©Novel Buddy
Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 251: Cosmic Unrest
The first tremor spread quietly.
It wasn’t sound. It wasn’t sight. It wasn’t anything a mortal mind could catch. It was older than that.
A breath from the Gate reached beyond stars, sliding through folds of existence that hadn’t been touched in millennia. To most, it was nothing. A passing cold wind. A ripple across some forgotten ocean. But to the Progenitors—the first—there was no mistaking it.
The adversaries had returned.
Michael opened his eyes first.
The Celestial Progenitor had been silent for ages, his gaze fixed inward, his wings folded like monuments of light. For him, centuries passed like moments, but this—this shook even his stillness. He knew that aura. He had fought it before.
And once, it nearly killed him.
A soft exhale left his lips, the faintest shift of his jaw betraying something like annoyance—or was it resignation? He closed his eyes again, but the glow behind them had sharpened.
The world was moving again.
Far away, where shadows kept their secrets, Lilith stirred.
Her laugh was faint at first, a hum that rolled low in her throat, but it wasn’t amusement. It was memory. She had danced with those adversaries once, kissed their blades, felt their hunger scrape against her own. Desire meeting desire. Destruction flirting with seduction.
"Back already?" she whispered, the corner of her mouth curving. "And here I thought you’d learned your lesson."
Her fingers trailed along her arm where scars once lived, hidden beneath flawless skin. Her smile lingered, but her eyes darkened.
Because she remembered something the others didn’t.
The adversaries never returned without reason.
The flame woke next.
Sythra stretched her wings, fire dripping from them like sparks into a night that wasn’t meant to burn. The Phoenix Progenitor had died more times than she could count, but even death had never cooled her memory of that aura. The adversaries weren’t a war—they were an ending.
Her eyes narrowed, gold catching brighter flame.
She remembered the first war, the smell of ash, the silence that came after. She remembered the names of those who never rose again. And though her fire was endless, even she wondered if it was enough this time.
A low growl rolled somewhere deeper.
Kaer.
The Werewolf Progenitor.
His claws flexed slowly, dragging against unseen ground, eyes narrowing into the dark. His kind had always been born of instinct, but his instinct now was clear.
The hunt was returning.
And hunters like him didn’t forget prey.
He turned his head slightly, ears pricking. Somewhere far, far away, he felt other Progenitors stirring. The circle was not yet whole.
Orzhun, the Dragon, shifted his massive frame in silence.
No fire. No roar. No show of power.
Just silence.
Because he remembered too well. The adversaries had wounded him once, something no god or beast had ever managed. His scales still bore the faint lines of that strike, lines that glowed now like old wounds reopening.
He did not move. He only opened one eye, its emerald slit cutting through the dark.
The adversaries were back.
And this time, something else walked with them.
Elandir’s breath came soft.
The Elf Progenitor closed his hand, and he swore he felt flowers die. The aura didn’t only announce war—it stole harmony. His people had long forgotten the age before gods, but he hadn’t. He had seen forests burn, rivers boil, mountains bleed.
He swallowed, a rare crack in composure.
He could almost hear their laughter again. The adversaries never fought for conquest. They fought for joy.
And that joy was waking again.
The Kitsune was already smiling.
Tsuyari floated lazily, her nine tails curling in rhythm, her golden eyes half-lidded. She felt the aura the way one might feel a familiar song carried by wind. She twirled her finger, little sparks of illusion trailing from it.
"Well," she murmured, her voice almost playful. "It’s been a while."
But her smile didn’t reach her eyes.
Because for all her tricks, for all her illusions, she remembered too well that the adversaries never fell for them. They cut through lies like silk. They cut through everything.
Still, she smiled. Because fear never suited her.
Myllin’s voice brushed against the others even before she spoke.
The Spirit Progenitor flickered faintly, her form unstable, shifting between shapes, between presence and absence. To most, she had no weight. To the adversaries, she had once been their favorite prey.
Because they loved silence.
And she had always been silence given form.
"They rise," she whispered across the fabric of existence. Her voice wasn’t loud, but it touched them all. "Again."
The Unknown Progenitor—she did not speak.
She didn’t need to.
Her eyes opened, pale and burning, her aura folding around her like a forgotten hymn. The others would feel her, as they always did, but no one knew what thoughts stirred behind those eyes.
Not then. Not now.
Only that she remembered.
