The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System-Chapter 175: The Truth of the Void

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Chapter 175: The Truth of the Void

Orion’s hand hovered over Alice’s still form for a long moment before gently making contact. His golden eyes closed, and the air around him grew heavy with focus. Adam could feel it, the ancient dragon’s consciousness reaching into the sleeping panther, probing the damaged core with a delicacy that belied his overwhelming power.

Minutes passed. Ignis shifted restlessly beside Adam, but a sharp glance from him kept her silent.

Finally, Orion’s eyes opened. They held something new understanding. The kind that came from witnessing similar tragedies across millennia.

"The Void," he began, his voice quiet, "is not merely a type of energy or a school of magic. It is... a remnant. Chaos left behind by a civilization that destroyed itself before your world was young." He withdrew his hand, folding it with the other in his lap. "That civilization once ruled vast territories—what you now call the Wastelands. But their greed consumed them. They fell, their power shattering into fragments that scattered across the world."

Adam’s jaw tightened. "And Alice...?"

"She is one of those fragments." Orion met his gaze. "Or rather, she was created by one. The entity that attacked her possesses a particular skill—the ability to split itself. Not cloning, but... reproduction. Each fragment becomes its own being, with its own personality, its own instincts, its own will to survive."

Adam felt the world tilt slightly. ’Fragments... personality... survival...’

"The purpose," Orion continued, "is growth. The parent scatters its children across the world. They grow, they learn, they accumulate power. And when they are strong enough..." He paused, letting the implication hang. "The parent consumes them. Reabsorbs everything they’ve become. It is... a harvest."

Adam’s hands clenched into fists at his sides. His voice came out rough, barely controlled.

"So the thing that attacked Alice... that’s her... her parent?"

"Yes." Orion’s voice was gentle, but the word was a blade. "Her progenitor. The source from which she was split. And what it did to her—what it tried to do—was exactly what I have described. It was harvesting her energy to regain its own lost power."

Adam’s breath caught. His mind flashed back to the dungeon, to Alice as a tiny cub tangled in spider silk, to her fierce loyalty, her possessive love, her endless determination to protect him despite her size. All of it—all of her—was just... food. Waiting to be consumed.

’Her own parent saw her as nothing but a meal.’

"Progenitor..." Adam’s voice cracked. "So the one who attacked her... is literally her father."

Orion said nothing.

Adam’s fists trembled. Anger—hot, blinding, overwhelming—surged through him. The Crown on his brow pulsed, its hunger stirring in response to his rage. He wanted to find that thing. He wanted to tear it apart. He wanted to make it suffer for what it had done to Alice, for treating her like livestock, for—

"Survival."

Orion’s quiet words cut through the fury like ice water.

Adam blinked. "What?"

"The law of the wild." Orion’s golden eyes held his, calm and unflinching. "It is not unfamiliar to you, Adam. You have lived by it yourself. In the dungeon, you killed your own siblings. You consumed them to grow stronger." He tilted his head slightly. "Or have you forgotten?"

Adam’s rage stuttered.

The memory surfaced unbidden—his first moments as a hatchling, surrounded by siblings who saw him as food. The desperate struggle for survival. The taste of blood that wasn’t his own. The cold, pragmatic realization that in that place, there was only eat or be eaten.

He had killed his brothers and sisters. He had consumed them. He had grown stronger from their deaths.

"I..." The word stuck in his throat.

Orion watched him with that same ancient, knowing gaze. "You are not so different from the Void entity, Adam. You both follow the same instinct. The only difference is that you chose to protect the fragments that proved themselves worthy of your loyalty. They are your family because you decided they would be. The Void entity sees its fragments only as fuel." A pause. "That is the distinction. Not the act itself, but the choice that follows."

Adam stood frozen, Orion’s words cutting through the red haze of his rage. The Crown’s hunger subsided slightly, its demands momentarily silenced by the weight of that truth.

"You..." He swallowed. "You’re saying I’m no better than that thing?"

"I am saying," Orion replied calmly, "that you have the capacity to be better. That you have already chosen to be better. The Void entity cannot make that choice. It is driven by instinct, by hunger, by the same law that ruled your first days in the darkness. You, however, have evolved beyond that law. You have built something new from the ashes of what you were forced to become." His golden eyes softened almost imperceptibly. "That is not nothing, Adam. That is everything."

Adam’s fists slowly unclenched. His breathing steadied. The anger didn’t disappear, but it settled—cooled from a raging inferno to a focused, patient flame.

