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The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System-Chapter 157: Consumption and Consequence
The elf prisoners watched the battle unfolding before them with a mixture of shock, disbelief, and dawning, fragile hope. For weeks they had languished in this miserable hole, their spirits crushed, their bodies broken. Rescue had become a fantasy—a child’s dream that adults had long since abandoned.
And now, here it was. Violence and fire and death raining down on their captors with brutal, beautiful efficiency.
Silvie’s eyes, still red and swollen from weeping over her brother’s body, tracked the horned man’s movements with desperate intensity. She saw him take hits that should have killed any normal fighter—the dark fire spear that slammed into his chest with enough force to shatter stone. But he didn’t fall. He barely staggered. And when his scales rippled across his skin, visible even from this distance, her breath caught.
’Scales... he has scales. That’s not human skin. He’s... he’s not human at all.’
The realization should have terrified her. Months ago, it would have. But now? After everything she’d endured at human hands? The distinction between "human" and "monster" had lost all meaning.
Before she could process further, a sound drew her attention—a wet, grinding series of cracks that made her stomach lurch. She turned instinctively toward the source and immediately regretted it.
The pale woman—the beautiful, terrifying creature who had emerged from the shadows—was systematically destroying the nervous one. Threads of something invisible wrapped around his limbs, his torso, his neck. And then... CRACK. CR-CRACK. CR-CR-CRACK.
Silvie’s hand flew to her mouth, stifling a scream. She watched as the man’s body bent in ways that defied nature, his scream starting as a roar and ending as a wet gurgle. And through it all, the pale woman’s face... she was smiling. Eyes half-lidded. Lips parted in ecstasy. As if she were listening to the most beautiful music in the world.
Then the woman turned. Her crimson eyes—not human eyes, no human had eyes like that—locked directly onto Silvie.
Silvie’s blood turned to ice. She wrenched her gaze away, pressing herself back against the cage bars, heart hammering so hard she thought it might burst.
’What... what IS that woman?! She’s horrifying! She enjoyed killing him—she actually ENJOYED it!’
For a long, terrible moment, Silvie couldn’t move. Couldn’t think. The image of that ecstatic smile, those crimson eyes, the sound of bones breaking in perfect rhythm—it was seared into her mind.
Then, slowly, something else rose within her. Shame. Determination. The memory of her brother’s body, still warm, still bleeding, lying in the dirt of this cursed place.
’I can’t stay frozen. I can’t. If I don’t act now, if I don’t at least TRY... Lyrian’s death means nothing. I have to speak to her. I have to make her understand.’
Silvie pushed herself forward, pressing against the cage bars. Her voice came out scratchy, weak—she hadn’t spoken properly in days. "Excuse me... please... please listen to me."
The pale woman turned. Those crimson eyes fixed on Silvie with an intensity that made her want to shrivel up and disappear. But the woman’s voice, when it came, was almost casual. Dismissive.
"Please don’t disturb me. I’m watching Adam fight. He’s so focused he’s completely ignoring me." A faint pout touched her lips—an expression so incongruous with the bloody threads still dangling from her fingers that Silvie’s mind nearly broke trying to reconcile it.
’She... she looks like a woman whose lover is paying attention to someone else. What... what kind of relationship do these people HAVE?’
Silvie forced herself to continue. "Please, I beg you. Free us. We can fight. We’ll be useful—I swear it. Just give us a chance."
The pale woman didn’t look away from the battle. Her response was flat, uninterested. "I can’t do that."
Silvie’s heart sank. But before despair could claim her again, her eyes drifted back to the horned man—Adam, the woman had called him. He was locked in combat with Kuan, the bandit lord who had murdered her brother. She watched as Adam’s fist connected with Kuan’s chest, sending the massive man flying into a pillar hard enough to shatter stone.
The cavern trembled as Kuan’s massive form straightened, his broken chest already beginning to heal—dark energy knitting bone and flesh with unnatural speed. His grin returned, wider now, more feral.
"You think you’ve won?" Kuan’s voice rumbled like approaching thunder. "You think a little hole in my chest means anything?"
His hand reached into empty air—a storage artifact activating—and emerged gripping something that made the temperature drop another ten degrees. A gauntlet. Black metal wrought into the shape of a snarling maw, teeth-like protrusions lining the fingers, the palm inset with a swirling vortex of sickly green light.
