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Strongest Incubus System-Chapter 230: Damon, and his new wife...
Damon slowly brought his hand to his forehead, his fingers pressing against his temples as if that were enough to organize the chaos forming inside him.
"Of course..." he murmured, his voice hoarse, almost an incredulous laugh escaping at the end. "That was why."
Elizabeth stirred slightly against his chest, but didn’t wake. She just snuggled closer, as if that were the most obvious place in the world to be. Her weight didn’t bother him—on the contrary. It anchored him.
Damon closed his eyes for a moment.
"It was a ritual," he whispered, more to himself than to her. "It wasn’t just blood."
The pieces began to fall into place with cruel clarity.
Her hesitation.
The excessive control.
The way she had said no, I can’t, and no, I don’t want to.
She knew.
The system didn’t appear on a whim. It didn’t reward impulses. It had been recognized as something structural, ancient, greater than the two of them.
He opened his eyes again, staring at the emptiness above him while the message still seemed to burn in his mind.
Vampire wedding ritual.
Damon let out a long sigh.
"Damn..."
His hand slid through his hair, messing it up even more, while the memory pulled something from the depths of his human mind—fragments of old readings, nights spent on forums, poorly translated PDFs, novels he devoured without imagining that one day that knowledge would be... relevant.
He remembered.
In many stories, vampires didn’t marry like humans. No ceremony, rings, or witnesses. The real bond came after the complete transformation. When both no longer belonged to the mortal world.
The ritual varied from work to work, but the core was always the same.
Exchange of blood.
Absolute consent.
Mutual acceptance of eternity.
It wasn’t enough for one to drink from the other. The order mattered. The timing mattered. And, above all, the intention.
Damon swallowed hard.
"You tried to avoid this from the beginning..." he murmured softly, almost tenderly now. "Not because it was dangerous for me. But because it was definitive."
Elizabeth shifted again, her face pressing lightly against his chest. His heart—the one that didn’t need to beat—reacted nonetheless, as if recognizing the gesture.
He felt something tighten inside him.
In the novels, the vampire marriage wasn’t merely symbolic. It created a structural bond. A tie that transcended distance, time, and, in some cases, even temporary death. Partners felt each other’s presence. They knew when the other was hurt. Some shared dreams. Others, emotions too raw to be filtered.
And there was one detail that now made perfect sense.
The ritual only worked if both drank after one of them had completely transformed.
He let out a low, incredulous laugh.
"You waited," he said quietly. "You waited for me to cross the line... and even then you tried to stop me."
Because Elizabeth Wykes wasn’t cruel.
She hadn’t transformed him to trap him.
She hadn’t fed him to possess him.
She had tried to give him a choice—even knowing he didn’t have all the information.
Damon took a deep breath, feeling something pulsing beneath the surface of his consciousness.
Her.
He didn’t need to look to confirm. He knew exactly where she was, the rhythm of her breathing, the specific weight of her body on his. It wasn’t heightened perception. It was... connection.
"This is ridiculous," he murmured. "I’ve become a character in a light novel."
But there was no real humor in the sentence.
The system’s message still lingered, impersonal and definitive, like a sealed sentence.
[Congratulations!] [You have completed the vampire marriage ritual with Elizabeth Wykes!]
[Eternal bond established.]
[Some functions will be unlocked gradually.]
Damon frowned.
"Some functions...?" he repeated mentally. "Great. Of course, this comes with mechanics."
He felt a strange impulse—not hunger, not desire. A silent need to touch her, to confirm that this wasn’t just a system mocking him.
Carefully, he moved his free hand to Elizabeth’s hair. His fingers slid slowly, respecting her sleep. At the contact, something responded instantly within him, as if the bond adjusted, satisfied.
She sighed.
She didn’t wake up. But she smiled.
Damon froze.
The smile was small, unconscious, but it hit him hard. This wasn’t acting. It wasn’t manipulation. It was comfort.
"You knew this would happen if I drank from you afterward," he murmured. "And yet... when I ordered... you came."
The memory of the moment before the ritual imposed itself, now with a different weight.
"That’s an order."
He clenched his teeth.
It hadn’t been pure domination. The ritual required real consent—not magical, not forced. If Elizabeth had truly objected, none of this would have worked.
She had chosen.
Perhaps the instant she realized he was no longer just an unstable variable.
Perhaps the moment she felt his blood sing.
Or perhaps... she had chosen long before.
Damon closed his eyes for a few seconds, letting the realization settle in.
He was married.
Not by paper.
Not by convention.
But for something ancient, predatory, and eternal.
When he opened his eyes again, the world seemed... adjusted. As if the system had recalibrated the reality around them. The mansion wasn’t just a safe place now. It was shared territory.
"That explains a lot," he murmured.
It explained the feeling of completeness.
It explained the inner silence.
It explained why his blood had reacted so violently to hers—and vice versa.
He looked at Elizabeth once more.
This time, not as his creator.
