Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 253: The Gathering

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Chapter 253: The Gathering

The silence in the First Void lingered long after Lucifer’s words had fallen.

The Progenitors stood in their places, the faint veins of silver above casting their light across faces old as the first dawn. The Witch watched with her hood lowered, calm and still as stone. Michael’s wings flexed in quiet tension. Kaer’s claws dug grooves into the pale ground. Orzhun’s scaled chest rose and fell with a low, steady rumble.

Sythra broke it first. "Adam walking with adversaries..." Her voice was like fire restrained, a low hiss beneath. "I thought we had ended them."

"You thought wrong," Kaer growled, his silver eyes flaring. His teeth glinted as he stepped forward, the heavy sound of his claws dragging across the stone. "You were not the only one burning when they rose. My kin bled for that war. Bled and vanished. Do not act as though your flames alone stood against them."

"Still as arrogant as you were then," Sythra snapped back, sparks scattering from her shoulders.

"Enough."

Michael’s voice cut through like a blade. Calm, but edged. His light burned brighter, casting their shadows long against the pale floor. "The adversaries nearly destroyed us all. Do you forget how close they came? Do you forget that even together, we barely held them at bay?"

Elandir stepped forward then, his cloak brushing the stone, his tone sharp but quiet. "I do not forget. My people still mourn the forests that turned to ash. Whole rivers poisoned, whole lands dead. And for what? To stall them? To push them into silence?" He turned his gaze toward Michael. "Tell me, Celestial, do you truly believe we won?"

Michael’s jaw clenched, though his voice stayed level. "We survived."

"That is not the same thing," Elandir said, bitterness flashing.

A low chuckle rippled through the air then, breaking the tension. Tsuyari leaned on her staff, her nine tails curling lazily behind her. "Listen to you all. Like children still fighting over scraps. The adversaries nearly ended you, yes. But must we truly drag every scar into this circle again? My tails will gray before your grudges do."

"They already have," Kaer muttered.

Her eyes snapped sharp as her grin widened. "Careful, wolf. I might weave you into a tale that leaves your descendants howling for centuries."

Kaer snarled, stepping forward, but Orzhun’s massive tail slammed once into the ground between them, cracking the pale stone. The sound rolled like thunder, still echoing long after. His emerald eyes glowed as his voice rumbled low.

"This is why we fail." His words were slow, like mountains grinding against one another. "We bite and claw at each other, but when the adversaries come, we scramble like frightened beasts. You speak of scars?" He looked toward Elandir. "The wounds on my kin run deeper. I watched cities drown in black flame. I tore through their hordes until my scales cracked. And still, still, they pushed us back. If not for—"

He stopped. His gaze shifted, heavy, toward Lucifer.

The silence after was thick.

"You," Orzhun said at last, his voice sharp as stone breaking. "You speak of adversaries as though you know them. As though you saw them. Yet you were not even born when we fought. Tell me, boy—how do you know what you know?"

Every eye turned to Lucifer. The red in his gaze burned steady, calm under the storm of stares.

He let the silence linger before answering, his voice low, unhurried.

"History books," he said. "Records. Written by those who survived. By those who watched."

A snort came from Sythra. "And you believe words on a page tell truth?"

Lucifer’s eyes slid to her, unreadable. "Truth is buried in words as much as in scars. Both remain after the battle ends. Both tell their own story."

[Sharp,] Damaris murmured in his mind. [But don’t overreach. They will test you. They always did me. Say little. Let them draw their own conclusions.]

Lucifer gave no outward sign of hearing, but his pause stretched just long enough to steady the air.

Orzhun’s eyes narrowed. "Books did not bleed. Books did not scream when the skies tore open. Tell me, boy, when the adversaries rip through your skin, will you still answer with pages?"

Before Lucifer could answer, Tsuyari’s tails flicked, her laugh soft but clear. "Oh, Orzhun. Must you always roar? He speaks well enough for someone not yet ground under your battles." She leaned forward, her smile sly. "Besides, perhaps the boy simply listens better than you ever did. You always preferred smashing through walls instead of hearing warnings."

