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Chapter 5 - Ascension

The chamber was silent, the air thick with the scent of old parchment and burning incense. Mage Light flickered against the stone walls, casting long, twisting shadows—like ghosts bearing witness to what was about to unfold.

Leora stepped forward, her boots clicking softly against the cobblestone floor. Her presence shifted—less maternal, more regal, like a monarch preparing to hand down divine law.

 "If you're to survive in this realm," she began, her voice clear and formal, "you must understand the order of our kind."

"Vampires are not one breed, not one person," she said. "We are a hierarchy built in blood."

Leora raised her hand with a graceful, deliberate motion, her fingers tracing a pattern in the air as she whispered an incantation. At once, the shadows cast by the flickering light arcana began to shift, no longer content to lie still upon the stone wall behind her. They twisted and surged as if stirred by a phantom wind, coalescing into haunting silhouettes all pulsing with an eerie semblance of life. The room seemed to hold its breath as the figures began to move, enacting ancient roles in a silent performance.

She gestured to the first shadow—a hunched, fanged creature with eyes that gleamed like coals.

"At the base are the Vampire Kindred: the Vampire Spawn, Lesser Vampires, Greater Vampires, High Vampires, and Vampire Elders. Bound by semi-hive minds, they obey their Progenitor without question. They cannot turn others. They exist to serve."

Jenny, one of the girls, scoffed softly beside me.

"Puppets."

Leora didn't look at her, but her voice hardened.

"Loyalty, not puppetry. That bond is why the Kindred never rebel."

The next figure emerged from the mist—tall and regal, but with eyes filled with something like doubt.

"Then come the True Vampires: Noble Vampires, Purebloods, and Blood Champions. They walk freely, think mostly freely. Still, their maker's voice always echoes in their soul. They can turn humans—if the human agrees. If not…"

A third form appeared—human-shaped, but twitching, grotesque.

"They become Thralls. Slaves in mind and body. Feared, yes. But more often pitied. Even despised."

"Those who rely on Thralls," Leora continued, "are seen as weak. Cowards who can't inspire loyalty."

Then came the third tier: figures cloaked in blood-red robes, their eyes burning with unearthly will.

"The Progenitor's Household: Blood Attendants, Blood Descendants, and Origin Borne. They carry the bloodline in its purest form. They do not answer to their creator—they are kin, not servants. Blood Attendants are rare, chosen. When elevated to True Blood Attendants, they become equal in power to their maker."

My eyes darted to Leora, she and Lucius both bore the name Umbera. Suddenly, Cacius's disrespect made even less sense.

She paused, eyes scanning us as if weighing our understanding.

"And finally—the apex: Origin Vampires. The Vampire Progenitors and their Blood Consorts. They alone are truly immortal. Destroy them, and they return. Only by finding and destroying their true coffin—their soul-forged cradle—can they be killed for good."

The shadows shifted again. A coffin, ornate and ancient, bloomed from the darkness.

Leora turned, folding her hands behind her back. "But blood alone does not define a vampire. Names do."

I blinked. "Names?"

"Yes," she said. "Our names carry weight. Identity. Power. A Progenitor cannot lie about their name. Nor can their Progeny. Our titles mark our rank, our role, and our legacy."

The projections flickered with runes and names etched in silver.

"Progenitors bear the title Von if they are blessed. Van, if they are not. If their Blood Consorts are blessed before being turned, they bear the name Ven, its Van. Origin Borne receives a first name from their Progenitor and a surname the same as their progenitor, prefixed with Kin. Blood Descendants use Gen instead, and if one of their parents is blessed, the child may carry the title Ven. However, if the clan bears Von, all descendants are blessed.

Blood Attendants usually only have first names. Only those elevated to True Blood Attendant status are given surnames—granting them independence and power equal to the Progenitor, a rare and serious honor."

It was like unraveling an ancient code.

Leora looked suddenly grim. I wondered what it had cost her to bear that name.

"Now," Leora said, summoning another figure into the light—smaller, childlike, with a flickering red core in its chest. "Let us discuss evolution."

The figure aged rapidly, growing in power and stature with each passing second.

"Vampires are born from Spawn Mothers—structures that grow in a Progenitor's domain each year. Their number is tied to the Birth Cities under that Progenitor's control. The city's tier determines the strength and growth rate of the Vampire Spawn."

Carla interjected, "So one Tier Five Birth City equals one Tier Five Spawn Mother?"

