The street had gone eerily quiet after the chaos. Sandman froze mid-motion, his sandy form half-shifted, staring toward where the tall, thin vampire lay pinned to the pavement as if an invisible hand held him there. Across from him stood Kurogai, his coat fluttering lightly in the wind.
The vampire's face reddened as he struggled against the unseen force pressing down on him. "What… what are you? Why can't I move?" His voice trembled with fury and disbelief.
He could feel the weight of the world crushing him. The air itself had turned solid, pinning him flat. He couldn't twitch, couldn't breathe freely—his limbs might as well have been encased in concrete. Kurogai's power, drawn from the Space Gem, had folded reality around the creature, locking every molecule of air in place. Under that pressure, movement was impossible.
"Who I am doesn't matter," Kurogai said softly, his expression unreadable. "What matters is that you don't disappoint me."
As he spoke, a strange weapon shimmered into existence in his hand—an obsidian-black scythe that pulsed faintly with dark energy. He raised it without hesitation and drove the blade straight through the vampire's chest. The creature screamed, his voice sharp enough to make the air vibrate. Kurogai didn't flinch. His attention was fixed on the weapon, watching as the scythe's metal gleamed red, drawing in the blood that seeped from the wound.
A faint smile tugged at his lips.
"So I was right," he murmured. "This really does meet a conditions."
The Space Gem's glow reflected in his eyes, and excitement flickered there. As the scythe drank deep, he felt a surge of feedback from deep within his own power. Inside his eyes, invisible to the world, the seventh pupil ring stirred for the first time, resonating like a bell struck under his skin.
That was it—the confirmation he'd been seeking. Vampire blood was the key to unlocking the seventh ring.
It was far simpler than he had expected. No need to cross dimensions, no need to seek alien DNA or chase cosmic entities. Vampires existed right here on Earth. If he could find more of them, he could continue his evolution without leaving this world. The realization sent a quiet thrill through him.
He didn't notice the incoming attack until it was almost upon him. A massive fist of compressed sand lunged toward his head, its shadow blotting out the light. The blow landed squarely against an invisible barrier, the impact scattering grit in all directions but leaving Kurogai untouched.
The Sandman's rough voice followed. "What are you? What's your purpose here?"
Kurogai turned his gaze on him. He could feel the man's panic, the desperate need to protect something beyond himself. No doubt Sandman was thinking of his family. He had heard the vampire's earlier threats, and he feared that Kurogai might be another hunter from the same shadowed world.
"Relax," Kurogai said lightly. "I don't have any plans for you right now. My interest lies with this one." He gestured toward the dying vampire beneath his control.
The reassurance did little to ease Sandman's tension. He studied Kurogai carefully, distrust still in his eyes. "If that's true, then leave him here. Walk away, and I'll let you go."
"I refuse," Kurogai said simply. "He's far too valuable to me."
Sandman's eyes hardened. He couldn't allow the vampire to live after the threat to his loved ones. "Then I'll take him by force!"
He slammed both fists into the ground. The street erupted as a tide of sand surged up around Kurogai, closing in from every direction like a collapsing dune. He had been cautious from the beginning, leaving grains scattered subtly around the stranger's feet—now he meant to bury him.
Kurogai's lips curved faintly. "Clever," he said, his voice calm even as the sand enclosed him. "But you chose the wrong opponent."
The Space Gem pulsed again. Space itself folded inward. The whirling grit froze midair, suspended for a heartbeat, then crashed straight down as if gravity had multiplied a thousandfold. Sandman screamed as the same invisible force dragged him to the ground, his body compressed under impossible pressure. The pavement cracked beneath him.
The air hummed with that terrible stillness. Every grain of sand had been locked in place.
"You'll stay down," Kurogai said evenly, "until I'm finished."
Sandman strained against the invisible weight but could not move an inch. His own power, once vast and fluid, now betrayed him—every particle he controlled had become part of the prison that bound him.
Kurogai turned his attention back to the vampire. The creature's body was frail now, skin pale and dry. The demon scythe had drained nearly all of his blood, leaving him trembling on the edge of death. Once a predator, now a husk.
Kurogai ignored the weakness spreading through the vampire's form. He raised his eyes slightly, and the air around him shimmered. His irises shifted—rings of deep violet unfolding one by one until seven distinct circles glowed faintly within his gaze. Power rippled outward as the seventh ring responded.
Behind him, a spectral figure materialized—ghostly, humanoid, and terrible. It reached forward with long, shadowy fingers, gripping the vampire by the chin. The creature screamed as its tongue was drawn out by some unseen pull.
"Human Path: Heart's Depth Extraction."
Kurogai's voice was calm as the ability activated. A pulse of energy flowed through the spectral figure into the vampire, pulling not just life but memories—knowledge, secrets, perhaps even the map of his kind. The vampire's body twitched once, then fell limp, his essence consumed by Kurogai.
For a moment, silence reigned. The Space Gem dimmed. The scythe dissolved. Kurogai exhaled slowly, eyes still glowing faintly with seven rippling rings.
"Seventh ring," he murmured. "Finally."
He turned to the immobilized Sandman, who still glared from where he lay trapped against the cracked street.
"Don't worry," Kurogai said softly. "You'll get your turn… eventually."
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