Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 103: For The World

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Chapter 103: For The World

The sound of battle shook the horizon.

Fogwalkers screamed as they fell, torn apart by blades, curses, and shadowfire. The Fifteen moved like a single entity—each attack folding into the next like a symphony of destruction. Bodies twisted. Space cracked. Magic warped.

And below it all—

Heron and Balgron clashed again.

The Draugr’s grin was wider now, blood on his knuckles and joy in his dead eyes. Balgron, once a towering beast of the old world, was losing ground. His breath was ragged, one of his tusks cracked, his skin ripped and sagging with every blow.

Balgron growled, summoning blood spikes from his shoulders, hurling them like missiles.

Heron didn’t dodge.

He stepped through them.

Literally.

His body shimmered, semi-transparent, moving through the barrage like fog through wind.

Then he reappeared—right in front of Balgron.

One palm glowed black with concentrated void mana. The other clenched into a hammering fist.

Crack!

Another blow to Balgron’s ribs—bone broke.

Crunch!

Knee to the jaw—his head snapped back.

Balgron swung wildly, claws igniting with corrupted fire. Heron leaned left, slipped past them, grabbed the monster by the wrist, and ripped his arm out of socket with a twist.

Balgron roared, stumbling back—but Heron wasn’t done.

His hand reached into Balgron’s chest, phasing through skin and armor. His fingers curled. Gripped something beating—twisting—deep inside.

The monster’s core.

Balgron’s eyes widened.

Heron met his gaze.

"Your curse ends here."

Then he ripped it out.

The core—a black, crystalline organ pulsing with cursed magic—shattered in Heron’s grasp.

Balgron let out a gurgling gasp. His massive form convulsed—then began to collapse inward, his body crumbling into ash and dust as the curse holding it together unraveled.

In seconds, the warlord of the ancient dark was no more.

Heron stood in silence, blood and shadow dripping from his fingers. Then, slowly, he looked toward the sky.

The others were finishing their ends.

Zane cut down the last Fogwalker in his path with a spinning arc of Midveil. The creature collapsed, folding like paper soaked in fire.

"Clear," he called.

Vel zipped to his side, blades humming. "Last one’s done west side."

"East is down," Mikael confirmed, stepping over a pile of twitching limbs.

Alessia emerged from a crack in the ground, cloak settling over her shoulder. "Shadows report no survivors."

One by one, the rest called in—clearing sectors. Fogwalkers were gone. The battlefield was still.

For now.

Anita, standing at the center of a blood circle she had drawn with her own veins, looked up at Serah.

"Now," she said. "We close that rift."

Serah nodded, voice already whispering in tongues. Her rose thorns twisted into the ground, weaving a spell lattice across the terrain.

Witchlight shimmered. The very air began to warp as the preparation to seal the tear began.

Mira and Kira stood by, lending power. Alessia extended shadow tendrils to anchor the edges of the rip. It flickered—resisted—but began to slow.

Then—

The wind died.

Not a normal silence.

A cold. A void. A wrongness.

Every head turned.

Because something was coming.

It didn’t enter like the others.

It didn’t crawl or slither.

It descended.

The sky turned black where it moved. The fog around it didn’t swirl—it ran. Backward. Away. Like it feared its own kind.

A single Fogwalker—but not like the others.

Massive. Towering. Wrapped in tattered rags of spectral flesh, bones fused with shadow, its head crowned with antlers made of screaming faces.

Eyes. Dozens. Hundreds. Rotating around its skull.

It floated above them all—weightless. Quiet.

And then it spoke.

A voice not heard with ears. Felt. In the bone.

"You have delayed what is already written."

Everyone froze.

Even Heron.

The world stood still.

Even the wind refused to breathe.

The sky — once cracked and blood-lit — now bent under a suffocating pressure. A pressure that weighed on the bones. A pressure that watched.

The creature floated, immense and silent, its body barely holding shape. Faces moved inside it, stretching beneath its torn veil of skin. Eyes spun like cursed constellations around its skull. Every movement, every twitch, felt like it rewrote the rules of what should be allowed to exist.

The Fogwalker didn’t scream.

Didn’t roar.

It just hovered, and whispered through silence—

"You have delayed what is already written."

Zane took one step forward.

Midveil trembled in his hand.

All around him, the other Seats slowly moved into formation, coats fluttering, auras rising like storms held at bay. Heron’s grin had vanished. Even he looked up at the thing with narrowed eyes.

Anita was dead still, blood forming a protective spiral around her.

Serah’s chant faltered.

"Zane," she muttered.

He looked back at her, voice steady.

"Go."

"But—"

He didn’t shout.

He didn’t blink.

"Take the witches. Close the rift. That thing is a distraction."

Her mouth tightened.

But she nodded.

With a flick of her wrist, her rose-thorn magic unfurled, and from the outer ruins, her witches appeared.

