Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 260: Ken And Dera

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Werewolf Realm

The air in the mountains was thick with pine and smoke.

The den stretched across the cliffs, its halls cut into living stone, lit by fire pits that never burned out. From the higher terraces, the land spilled wide—forests as old as time, rivers running silver under the moonlight. To a stranger, it was wild. To the wolves, it was home.

Dera stood in one of the training courts carved into the mountain's side. The ground was rough, uneven, stained from years of claws and blades cutting into it. Her chest rose and fell with each breath, sweat clinging to her back. The knife in her hand spun once before she gripped it firm again.

Her boots dug into the dirt as she slashed forward, quick and clean, the sound sharp in the night. She didn't need targets anymore. The images in her head were enough. Shadows of her dreams, memories pressing against her hands until the movements felt less like practice and more like remembering.

The runes came too.

Faint, glowing lines that crawled across her forearms as her pulse quickened. Her father had taught her the basics once—binding strength to steel, calling focus through symbols etched in blood. But now, she moved through patterns she had never known before. Marks that had come from the dreams. They carved themselves across her skin without thought, blazing and fading as she fought the air.

Her blade blurred. Her body moved like it had been born to this.

But each strike still carried the weight of doubt.

When the blade finally stopped, she stood in the silence, chest tight, staring at the faint shimmer of runes fading from her arms. She didn't know if she should be grateful or afraid.

A shadow moved at the edge of the court. 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺

Ken.

He stepped down from the higher path, his boots crunching the dirt. His aura pressed heavier than the fire pits, pulling the air toward him, marking him Alpha in every step. His eyes caught hers briefly before flicking to the knife in her hand.

"You're pushing too hard," he said simply.

Dera scoffed, wiping sweat from her brow with the back of her hand. "Says the one who runs ten wolves into the ground every morning."

Ken's mouth twitched faintly, not quite a smile. He drew closer, pulling a wooden blade from the rack at the side of the court. "Spar."

Dera rolled her eyes. "Again?"

"You need it." He tossed the other wooden blade toward her. She caught it instinctively, grip tight.

They circled.

Ken moved first, stepping in sharp with a downward strike. Dera blocked, the wood cracking against wood, sparks of pain shooting through her arm from the force. He was stronger—always stronger—but she was faster. She slipped under his guard, swinging low.

He caught it, twisted, shoved her back.

Again.

The rhythm carried them, strike after strike, their movements echoing off the stone walls. Every time she thought she had him, his strength broke her guard. Every time he thought she'd stumble, her speed cut the air just shy of his side.

It was almost like old times. Almost.

When she finally slipped past his defense, her blade stopping an inch from his ribs, both froze. Her chest heaved. His gaze locked on hers, steady, unreadable.

Slowly, she dropped the blade.

"I need to ask you something," she said, her voice low.

Ken set his weapon aside, brushing dust from his palms. "Ask."

Her throat tightened. The words tangled before they left, but she forced them out. "Have you forgiven me?"

The silence stretched, heavy. His eyes didn't waver, didn't blink.

Finally, he said, "Yes."

Her chest hitched, breath stumbling. But still, the guilt sat heavy. She turned her blade in her hands, eyes fixed on the dirt.

"I'm sorry," she whispered.

Ken tilted his head. "For what?"

"For all of it." Her voice shook, sharper now. "For lying to you. For never telling you what I was. For being with you all that time and keeping it hidden. For killing Remu without a word—without telling you what I was about to do. I just… I followed my impulse. I thought I was doing the right thing, but I didn't even think of what it would mean for you."

Her grip tightened around the blade until her knuckles went white. "And I lost you for it."

Ken stepped closer, his shadow brushing over hers. His hand rested on her arm, grounding, firm.

"It's okay."

Her eyes snapped up, searching his face.

His voice stayed steady, but softer than before. "It's okay. I hated you for it once, but I understand now. You did what had to be done. You saved lives. And I've had enough time to see that truth."

Dera's lip trembled. She shook her head. "But I—"

He cut her off gently. "I've forgiven you, Dera."

The weight in his words was final.

For a moment, she couldn't breathe. The court, the den, the whole realm seemed to fade, and all that remained was the boy she had once loved—the man who stood before her now, Alpha, but still him.

Her hand shook as she lowered the blade, the dirt swallowing the sound as it dropped.

Ken's grip stayed steady on her arm. "You don't have to carry it anymore."

Her chest tightened, tears burning the corners of her eyes. She let out a sharp breath, half laugh, half sob, and shook her head. "You always make it sound so simple."

He gave the faintest smile. "Because it is."

For the first time since she'd woken in New Earth, since the flashes had started, the knot in her chest eased just a little. The guilt didn't vanish, but it loosened, enough to let her breathe.

The firelight flickered against them, shadows swaying across the court.

Ken let go of her arm, stepping back just slightly. "Come. Again." He picked up his blade, stance ready.

Dera wiped her eyes with the back of her hand, straightened, and grabbed her weapon again.

This time, when their blades clashed, her chest felt lighter.

The war was still coming. The adversaries still rose. But for the first time, she wasn't carrying her ghosts alone.