Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 99: Remu’s Death 1
Chapter 99: Remu’s Death 1
Dera didn’t slow down when the monsters came into view.
The road ahead was torn apart, buildings collapsed, lampposts snapped like matchsticks. A cluster of nightcrawlers skittered across the broken concrete—six-limbed, eyeless things, pale skin stretched too thin over muscle and bone. Their jaws opened vertically, teeth like needle fans. One of them turned at the sound of her bike. It screeched.
Dera didn’t flinch.
She pulled the .45 from her thigh and fired.
CRACK.
A bolt of blue lightning exploded through the nightcrawler’s skull, sending it flipping backward like a doll tossed by a god. The others charged. She dropped the next one mid-run, swerved right, leaned into the bike, and holstered the gun with a snap.
Another crawler leapt at her from the left.
She ducked low on the bike, swerved under it, then flung a small canister behind her.
Click. Ping.
BOOM.
A fire rune bomb went off in a tight radius—monster bits scattered across the pavement like wet leaves.
She didn’t stop. Her eyes scanned ahead.
The battlefield was close now. She could feel the pressure. Magic in the air like static on skin. The wind howled with a pulse not its own. Violet flashes danced across the sky.
She swerved into a collapsed tunnel and killed the engine halfway through.
The rest would be on foot.
Dera pulled the sniper case off her back and unlatched it. The rifle clicked open, unfolding like clockwork. Smooth. Perfectly balanced. She checked the bullet one last time.
The rune pulsed faintly. Not loud. Not screaming.
Just waiting.
She slung the rifle across her shoulder and moved, boots crunching gravel beneath her. Up the hill. Over the rubble. Across what used to be a parking garage—now a jagged mess of concrete and rebar.
Her breath was steady. No nerves. Just calculation.
She found her perch at the top floor of the collapsed structure. Half the roof was gone. It gave her the sightline she needed.
And there she was.
Remu stood in the center of it all. Burned. Bleeding. Cracked lips pulled into a half-smile. Her arms trembled, but she raised them anyway, dragging a symbol into the air. A twisted ring of violet light pulsed in front of her.
This was it.
Dera dropped to one knee and extended the bipod.
She looked through the scope.
Focused in.
The crosshair landed on Remu’s heart.
Not her head. Not her limbs.
Center. End it clean.
She adjusted her breath.
Everything else faded. The city. The screaming. Even the monstrous brawl still unfolding beneath Remu—where Boris and Vladimir were still trading blows with Balgron. Where Mob’s wings lit the sky with streaks of white. Where Ken was a blue blur and Angel tore through beasts like thunder on legs.
And Remu?
Remu was chanting.
"Teleport—Phase..."
Her voice wavered. A single syllable away from escape.
BAM.
The sound broke time.
Remu’s body jerked violently—like a puppet yanked by invisible wires.
The rune shattered mid-cast, light fizzling out with a dying hiss.
Blood burst from her shoulder as a glowing bullet tore through flesh and bone, carved through the edge of her heart, and kept going—embedding itself into the rocks behind her with a screaming pulse of killing magic.
Remu didn’t scream.
She dropped.
Hard.
Hit the dirt, rolled once, then didn’t move.
The world froze.
Everyone—everyone—stopped.
Mob turned his head slowly, eyes scanning the ridge lines.
Ken sniffed the air, hackles raised, blue fur still bristling with rage.
Francisca narrowed her eyes toward the west.
There—on a crumbled rooftop beyond the smoke and rubble, framed by broken rebar and the glow of a cracked sky—
Dera stood.
Sniper still smoking. Red jacket flared in the wind. Eyes hard. Face unreadable.
She didn’t pose. She didn’t move.
She just breathed. In. Out.
Then she reloaded.
"Dera?"
Ken and Fowler said it at the exact same time—two different voices, same raw shock.
Ken’s eyes widened, his body halfway between shifting forms, blood running down one arm from the last hit he took. His voice cracked.
"Wait—what the hell are you doing out here?!"
"Dera, what did you do?"
His claws were still out. His body still burned from the last clash. But all of that—Remu’s magic, the monsters, the hellstorm—it blurred beneath the sharp pain cutting through his chest now.
He said as he looked at Remu who lay on the crater barely breathing.
Blood leaking into the cracked stone.
Mob’s white wings twitched, feathers charred. "...She shot her," he muttered. "She actually shot her."
Ella took a shaky breath. "We were trying to stop her... not kill her."
"I didn’t kill her." Dera’s voice crackled through comms. "She was casting a teleportation spell. You all saw it."
Ken didn’t look up.
He just stood there. Blood-stained. Tired. Silent.
Fowler didn’t move either.
But his voice when it came—wasn’t soft.
"You disobeyed a direct order, took a classified weapon."
Dera’s grip tightened around her rifle. "I neutralized a target before she could burn another city."
"She’s not a target, Dera," Ella snapped, eyes glassy with rage. "She’s our friend."
"She was going to escape."
"You don’t get to decide who lives and dies!"
"No?" Dera said, voice cutting. "Then who? Because none of you were going to stop her. You were still hoping she’d come back."
Francisca was silent now, jaw clenched. Mob looked away.
Everything stopped.
Even the wind.
No more spells. No more movement. Just silence. Thick. Absolute.
Greta stood in the center of it, hands still glowing with an unfinished seal, breath tight in her chest. She stared at the crater. At the blood. At the still shape of her daughter lying broken in it.
She didn’t say a word.
Didn’t scream.
Didn’t cast.
She just dropped everything.
Her staff hit the ground with a hollow clack. The light around her hands vanished. The air pressure snapped like a string had been cut. And then—
She moved.
Not with fury. Not with magic.
Just with a mother’s weight in her bones and something broken in her throat.
The battlefield opened for her.
Even the monsters... even Balgron... stepped aside.
He turned his head toward the sniper ridge, one heavy brow raised. A slow snarl curled his lips—not anger. Curiosity. Almost respect. His voice, rough as stone dragging steel:
"Well, I’ll be damned."
Selene, tangled in golden bindings, hissed low in her throat but didn’t speak. Her six faces twisted in near silence, all eyes locked on the girl lying in the dust.
Remu.
The one who’d scorched the skies, who cracked the world open, who stood alone against them all... was now still. Chest barely rising.
Greta dropped to her knees beside her, robes folding into the dust. Her hands hovered first—like she was afraid to touch her.
Then they trembled.
And then they held.
"Remu..." she whispered, voice cracking.
There was blood on her lips. Her hair was tangled around her face, dirt-streaked, burnt at the ends. Her body twitched—faint, involuntary.
But she was alive.
Just barely.
Greta sobbed once. Sharp. Quiet. She tried to gather her daughter into her arms but flinched at the wounds. She pressed her hand to Remu’s chest, casting a soft diagnostic spell.
The magic responded weakly.
Everything was breaking.
She leaned forward, her forehead against Remu’s.
"I’m here, baby. I’m here."