Vampire Progenitor System -
Chapter 186: "So you believe me?"
Chapter 186: "So you believe me?"
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Let’s focus on your scene. I’ll now write a 1200-word continuation from your previous Chapter, with Clone Lucifer and Valena inside her home while Greta prepares the spell to send the werewolves, kitsunes, and witches to their realms. Valena will ask Clone Lucifer about his intentions, unaware of the human world or his nature. The tone will remain mature, human, anime-style, and cinematic—simple, grounded, and immersive. No big grammar, no motivational talk. Give me a moment.
The stone windows of Valena’s home were covered with deep indigo curtains, and the air smelled faintly of lavender and burning old sage. It was quiet—too quiet after what had just happened in the throne hall.
Clone Lucifer sat on a low, curved chair carved from darkwood, facing the firepit. He had cleaned the blood off his claws and face, but the red stains still clung faintly to his skin, like shadows that refused to fade. His wings were folded behind him, twitching now and then as though they hadn’t adjusted to stillness.
Across the room, Greta was bent low over a wide chalk circle, her hands flicking through old leather-bound tomes while her coven of witches gathered ingredients into small ceramic bowls. The air around them crackled softly—magic forming. Magic meant to open a path home.
The werewolves had gathered near the side wall, sitting or leaning with bruised faces and tired eyes. The kitsunes were quieter, one or two casting glances toward Clone Lucifer now and then. No one said a word to him.
Except Valena.
She entered the chamber without a sound, barefoot on smooth marble. Her long silver-white hair had been untied, falling around her shoulders in waves. Her robes were simpler now—plain black and sleeveless, with only a small charm hanging around her neck: an old sigil etched in forgotten tongue.
She didn’t speak at first. Just stood beside the firepit and watched him.
"You didn’t have to fight him like that," she said quietly, finally.
Clone Lucifer didn’t look at her. His gaze was locked on the fire. "Didn’t have a choice."
"You always have a choice," she said. "Even if they’re all bad ones."
He didn’t answer right away.
"I just... couldn’t let them be taken. Not after everything."
Valena walked around the fire, then sat across from him. Her legs folded neatly beneath her, hands resting in her lap. She studied him in the flickering orange light.
"You have the same scent," she said after a moment. "Same weight in your aura. Same eyes."
"But I’m not him," he said, finally looking at her.
"No," she agreed. "You’re something else."
She leaned forward a little.
"So... what are you going to do now?"
He tilted his head. "What do you mean?"
"I mean," she said, voice calm and low, "you just made a scene in front of half the nobles of this realm. You brought witches, werewolves, and fox-spirits into a vampire throne hall and called Valecar out on his own ground. You have blood of the firstborn in your veins. You carry the aura of the original. The nobles will talk. They’ll speculate. And some of them will see you as a threat."
She paused, her eyes searching his.
"Are you planning to stay? To lead? To take the throne?"
Clone Lucifer exhaled slowly. The fire crackled.
"No."
Valena blinked. "No?"
He shook his head once. "I don’t have a plan. I wasn’t sent to rule anything. I was only told to bring them here. Keep them safe. That’s all."
"Told by who?"
"The real one," he said quietly. "The real Lucifer."
Valena didn’t speak. Her eyes narrowed slightly, reading him again.
"I don’t even know if I’m supposed to exist," he muttered. "But he said I was important. That I could help. That I had enough of him in me to make people listen."
He paused, then added, "He said when he comes... everything would change. One way or another."
Valena leaned back slightly, watching him now with something closer to curiosity.
"You speak like someone with centuries behind your eyes," she said. "But your voice feels... young."
"I am young," he said. "But I carry everything he was. All of it. Like memories stitched into my bones."
He looked up at her.
"And I know this much. When he comes, your world—this world—will have to choose."
Valena studied him. The firelight danced across her sharp cheekbones and tired silver eyes.
"Choose what?"
"To follow him," he said softly. "Or try and stop him."
She was quiet for a long time.
Behind them, Greta murmured something in a forgotten dialect. The runes around the circle flickered to life, glowing with a faint red sheen. One of the witches sprinkled powdered silver into the air.
Valena still hadn’t moved.
"I’ve seen men who wanted to rule," she said finally. "I’ve seen kings built from war. From love. From nothing. But this is different."
Clone Lucifer gave a quiet nod. "He doesn’t want to rule."
"Then what does he want?"
"To fix what was broken," he said. "Even if he has to break everything else to do it."
Valena let the silence stretch. Then she stood slowly.
"I don’t know the world you came from," she said. "I’ve lived my whole life inside these walls, in this realm. We bleed and drink and curse the sun and tell old stories. But I’ve never seen witches cry like that. Or werewolves kneel to anyone but their own."
She looked toward the circle where Greta worked, then back at him.
"They followed you. Without fear."
"I didn’t give them a choice," Clone Lucifer said, looking down.
"You didn’t need to," she replied. "That’s what makes it strange."
Clone Lucifer didn’t answer.
She stepped beside him, resting a hand lightly on the back of his chair.
"You may not be the original," she said softly, "but something in you is going to change this realm. And when it happens... I hope we survive it."
He looked up at her. "So you believe me?"
Valena smiled faintly. "No. But I believe what I saw."
Greta’s voice cut through the air. "It’s ready."
The circle shimmered in the middle of the chamber. A low hum thrummed through the floor. The air smelled sharp—like burnt ozone and crushed rose petals.
The witches stepped forward, guiding the kitsunes and werewolves one by one. Some looked relieved. Others just exhausted.
Serah paused before stepping into the circle. She glanced back at Clone Lucifer and held his gaze for a moment.
He didn’t smile. He just gave her a nod.
She vanished into the light.
One by one, the others followed. Greta lingered last, her face pale and worn.
She turned to Valena.
"Thank you," she said.
Valena nodded. "Just make sure they arrive safely."
Greta glanced at Clone Lucifer once, then turned and stepped into the magic circle.
The hum stopped.
The light dimmed.
Silence returned.
Only Clone Lucifer and Valena remained now.
She walked slowly toward the fire, staring into it.
"Stay as long as you want," she said. "I’ll have a room prepared."
He stood quietly behind her.
"I don’t know how long I’ll be here," he said. "But thank you."
Valena didn’t look back.
"Don’t thank me yet," she said softly. "This realm remembers. And it forgets slower than most."
He didn’t answer.
He didn’t need to.
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