"So Alice..." He looked down at her sleeping form. "She can still be saved?"

Orion considered for a long moment. "Her core was damaged. Severely. But the Starlight Ward you applied has stabilized her. It will protect her from further corruption, and it will buy time."

Adam let out a breath he hadn’t known he’d been holding. His hand reached down, gently brushing Alice’s dull fur. She didn’t stir, but beneath his fingers, he could feel the faint pulse of her presence—weaker than it should be, but stable.

"Alice’s form," Adam said quietly. "Why a panther? If she’s a fragment of this Void entity, why does she look like... this?"

Orion’s gaze shifted to Alice’s still form, studying her with that ancient, patient attention. "Each fragment, when split from the parent, instinctively seeks a form. A shape that feels... familiar." He glanced at Adam. "She was born in a dungeon, near you. You were the first thing she knew—the first presence she recognized as something other than threat. So she shaped herself in a way that echoed you."

Adam blinked. "Echoed... me? But I was a snake. A viper."

"Proximity influences form, but it does not dictate it absolutely." Orion gestured vaguely. "She is a panther because that shape resonated with something in her fragment’s essence. Perhaps she sensed your... soft beneath the scales. Perhaps she simply found the form appealing." He shrugged slightly. "It is not uncommon for Void fragments to take shapes that reflect those around them. I have seen fragments that resembled humans, elves, even dragons. They adapt. They mimic. They survive."

Adam absorbed this, pieces clicking into place. ’She became a panther because of me.’

Ignis, who had been uncharacteristically quiet during the exchange, finally spoke up. Her voice was small, uncertain—a rare thing for her.

"So... if we find other fragments... they might look like people? Like humans?"

Orion nodded slowly. "It is possible. Likely, even. The Void entity you face has been scattering fragments for a very long time. Some will have taken forms that let them blend into civilizations. Others will have remained in the wild, becoming beasts. And some..." He paused, his golden eyes distant. "Some may have forgotten what they are entirely. Living as humans, elves, dwarves—unaware of their true nature, living out whole lives before the harvest comes."

Adam nodded slowly, processing the weight of Orion’s words. Fragments living as humans, unaware of their true nature. The entity harvesting them all eventually. It was monstrous. It was also, in a twisted way, understandable—the same survival instinct that had driven him to consume his own siblings in the dungeon.

But understanding didn’t mean forgiving. Not when Alice was the one who had been hurt.

"So," Adam said, forcing his voice to remain steady, "how do we heal Alice? There has to be a way."

Orion was silent for a long moment, his golden eyes fixed on the sleeping panther. When he spoke, his voice carried the weight of ancient knowledge.

"There is a fruit. It grows only in the Wastelands—the territory where the Void civilization once thrived. It is called the Abyssal Bloom." He paused, letting the name settle. "The Bloom absorbs the ambient chaos of that place, distilling it into something... pure. Consuming it would not repair Alice’s core directly, but it would provide her with enough concentrated Void energy to rebuild it herself. Her own regeneration would do the rest."

Adam’s heart leaped. "How do we find it?"

Orion’s expression grew thoughtful. "The Bloom grows near the heart of the Wastelands, where the corruption is thickest. It is guarded—by remnants of the old civilization, by creatures born of the chaos, by the very land itself." He met Adam’s gaze. "It will not be an easy journey. Many have sought the Bloom. Few have returned."

Ignis, who had been listening with wide eyes, piped up. "But Adam’s strong! And I’m strong! We can do it!"

Orion’s lips twitched—the barest hint of amusement. "Your confidence is... admirable. But the Wastelands are not a dungeon, child. They are not a battlefield. They are a place where reality itself is... uncertain. What is true one moment may be false the next. What is solid may become mist. What is friend may become foe." His golden eyes swept over them both. "You will need more than strength to survive there. You will need clarity. Purpose. And perhaps most importantly—luck."

Adam absorbed this, his jaw tight. ’The Wastelands. Near the heart. Guarded by remnants and chaos.’ It sounded impossible. It sounded exactly like the kind of place he’d had to survive his entire second life.

"Where are these Wastelands?" he asked. "We don’t know this region. We were teleported here from somewhere far away. We have no map, no sense of direction."

Orion rose smoothly, brushing soil from his robes. "The Wastelands lie to the east, beyond the mountain ranges, near the border of the Demon territory." He glanced at Adam. "If you do not know the region, then you are fortunate that I do."