The dragon’s growl rolled deep, but Michael’s voice cut in before the clash could spark.

"Enough." His wings spread wide, light spilling bright enough to paint the void. "We are here for one reason: Adam. The adversaries rise again, and if what was said is true, then our silence has ended."

Silence followed.

Myllin’s soft voice brushed through, almost a whisper. "Adam... I remember him." Her form shimmered faint, translucent. "He did not stand with us then. Always apart. Always watching. I thought him only cold. I did not see the shadow he carried until it was too late."

"He was never ours," Sythra said sharply. "Never circle. Always something else."

"And now he is worse," Elandir said, bitterness sharp in his tone. "To walk with adversaries is to betray all creation."

Lucifer’s voice cut through then, steady, quiet. "You talk of betrayal as if it surprises you. But Adam was always apart. He laughed at us. Mocked us. He saw weakness in our unity."

His crimson eyes swept across them. "And now he’s proving himself right."

[Good,] Damaris murmured. [Strike at their pride. It will bind them to anger at Adam, not at you.]

Kaer snarled. "You speak bold for one not yet blooded by their claws."

Lucifer’s gaze shifted to him, calm, unflinching. "I’ll bleed if I must. That’s more than Adam ever did."

The wolf’s growl rose, but Lilith stepped forward then, her aura pressing down smooth and sharp like a blade. "Enough. He is my son. He speaks as one who bears Damaris’ blood. If you challenge him, you challenge me."

Kaer bared his teeth but said no more, stepping back.

The Witch’s voice rose then, soft but absolute, pulling all their focus. "The adversaries cannot be fought as we did before. You remember it. How many fell. How even Damaris was torn from us." Her eyes moved over them, steady as stone. "You know the truth. Even together, we may not win again."

The words fell heavy.

Elandir’s face hardened. "Then what do you suggest? That we run? That we hide while Adam tears through everything we swore to protect?"

"No," she said simply. "We prepare. And we choose where we stand. For this war will not only be against the adversaries. It will be against Adam himself."

The words cut deep.

Lucifer’s voice broke the silence after, calm but sharp. "Then let’s not waste time clawing at each other. Decide. Will you fight, or will you fold?"

The circle stirred.

Sythra’s flames flared, her eyes hard. "I will burn until nothing remains. They will not take my sky again."

Kaer’s growl rumbled. "My kin may be gone, but I still stand. I will tear their throats until my claws break."

Elandir’s gaze was cold. "The forests will not fall again. I swear it."

Orzhun’s massive head dipped once. "If the boy bleeds, I will bleed beside him. Better than watching Adam poison the skies."

Tsuyari grinned faintly. "I do so love a grand play. Very well. My illusions will haunt them until their minds break."

Myllin’s form flickered. "I will stand. Spirits remember, even if flesh forgets."

Michael’s light flared bright. "Then it is settled. The circle fights once more."

The Witch gave a slow nod, her eyes sharp as she looked toward Lucifer. "And the son of Damaris stands among us. Let us see if his blood burns true."

The circle’s weight settled heavy, the First Void thrumming faint as if the marrow of creation itself remembered their vow.

Lucifer stood at the center of their stares, crimson eyes steady.

[Good,] Damaris murmured in his head, voice quiet but warm. [You’ve taken the first step. Now the circle breathes again. And when the storm breaks, they will know you are mine.]

Lucifer didn’t answer. But he didn’t look away.

And the silence of the First Void felt heavier than war itself.

Elsewhere

The glass streets of New Earth stretched forever. Not a crack. Not a blemish. Towers rose like polished spears, the horizon flawless and false. The silence clung to everything, heavy as if the air itself feared the ones standing at its center.

The adversaries. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎

They gathered at the heart of the city, a circle of shadows wearing human shapes, though none of them looked truly human.

The one who had spoken—tall, lean, with eyes like pits that ate the light—stood at their head. His grin lingered as he rolled his shoulders, the sound of his joints snapping like stone breaking.