The moment it appeared, the Crown on Adam’s brow pulsed with violent hunger.
Silvie’s eyes went wide. Her voice tore from her throat, raw with terror. "RUN! YOU HAVE TO RUN! THAT’S THE SPIRIT EATER! IT CONSUMES SPIRITS AND STEALS THEIR POWER! EVERY SPIRIT IT’S EVER EATEN—THEY’RE ALL TRAPPED INSIDE!"
Lilith’s head tilted, her crimson gaze finally leaving Adam to study the artifact with academic interest. "Hmm~ So that explains the ice mage outside. A consumed spirit, given form." Her lips curved. "Interesting."
"Don’t just STAND THERE!" Silvie screamed, rattling the cage bars. "RUN WHILE YOU CAN! YOU CAN’T FIGHT THAT—"
Lilith’s eyes snapped to her, and Silvie’s voice died in her throat. The look wasn’t angry or threatening. It was worse. It was patient. Tolerant. Like a cat acknowledging a noisy mouse.
"I don’t mind you being loud," Lilith said softly, her voice carrying that same serene melody. "But don’t underestimate Adam. A toy like that?" She glanced back at the Spirit Eater, dismissing it with a wave of her fingers. "It’s nothing to him."
Silvie’s mind went blank. ’Nothing...? That artifact has destroyed spirit mages for centuries. It’s legendary. And she calls it a TOY?’ Her hands gripped the bars so hard her knuckles went white. ’We’re all going to die. I thought I’d be saved, but they’re just—they don’t understand what they’re facing—’
Kuan’s aura exploded outward.
From the Spirit Eater’s maw, spirits poured forth—dozens of them, hundreds, a torrent of tortured souls twisted by years of captivity. They weren’t the graceful spirits of elven legend. They were corrupted things, their forms warped, their eyes burning with mad hunger. Ice spirits. Fire spirits. Shadow spirits. Beasts that had once roamed the wilds, now reduced to slaves of Kuan’s will.
They swirled around him like a cyclone of damned souls, howling with voices that weren’t quite human, weren’t quite animal. The temperature fluctuated wildly—freezing one moment, scorching the next. The very air grew thick with despair.
Adam stood at the center of the storm, untouched. His crimson eyes studied the spirits with calm assessment, cataloging their types, their numbers, their threat level. And in his mind, a conversation unfolded.
’So this is why you wanted me here,’ he thought, addressing the Crown directly. ’You sensed the Spirit Eater. You want it.’
The Crown pulsed. Once. Twice. A rhythm that felt almost like agreement. Its hunger intensified, matching the storm of spirits with its own dark appetite. The spectral artifact blazed on Adam’s brow, its presence pressing against the corrupted souls, challenging them.
Kuan laughed, the sound booming through the chaos. "What’s wrong, little kid? Your crown’s hungry, isn’t it? I can feel it reaching out, trying to take what’s mine." He raised the gauntlet, and the spirits screamed louder. "But you can’t. The Spirit Eater doesn’t share. It only TAKES. And right now? It’s going to take YOU."
He thrust his hand forward.
The cyclone responded. Spirits converged on Adam from every angle, their forms stretching into lances of corrupted energy, their howls rising to a deafening crescendo.
Adam didn’t move.
At the last possible instant, his hand shot up—not to block, but to grip. His fingers closed around something only he could see: the Crown’s hunger, made tangible, channeled through his will. He pulled.
And the world shattered.
The spirits screamed—not in fury, but in something else. Recognition? Fear? The Crown’s presence expanded, not attacking the spirits, but overwhelming them. Its hunger was older, deeper, more absolute than the Spirit Eater’s crude consumption. Where the gauntlet trapped and twisted, the Crown simply... absorbed.
One by one, the corrupted spirits halted mid-charge. Their forms flickered, distorted, then dissolved—not into nothing, but into streams of dark energy that spiraled toward Adam’s brow. Toward the Crown.
Kuan’s eyes went wide. "What—NO! You can’t! The Spirit Eater doesn’t lose! It’s MINE!"
Adam’s lips curved into a cold smile. "Not anymore."
He pulled harder.
The remaining spirits screamed in unison—a chorus of damned souls finally finding release—and collapsed into motes of light that the Crown drank down like water. The Spirit Eater’s glow dimmed, its maw gaping uselessly as its stored power drained away.
