The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System-Chapter 196: The Caged Vampire

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 196: The Caged Vampire

The soldiers’ celebration was already in full swing by the time Lilith slipped through the back door of the garrison’s common room. The space was crowded, hot with bodies and too many torches, the air thick with the smell of spilled ale, sweat, and the particular pungency of men who had spent weeks in the field without proper baths.

A sergeant with a nose that had been broken so many times it resembled a misshapen potato slammed his tankard on the table. "Thirty! Thirty demons I killed with my own hands!"

"Thirty? I saw you hiding behind Vedran the whole battle!"

"It’s called tactics, you milk-sop!"

A fight broke out near the hearth, was resolved with fists, and the participants were drinking together again within minutes.

Lilith found a shadowed corner near the kitchens, her back against the wall, her presence already forgotten by the revelers. She watched them with the patient disinterest of a cat observing mice.

A younger soldier—barely old enough to grow a proper beard—leaned across the table, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper that carried anyway. "Did you see her? When they brought her in?"

The man beside him, older, his face lined with the particular hardness of a veteran, shrugged. "Saw it. What of it?"

"She’s just a girl. Can’t be more than sixteen. And they had her in chains like some kind of animal."

"Because she is an animal." The veteran’s voice was flat. "It’s a vampire. Doesn’t matter what it looks like. It’s a monster. Would’ve been killing people if we hadn’t caught it."

The younger soldier’s face twisted. "But—"

"But nothing." The veteran’s hand slammed against the table, making the mugs jump. "You think it’s innocent? I’ve seen what vampires do. I’ve seen the villages they leave behind. The children with their throats torn out. The mothers who find their babies drained dry." His voice was shaking now, and Lilith realized it wasn’t anger that drove him. It was memory. "You don’t get to feel sorry for it. Not ever. You remember that."

The young soldier subsided, his face pale, his hands wrapped around his mug like it was the only solid thing in the world.

The celebration continued. Someone started a song about the Battle of the Crimson Ford. The veteran who had shouted about the vampire was leading it, his voice rough but true, and the other men joined in, their voices rising until the walls seemed to shake.

Then the door at the far end of the hall opened, and the noise died.

The man who entered was not large. He was not young. His hair was iron-grey, his face weathered by years that had not been kind, and he walked with the careful precision of someone whose body had been broken and mended more times than it should have been. But when he moved, the soldiers moved with him. They parted like water before a stone, and the silence that fell was not fear—it was respect.

He stopped at the center of the room, and his eyes, pale grey and sharp as winter ice, swept the gathered men.

"Captain Serris." The sergeant with the broken nose had risen, his voice rough but steady. "We heard the army’s returned. The demon front—"

"Has held." Serris’s voice was quiet, but it carried to every corner of the room. "The army is encamped at the Iron Gate. The demons will not advance further this season."

Relief rippled through the room. The sergeant’s shoulders sagged, and for a moment, he looked like a man who had been holding a breath for months.

"But that is not why I am here." Serris’s gaze moved, slow and deliberate, until it settled on a group of soldiers near the hearth. The younger ones. The ones who had ridden in with the cart. "You have something for me."

The young soldier—the one who had spoken against the chains—stepped forward. His face was pale, his hands shaking, but his voice was steady.

"Captain. We found her in the ruins of the old watchtower. She was alone. The other vampires—the ones who had been raiding the border villages—they’d left her behind when the army pushed through. We thought she might be a scout. Or a sacrifice. But she didn’t fight. She didn’t even try to run."

Serris’s expression didn’t change. "And you brought her here."

"She’s valuable, Captain. A live vampire is worth a fortune to the right buyer. Or..." He hesitated. "A gift for His Majesty."

The room was very quiet. Serris studied the young soldier for a long moment, and something flickered in those winter-grey eyes—something that might have been disappointment.

"You think our king wants a monster as a gift?"

The young soldier’s face went red. "I thought—the scholars, they say the blood of a vampire can be used in potions. For healing. For strength. And with His Majesty so ill—"

"His Majesty is dying." Serris’s voice was flat, matter-of-fact. "A vampire’s blood will not save him. And keeping such a creature here, in this castle, surrounded by men who have lost brothers, fathers, sons to its kind..." He shook his head slowly. "That is not a gift. That is a curse."

