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My Wives Are Seven Beautiful Demonesses-Chapter 133 - No. One Final Stretch (3)
[Location: Dungeon—Vampire King’s Castle]
"I don’t."
"What are you on about?" Alucard asked.
The laughter that had been echoing through the dungeon faded, not because he willed it to stop—but because something in the air refused to carry it any further. The crimson haze of the Crimson Dominion shuddered, like blood hesitating to flow.
I exhaled slowly.
Not in relief.
In control.
"I don’t belong," I continued calmly, "to your order. To your hierarchy. To your assumptions."
The silence that followed was heavy—thick enough that even the dungeon’s endless drip of blood seemed to stall mid-fall.
Alucard stared at me.
Not with rage.
Not with mockery.
But with something far rarer.
Confusion.
The Crimson Dominion pulsed once, reflexively, as if responding to its master’s unease. The fleshy walls quivered. Veins throbbed. The castle—his body—tightened around us.
"What... are you?" Alucard asked slowly.
Not who.
What.
That alone told me everything.
I gave a small, humourless smile.
"That’s the problem," I said. "You’re trying to categorize me."
My shadows stirred.
Not aggressively.
Not defensively.
They simply... shifted, like a tide that did not recognize the moon commanding it.
"You see, kings," I continued. "Souls. Bloodlines. Lineage. You see systems built on inheritance and authority."
I took a step forward.
The chains embedded in the air—those crimson scripts meant to latch onto identity—shuddered.
"...And you assume everything fits inside that framework."
Alucard’s fingers twitched.
The chains tightened.
And then—
They stopped.
Not snapped.
Not repelled.
They... refused.
Like hooks thrown into empty space.
His eyes narrowed.
"No," he muttered. "That’s not possible."
I tilted my head slightly.
"You’re editing souls," I said. "But you’ve already decided I have one that follows your syntax."
The dungeon groaned.
Somewhere deep within the castle, something old and furious shifted.
"I don’t," I said softly.
For the first time—
Alucard took a step back.
Just one.
But it echoed.
...
"Is... that so~" Alucard dunked his head a bit; his expression was hard to read.
"Ha... haha... hahahahahahaha—!"
The laughter exploded outward like a ruptured artery.
Not loud.
Not manic.
But deep.
So deep it vibrated through the marrow of the castle itself.
Fafnir spread his wings.
No—
Unfurled was the correct word.
Golden-black membranes tore through the thick crimson fog of the Crimson Dominion, each span eclipsing entire corridors of the dungeon. Scales shimmered with ancient greed, engraved not with runes—but with claims. Hoarded epochs. Devoured kingdoms. Buried gods.
The dragon’s pupils contracted into vertical slits.
And for the first time since his summoning—
Fafnir looked past Alucard.
He looked at me.
The castle shuddered as his claws dug into the living floor. Veins burst. Blood sprayed upward like panicked serpents, recoiling from his presence.
"Interesting," Alucard said, still laughing, one hand covering his eyes. "Truly... interesting."
He lowered it slowly.
That confusion was gone.
Replaced by delight.
"I wondered," he continued, voice now calm, measured, "why Helel said that to me at that time~"
The laughter died completely.
Not because he stopped laughing—
But because the dungeon itself seemed to lean closer to listen.
"He told me," Alucard went on, fingers tapping lightly against his own skull, tap... tap..., "that one day... something would stand before me that I could not rewrite."
His crimson eyes slid fully onto me.
"Something that would not belong to any ledger."
The Crimson Dominion rippled.
Not aggressively.
Cautiously.
As if the domain itself—his flesh, his blood, his authority—was reassessing the right to exist in my presence.
Fafnir growled.
Low.
Resonant.
Not at Alucard.
At the castle.
The dragon’s greed rolled outward like a pressure wave, not coveting gold or power—but recognition. A hoarder’s instinct, sensing something that did not yet belong to anyone... and therefore must.
