Lust System: Conquering the World Beauties-Chapter 401 The Awakening

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Chapter 401: Chapter 401 The Awakening

The wind moved through the empty city like it had nothing better to do. It blew paper, nylon bags, broken flyers, and small trash across the streets. Everything drifted slowly, like the whole place was tired. The city used to be loud. Traffic. People shouting. Cars honking. Music from bars. All gone now. Silence sat on everything like a blanket that no one asked for.

After everything that happened, the city simply gave up. It could not take it anymore. One evacuation notice, then another, and then the panic hit. People ran. People fought. People paid whatever they had just to leave. And now the streets were dead. The only ones left were the ones who had nowhere to go. Homeless men sleeping beside cold sidewalks, thugs that had no money and no plan, disabled people who could not afford the evacuation cost. They stayed because they did not have a choice.

Liam sat on the roof of an old church, legs crossed, elbows on his knees. He looked down at the dead streets like he was waiting for something to move. According to Mirov, it would happen today. No delays. No more warnings. Today was the day the vampires got released.

He felt something shift behind him. A faint movement. Light, but not light enough for him to miss. He turned his head a little.

A shadow on the roof stretched, twisted, then pulled itself together. In a few seconds the shadow shaped into a human form. Ann stepped out of it as if she had always been there. She brushed her hair away from her face, then came to sit beside him.

She looked at him for a moment. He did not speak. She waited.

"What are you thinking?" she asked finally.

Liam shook his head slowly. His eyes stayed on the empty road below.

"No matter where these people run to," he said, voice low, "no matter which part of the world they hide in, they’re fucked."

Ann reached out and tilted his chin a little so he would look at her.

"Hollup," she said, confused. "Don’t tell me you blame yourself for all this?"

Liam chuckled. It was short and careless.

"Hell no. The vampires existed long before I was even born. I have nothing to do with this shit."

Ann nodded. She leaned closer and rested her head on his shoulder. For a few seconds neither of them said anything. The wind pushed against them. Papers kept rolling down the street like slow ghosts.

"What do you wanna do?" she asked softly.

"Right now?" Liam said.

"Yes."

Liam breathed in. He let it out through his teeth.

"The war between the vampires and the werewolves and the witches... that’s not my fight. It never was," he said. "But if any of the three mess with us... then they’ll find out real quick."

Ann smiled a little. She liked when he talked like that. She shifted closer and wrapped her arm around his.

The sky above them was fading. A strange feeling hung in the air. Heavy. Like the city knew something was coming but had no way to stop it.

——

Meanwhile, in Russia, the streets were completely different. People were still moving around like nothing was wrong. Markets were open. Kids ran between cars. Men smoked outside bars. Women kept shopping like any other day. Life was normal. They had no idea what was coming. The danger in the other city felt too far away to matter.

By daybreak, the vampires would be free from sunlight. Free from the borders of this city. Free from every old restriction that held them in place. After today, they could go anywhere they wanted. There would be no more walls to stop them, no more lines to keep them trapped.

Nobody in Russia knew that their world had already changed and they were just late to the news.

Hours passed. The tension in the world felt like a quiet wire pulled tight.

the city clock tower stood tall above all the buildings. People walked under it without looking up. Cars passed by. Buses stopped and moved. Everything felt normal.

Until the moment the city clock hit 00:00.

A loud bell rang through the city. A deep, heavy ding that echoed between the buildings as if it wanted to shake the whole street awake.

A deep rumble moved under the city like something massive had turned in its sleep. It rolled through every street and every building. Windows trembled. Loose metal rattled. The ground shook just enough to wake anyone who still managed to sleep through fear.

People jumped out of bed. People outside stopped talking and froze. Then the shaking got louder. The whole place trembled like it wanted to break apart.

"What is going on?" someone shouted from a balcony.

"I don’t know, man!"

"Is it an earthquake?"

"Are we gonna die?"

"Shut your mouth, Anya. Nobody is dying!"

The rumble kept getting stronger. Dogs barked. Alarms went off. People ran out into the streets. Fear did not care about rules. When the ground shakes, instinct takes over.

The rumbling went on for almost a full minute. Long enough to make everyone hold their breath. Long enough to make some people cry. Long enough to make even tough men feel something cold slide down their spine.

Then suddenly it stopped.

Everything went quiet again. The silence felt heavier than the shaking.

People waited. No one moved at first. Their ears strained for the next vibration, but nothing came.

Finally someone yelled, "It stopped!"

People sighed in relief. Nervous laughter spread. Some hugged. Some cursed at the ground. The fear was still there but fading.

"Alright, get off the streets, you fuckers. Movie’s over!" a man yelled, waving his hands like he owned the whole block.

"Hey! Don’t you hear me, you bloody ass wanker!" he shouted at another man who kept staring at the ground like it might move again.

A few cars honked even though there was barely anyone left driving in that city. The horns echoed through the empty buildings.

Everyone believed it was just a normal earthquake. They had no idea what the rumble really was.

Deep under the city, far below the abandoned streets, old mansions were buried in darkness. Mansions built centuries ago. Mansions forgotten by everyone except the ones who slept in them.

In those halls, eyes opened.

Dozens... hundreds... bright red eyes that had been closed for generations. Vampires cursed to endless sleep felt the curse break like someone had ripped chains off them.

They woke instantly. No slow blinking. No stretching. Just eyes snapping open.

The entire city above felt a sudden chill. People rubbed their arms. Some shivered without knowing why. It was not the wind. It was the vampires breathing again.

In one particular underground mansion, a young man stepped out into the open hall. He walked barefoot, his steps soft on the cold stone floor. When he reached the exit that led up to ground level, he stopped.

He stepped outside and touched the earth like it was something sacred. He pulled in the midnight air through his nose, breathing it in deep. His chest rose as he gasped lightly, like he had been drowning his whole life and finally reached the surface.

Behind him, more vampires stepped out. Their red eyes glowed in the shadows. Their bodies were tense with hunger. They felt it too. The curse was gone. The restriction was gone. They were free.

Boris smiled. It was a calm, dangerous smile. He lifted his hand slightly, watching the vampires settle as if waiting for his signal.

"Tonight," he said quietly. "We feast."

The vampires did not cheer. They did not speak. They simply showed their fangs. A second later their bodies blurred, disappearing one by one into the night, moving faster than any human eye could catch.

While the others vanished, someone was still sitting on the steps of the mansion. A young man leaned back on his elbows like he had no interest in rushing anywhere.

Boris looked at him and raised an eyebrow.

"Alexander," he said. "You are not going to feed like the rest?"

Alexander shook his head. He looked calm, almost bored.

"I still have to babysit you," he said.

Boris stepped closer. His tone tightened a little, like he could not understand the logic.

"Come on. I know you are itching to go feed. Sixty years of feeding on animals. Sixty years of that disgusting taste. And finally we get to feed on humans again. And you are thinking about some stupid babysitting job?"

Alexander finally moved his eyes away from the moon. He looked at Boris for a moment, then looked back up at the sky, unimpressed.

"I know you," he said. "The moment I turn away, you will chase down that Ann girl. You will go after wherever she came from."

Boris narrowed his eyes, but he did not deny it.

Alexander stayed seated, shoulders relaxed, eyes still on the moon as if the entire world waking up beneath them meant nothing.