"It is time," he said again, slower now.

A second voice laughed. It came from a figure lounging lazily on the edge of a crystal fountain, his bare feet kicking at the rippling water. His hair was white, falling in jagged strands over a boyish face, but his smile was crooked and dangerous. "Finally. I was starting to wonder if we came here just to stare at all this fake perfection." He gestured lazily at the skyline. "Pretty, though. Shame it won’t last."

"You talk too much," another cut in, sharp and cold. Her body seemed woven from obsidian shards, lines of red light pulsing through the cracks of her form. She stood rigid, eyes burning like coals, her voice edged with command. "We did not crawl through shadow and silence to waste time. We move."

From the far side of the circle, a heavy step shook the glass road. A massive figure emerged from the haze—a hulking beast in the shape of a man, skin marked by crawling black veins that pulsed with heat. His horns curled back, his arms thick as stone pillars. He cracked his knuckles, the sound like thunder.

"Let her bark," he rumbled, voice low and guttural. "I want to see what this world bleeds like. Let me crack its spine."

The lounging one laughed again, tilting his head. "Always so dramatic. Break a spine, drink some blood, howl at the sky—do you ever want anything new?"

The beast snarled, stepping forward. "I want silence from you."

The air warped between them, tension snapping sharp. But before either could strike, another figure lifted a hand.

He wore no armor, no cloak. Just a simple black coat that fell straight to his boots, his long hair tied back, his eyes hidden behind thin lenses that glowed faintly violet. He didn’t speak loudly, but his voice cut clean through the others.

"Enough. You know the rules."

The beast froze, growling low but stepping back. The lounging one smirked but leaned back against the fountain again, throwing his hands up in mock surrender.

The violet-eyed man lowered his hand. "This realm will not stand long once we move. But it will not fall to tantrums or impatience. We do this with precision."

From the shadow of a tower, another adversary stepped out. Her form shifted with every blink, sometimes a child, sometimes an old woman, sometimes nothing but smoke with eyes. Her laughter slithered across the street like oil. "Precision, yes. And yet you say it as though it matters. The end will come whether we play clean or dirty. That is the gift of inevitability."

The obsidian woman’s eyes narrowed. "Your tongue is poison."

The shifting figure only grinned, her voice changing with every word—sweet, broken, cruel. "And you love to taste it."

"Enough."

The command came again from the violet-eyed man. His calm held weight, enough to quiet the bickering for the moment. He turned his gaze toward the one at their head—the tall figure with the pit-black eyes and the grin that refused to fade.

"You gave the word. Then lead us."

The grinning one finally moved. He stepped forward, his shadow dragging longer across the flawless glass as though it wanted to swallow the city whole. Every step echoed too loud, like the world itself recoiled.

He raised his hand once, flexing his fingers as if grasping something unseen. The air buckled. The sky, perfect and smooth, flickered faint like glass under strain.

He looked back at them, his grin sharper than knives.

"Brothers. Sisters. Monsters." His voice carried low, heavy, thrumming with promise. "The Progenitors stir. The circle is whole again. Good. Let them gather. Let them sharpen their blades."

He tilted his head, eyes glinting.

"It will make breaking them all the sweeter."

The obsidian woman raised her chin. "Then we move now."

The beast grinned wide, saliva steaming against the glass at his feet. "Finally."

The lounging one hopped off the fountain, cracking his neck, excitement flashing through his crooked smile. "About time."

The shifting woman dissolved into smoke, her voice crawling over all of them. "I’ll take the children. Their screams are sweeter."

The violet-eyed man adjusted his lenses, eyes narrowing faint. "Just follow the order. Strike, burn, consume. Leave nothing but silence."

The leader lowered his hand. The sky above shivered once, then stilled. He turned back toward the flawless city stretching endless ahead of them.

"Then let’s move."

The adversaries stepped forward together, their shadows spilling across the perfect streets like a tide. And as they did, New Earth—untouched, unbroken, unchallenged—began to tremble.

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