Serah turned to them, pointed at the rift.

"Form the Spiral. Bind the root. Hold nothing back."

The witches moved, fast and fluid, taking positions around the tear. Their chants began to ripple through the air—raw, old, and sharp like ancient glass.

And Zane?

He faced the Fogwalker.

"Alright then," he whispered. "Let’s see what you are."

The Prophet of Oblivion moved.

Not like a creature.

Like a concept.

It glided forward, and the sky cracked behind it. Just existing caused the light to twist and bend. It raised a hand — five fingers, all eyes, all blinking.

The air imploded.

Zane vanished.

Reappeared mid-air, slashing downward with Midveil. The blade cut through the dark, hitting the Prophet’s arm—

And stopped.

Like hitting obsidian. No recoil. No slice.

Zane flipped off it, landed, and shouted—

"Now!"

Vel was first. She blitzed from the right, her plasma daggers dragging streaks of lightning. She aimed for the side of the Prophet’s head—only for it to bend backward, its form warping in an instant.

She slid under it, throwing a pulse mine into its lower chest.

BOOM!

No effect.

Just distortion.

The Prophet turned its many eyes on her.

Kira cut in next.

Her voice shifted pitch, casting a Curse of Dissolution, a spell meant to erase even names from existence.

The curse hit.

It rippled—

Then recoiled.

Kira screamed, blood spilling from her mouth. Daron caught her, pulling her back.

"It reflects spells. Don’t use your name again."

Mikael charged. Sword raised. Scarbrand glowing red-hot. He leapt, bringing it down with a battle cry—

The Prophet didn’t move.

It let him strike.

The blade hit its body—

And froze.

Not stuck.

Frozen in time.

Mikael roared, trying to pull it out.

The Prophet blinked once—

And time resumed.

SLAM.

The Prophet backhanded him mid-air. He crashed into three buildings before skidding to a stop, leaving a bloody trail across the earth.

Alessia slipped in from the shadows.

She leapt from her own reflection, daggers aimed at the thing’s throat—

The Prophet looked at her shadow.

It split.

Turned on her.

She barely phased out before it stabbed her with her own shade.

Zane growled. "Enough."

He held Midveil with both hands now.

"Everyone—high impact. We bring it down now."

Anita raised her arms.

The blood in the entire battlefield responded.

It rose like a sea, forming a giant hand — dozens of meters high — and crashed down on the Prophet with the weight of a thousand hearts.

The Prophet vanished.

Reappeared behind her.

Its eyes blinked—

And Anita’s entire blood ring collapsed.

She coughed, hit a knee, blood pouring from her nose.

Jax transformed.

His mechanical joints rotated, locks disengaged.

He shifted into a massive warform, shoulder cannons locking on.

"Firing."

Twin beams of hyper-concentrated mana lit the sky—white-hot and screaming—

They hit the Prophet dead center.

Finally—impact.

Smoke.

Wind.

Silence.

Then—

The Prophet walked out of the smoke.

Untouched.

Heron cracked his neck. "Time to cheat."

He launched himself like a meteor, both hands glowing black.

He slammed into the Prophet, fists landing rapid-fire, each hit bending light. His strikes weren’t just physical—they were cursed concepts. Strikes meant to end cycles, to deny reincarnation. freewebnøvel.coɱ

The Prophet’s form cracked slightly.

Heron grinned.

Then the Prophet opened its chest—

And Heron screamed.

A thousand mouths opened within.

They bit him. Dozens. Hundreds.

He vanished into the maelstrom.

"HERON!" Zane shouted, rage now burning full.

He raised Midveil again.

This time—it ignited.

Black and red flames roared around the blade, and Zane’s eyes lit like a dying star.

He rushed in—spinning—cutting upward with all his might.

Midveil screamed.

And this time—it sliced.

Right through the Prophet’s side.

It shrieked.

Pain. Actual pain.

The body cracked. Smoke bled.

The Prophet lifted a hand—

But Mira was already there.

"Now."

She tossed a micro-rift onto the Prophet’s chest.

It pulled. Hard.

The beast bent backward, limbs warping.

Anita forced herself up again.

Blood surged.

Serah’s voice echoed from the rift circle—

"NOW!"

The tear began to collapse.

Light poured from its edges. The rift shuddered, screaming like a wounded god. The witches chanted louder, hands locked, magic burning their veins.

The Prophet screamed again, trying to fly—trying to run.

But Zane was already above it.

Midveil raised.

Winds howled.

He whispered one last thing.

"For The World."

Then—

He dropped.

Blade first.

Right through the Prophet’s core.

The beast spasmed. Its form exploded in every direction—smoke, screams, pieces of gods—

And was gone.

Silence.

The rift closed.

The fog vanished.

And the sky... was clear.