Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 256: Preparations
Spirit Realm
The Spirit Realm breathed like a living thing.
Its forests weren't just trees—they were spires of light, roots sinking into rivers that glowed as though the stars themselves bled through the soil. Every step stirred fragments of souls, drifting sparks that shimmered and faded back into the air.
Ruka sat cross-legged near the water's edge, flames flickering low around his hands. They weren't hellfire—never had been. Just simple, stubborn fire. His kind of fire.
Across from him, Temmy knelt in silence. Her palms rested flat against the earth, eyes shut, hair whipping gently in the strange, unseen wind. Around her, the faint outline of a beast pulsed—massive, horned, waiting to be born.
"Again," Ruka said, his tone firm but not unkind.
Temmy's breathing slowed. The ground trembled faintly beneath her fingers, the outline of the beast growing clearer, like a shadow pressing through from another world. Sweat slid down her brow.
"I can't hold it," she whispered.
Ruka's flames flared. He leaned forward, his eyes narrowing. "You don't hold it. You let it hold you."
Her eyes snapped open, meeting his. He wasn't smiling. He wasn't mocking. Just steady. She nodded, closing them again. 𝒻𝑟𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝑛𝘰𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝘤𝘰𝘮
The beast roared silently, its form surging, and this time, the spirit energy wrapped around her shoulders instead of slipping away. Temmy gasped, the weight of it pressing her chest, but she stayed upright.
Ruka's fire dimmed, a grin finally tugging at the corner of his mouth. "There you go."
The air shimmered. The Spirit Beast was waking.
Far from that realm, the Wolf Den stirred with a different kind of weight.
The den wasn't stone and dirt—it was carved into living mountain, halls lined with claw marks and wolf statues older than memory. Fires burned along the walls, crackling against pelts stretched out beneath them. The smell of earth, sweat, and blood hung heavy in the air.
Dera stood in the center, shoulders tight, surrounded by wolves in human skin. Their eyes glowed faint in the firelight, gold, silver, amber. Each gaze weighed her down, sizing her up.
She hated the attention. Hated the way her hands itched for a blade she didn't yet have.
Ken stood beside her, calm in the firelight, his aura heavy enough to silence the mutters around them. His presence kept them at bay, but only just.
"You'll get used to it," Angel said from the shadows, stepping into the circle.
Dera turned. She didn't know what she expected—maybe someone softer, with a name like that. But Angel was scarred, one eye blind and milky, the other sharp as steel. His frame was lean but coiled, like every muscle had been built for killing.
"You don't look like someone named Angel," Dera muttered before she could stop herself.
A few of the wolves barked laughter. Angel grinned, flashing sharp teeth. "Good. Then you're not blind."
Ken shot him a look, but Angel only shrugged.
"She needs to understand what this is," Angel went on. His eye flicked back to Dera. "You're in the den of wolves now. They'll test you, hunter. Every step. Every word. If you show fear, they'll eat you alive."
Dera clenched her fists. "Let them try."
Angel's grin widened. "Not bad. Maybe you won't break."
Ken stepped forward, his aura spiking. "That's enough."
Angel raised his hands in mock surrender. "Relax, Alpha. Just saying what everyone's thinking."
The circle quieted again. The fire crackled.
Dera let out a slow breath. She wasn't sure if she hated this place yet, or if some deep part of her—the part that still remembered knives and screams—was already at home.
In another realm, where shadows burned instead of flickered, Daniel stood at the balcony of the Demon Citadel.
The city stretched below—vast, endless, black towers spearing upward like teeth, rivers of molten fire winding between them. The air was thick with ash and power, heavy enough to choke a mortal. To him, it was air.
Behind him, soft footsteps clicked against the stone. Remu.
She leaned on the balcony beside him, her hair catching the faint glow of firelight. Her smile was sharp, but her eyes—always—held something softer beneath.
"You've changed," she said simply.
Daniel's jaw tightened. He didn't answer right away. His gaze stayed fixed on the city, on the flames twisting far below.
"The realm has changed," he said finally. "I had to match it."
Remu tilted her head, studying him. "No. This isn't just the realm." Her fingers brushed the edge of the stone rail. "It's you."
Daniel turned to her then, crimson burning faint in his gaze. His expression was calm, but the weight behind it was clear.
