The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System-Chapter 197: The Hunter and the Spider
The vampire’s pale blue eyes flashed, and for a moment, something shifted in the dim light of the storehouse. Her aura pressed against Lilith’s senses.
"Do not test my patience." The words came from somewhere deeper than the girl’s throat. "I am in a cage, but I am not helpless."
Lilith’s smile didn’t waver. Her threads, curled around her fingers like sleeping serpents.
"How fascinating." Her voice was soft, almost admiring. "You have been captured. And yet you still have enough power to threaten me." She tilted her head, her crimson eyes fixed on the vampire’s face. "You could have killed them. The soldiers who found you. You could have fled. But you didn’t." A pause. "You wanted to be caught."
The vampire’s aura flickered. Her jaw tightened.
"You know nothing—"
The door groaned.
Both of them froze. Lilith’s threads snapped upward, carrying her into the darkness of the rafters. Her body pressed against the beams, her presence dissolving into shadow, her breathing so slow it was barely a whisper.
The iron door swung open, and the guard who had been standing watch stepped inside. His face was pale, his eyes darting toward the cage, toward the corners of the room, toward the ceiling where Lilith watched with the patience of a spider.
Behind him, a woman entered.
She was the one Lilith had seen earlier—the commander who rode apart from the soldiers, who burned brighter than the rest. Up close, the impression was stronger. Her uniform was dark, unadorned except for the silver thread at her collar, and her hair was the color of winter ash, pulled back from a face that might have been beautiful once, before whatever had carved those lines around her mouth and eyes.
The guard’s voice was a nervous whisper. "Commander Viks. I don’t think—the Captain said—"
Commander Viks did not look at him. Her eyes were fixed on the cage, on the figure curled within it, and there was something in her gaze that made Lilith’s threads tighten.
"You are alive." Vex’s voice was flat. "Good."
The vampire didn’t move. Her face was half-hidden behind her tangled hair, but Lilith saw the tension in her shoulders, the way her fingers curled against her knees.
Viks took a step closer. The guard moved to follow, and she raised a hand, stopping him where he stood.
"You will keep the Captain away from this place." Her voice was soft, but there was steel beneath it. "No one enters this storehouse. Is that understood?"
The guard’s face went pale. "But Commander—Captain Serris—he gave direct orders—"
"Captain Serris does not know what he is dealing with." Viks’s eyes never left the cage. "This is not a prize to be paraded before the court."
The guard’s mouth opened, then closed. He swallowed hard, nodded once, and backed toward the door.
"Wait."
The guard froze. Viks’s head turned, just slightly, her gaze shifting from the cage to the shadows above.
"There is someone else here." Her voice was calm, unhurried. "Someone who does not belong."
Lilith’s threads went still. Her breathing, already shallow, stopped entirely.
Viks’s hand moved to the hilt of the sword at her belt. The blade whispered free of its sheath, silver light gleaming along its edge.
"Show yourself," Viks commanded. "Before I cut you out of the darkness."
For a long moment, nothing moved. Then Lilith’s form descended from the rafters, her movements fluid, unhurried. Her threads retracted, coiling around her fingers like sleeping serpents. Her smile, when it came, was serene.
"How impressive." Her voice was soft, almost admiring. "I did not expect anyone here to possess such sharp senses."
Viks’s eyes narrowed. Her sword didn’t waver.
"You are not human."
Lilith’s smile widened. "No. I am not."
The guard’s face went pale. His hand moved to his own weapon, but Viks raised a hand, stopping him.
"Stand down." Her eyes never left Lilith. "This one is not for you."
The guard hesitated, then stepped back, his hand falling away from his sword.
Viks studied Lilith for a long moment—her pale features, her crimson eyes, the threads that curled around her fingers like living things.
"Are you her ally?"
Inside the cage, the vampire’s shoulders stiffened. Irritation flashed across her pale face, but she said nothing. Her fingers only curled tighter against her knees, the faint blue glow around her eyes flickering once before fading again.
Lilith followed the movement, then looked back at Viks with a soft shrug.
"You could say that," she replied. "I have business with her. So—would you mind leaving? It would make things much easier for everyone."
The guard let out a sharp breath, clearly unsure whether to attack or wait for an order. His eyes darted between them, tense, ready.
This time, Viks moved.
Her hand slid to the hilt at her waist. The blade came free in one smooth motion, and the moment the steel left its sheath, something changed in the air. A faint silver aura spilled from it—quiet at first, then stronger, like moonlight thickening into something almost tangible.
"That won’t be possible," Viks said.
Her voice was calm, but there was no hesitation in it at all.
"She is my guest."
Lilith sighed softly, almost disappointed.
Threads slipped from between her fingers, thin as hair, glinting faintly in the dim light as they stretched toward the shadows around her.
"That’s a shame," she murmured, her smile sharpening. "I really didn’t want to cause trouble tonight."
Viks moved first.