"Correct," Leora replied. "In this scenario, each spawn gains ten power per year and evolves in their fifth—if they grow. But evolution requires more than time. It requires legacy."

The chamber shifted again, revealing a floating tome bound in bone and silver.

"The Tome of Legacy. Vampires ready to evolve must obtain one from the Chamber of Legacy. Those who fail must rely on the Archive of Legacy—an ancestral library of tomes used once per year."

 "They just... read it?" I asked.

"Yes," she said. "But only tomes glowing with violet light can be used. Others are still cooling. High-ranking vampires read them for leisure, but to the young... they are salvation."

Another figure evolved—stronger, sharper—but slower.

 "A Tier 1 Spawn Mother gives birth to a tier one vampire spawn which needs one year to evolve into a Lesser vampire, then two to Greater Vampire, four to High Vampire, and eight to Vampire Elder."

"My head spun. "And then?"

"Then," she said, "comes nobility. An Elder who earns a Tome of Legacy and achieves a worthy feat becomes a Vampire Baron—the lowest rank of Noble. The gods name them. That name forms their soul. And with that soul, they form their Peerage."

A circle of knights rose behind the Baron, loyal and shining with dim echoes of his power.

"Their Peerage are turned willingly. Their strength, a portion of their master's. The path continues: Baron to Viscount, Count, Count to Marquise, Marquise to Duke. And if a Duke earns another feat, another Tome, and is granted blood and name from their Progenitor—they become Pureblood."

The shadows knelt before the final form, regal and terrifying.

"A Pureblood may then choose their Bloodmate. Which allows them to have children."

She paused, letting the final words settle like dust.

"And now," she said, voice low and electric, "we speak of the exceptions. The special evolutions… those that meet certain prerequisites ."

The room dimmed. The shadows began to twist again.

And I realized—we were only just beginning.

"Some Vampire Spawn evolve not by time or trial alone, but through circumstance," Leora continued. "In large-scale battles under the presence of a Progenitor or Blood Consort, when many Spawn approach the cusp of evolution, something rare may occur, and they transform into Vampire Legionnaires."

"Legionnaires are stronger, their power scaling in formation. When one evolves further, they become a Vampire Centurion, capable of commanding a full century of Legionnaires. Spawn who fight alongside this unit can mutate into Vampire Milites, which fill the Century's ranks and later evolve into Legionnaires themselves."

"As more evolve, leadership shifts. If another Legionnaire ascends, the original Centurion becomes a Centurion Major, and the newer one a Centurion Minor."

She paused, letting the image settle in our minds.

"This path continues upward—greater ranks, larger commands—but one price remains constant: they never attain true free will. Even at their peak, as Praetorian Praefectus—equal in strength to a Blood Champion—they remain bound. Not mindless like Thralls, but locked in unbreakable duty."

"So... puppets?" Jenny asked, her voice cautious.

"Yes and no," Leora replied. "They possess tactical awareness, unlike Thralls, who require explicit direction for every move. A Praefectus can plan a conquest on its own—but its objective will always align with the will of the Progenitor. They are not slaves, but servants. Loyal to a fault."

She scanned our faces, then continued.

"I'll explain the full Legion evolution tree another day. For now, let's touch on the Peerage Tree—another alternate evolution line."

She gestured again, and the shadows reformed into a new tableau: banners bearing crests, knights in rank.

"This occurs under different conditions. When Vampire Spawn fight under a Blood Champion—not a Progenitor or Consort—and many become ready to evolve, they may instead become Vampire Footmen. These are Lesser Vampire equivalents, slightly stronger and bound to command."

"As they grow in strength, they evolve into Vampire Knights—the Peerage equivalent of True Vampires. A Knight can form a Knight Order and, with the Progenitor's permission, begin converting Vampire Spawn into Vampire Militia."

"The Peerage path branches further, but like the Legion Tree, it's a story for another time."

Leora grew quiet, then suddenly tilted her head. "You haven't eaten, have you? Shall I bring food?"

A chorus of agreement followed. She gave a small nod and left the room.

We talked amongst ourselves then, digesting both the information and our own uncertainty.

Leora returned shortly with food, placing it on the table without a word, then disappeared again. Throughout the day, she came and went, alternating between short lectures on vampire society and quiet offerings of food.

By nightfall, I was exhausted. As I lay in bed, staring at the unfamiliar ceiling, a single thought drifted through my mind:

Maybe this life would be more interesting than I'd feared.

And with that thought, I let sleep take me.

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