"Things are moving," he said. "The adversaries, the Progenitors. Even Adam. The old balance is gone. Demons can't stay buried in the cracks anymore."
Remu's smile curved faintly. "So you'll rise with them."
His lips pulled into the faintest smirk. "I'll rise above them."
For a moment, silence settled. Only the distant roar of the city filled the air.
Then Remu laughed, soft but sharp. "Good. I was getting bored."
Daniel's gaze softened just a fraction. But only for a moment.
Back in the Spirit Realm, Temmy collapsed to her knees, gasping. The beast's energy faded, dissolving back into sparks.
Ruka crouched beside her, his hand hovering at her shoulder. "Not bad."
Her voice was shaky, but her eyes burned with determination. "Not enough."
Ruka's grin widened. "Spoken like someone who'll make it."
In the Wolf Den, Ken finally dismissed the circle. The wolves broke apart, some muttering, some laughing, but all watching Dera as they went.
She stood tall, even if her stomach was still in knots.
Ken's hand brushed her arm briefly as he passed. "You did fine."
Dera shot him a look. "That was fine?"
Angel's voice echoed as he walked away. "For a human? Yeah."
Dera's jaw tightened, but her fists didn't unclench.
And above it all, across every realm, something unseen stirred.
The adversaries moved. The Progenitors gathered. The air of creation itself hummed with the weight of what was coming.
The war wasn't here yet.
But the pieces were falling into place.
And in the spaces between fire and shadow, steel and blood, every soul sharpened itself for the storm.
The Celestial Realm
The Celestial Realm stretched like an endless dawn.
Its skies were painted in gold and pale blue, a horizon that never dimmed. Mountains of crystal pierced upward, their peaks glowing faintly with divine fire. Rivers of light threaded between them, carrying hymns that were not sung but felt—resonating through bone, through spirit. The air was sharp, clean, alive with an energy older than stars.
At the heart of it stood the training fields. Wide expanses of pale stone, each square etched with runes that pulsed faintly, reshaping themselves with every strike upon them. Constructs of radiant metal rose from the ground, bodies shifting between forms—beasts, warriors, titans—meant to sharpen skill against impossible odds.
And above them, a winged figure moved.
White wings cut through the air, each beat sharper than a blade, each motion carrying lethal grace. He descended like lightning, sword flashing once, clean and precise—an entire construct split into two before it even realized the strike had landed. Sparks scattered, fading into the runes.
Another construct lunged. The figure twisted mid-air, wings folding in tight before snapping outward with explosive force, slamming into the thing's chest. He followed with a slash so smooth it carved silence itself. The construct fell apart, its pieces scattering across the stone before dissolving back into light.
One after another, they came. Giants wielding hammers, serpents of shining steel, armored knights twice his height. None of them lasted more than a heartbeat. Every strike he gave was efficient, merciless, clean. There was no wasted movement, no hesitation.
Only precision.
The sound of battle slowed. The constructs pulled back into the stone, vanishing into runes that dimmed quiet.
The winged being stood in the center of the field, wings folding slowly behind him, breath steady. His blade dripped faint trails of light, which evaporated before touching the ground.
From the far edge of the field, footsteps echoed. Not hurried, not heavy. Calm. Certain.
Michael.
The Celestial Progenitor's wings stretched wide as he approached, their glow bathing the arena in brilliance. His face was unreadable, but his eyes burned like two suns caged in flesh. He stopped a few steps away, gaze fixed on the figure before him.
"You haven't dulled," Michael said, his voice low but carrying, each word rolling across the vast arena.
The winged being said nothing, but his sword lowered to his side, blade still gleaming faintly.
Michael's eyes narrowed, a faint glimmer of something darker passing through their light. Not anger. Not pride. Something sharper.
"It's time," he said.
The silence hung, heavy.
Michael stepped closer, his wings casting long shadows across the pale stone. His voice cut through the air, steady as judgment.
"The adversaries stir. The Progenitors gather. And Adam walks with the enemy. You've waited long enough. Your time has come."
His gaze sharpened, pinning the other in place.
"Take your revenge."
The words echoed in the arena, swallowed by the dawn-lit sky.