And that was enough.
And then, the Witch.
Not a whisper. Not a flicker. Not a hint.
She spoke.
Her voice rippled through the universe, steady and sharp, brushing across every Progenitor like a bell tolling in the void.
"They are awake."
Her tone carried no fear, no hesitation. Only truth.
"The adversaries have risen. I call you—each of you—to remember the circle. To gather once more. To stand as we once stood. Because this time... if we falter, nothing remains."
The message did not travel by sound. It wasn’t carried by light or shadow. It was older than those things. It was carried by memory itself, burned into the essence of every Progenitor that had once drawn blades against the adversaries.
Her voice ended, but the echo lingered.
They all felt it.
Michael’s jaw tightened. Lilith’s smile dimmed. Sythra’s flames hissed sharper. Kaer growled low. Orzhun’s tail cracked once against the void. Elandir closed his eyes, steadying his breath. Tsuyari twirled her illusions faster, tails curling. Myllin whispered again. The Unknown Progenitor stayed silent.
And all knew—
The Witch had spoken truth.
Across existence, stars burned on, unaware. Worlds spun in ignorance. Gods ruled their petty thrones. But deep within the oldest marrow of reality, the first circle was stirring again.
The Progenitors had heard the call.
And they knew what it meant.
War.
The adversaries had returned.
And for the first time in an age...
the Progenitors would gather.
New Earth
The Gate bled black light.
Its frame shuddered as cracks tore through the veil, spilling smoke that coiled like serpents. Each pulse of it carried weight, a pressure that bent the floor, split the marble, and drove angels to their knees. They tried to look, but their eyes burned, wings trembling as if the air itself had turned against them.
The first figure stepped through.
Barefoot, chains still wrapped around his arms, the adversary’s body was lean, scarred with marks that had never healed. His eyes opened—pure black, swallowing even the light of the hall. The moment his foot touched the ground, the air dropped cold, and every candle of celestial flame guttered out. His aura spread sharp, like blades pressing against every throat.
Behind him came another.
Her hair was long and silver, her skin pale like carved bone. She didn’t move fast—she didn’t need to. The shadows bent for her, sliding along her body as though worshiping her shape. When her gaze lifted, even the angels felt their breath stolen, as though beauty itself had become a weapon meant to crush them.
And then more.
One after another, they walked through the Gate. Each presence different, but each terrible in its own way. The air shook under their weight—gravity twisting, time stuttering, sound breaking into static. They didn’t roar or scream. They didn’t need to. Their silence was heavier than storms.
The hall cracked. Pillars bent.
And still, Adam watched.
He sat on his throne with his head tilted back, eyes half-closed, as though he were listening to an old song only he could hear. His lips curved slowly, not in fear but in amusement. His fingers tapped once against the arm of the throne, and then he stood.
The adversaries turned their eyes toward him.
Most would crumble under a single glance. But Adam—Adam welcomed it. He stepped forward, cloak brushing the broken marble, his aura folding out like black fire licking at the edges of heaven itself.
He looked at them. They looked at him.
And then he laughed.
It wasn’t soft. It wasn’t controlled. It burst out of him like thunder breaking apart a storm. His laughter rolled through the hall, shaking the very pillars of heaven, carrying past the angels, past the Gate, into every corner of New Earth.
The adversaries did not move. They stood, each radiating terror enough to end a world, and yet his laughter only grew louder.
Because he felt it.
Behind their arrival, behind the weight of their return, he felt the stir. The Progenitors—the first—were moving. Their auras flared across existence, one by one, touched by the same tremor he had unleashed. He felt their caution, their fear, their readiness. And it delighted him.
He spread his arms wide, as if to embrace it all.
"The world finally wakes," Adam said, voice carrying like a knife through silence. "The first rise, the last return, and I—" his grin sharpened, eyes burning crimson, "—I sit in the middle of it all."
He laughed again, long and wild, and this time even the Gate shook.
The adversaries stood before him, their auras pressing harder, enough to crush angels to dust. The angels writhed, faces pressed to the floor, wings broken by air alone.
But Adam did not kneel.
He only laughed, shaking the heavens as though they were nothing but glass.
And in that moment, he looked less like a man and more like what he truly was—something that neither Progenitors nor adversaries had ever accounted for.
Something beyond both.
Adam Origin.
And the war he had been waiting for had finally begun.







