Chapter 297: Return to New Earth
New Earth
A hundred years ago, this ground had been torn open by angelic spears and shadow tendrils. The sky had wept gold fire. The air had tasted of ash and copper and the dying screams of Adam’s failed heaven. Now grass covered every wound. Wildflowers nodded in a breeze that carried nothing but the scent of soil and distant rain.
Lucifer stood at the edge of the shallow depression and felt the fragment around his neck pull so hard it left a mark.
Dera hadn’t moved from her spot near the stone hatch. She’d watched them approach in silence, her weight shifted back on her heels, her arms crossed loose across her chest. Not a defensive posture. A patient one. She’d been expecting this visit for decades.
"You took your time," she said.
Her voice was steady. Older than he remembered. Not older in years—Progenitors didn’t age—but older in the way people grew when they carried burdens alone.
Lucifer touched the vial through his shirt. The golden fragment pulsed against his sternum.
"I’m here now."
Dera’s gaze dropped to his chest. The Human Authority inside her stirred—Lucifer felt it as a faint pressure, like the moment before a storm breaks. Recognition. Adam’s mark was all over that fragment. She’d felt it for a century.
She looked back at his face.
"You’ve changed."
"Everyone changes."
"Not like you." Her eyes moved past him, to the tall figure standing a few paces behind. Damaris waited with his wounded wing wrapped in shadow-bandages, his golden eyes patient, his silver hair catching the afternoon light. "And you brought company."
Damaris inclined his head.
"Dera."
"Damaris." She said his name like she was tasting it. "The stories said you were dead."
"The stories were right. For a while."
Dera snorted. Not mockery. Something closer to recognition.
"A century changes things."
She turned and walked toward the depression’s center. Her boots left faint impressions in the soft earth. Lucifer followed. Damaris followed. The grass whispered against their legs.
Dera stopped at the stone hatch.
It was older than Adam’s sanctum. Lucifer could see it now—the way the stone had weathered, the way the symbols carved into its surface predated the language Adam’s angels had used. Whatever lay beneath, Adam hadn’t built this place. He’d just claimed it.
"He kept a vault," Dera said, her voice low. "Beneath his sanctum. Beneath everything. A place for things he couldn’t destroy and couldn’t trust anyone else to guard."
Lucifer’s shadows stirred along his shoulders.
"Francisca’s fragment."
Dera nodded.
"I’ve felt it for a hundred years. A piece of something that doesn’t belong with the rest of his trophies. Every time the Authority settled deeper into me, I felt that fragment calling. Not to me. To something else." She looked at him. "To you."
Damaris stepped closer to the hatch. His boots scraped against the stone rim.
"Entry requires the Human Authority."
Dera’s lips curved—not a smile, just an acknowledgment of the obvious.
"Adam was paranoid. He didn’t trust his angels. Didn’t trust his Adversaries. Didn’t even trust himself, not fully." She raised her hand. The Authority pulsed around her—invisible, but Lucifer could feel it pressing against his skin. "The only thing he couldn’t fake was another Progenitor’s bloodline. So he locked his vault with a key only a Human Progenitor could turn."
Lucifer’s jaw tightened.
"Then turn it."
Dera held his gaze. The wind pushed her hair across her face. She didn’t brush it aside.
"Opening this vault will do more than unlock a door. It will break seals Adam placed. Seals that have held for a century."
Damaris’s wings shifted. The shadow-bandages creaked.
"What kind of seals?"
Dera looked at him. Her expression was unreadable, but something flickered behind her eyes. Fear, maybe. Or caution.
"Things Adam wanted to forget. Things he couldn’t destroy, so he buried them instead." Her voice dropped to almost a whisper. "Some of them might still be alive. Some of them might wake up when the seals break."
The wind picked up. The wildflowers bent low. The grass rippled like water.
Lucifer didn’t look away from her.
"I don’t care."
Dera studied him for a long moment. The sun moved behind a cloud. The field grew darker.
"You should." She glanced at the hatch. "Whatever’s down there—it’s been waiting. For a century. For longer, maybe. Adam was afraid of it. That’s why he sealed it instead of using it."
Lucifer’s shadows coiled around his feet, restless and hungry.
"I’m not Adam."
Dera’s expression softened. Just slightly. Just enough.
"No. You’re not."
She raised her hand.
The Human Authority blazed.
The symbols on the stone hatch ignited one by one—gold and crimson, pulsing in a rhythm that matched Lucifer’s heartbeat. The ground trembled. The air grew thick, heavy, difficult to breathe. For a moment, Lucifer felt something push back from below. Something old. Something angry. Something that had been waiting for this door to open.
Then the lock broke.
The sound was deep. Resonant. Like a bell struck beneath the earth.
Dera lowered her hand. Her breathing was uneven.
"It’s open."
Lucifer grabbed the edge of the hatch and pulled. Stone ground against stone. The hatch lifted, revealing darkness below. Cold air rushed out—air that hadn’t touched sunlight in centuries. It smelled of dust and iron and something else. Something that made Lucifer’s shadows recoil and press closer at the same time.
Damaris peered into the darkness.
"Stairs."
Lucifer nodded.
"I’ll go first."
"No." Damaris stepped in front of him. His wings spread slightly, blocking the way. "I’ve already died once. If something’s waiting down there, it should find me before it finds you."
Lucifer stared at his father. The afternoon light caught the silver in Damaris’s hair, the lines around his eyes, the fresh scars on his throat.
"That’s not how this works."
"It is today."
Damaris descended into the darkness. His footsteps echoed up the stone stairs.
Lucifer followed.
Dera watched from the edge, her arms wrapped around herself now.
"Be careful," she called after them. Her voice echoed down the stairwell. "Adam didn’t just hide things down there. He buried them."
The darkness swallowed father and son.
Dera stood alone in the field, the open hatch at her feet. The symbols on the stone had stopped glowing. But somewhere beneath New Earth, something stirred.
Something that had been waiting.
She closed her eyes.
"Don’t wake what can’t be put back to sleep."
The wind didn’t answer.
Neither did the vault.
But the ground trembled again—just once, just slightly—and Dera knew.
Too late.
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