I did not look at him.
My gaze stayed on Alucard.
"Helel didn’t understand it either," I said. "He just knew you’d notice."
Alucard’s smile widened.
"Oh, I noticed," he said softly. "Oh, I noticed immediately."
The castle pulsed.
The fleshy walls peeled back slightly, revealing layers beneath—older, darker tissue stitched together by ancient blood rites. Symbols surfaced along the floor, not glowing, but bleeding into existence.
Sigils of dominion.
Sigils of binding.
Sigils meant for gods.
"Do you know what a Progenitor truly is?" Alucard asked conversationally, as if we were discussing wine rather than existential annihilation. "People like to think we are simply... the first."
He spread his arms.
"No," he said. "We are... the very start of an entire race’s permission to exist."
The words settled like sediment in deep water.
"I wanted my race at the very start to have something even gods lacked."
Alucard’s voice was calm now. Too calm.
The laughter was gone, replaced by a tone of explanation—of revelation. That was far more dangerous.
"Gods," he continued, slowly pacing forward, bare feet pressing into the living floor, "are born into concepts. Domains. Authorities that predate them. They inherit rules... and are shackled by them."
With every step, the castle responded. Veins pulsed beneath his feet, pumping blood in rhythm with his heartbeat.
"But Progenitors?" He smiled. "We were allowed to choose."
The sigils beneath us completed themselves.
Not light.
Blood.
Ancient, coagulated power forming circles within circles—rites older than the Seven Satans, older than most pantheons. This wasn’t a spell cast in the present.
This was a decision made at the dawn of a race.
"I chose souls," Alucard said simply.
The dungeon exhaled.
Every vampire corpse scattered across the battlefield—those dissolved into mist, those erased by shadows, those crushed, frozen, annihilated—trembled.
Not resurrecting.
Responding.
"Not as an element," he clarified. "Not as energy. But as property. But—"
Sigh!
"But just like anything else, the ’world’ couldn’t let such a being without weaknesses."
There was contempt for ’weakness’, as if the very word disgusted him.
Alucard’s fingers clenched slowly, nails biting into his own palm. Blood welled up—thick, ancient, almost black—and instead of dripping, it crawled back into his skin, ashamed to fall.
"Light," he spat, the word carrying centuries of loathing. "Sun. Purity. Faith. As if existence itself needed moral permission."
The Crimson Dominion responded.
The ceiling convulsed, layers of flesh peeling apart to reveal something beneath—not bone, not stone, but memory. Echoes of an age when the world was younger, when races had to beg the cosmos for the right to be real.
"I accepted the weaknesses," Alucard continued. "Not because I had to. But because the world demanded balance."
He looked at me again.
"And balance," he smiled thinly, "always demands payment."
The sigils beneath our feet ignited—no, activated—and the battlefield changed.
Not visually.
Conceptually.
The scattered vampire remains began to dissolve—not into mist, not into shadows—but into threads. Pale, translucent filaments that rose upward, twisting, converging, weaving themselves into the air.
Souls.
Not screaming.
Not resisting.
They moved as if answering a call they had accepted long ago.
"I eat gods alive to counter divinity and, in the process, got divinity of my own. I dared to taste the ichor of even Archangels of the highest order to counter the holy itself— It was a pain in the ass to fend it off," Alucard finished lightly, as if recounting an inconvenience rather than blasphemy.
The threads of soul-light thickened.
They didn’t swirl chaotically. They aligned.
Lines. Layers. Lattices.
A structure.
"I learned very early," he said, looking up as the filaments braided together above us, "that divinity is just... insulation. Strip it away, and everything screams the same."
The air tightened.
Not pressure.
Expectation.
The souls began to descend.
Not into bodies.
Into him.
They sank into Alucard’s flesh like ink into parchment, vanishing beneath his skin as crimson sigils crawled up his arms, neck, face—rewriting him in real time.
