Chapter 219: "You're not my equal."
Valecar roared.
His body surged with rage, shadows peeling off his limbs like smoke. His muscles expanded, bones crackling with raw energy. His hand exploded into claws, and with one brutal twist, he tore himself free from Lucifer's grip and launched a vicious strike across Lucifer's face.
Lucifer's head snapped to the side—blood flew.
But he didn't move.
He turned back slowly.
His lip was split. A red line cut across his cheek.
But his eyes?
Unblinking.
He drove his knee into Valecar's gut—deep, merciless. The impact lifted Valecar off the ground. Before he could fall, Lucifer grabbed his leg and spun, smashing him through a column. The stone shattered like wet paper. Valecar tumbled across the courtyard, leaving a groove in the floor.
He tried to stand.
Lucifer appeared behind him again.
One hand gripped his shoulder.
The other smashed into his spine.
A sickening crack echoed.
Valecar screamed.
He rolled to the side, swung his arm wide, blood tendrils whipping out like blades.
Lucifer stepped through them. Each strike nicked his coat, tore into his skin—but he didn't flinch.
He slammed his boot into Valecar's chest and pinned him.
Valecar tried to push up.
Lucifer raised his fist and brought it down.
Once.
Twice.
Three times.
Each strike louder. Slower. Heavier.
Stone cratered deeper with every hit. Blood sprayed up. Valecar's face was caved in, bones broken and then broken again. His body twitched under the blows, not with strength, but reflex. Nerve memory. The last scraps of defiance.
"Still breathing," Lucifer muttered.
He dragged Valecar up by the hair.
Valecar's face was nearly unrecognizable—swollen, bloodied, one eye barely open. He tried to spit something, some curse or insult—
Lucifer slammed him into the wall instead.
"You thought I was weak?" he whispered, voice flat. "Because I gave you time to talk?"
He grabbed Valecar's arm—and snapped it backward.
The scream it pulled wasn't human.
"You thought blood made you kin?" Another bone broke. "You thought betrayal made you king?"
Valecar tried to call on his magic, his aura flaring dimly—but Lucifer bit his wrist and drained the spell from the source, burning it out with sheer will. His fangs left jagged marks down to bone.
"No," Lucifer said.
He dropped Valecar to his knees.
"You're not my equal."
Then he stepped behind him, wrapped an arm around his neck—
And slowly, like the finale of a song—
He snapped it.
The sound was clean.
Final.
Valecar's body crumpled to the ground, twitching once before going limp, a smear of blood trailing behind his last breath.
Silence fell across the battlefield.
No one moved.
Vina lowered her claws. Ella, breathing hard, took a step back and wiped her blade.
Then—
A blur.
Something fast.
Something wrong.
Before anyone could speak, a shadow dashed across the square—a blur of silver and crimson, cloaked in silence. No warning.
In that split second, the nobles who had blocked the cliff's edge—the old loyalists—turned.
One opened his mouth.
Then his head hit the floor.
Another reached for a blade.
A crimson claw tore through his chest.
Four nobles.
Dead in under two seconds.
The blur stood still now, in the center of the blood.
It was him.
Lucifer?
No.
The same face.
But wrong.
No warmth. No pause. Just precision. Cold eyes that didn't blink. A twisted reflection of the one who had just delivered justice.
Lucian.
He turned once—briefly—to Lucifer, who didn't react. Their eyes met. Nothing was said. Nothing had to be.
Then Lucian vanished again.
Gone.
As if he'd never been there.
The silence remained—tense, raw.
Then Lucifer's aura began to shift.
Everyone felt it.
The ground trembled under his feet.
Cracks rippled out from where he stood, spiraling like veins across the courtyard. The very air around him folded inward, pulled by some gravity none of them could describe.
"Wait," Vina said, her ears flattening. "He's—"
Too late.
Lucifer exhaled.
And the world changed.
His aura exploded upward like a tower of black-red flame. It shot through the sky, piercing clouds, breaking the night open. The stars above flickered, then dimmed, like they couldn't bear to watch.
Waves of raw energy surged outward from him. The realm shook. Magic cracked. Ancient stones glowed beneath the dirt as ley lines reacted. The entire capital tilted toward his power, bending—not by force, but by nature.
The power didn't just rise.
It evolved.
Flesh shifted. Bone aligned. Every inch of Lucifer's presence grew heavier, denser, more defined. The very definition of who he was began to rewrite itself. Something primal awakened—something older than memory.
Vina dropped to one knee. Ella leaned on her dagger. Dracula shielded his eyes. Zane cursed under his breath. Valena trembled but didn't look away.
Lucifer's body trembled once.
Then stillness.
Then…
His eyes widened—and rolled back.
He collapsed forward.
Unmoving.
His aura flickered once more, then vanished like the last breath of a storm.
He had broken through.
And passed out.
For a second, no one moved.
Just the wind—whipping through the shattered square, tugging at cloaks and kicking up dust across the blood-stained floor.
