Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 109: The Adversaries
Chapter 109: The Adversaries
The Beginning of All Things
Long before gods. Before thrones. Before the first star cracked open in the void—
There were the Progenitors.
Born from the raw essence of the World Vein—the first surge of creation—they weren’t made. They were willed into being by existence itself. Not as kings or rulers. But as the first representations of life, balance, and will.
There were seven.
The Vampire Progenitor.
The Human Progenitor.
The Elven Progenitor.
The Dragon Progenitor.
The Demon Progenitor.
The Spirit Progenitor.
And the Beast Progenitor.
Each of them rose from a different strand of the World Vein, their forms taking shape based on the primal nature of what they were meant to protect.
The Vampire Progenitor—tall, pale, eyes like eclipses—was the balance between life and death. A being who thrived in twilight. Not predator, not prey. Just... eternal.
The Elven Progenitor shimmered like moonlight on leaves, walking barefoot on nothingness, the first to hear the whispers of stars.
The Spirit Progenitor had no flesh—only form. A translucent silhouette of swirling soul-light, humming with every breath of the world’s essence.
The Demon Progenitor was fury, chaos, desire. Horns wrapped around their skull like broken crowns. Fire was their blood, sin their spine.
The Dragon Progenitor cracked open the sky when they were born. Their roar was the sound of mountains learning to stand.
The Beast Progenitor was fur, claw, instinct. A titan who knelt to no one, not even time.
And the Human Progenitor... was quiet.
No claws. No wings. No fire or fangs.
Just a pair of eyes that reflected everything.
They weren’t the strongest. Or the fastest. But when they walked... the other Progenitors watched.
Because humans weren’t built to survive.
They were built to endure.
Each Progenitor carved out a piece of the World Vein to call their own.
The Vampire Progenitor created Tenebris—a realm of shadows and moonlight, where night was more than a cycle—it was home.
The Spirit Progenitor built Elarion, a world suspended between moments, where soul energy moved like rivers and time danced backwards when it felt like it.
The Demon Progenitor tore open Abyzzar, a land born of fire and emotion, ruled by desire and primal rule.
The Dragon Progenitor breathed life into Skayros, a skyland of floating continents, where only the strong could survive the weight of the air.
The Beast Progenitor took to Gaulvyrn, a wild, untamed land where instinct ruled and the stars rarely showed.
The Elven Progenitor made Sylira, a realm of harmony and deep roots, where even silence had magic.
And the Human Progenitor shaped Ostarius—a realm of balance. Mountains and oceans. Forests and plains. The mortal world.
For a time... there was peace.
Each Progenitor ruled their domain, growing their people, watching civilizations rise and fall. The realms didn’t always agree—but there was respect. And that was enough.
Until... the Others came.
They were not born from the World Vein.
They had no heart.
No anchor.
They were the forgotten dreams of dead stars.
They were the adversaries.
Fogwalkers.
Monsters.
Faceless ones.
They came not from a realm, but from between realms. From the cracks in existence. From the screams between breaths. From the silence that lives under everything.
They didn’t talk.
They didn’t feel.
They consumed.
First, they tried to break into Tenebris.
But the Vampire Progenitor fought them off with blood storms and nightfire.
Then they moved toward Skayros.
And the dragons met them in the sky. The clouds burned for days.
But then... they found something weaker.
Ostarius.
The mortal realm.
The Human Progenitor stood alone.
And fought alone.
Ten thousand years ago... the first great war began.
It wasn’t just a battle. It was annihilation. Fogwalkers blotted out the sun. Bonebeasts taller than towers tore through cities. The sky bled. The oceans screamed.
And in the center of it all—
The Human Progenitor stood their ground.
With nothing but a sword.
And a reason.
The other Progenitors joined late—but when they came, they came like storms. Dragons rained fire from above. Spirits screamed through monsters, shredding them into dust. Vampires turned entire battlefields into crimson silence.
But the cost...
The Human Progenitor was gone.
Fallen.
Not dead.
Gone.
Swallowed by a creature that was never meant to be named. Something that still haunts the gaps between time.
After that, the Progenitors knew the mortal realm could not be left unguarded.
So they chose guardians from each of their races.
Champions.
And they sent them to Ostarius.
To watch.
To protect.
To hold the line.
Even if the Progenitors couldn’t step in again.
Lilith stood in the middle of the white-light chamber as she told the story. Her voice had never cracked. Not once.
Until now.
"The Vampire Progenitor..." she said.
She looked away.
"Vanished... decades ago."
A beat passed.
Lucifer stood completely still.
Ruka’s brows furrowed.
Temmy narrowed her eyes slightly, quietly listening.
Lilith kept going. "One day, he left Tenebris. Said he had... something to finish. Something he never told anyone. And he never came back."
She didn’t cry.
But her voice changed.
Just slightly.
Lilith paused.
The silence wasn’t awkward. It was full. Heavy. Like even sound didn’t want to interrupt.
She finally turned.
Her eyes met Lucifer’s.
Not as a queen. Not as a ruler.
As something older.
Something quieter.
"Some of us... are still out there," she said. "Sleeping. Watching. Hiding."
She stepped forward, not floating now. Her bare feet touched the stone. Soft. Sure. Real.
"Not all Progenitors vanished," she continued. "Some fell into deep sleep. Too wounded to heal. Too tired to rise. Some were sealed away... by their own will. Some were forgotten entirely. Erased from memory by the very realms they helped create."
She looked up toward the domed sky of the chamber—its celestial map still glowing faintly.
"You’d be surprised how easy it is to forget gods when the stars stop mentioning them."
Lucifer didn’t blink. His expression stayed still, unreadable.
Lilith exhaled slowly, then turned her gaze to Ruka and Temmy.
"But the same goes for the Others."
"The adversaries we fought in the Great War? The Fogwalkers? The beasts with too many mouths? They were just the front."
"A vanguard."
"A warning."
Temmy’s voice was low, quiet. "You mean... that wasn’t their full strength?"
Lilith shook her head.
"No. Not even close."
Her fingers moved and a new projection lit up above the map. The realms blurred, and between them—thin, cracked voids began to pulse with dark red light.
"In the gaps between realms, they’ve been growing. Waiting. Feeding on whatever we cast out. Broken gods. Forsaken spirits. Forgotten nightmares."
She looked at Lucifer again.
"And now, with balance weakened... they’ll start moving."
"Soon."
Lucifer stepped forward. "What do they want?"
Lilith didn’t hesitate.
"To unmake us."
"They don’t want power. Or land. Or vengeance."
"They want silence."
Ruka spoke this time. "You said some Progenitors were sealed... does that mean there are more than seven?"
Lilith nodded slowly. "There were always more. But not all of them chose to create realms. Some... created nothing. Some simply were. Concepts. Forces. Wild anomalies even we didn’t understand."
She paused again.
"There was one they called the Woundmaker. A Progenitor of Ruin."
"No one ever met it. No one wanted to. But we felt its presence when the Others first arrived. When the Human Progenitor disappeared, that presence... grew."
She raised a hand and a black silhouette appeared—shifting, faceless, not quite a shape or a shadow.
"Some say it was the first adversary."
"Others say it was a Progenitor who lost its way."
Temmy stepped forward. "And what do you say?"
Lilith didn’t answer right away.
Then: "I say it’s still watching."
The room went cold.
The white portal behind them flickered for a moment, as if something brushed its edges from beyond.
Ruka folded his arms. "So what now?"
"Now, my sons, you grow stronger."