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Strongest Incubus System-Chapter 241: Problems completely solved.
The air still vibrated with Elizabeth’s newly materialized presence when hurried footsteps echoed down the side corridor, stumbling among debris and pieces of broken marble. Lily emerged from the curve of the destroyed archway leading to the mansion’s administrative wing. The dress she wore—once impeccable, simple, and elegant—was now stained with gray and dried blood. Her hair, always perfectly styled almost obsessively, hung disheveled around her pale face.
She stopped when she saw the main hall.
Her eyes scanned the broken columns, the cracked floor, the deep marks of blades embedded in the walls, and then found Damon kneeling before Aria, carefully adjusting the bandages on her shoulder.
Lily’s face broke.
It wasn’t immediate—it was like glass beginning to crack under pressure.
Her lips trembled first. Then her chin. Then her eyes filled, and tears began to fall uncontrollably.
"D-Damon..." Her voice came out weak, broken. She took two steps forward, almost slipping. "Several... several employees died."
The sentence seemed to echo louder than it should have.
Damon didn’t immediately raise his head. His fingers remained steady, pulling the bandage around Aria’s shoulder, adjusting the tension with almost clinical precision.
"I counted at least twelve in the east sector..." Lily continued, now sobbing openly. "They were hiding in the kitchen, in the file room... They weren’t warriors... they just... they just worked here..."
Her breath hitched.
Aria closed her eyes for a moment, feeling the weight of those words press against her chest harder than any physical injury.
Only then did Damon look up.
And what Lily saw there made her sobs subside for a second.
There was no shock.
There was no rage.
There wasn’t even sadness.
There was emptiness.
A cold emptiness, like that of someone who has seen it happen too many times to react in the "right" way. "That’s how it is." He said, his voice flat, almost distant.
Lily blinked, confused.
"That’s... how it is?" she repeated, as if she hadn’t heard correctly.
Damon finished tying Aria’s bandage before slowly standing up. He stared at Lily without changing his expression.
"When you live in this world... that’s how it is." He finished. "People who shouldn’t die, die."
Lily brought her hand to her mouth, her shoulders trembling.
"But... yesterday..." she whispered, almost breathless. "Yesterday they were so happy. The kitchen was full... they were planning the winter party... Mrs. Mabel was laughing because she burned the bread again..." Her voice completely failed. "They were alive."
The silence that fell was suffocating.
Something inside Damon seemed to tense.
It wasn’t the mention of the deaths.
It was the normalcy.
The happiness of yesterday.
The brutal contrast with the present. The sound came suddenly.
A dry thud.
Damon’s fist partially shattered the wall beside him, cracking the stone with enough force to scatter web-like fissures around the impact. Fragments fell to the floor.
"SHUT UP!" His voice exploded through the hall, raw, violent, laden with something that finally shattered the surface of that emptiness.
Lily took a step back, her body instinctively shrinking. Her eyes widened, her sobs clenching abruptly as if cut with a blade.
She lowered her head immediately.
"S-sorry..." she murmured, her voice tiny.
Blood trickled down Damon’s knuckles, mingling with the dust of the shattered wall.
Ester stood slowly, despite the pain in her arm.
"Damon." Her voice came out firm, yet soft. "Calm down."
He didn’t respond immediately. Her breathing was heavy, uneven. Her jaw clenched.
Aria, still seated, spoke in a low tone, but clear enough to cut through the weight in the air.
"It’s best... everyone stay quiet for now."
No one argued.
The silence that followed wasn’t just an absence of sound—it was restraint. Compressed emotions, trying not to explode again.
Then footsteps echoed from the main entrance.
Slow.
Firm.
Dragging lightly over the broken marble.
Damon was the first to look.
And, for the first time that night, his eyes widened.
Elizabeth walked into the hall.
Each step left a damp mark on the floor.
Her white hair—once ethereal, almost luminous—was completely soaked in blood, now dark scarlet, heavy against her back. The black dress she wore clung to her body under the thick layer of red that covered it; There wasn’t a single clean spot. Blood ran down his arms, dripped from his fingers, traced slow lines down his legs until it fell onto the cracked marble.
But it wasn’t just the blood.
It was the aura.
She didn’t need to actively release it—it simply existed around her.
An overwhelming weight.
Ancient.
Predatory.
In her hands, Elizabeth carried two enormous dark canvas bags, also soaked. The fabric seemed almost to tear under the weight of what was inside.
She stopped in the center of the hall.
Red eyes scanned each of them.
Damon.
Ester.
Aria.
Lily.
There was no smile.
There were no tears.
Just something resolute.
She dropped the bags.
The sound was grotesque.
Heavy.
Damp.
A thud that echoed through the hall and seemed to vibrate in everyone’s chest.
For a second, nothing happened.
Then one of the bags partially opened.
And something rolled out.
A head.