Then Luna was the first to break from her trance.
She ran.
"Lucifer!"
Her boots pounded against stone as she sprinted toward him, her heart hammering harder than her steps. Vina moved at the same time, shifting mid-run back into her humanoid form—smaller, leaner, but still glowing with a faint red haze. Ella followed, blades still gripped tight, eyes scanning the shadows for anything else that might strike.
They reached him in seconds.
Lucifer lay still, face half-turned toward the ground, blood trailing from the corner of his mouth. His body radiated faint heat—residual force from the evolution still burning under his skin.
Luna dropped beside him and gently rolled him onto his back. "He's breathing…"
"Barely," Vina muttered, kneeling on the other side. "But he's alive. Dammit. Whatever he just unlocked, it nearly tore him apart."
Ella stood over them both, eyes flicking to the ruins of the plaza, to the crater where Valecar's body lay twisted and broken.
"I've never felt that kind of power before," she said softly. "It wasn't just energy. It was like… the realm recognized him."
Luna didn't answer. She pressed her forehead to Lucifer's chest, listening for the rhythm—shaky, fading, but there.
"We need to get him back."
Behind them, Dracula raised his voice.
"Everyone, calm yourselves."
His tone was cool, commanding. Centuries of leadership bled through every syllable. The guards and nobles who had witnessed everything—those who had knelt, those who hadn't—snapped to attention. Even the air seemed to still at his words.
"This is not a time for panic," he said. "The challenge is over. The traitor is dead. What remains is order."
He stepped down from the higher platform, his cloak dragging across the blood as he approached the center of the wreckage.
"Anyone loyal to the former order should step forward now. Not to beg for mercy—but to choose survival."
No one moved.
Dracula's eyes narrowed. "Good."
He turned to Zane, who was dusting off his coat, unfazed as always. "Take a squad. Secure the city perimeter. I don't care how many shadows are still hiding. No more surprises tonight."
Zane nodded once. "Already moving."
In the background, a signal whistle echoed—squads of elite vampires darting into action, silent and precise.
Meanwhile, back by Lucifer, Luna cupped his cheek, voice low. "We're taking him home."
Vina shifted forward and hooked an arm beneath his shoulders. "He's heavy as hell."
"I'll get his legs," Ella said, tucking her blades away.
Together, the three women lifted him—slow, careful. His body was limp, but still radiating heat like cooling metal. Luna winced when she saw the burn marks along his ribs, some wounds still half-open despite the healing.
They walked.
Step by step, they made their way through the ruins, past shattered columns and bloodied tiles, through the quiet remains of the rebellion. Vampires bowed as they passed—some with guilt in their eyes, others with fear. All understood one thing now.
This was no longer Valecar's realm.
It never had been.
It was his.
Lucifer.
By the time they reached the blackstone path leading up to the castle gates, more nobles and guards had gathered along the stairs. Some offered to help.
None were allowed.
Dracula met them at the foot of the steps and gave a single nod. "We've cleared the great hall. The throne room is being cleaned. Aether wards are active. No disturbances will reach him tonight."
Ella adjusted her grip on Lucifer's legs. "Where are the humans?"
"Safe," Dracula said. "Valena moved them to the underground spring caverns as soon as the blast hit. Zane stationed ten guards. Anita's watching the northern perimeter."
Luna gave a grateful nod, breath heavy. "Thank you."
Dracula stepped aside and opened the door himself.
They entered.
The castle was quieter than usual. Lights were low, sconces flickering red against obsidian walls. The scent of ash and iron lingered in the air—residual energy still bleeding from the throne room's foundation.
They carried him through the main corridor, past carved murals and tapestries older than memory. Finally, they reached his chamber.
A dark room. High ceiling. Deep red banners. A single bed lined with obsidian frames and woven silk sheets. The place hadn't changed.
But the man had.
They laid him down gently.
Lucifer stirred only once—his fingers twitching as if grasping for something that wasn't there.
Then stillness again.
Luna sat by his side, brushing the hair from his forehead. "Sleep," she whispered. "We've got it from here."
Vina stood near the door, arms crossed. "He burned through everything. Energy. Blood. Soul strain. He'll need at least a few hours."
Dracula stepped forward and placed a small obsidian stone near the bedpost—a blood ward. "No one gets in without my mark. Not even you two."
Ella gave a soft chuckle. "Don't worry. I'm too tired to stab anyone else tonight."
They all stood there for a moment.
Watching him.
The one who returned.
The one who crushed rebellion, turned death into dominance, and then collapsed from the weight of what he carried.
Vina finally sighed. "He's going to kill himself one day, fighting like that."
"No," Luna said softly. "He's already died once. Everything after this… is just living for those who couldn't."
No one argued.
Silence settled again.
And in that silence, something shifted in the air—small, soft, invisible.
Lucifer's aura pulsed once.
Not loud.
Not threatening.
Just… there.
Alive.