And then—
A pair of large wings made of blood, slightly grey skin, eyes with black sclerae and glowing crimson irises, slightly pointy ears, and a mouth entirely made of sharp teeth with no lips. His hands were made of sharp, monstrous claws, as were his feet. He has patterns of black tattoos wandering across his body as if they were alive.
"THIS HERE IS MY TRUE FORM!"
Wind picked up.
No—
the dungeon inhaled.
Every corridor, every chamber, every drop of blood lining the living walls was dragged toward Alucard’s transformed body as if reality itself were being summoned to bear witness.
The Crimson Dominion stopped behaving like a domain.
It became an organ.
A colossal, beating heart that existed solely to sustain the thing standing before me.
The wings of blood unfurled fully.
They weren’t decorative. They weren’t symbolic. Each membrane was layered with soul-script, veins glowing with the pale residue of countless lives. Every flap displaced not air—but existence, warping space as if the world briefly forgot how distance worked.
Fafnir hissed.
Not a roar.
A warning.
The dragon’s greed recoiled—not in fear, but in irritation. Like a collector realizing the artifact in front of him was already claimed... and violently so.
Alucard flexed his claws.
The sound wasn’t flesh grinding against flesh.
It was contract-tearing.
"Ahhh..." he sighed, rolling his neck as if loosening stiff muscles. "I had almost forgotten how constricting that humanoid shape felt."
His head tilted, black sclerae locking onto me.
"And yet," he smiled—if that mouthful of serrated teeth could be called a smile—"you are still standing."
The ground beneath my feet cracked.
Not from pressure.
From definition.
The moment Alucard completed his transformation, the dungeon’s rules updated. Gravity adjusted. Distance recalibrated. Cause and effect hesitated, checked his credentials, and resumed with visible reluctance.
This wasn’t just power.
This was authorization.
"I expected you to kneel," Alucard admitted mildly. "Most do. Gods. Elders. Even Archangels... once they realize what they’re facing."
He spread his arms slightly, wings stretching wider, eclipsing the crimson sky of the domain.
"But you’re still upright."
I exhaled.
Slowly.
Measured.
My heart was steady.
Not because I wasn’t afraid.
But because fear... didn’t know where to land.
"You’re still trying to measure me," I said.
My voice didn’t echo.
The dungeon refused to reflect it.
Alucard paused.
Just a fraction.
"...Am I?" he asked.
I nodded once.
"You escalated," I continued. "Changed vectors. Shifted from editing to assimilation."
I glanced briefly at the soul-threads still faintly glowing beneath his skin.
"That tells me something."
His eyes narrowed.
"Oh?"
"You couldn’t rewrite me," I said. "So now you’re trying to include me."
The silence that followed wasn’t empty.
It was calculating.
Fafnir’s wings twitched.
The dragon’s massive head lowered slightly, one eye rotating toward me, slit pupil dilating.
For the first time since his summoning—
He wasn’t looking at Alucard as the apex.
He was... reassessing the hierarchy.
Alucard noticed.
Of course he did.
The Progenitor chuckled, rolling his shoulders. "Clever."
The sound vibrated through bone.
"But you misunderstand something important."
He took a step forward.
The distance between us collapsed unnaturally, shrinking from dozens of meters to a few heartbeats apart without him crossing the intervening space.
"Assimilation implies consent," Alucard said softly. "Inclusion implies permission."
He leaned down slightly, bringing his monstrous face level with mine.
"This," he whispered, "is consumption."
The dungeon screamed.
Not audibly.
Conceptually.
The Crimson Dominion surged, blood-flesh walls convulsing as massive veins ruptured, spilling torrents of viscous crimson that did not fall—but flowed sideways, upward, inward, forming spirals around Alucard’s body.
A vortex.
A soul-maelstrom.
Every remaining vampire corpse—every fragment, every echo—was torn apart at a fundamental level, their residual soul-threads ripped free and fed into the storm.
***
Stone me, I can take it!
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