Nor as an entity too ancient to be understood.
But as something dangerously closer.
"When you wake up," he said softly, almost a warning, "we’re going to have a talk."
Elizabeth stirred slightly, as if she had heard, and murmured something incomprehensible before settling back down.
Damon let his hand rest on her back.
The system could call it a ritual.
The novels might call it marriage.
But deep down, he knew.
It hadn’t been a mistake.
Damon awoke slowly, as if emerging from a lake too deep.
The first sensation was strange—a slight discomfort in his neck, not exactly pain, more like the memory of something that had already happened and that his body hadn’t yet decided whether to complain about or not. A warm, rhythmic pressure.
He frowned.
Then he opened his eyes.
It took a few seconds for his vision to adjust to reality.
Elizabeth was leaning over him, carefully supported, one hand resting on his chest as if she had been balancing there for hours. Her light hair fell forward, partially hiding her face, and her lips... her lips were exactly where the discomfort made sense.
She drank his blood with an almost offensive tranquility.
No rush.
No violence.
It was calm. Natural. Like someone drinking coffee on a lazy morning.
Damon’s eyes widened.
"...Elizabeth?"
She pulled away instantly, wiping her mouth with the back of her hand, without the slightest sign of guilt. On the contrary—she smiled. A wide, bright, almost childlike smile.
"Finally," she said with a satisfied sigh. "I thought you’d never wake up again."
Damon blinked a few times, still processing.
"You... were..." He brought his hand to his neck, feeling the sensitive spot, the warm skin. "...drinking my blood."
"I was," she confirmed, sitting up on her legs in bed, perfectly at ease. "I tried to wake you up earlier, you know? I called you, shook you, even splashed water on your face."
She made a brief pout, as if feeling wronged.
"Nothing. You were sleeping like a rock."
Damon let out a short, incredulous laugh.
"Of course I was asleep. My system decided to give me a reward coma."
Elizabeth tilted her head, observing him intently.
"After a full-blown vampire wedding?" she commented casually. "It was expected. Your body was readjusting. I figured you’d only wake up when you were... ready."
She made a vague gesture with her hand, as if "ready" were a simple concept.
Damon propped himself up on his elbows, sitting up a little more comfortably. The world seemed clearer than ever. Every detail of the room, every distant sound from the mansion, everything seemed perfectly aligned.
But nothing caught his attention more than her.
Elizabeth was different.
Not physically—she was still the same elegant, ethereal figure, with that beauty that seemed to have traversed centuries without asking permission. But something about her... had shifted.
The mystery had vanished.
Or rather: not gone, but relaxed. Like a heavy cloak she had finally let fall to the floor.
She was free.
Alive.
"You seem... happy," he said carefully.
Elizabeth blinked, surprised, as if she’d only just now realized.
"I am," she replied without hesitation. "It’s strange, isn’t it? I spent so much time... holding everything in. Thinking about consequences, rules, risks. Always calculating."
She looked at her own hands.
"Now I don’t need to hide anymore. Or pretend to be in control all the time."
Damon felt a tightening in his chest.
"So that was the weight," he murmured.
She nodded.
"The bond took that away from me. I can’t lie to you anymore. Or to myself."
Elizabeth looked up and smiled again—not the distant smile from before, nor the enigmatic one. It was simple. Almost silly.
"Oh, and since you weren’t waking up... I decided to start breakfast."
Damon’s eyes widened again.
"...That was breakfast?!"
"Only part of it," she replied, shrugging. "Don’t worry, I controlled myself. You’re still in one piece."
He ran a hand over his face, chuckling softly.
"I wake up married, being used as juice... and you say that as if you were commenting on the weather."
Elizabeth leaned in again, closer than necessary.
"Don’t you like it?"
Damon felt the immediate reflex of the bond respond. Not raw excitement—something deeper. Belonging. Acceptance.
He raised his hand and placed it in her hair, his fingers sliding slowly, in an instinctive gesture. Elizabeth froze for a second... then relaxed completely under the touch, her eyes almost closing.
"It’s okay," he said, softly, sincerely. "You can drink as much as you want."
She opened her eyes slowly.
"Really?"
"Really," she confirmed. "If it makes you feel this way... then I don’t see a problem."
Elizabeth stared at him for a few seconds that were far too long, as if searching for an invisible trap. He didn’t find it.
The smile that followed was unlike any other.
"You’re dangerous, Damon."
"Says the vampire who just used me as coffee," he retorted.
She laughed. A real, clear laugh that echoed through the room in a way the old Elizabeth would never allow.
"I warned you this would be troublesome."
She leaned in again, not to bite, but to rest her forehead against his.
"Now I don’t need to ask permission anymore."
Damon closed his eyes for a moment, feeling the bond vibrate softly between them.
"No," he agreed. "You don’t need to."
The day had barely begun.
And, for the first time since everything had changed, Damon was certain of one thing:
This wasn’t the end of his humanity.







