her voice finally emerged, thin and rasping but still defiant.

"You... almost killed us... I won’t... forgive you..."

The ancient said nothing. He simply watched as her body finally surrendered to the impossible demands she had placed upon it. Her eyes fluttered, closed, then opened again with desperate effort.

’Adam...’

The thought was barely formed before darkness swallowed her.

Ignis’s body went limp, her flames extinguished completely for the first time since the ancient had encountered her. She lay crumpled at the base of a shattered tree, her draconic features slowly receding as unconsciousness claimed her.

The ancient stood motionless for a long moment, his golden eyes moving between the two broken figures before him. Then, slowly, he knelt beside Ignis.

His hand hovered over her chest, not touching, simply... feeling. The faintest pulse of light emanated from his palm, passing through her body like water through sand.

"Exhaustion. Mana depletion. Multiple fractures." He cataloged her injuries with clinical detachment. "The Dragon’s Will burned through what little she had left. She will recover, but not quickly."

He moved to Adam, repeating the same diagnostic gesture. His eyebrows rose slightly.

"Progenitor’s bloodline, indeed. Your regeneration is remarkable—it fights even now against wounds that should be mortal."

He straightened, looking down at them both. For a long moment, he simply stood there, ancient and still, the forest whispering around him.

Then he sighed—a sound that carried the weight of ages.

"Troublesome hatchlings."

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