Her eyes were still open.
Frozen in absolute terror.
The cut on her neck was too clean—precise, surgical. There was no hesitation in that blade.
Lily brought her hands to her mouth again, but this time there was no crying—only a muffled sound of horror.
Elizabeth pushed the other bag with her foot.
The fabric tore.
And the contents spilled onto the broken marble floor.
Heads.
Dozens of them.
At least thirty.
Some still with black masks partially attached to their faces.
Others with runic tattoos visible on their pale skin.
All with expressions of pure terror.
Some with their mouths open as if they had tried to scream at the last second.
The blood began to spread slowly, forming a dark pool that reflected the dim light of the hall.
The silence became absolute.
Elizabeth finally spoke.
"The Shadow Guild of Akalizeht... no longer exists."
Her voice wasn’t loud.
But each syllable seemed to carry the weight of a divine verdict.
Esther swallowed hard, her eyes scanning the heads.
"All of them?" she asked, almost voiceless.
Elizabeth tilted her head slightly.
"All that breathed."
Aria felt a shiver run down her spine.
Damon stepped forward.
"And the Black Union?" he asked, his voice low but firm.
Elizabeth’s eyes turned to him.
For a brief second, something different shone there—something more personal.
"They already know," she replied. "And now... they’re afraid."
The wind blew through the destroyed entrance again, but this time it seemed to carry a deeper chill.
Lily, still looking at the scattered heads, murmured almost to herself:
"Does this... does this bring them back?"
The question hung in the air.
Elizabeth didn’t answer immediately. She looked at the blood on the floor.
At the heads.
At the battle scars on her own house.
At the wounded faces before her.
Then she finally spoke.
"No."
The word was simple.
Raw.
Honest.
"It doesn’t."
The room remained still.
"But it prevents more from dying tomorrow." She finished.
Damon held her gaze for long seconds.
There was something different there now.
It wasn’t just anger.
It was consequence.
It was declared war.
Esther took a deep breath, trying to organize her thoughts as she stared at the grotesque scene on the floor.
"This... will escalate." She said finally.
Elizabeth slowly wiped the blood that trickled down her chin with the back of her hand—an almost casual gesture in the face of the massacre she had carried out.
"It already has." She replied.
Aria closed her eyes.
Lily remained motionless, staring at the heads as if trying to accept that this was real.
Damon, still with his bruised and bleeding fist, let out a heavy sigh.
He didn’t ask how.
He didn’t ask how long it took.
He didn’t ask if Elizabeth had hesitated.
He already knew the answer.
Elizabeth stepped forward.
The blood beneath her feet made a soft, viscous sound.
"Gather the survivors," she said, now fully assuming the role of leader. "Take care of the wounded. Arrange the bodies of ours. They will have dignified funerals."
Her voice didn’t waver.
"And spread the word."
Her red eyes gleamed with renewed intensity.
"Let everyone know what happens when they touch what is mine."
The destroyed hall seemed too small to contain her presence at that moment.
And, for the first time since the attack, the fear shifted sides.
It was no longer the fear of those who had been attacked.
It was the premonition of what was to come.
...
Black torches crackled along the walls of the subterranean hall, casting distorted shadows on the dark, polished marble that resembled an obsidian mirror. The vaulted ceiling was supported by columns carved with ancient arcane symbols, markings that predated the very foundation of the organization. The air there was thick—laden with incense, ritualistic magic, and something more subtle... fear.
In the center of the hall, kneeling on the cold floor, was the man who had started it all.
His hands trembled, pressed against the floor. His forehead almost touched the marble. Sweat trickled down his temples, mingling with the tears he couldn’t hold back. He dared not lift his head.
Before him, elevated on a semicircular platform of black steps, stood the leaders of the Black Union.
Five figures seated on thrones of dark stone.
Five entities that, together, controlled illegal markets, demonic pacts, political assassinations, and the trafficking of cursed artifacts in the underworlds of the world’s largest cities.
And at that moment, all were silent.
"I... I didn’t know this would happen..." the man’s voice trembled, breaking with each word. "We only wanted to track down the succubus... that’s all. She was stolen at the underworld auction, gentlemen. We needed to recover the asset. It was a matter of reputation..."
One of the leaders shifted slightly on the throne. The sound of heavy fabric brushing against stone echoed like thunder in the silent hall.
"Reputation," repeated a deep, slow voice, which seemed to emanate from all corners at once.
The man swallowed hard.
"Yes... yes, sir. The buyer masked their identity. We only discovered a residual trace of their aura. We sent someone to track her. That was all." He lifted his face slightly, his eyes wide and moist. "I swear! We didn’t imagine he belonged to that family."
An even heavier silence fell over the hall.
Another leader leaned forward. His eyes gleamed beneath his dark hood.
"You authorized the sending of assassins."