Kuan stumbled back, clutching the gauntlet, watching in horror as centuries of accumulated spirits vanished in seconds. His tattoos flickered. His aura guttered. For the first time since the fight began, genuine fear showed in his eyes.
"You... what ARE you?" His voice cracked.
Adam stepped forward, the Crown blazing on his brow, its hunger finally—finally—beginning to ease. The souls counter in his mind ticked upward in a cascade of numbers he barely registered.
[+47 Souls Acquired]
[+62 Souls Acquired]
[+84 Souls Acquired]
[Total Souls: 76 -> 269]
The notifications scrolled past, but Adam ignored them. His focus remained fixed on Kuan, on the artifact in his hands, on the final piece of this battle.
"I’m the one who takes what’s yours," Adam said quietly. "And I’m not done yet."
Kuan’s massive frame trembled. His kerambit came up in a desperate guard, the Spirit Eater still clutched in his other hand. "Stay back! I’ll—I’ll kill you! I’ll—"
Adam moved.
Mirage Cascade. Three afterimages. Three strikes.
The first afterimage flickered into existence at Kuan’s right flank, a phantom of dark energy and coiled muscle that drew the bandit lord’s desperate attention. Kuan’s kerambit swept toward it in a wild arc—and passed through empty air.
The real Adam materialized on his left.
His hand shot forward, not as a fist, but as an open palm that clamped onto Kuan’s wrist like a vice. The kerambit, still wreathed in dying flames, stopped inches from Adam’s face. Kuan’s eyes widened—he hadn’t even seen the movement.
Adam twisted.
CRACK.
The sound of Kuan’s wrist breaking was sharp, wet, final. His fingers spasmed, the kerambit falling from suddenly nerveless grip. It clattered against the stone floor, its flames guttering out like a candle in a storm.
Kuan’s roar of pain had barely begun when the second strike landed.
Adam’s other hand shot toward the Spirit Eater still clutched in Kuan’s opposite grip. His fingers closed around the artifact’s gauntlet—not the metal, but the space between, void energy wrapping around it like living shadow. He pulled.
The Spirit Eater tore free from Kuan’s grasp with a sound like ripping flesh from bone. The gauntlet’s maw gaped uselessly, its green light flickering, dying, as Adam hurled it away. It spun through the air, trailing sickly sparks, before landing on the stone floor with a hollow clatter and rolling to a stop near the elf prisoners’ cage.
Kuan was still processing the loss when the third strike arrived.
Adam’s body aligned into a single devastating line—shoulder lowered, spine straight, every ounce of strength and momentum focused into his right fist. The same technique that had shattered the Wind Elemental Sovereign’s core. The same strike that had caved in the Pale Revenant’s skull.
Monarch’s Pierce.
His fist drove into the center of Kuan’s already-caved chest.
CRAAAAAAAAACK—BOOM!
The sound was not one impact, but many—ribs shattering, sternum snapping, the wet tear of internal structures giving way under impossible force. Kuan’s eyes bulged from their sockets, his mouth opening in a scream that had no air to fuel it. The tattoos covering his body flared once, violently, then went dark.
His massive form lifted off the ground—actually lifted—carried backward by the sheer force of Adam’s strike. He flew across the cavern like a ragdoll, a broken doll hurled by a child’s tantrum. His back slammed into the stone wall with a sound like a collapsing building.
CRASH—CRUMBLE.
The wall caved. Stone shattered, dust exploded, and Kuan’s body embedded itself in the crater his impact had created. For a long, terrible moment, he hung there—arms limp, head lolling, chest a ruin of splintered bone and pulped flesh.
Then, slowly, he slid down the wall. His body left a trail of blood on the stone, dark and thick, before crumpling into a heap at its base.
This time, he didn’t get up.
Adam stood over the fallen bandit lord, breathing steady, expression calm. His fist was still extended, dark energy curling from his knuckles like smoke. A few drops of Kuan’s blood dripped from his fingers, pattering against the stone floor in the sudden, profound silence.
He looked at the Spirit Eater lying on the ground near the cage, then at the Crown’s fading glow in his vision.
"Good enough?" he murmured.
The Crown pulsed once. Satisfied.







