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Vampire Progenitor System-Chapter 119: Agreement
Chapter 119: Agreement
Geneva – Global Summit Hall
Evening. The sun dipped low, painting the glass dome in gold and ash.
The summit was winding down. Delegates stood, some stretching stiff legs, others quietly packing their notes. The air had softened—like a pressure valve had finally been released. Still tense, still uncertain, but there was something else now.
Direction.
The supernatural leaders exchanged a few quiet words with each other before heading toward the exits in their own groups. No handshakes. No pictures. But also... no more glares.
Zane slid his hands into his pockets, following Lucifer toward the far hall. Behind them, Greta moved with the witches from Highland, Vulpina spoke low with Vladimir and Boris, and the werewolves from the Nordic line faded into the outer corridor like they were never there.
On the human side, Malakov sat with his head in his hands for a long moment. Then he stood up without a word and followed the others out. He looked like a man who had stared at the edge of something too big to name—and chose to back away, slowly.
Reporters had been waiting.
Kept behind glass barriers. Watched from elevated rooms. But now that the summit was officially "concluded," they were flooding the perimeter like hungry crows.
Cameras blinked. Boom mics swung.
Questions hit the air like bullets.
"Did the supernatural leaders agree to human laws?"
"Will there be a vampire presence in local governments?"
"Who is the man with the white hair? Was he the one who ended the Rift Crisis?"
"Are the Origin Clan operating globally now?"
"Will humans be allowed into supernatural spaces?"
"Are we at peace? Or is this just the eye of the storm?"
Lucifer didn’t stop.
Didn’t even glance their way.
He stepped through the double doors like they weren’t even there. Like their noise didn’t reach him anymore. Zane followed, a quiet smirk on his face. It was hard to tell if he found it amusing or exhausting.
But not all of them backed down.
Among the voices, one cut through the others. Calm. Not panicked. Just clear.
"Lucifer Origin. What’s your plan moving forward now that the world knows who you are?"
That made him stop.
Not fully. Just for a second.
He turned slightly, eyes narrowed.
The press around the speaker fell quiet. Boom mics froze midair. The air thickened like fog rolling through a frozen field.
Lucifer’s gaze settled on the one who had asked. Luna Rae.
He didn’t speak immediately.
Didn’t give her the satisfaction of a press-ready line.
He looked at her like someone trying to decide if a question was worth an answer.
Then, finally:
"I don’t have a plan."
A pause.
Then a breath.
"I have a clan."
He turned again, walking away.
Zane chuckled. "That’s a quote they’ll eat for a week."
Outside, cars and transports waited for each faction. The supernatural leaders moved off in different directions, some flying, some vanishing into smoke, some escorted by silent agents from their own kind.
The humans? They were left with their tablets. Their documents. Their security teams and urgent phone calls.
But all of them knew the same thing now.
The world had changed.
Not by force.
Not by declaration.
But by presence.
The summit didn’t end with applause. It ended with quiet steps and retreating shadows. With cameras clicking until their batteries died. With people on both sides wondering what tomorrow would look like, now that the masks were off.
No one pretended anymore.
No one could.
And as the lights dimmed inside the summit hall—
The new world took its first real breath.
Elsewhere
Night.
Rain tapped gently on the windows, soft but steady.
Inside a small house tucked deep in the outskirts of a ruined city, the lights flickered. The kind of flicker that came not from power failure—but from pressure.
A man paced back and forth across a worn wooden floor. The carpet under his boots was frayed at the edges, stained with old ash and spilled wine. His hands were shaking—not from fear, but from the kind of rage that had nowhere left to go.
"Stupid... stupid..." he muttered under his breath.
His voice cracked as he repeated it.
"Why would they allow those things to walk free? Huh?" he snarled, turning sharply and nearly knocking over a lamp. "They brought death. Fire. Monsters that tore through cities, families, children—"
He stopped.
Face twisted.
He gritted his teeth so hard his jaw clicked.
"They talk about peace," he spat. "Peace with vampires? With werewolves? With things that drink blood and howl at the moon and curse your name under breath and spell?"
He grabbed the edge of the table and slammed it once. The legs cracked beneath the pressure. A photo frame fell to the floor with a dull clink.
He stared at it.
Then slowly bent down and picked it up.
Inside the frame—
A woman. A child. Smiling. Caught in a moment that would never happen again.
He stood there for a long time.
Rain kept tapping on the windows.
Then he turned his head toward the wall.
Covered in old newspaper clippings. Burned edges. Red string. Circles around faces. Names. Symbols.
And at the center—
A torn picture of the summit. Of the supernatural leaders walking side by side.
His eyes burned.
"I won’t let this slide," he whispered.
He stepped toward the wall, knuckles white. freewebnøvel.com
"They took everything. My home. My daughter. My wife."
He clenched the photo tighter.
"They don’t deserve peace. They don’t get to walk freely while the world forgets what they did."
His breathing grew slower.
But heavier.
Like something inside him was waking up.
He touched one of the names on the wall. One written in bold. Underlined twice.
Lucifer Origin.
The man’s lips curled into a snarl.
"I swear to every god that’s listening..."
He slammed the frame down onto the desk, glass shattering.
"...I’ll avenge them."
And in the silence that followed, the rain fell harder.
Like the world already knew what he’d just started.