Vampire Progenitor System

Chapter 240: Waking Lilith



Lucifer didn't move closer to the bed yet.

His eyes stayed fixed on Lilith, but he could already feel the subtle stir in the back of his mind—the deep, steady presence that was Damaris, coiled into the architecture of his system.

[That's more than enough, my son.]

The voice didn't come from the room. It came from everywhere inside his head at once, low and rich, carrying a weight that wasn't physical.

Lucifer's sight blurred for a heartbeat. When it sharpened, the edges of the chamber had softened. It was as though his vision was folding in on itself, focusing only on her.

Through his eyes, Damaris looked. And when he looked, it wasn't the stillness of the present he saw—it was the shape of years.

[She was always like this, you know. Even when she pretended she wasn't. Strong enough to make the realms kneel, yet she would smile as if she held nothing at all.]

Lucifer didn't answer. He let the old voice speak.

[The first time I saw her, she had already beaten three kings into the dirt. Her hair was a mess, her blade dripping. And she still turned to me and asked if I'd eaten yet.]

For a moment, there was warmth in that voice, almost a chuckle.

[When you came…]

Lucifer's gaze lingered on her face.

[…She laughed, Lucifer. Do you understand? Not the laugh of victory, not the cold smile she gives her enemies. She laughed like someone who had been waiting for a lifetime. She carried you herself for months, refused every attendant, every guard. And when you were born, she looked at you as if you were the only thing in all existence that mattered.]

The silence between them stretched. Damaris's voice softened, like it had stepped closer inside his head.

[She kept you close. Always. You would not remember—you were far too small—but there were nights she would hold you until the sky shifted colors. She told me once she had only one regret—that she could not give you a world that would never touch you with its claws.]

Lucifer's jaw tightened slightly, though he didn't speak. His hands stayed loose at his sides, but the stillness in his stance was heavier now.

[The years were never gentle on her, my son. But she did not break. And now…]

The voice slowed. It wasn't grief—it was calculation.

[…now she needs you.]

Lucifer's focus sharpened. "Tell me how."

Damaris didn't answer immediately. It was as if the old presence was searching for the right shape of the words.

[Blood.]

Lucifer's eyes narrowed faintly.

[But not just any blood. Hers. Yours. It must be joined—merged in a seal older than the throne she built. That is the only thing that can stir what sleeps.]

Lucifer said nothing, waiting.

[Her body will not take from another. And your own alone will not be enough. She must taste what was once hers returned to her, bound with what is hers still. You are her son. Half of what she is sleeps in you, even if you do not feel it.]

Lucifer glanced at her again, taking in the faint motion of her breathing. The idea of her being weaker than the shadow she cast was wrong in ways he couldn't name, but he kept his voice level.

"And this… won't kill her?"

[No,] Damaris said. [But it will hurt her. She will resist even in sleep. You must not falter until it is done.]

Lucifer's smirk was small, humorless. "Never been a problem."

The voice was silent for a moment, then it pressed closer, heavier.

[You do not know her as I do, Lucifer. She is not like the rest of us. She does not yield easily—not to steel, not to time, and certainly not to those she loves. You will see it when you begin.]

Lucifer kept his eyes on her face. "You said it needs both our blood. Explain it clearly."

[You will cut your palm and let your blood fall into hers. Not on her skin. Into her vein. The wound will close instantly if you do not bind it with the seal I will give you.]

Lucifer's tone didn't change. "And if I fail?"

[Then you try again. Until you don't.]

That earned the faintest twitch at the corner of Lucifer's mouth.

[When the blood joins, she will wake in part. Not fully, not yet. But she will know you were here. That will be enough.]

Lucifer stood in silence for a long moment, his gaze steady on the woman in the bed. The light from the candles traced the line of her jaw, the sharp points of her crown half-hidden in the sheets of her hair.

"She doesn't look like she's aged a day," he said finally.

[She hasn't,] Damaris replied. [Time bends around her. It always has.]

Lucifer's fingers flexed once, the faint pull of his own aura brushing the edge of hers. It was still there, buried deep—a weight, a pull, like the pressure before a storm.

"When I do this," he said, "she'll know me?"

[She already does,] Damaris said. [Even now. She is simply too far from the surface to reach you.]

Lucifer's gaze lingered on her lips for a moment. "Then I'll bring her back to it."

[Good.]

The presence shifted, quieter now, as though stepping back to let him stand alone. But before it faded entirely, it left one more line in his mind—heavier than the rest.

[Remember—thirty minutes. No more. The seal will close to you after that, and not even I can open it twice in a day.]

Lucifer's smirk returned, faint but sharper. "Thirty minutes is all I need."

He stepped closer to the bed at last, the shadows moving with him, curling around the edge of the silk. His eyes stayed locked on her face. Whatever he had imagined in the years away, it wasn't this—wasn't the quiet weight of seeing her like this, wasn't the strange pull low in his chest that came with it.

Her breathing stayed slow, steady, untouched by his presence. But his? It had shifted.

He rested his hand on the bed's carved frame, the faint heat of the wood seeping into his palm.

Somewhere deeper, he felt Damaris settle like a shadow against the back of his mind.

[When you are ready, I will guide your hand.]

Lucifer didn't answer. His eyes stayed on Lilith. The seconds were already burning away.


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