The silence stretched, heavy and uncomfortable. Then the veteran who had shouted at the young soldier spoke up.

"What would you have us do with it, Captain?"

Serris turned, and his eyes met the veteran’s. "Where is it now?"

"In the old storehouse. The one with the iron door. We thought—" He stopped. "We thought you would want to question it. Before anything else."

Serris nodded slowly. "I will see it tonight. Alone." His gaze swept the room. "No one goes near that storehouse until I give the word. Is that understood?" 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

A chorus of "Yes, Captain" answered him. But Lilith, watching from her shadowed corner, saw the young soldier’s face. Saw the way his hands tightened around his mug. Saw the flicker of something in his eyes that might have been rebellion. Or curiosity. Or something else entirely.

Lilith slipped out the way she had come, back into the cooling evening air.

The storehouse was easy to find. It sat at the edge of the garrison, a squat stone building with a single iron door and a roof that sagged in the middle. A single guard stood watch, his back to the door.

Lilith did not kill him. She simply waited until his attention drifted, until his shoulders sagged with the particular exhaustion of a man who had been standing in one place for too long. Then she moved, and slipped through the small window at the back of the building.

The storehouse smelled of old grain and rust and the particular emptiness of a space that had outlived its purpose. Barrels and crates lined the walls, their contents long since removed, their wooden slats grey with age. Dust hung in the air, stirred by Lilith’s passage, catching the faint light that filtered through cracks in the walls.

And there, at the back of the room, a cage.

It was not large—perhaps six feet by six, the bars set into a frame of iron that had been bolted to the stone floor. The bars themselves were black, etched with faint lines that Lilith recognized as binding runes. Not powerful ones. Whoever had made this cage had not expected to hold anything truly dangerous.

But then, they had not been holding anything truly dangerous.

The figure inside did not move as Lilith approached. She was curled against the far bars, her knees drawn up to her chest, her arms wrapped around them like a child seeking comfort from a nightmare. Her hair—pale, tangled, matted with what might have been blood or dirt or both—fell in curtains around a face that was half-hidden in shadow.

Lilith stopped a pace from the bars. Her head tilted. Her eyes, crimson and patient, studied the creature before her.

’So this is a vampire,’ she thought. ’How curious. I expected something... more.’

The figure stirred.

The movement was slow, reluctant, as if even the effort of waking was more than she wanted to bear. Her head lifted, and her hair fell back from her face, and Lilith saw—

A child. Her features were sharp, gaunt with hunger and something deeper, but the bones beneath were young. Her eyes, when they opened, were a pale, washed-out blue, and they fixed on Lilith with an expression that was neither fear nor hope nor hatred.

Just exhaustion.

"Who are you?" Her voice was a whisper, rough as if she hadn’t used it in days.

Lilith’s smile curved, slow and patient. "My name is Lilith." She let the word settle, let the silence stretch. "I am an arachnid. A monster, like you." She paused. "I am here to satisfy my curiosity."

The vampire’s eyes narrowed. "Arachnid? A monster like me?" A bitter laugh escaped her, short and sharp. "I’m a vampire, not a curiosity. Are you a monster who evolves?"

Lilith’s smile widened. "I am."

The vampire’s gaze dropped. Her arms tightened around her knees.

"It doesn’t matter." Her voice was flat. "Leave me alone. I don’t want to be bothered."

Lilith did not move. Her fingers traced the edge of a bar, her touch light, exploring.

"Strange," she murmured. "You are a prisoner. Captured by humans who would kill you if they knew what you were. And yet you tell me to leave you alone." She tilted her head. "Did you surrender yourself to them?"

The vampire’s eyes snapped up, something flickering in that pale blue gaze.

"That’s none of your business, child." Her voice was harder now. "Go away. Before I decide to kill you."

Lilith laughed—a soft, musical sound that held no warmth at all.

"You, in that cage, threaten to kill me?" Her fingers curled around the bar, her grip light, almost affectionate. "How amusing."