"It was just a coercive investigation!" he hastened to say. "The Akalizeht Shadow Guild always carries out this kind of operation for us. They come in, they press, they gather information. It was never meant to... to escalate like this!"
A third figure, whose skin was marked by runes that pulsed softly under the torchlight, raised her hand with calculated slowness.
"Thirty-two dead," she said, her voice cold as ancient ice. "All members of the hired guild."
The man froze.
He knew.
The news had arrived just a few hours earlier. An arcane messenger, pale as a corpse, bringing crystallized images from magical memory.
Heads.
All returned.
Like a message.
"She... she responded disproportionately," he whispered, almost pleading. "We didn’t know it was her. If we had known that house was protected by... by Elizabeth..."
He didn’t dare say the surname.
He didn’t dare pronounce the title that ran through the corridors of the underworld like a reverent and terrified whisper.
One of the leaders laughed.
It wasn’t loud.
It wasn’t long.
But it was enough to make the man break out in a cold sweat.
"Disproportionate?" the voice echoed again, this time with a note of dark amusement. "You send assassins to a matriarch’s house. You kill her employees. You wound her protégées. You hunt her husband." A pause. "And you call the response disproportionate."
The man trembled.
"I didn’t know! I swear! It was just tracking a stolen asset! The succubus was removed from the auction under our supervision. We needed to show strength. If we let this go, other buyers will test our limits."
The central figure, who until then had remained completely still, finally moved.
He wasn’t wearing a hood.
His face was visible.
Skin too pale to be natural. Completely black eyes, without irises. A slight smile that never quite reached expression.
He interlaced his fingers in front of his face.
"You understand," he began, with an almost didactic calm, "that by sending assassins to a bloodline like that... you weren’t just tracking an asset."
The man was breathing too fast.
"You were challenging territory."
The words fell like a sentence.
"In the underworld," the leader continued, "territory is more valuable than gold. More valuable than contracts. More valuable than winged slaves stolen at auctions."
The man lowered his head again.
"She invaded one of our smaller cells," murmured another leader, consulting a blood-sealed scroll. "She entered alone. Paralyzed everyone present with spiritual pressure. Executed every guild member. Collected their heads. Didn’t touch anyone else."
The silence that followed was laden with meaning.
It wasn’t an indiscriminate attack.
It was surgical. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
Clear message.
You crossed the line.
The central figure tilted her head slightly.
"She didn’t declare war."
The man blinked, confused.
"No...?"
"If you wanted war," the leader replied, "we would have received more than heads."
The air in the hall seemed to cool a few degrees.
The man finally understood what that meant.
This was not an impulsive act.
It was not uncontrolled fury.
It was absolute control.
She could have gone further.
She chose not to.
For now.
"Then... then we can still resolve this." He raised his face with desperate hope. "We can offer compensation. Gold. Artifacts. Information. We can deliver the head of whoever coordinated the operation—"
He stopped.
He realized too late.
He had coordinated it.
The five leaders looked at him.
Not with anger.
But with assessment.
"You acted without consulting the full council," said the leader of the runes. "He authorized armed mobilization in territory not officially mapped as neutral."
"Because it was an operational matter!" he insisted. "If every tracking needs to go through the council, we’ll lose agility!"
"Agility," the central leader repeated with a slight smile. "It’s useful."
He stood up.
The sound of heavy fabric echoed through the hall.
"But survival," he concluded, slowly descending the steps until he stopped before the kneeling man, "is essential."
The man began to cry for good.
"I can fix this. I can go to her personally. I can apologize. I can take responsibility. Just... don’t hand me over. Don’t turn me into an offering."
The leader leaned slightly.
"You are already an offering."
The words were soft.
Almost gentle.
Two enforcers emerged from the shadows behind the man—tall figures, shrouded in ceremonial robes, curved blades strapped to their backs.
The man tried to turn around, but firm hands gripped his shoulders.
"Please!" he cried, his despair now raw and unfiltered. "We only wanted to recover the succubus! She was an asset! A commodity!"
The central leader watched him without emotion.
"And now," he said, "you are."
The runes on the walls began to glow.
An arcane seal activated beneath the man’s knees, red lines emerging from the black marble like open veins.
"We will send your body," the leader continued, "with a formal letter acknowledging operational error. Compensation will be negotiated later."
The man began to scream as the seal burned his flesh.
"She didn’t declare war," the rune leader murmured. "But she made it clear she could."
The central leader nodded.
"And we are not foolish enough to test the limits of a woman like hers who returns heads as mail."
The scream was abruptly cut off.
Silence.
The seal faded.
Only the smell of burnt flesh remained.
The central leader turned and slowly returned to the throne.
"From today onward," he declared, "any operation involving ancient bloodlines will require the full approval of the council."
The other four nodded.
"The underworld thrives because it understands balance," he concluded. "And balance requires knowing when to retreat."