The silver aura around her blade flared without warning, and in the next instant she was already in front of Lilith. The strike came down in a clean, merciless arc—fast enough to split the air before the sound followed it.
Lilith reacted on instinct.
Her fingers snapped outward, and a web of threads burst into existence between them, stretching across the space like a sudden wall of silk. The silver blade met the threads and cut straight through them.
For a fraction of a second, Lilith’s crimson eyes widened.
The severed threads curled in the air like dying snakes, and Lilith’s body dissolved backward in a blur of motion. She twisted away just as the edge of the strike tore across the floor, the impact leaving a pale scar through the wood where the aura touched it.
She landed lightly several steps away, one hand braced against the ground.
"Interesting..." she whispered, her voice lower now.
The skin along her fingers shifted, almost subtly. The threads that reappeared this time were darker, thinner—more delicate. A faint sheen clung to them, barely visible in the dim light.
Poison.
Lilith flicked her wrist.
The threads shot forward in silence, spreading through the air like a trap that had been waiting years to close. They curved, twisted, changed direction mid-flight, aiming for Viks herself.
Viks stepped back once.
Then again.
The poisoned threads brushed the sleeve of her uniform and hissed softly where they touched the fabric. Her eyes sharpened, and the silver aura surged higher, flooding the room with a pale glow that pushed back the darkness itself.
"I see," she said quietly. "You are not a human infiltrator."
Lilith’s smile returned, slow and sharp.
"I never said I was."
Viks raised her sword slightly, the silver light gathering along its edge until it trembled like liquid moonlight. The guard behind her swallowed hard but did not move. Even the vampire in the cage had lifted her head now, pale blue eyes glowing faintly as she watched the clash unfold.
Viks exhaled once.
Then her voice rang through the storehouse—calm, controlled, and unmistakably deliberate.
"Silver Slash."
The aura exploded forward in a crescent arc.
Lilith’s pupils shrank. Her body reacted before her mind could catch up. Threads snapped out in every direction, pulling her upward, sideways, backward at once—like a spider fleeing the vibration of a broken web.
The silver arc tore through the air where she had been standing a heartbeat earlier, slicing across the floor, the walls, and the hanging beams with brutal precision.
Lilith landed upside-down against a wooden pillar, her body clinging to it effortlessly now, no longer bothering to hide what she was.
Her smile widened slowly, something darker now glinting in her eyes.
"...Now this is getting fun."
The guard was the first to react.
A strangled sound escaped his throat as Lilith’s body shifted fully against the pillar. Her limbs clung to the wood at unnatural angles, threads spreading behind her like a silent web, her silhouette no longer something that could be mistaken for human.
"M–monster..."
His hands trembled so badly the sword almost slipped from his grip.
Viks did not step back.
Instead, her eyes sharpened, and something colder settled across her face.
"It has been a long time," she said quietly, lifting her blade again, the silver aura pulsing once more. "Since I hunted a real monster."
Lilith laughed softly.
A slow, delighted sound.
"How amusing," she replied, her crimson eyes glowing brighter in the dim light. "Because I have hunted humans like you far more often."
Her gaze locked onto Viks’s.
The air tightened.
Then the world seemed to narrow to those two eyes alone.
"[Crimson Gaze]".
Viks’s body stiffened.
Her fingers tightened around the hilt of her sword, but the blade did not move. The silver aura flickered once—then froze completely, as if time itself had been held in place.
’...What?’
Her thoughts felt slow.
’My body... won’t move...?’
Lilith dropped lightly from the pillar, landing without a sound. The threads around her shifted again, weaving together faster now—layer upon layer, tightening, compressing, becoming something solid rather than silk.
"[Silk Sovereign]".
The threads gathered in front of her hand, twisting into a dense shape, sharper and sharper until it formed a long, needle-like arrow, dark and gleaming with a faint crimson sheen.
Lilith smiled.
A cruel, satisfied smile.
"Enjoy this."
She released it.
The arrow shot forward with a shrill snap of tension breaking, cutting straight through the still air toward Viks’s unmoving chest and struck.
The impact threw Viks backward, the sound sharp and brutal in the silence of the storehouse. The silver aura shattered around her like broken glass, and the arrow buried itself deep enough to draw a thin line of red across her uniform.
"Commander!"
The guard rushed forward instinctively, panic replacing fear. His boots barely hit the floor before—
Something moved.
So fast it didn’t feel real.
The figure that had been inside the cage was suddenly gone.
And in the next instant, the vampire stood in front of Viks.
A crimson barrier spread outward from her raised hand, thin at first—then thickening into something that looked disturbingly like liquid blood hardened into glass. The silk arrow struck it with a sharp crack, splintering across the surface before dissolving into useless threads.
Lilith froze.
For the first time, confusion crossed her face.
The vampire didn’t look back at Viks. Her pale blue eyes were fixed only on Lilith now, glowing faintly in the darkness.
"...Are you satisfied now, spider?" she asked quietly.







