The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System

Chapter 124: Mission and Duty


Adam stared at the newly formed mega-bed, a fortress of blankets and misplaced goodwill. Lilith's voice cut through his reverie, laced with velvet amusement. "You're being unusually quiet, Adam. Could it be that sharing a bed with us is inspiring... unusual thoughts?"

Adam's head snapped toward her. "No. It's not. I'm thinking about how to secure the room."

Ignis popped her head up from the middle of the mattress. "What kind of thoughts? What are you guys talking about?"

Adam let out a long, weary sigh, surrendering to the inevitable. He sat up, crossing his legs on the edge of the combined bed. "Alright, fine. I'll sleep here. But before anyone closes their eyes, we need to talk. Seriously."

Lilith inclined her head, her playful smirk fading into a look of sharp attention. "A prudent suggestion. We are, after all, deep in human territory. Complacency is a luxury we cannot afford."

Ignis flopped onto her back. "But it's so quiet here! What's the problem?"

"The problem," Adam said, his voice low, "is that we got lucky today. The checkpoint could have gone differently. And Elise..." He paused, choosing his words. "She didn't even try to hide her identity from the border sergeant. She used her royal seal openly."

Lilith's crimson eyes gleamed in the lamplight. "I had considered that. It seemed a deliberate choice, not mere carelessness. By revealing herself to the authorities, she ensures our passage is officially logged. It creates a trail. A trail that ties us—monsters disguised by her magic—directly to her. It is a leash, of sorts. If we act against her interests, or draw undue attention, she could theoretically expose us with a word. She knows what we are, and now the local powers know she is with us."

Ignis's eyes widened. "You think she's planning to betray us?"

"I think she's a princess who has survived assassination attempts and family betrayal her whole life," Adam corrected. "She's covering her bases. It's smart. For her." He looked between his two companions. "It doesn't mean she's an enemy. But it means we shouldn't be naive. We need to cover our own bases too."

Lilith nodded slowly, a spark of dark approval in her gaze. "A most logical assessment. What do you propose?"

"Information," Adam stated. "Lilith, come with me. We're going for a short walk. We need to listen to the gossip in this town. See if anyone is asking about a princess, or about strange travelers. See what the mood is."

Ignis immediately bounced up. "I wanna come too!"

"You can't," Adam said firmly. "You have a different job, and it's the most important one."

Ignis pouted. "What? Guard the bags?"

Adam shook his head, his expression turning completely serious. "You guard Elise. Seraphina is good, but she's just one knight, and she's exhausted. If something happens here at the inn—if the lich's agents, or her siblings' spies, or just common thieves come—you are the first line of defense. Your fire in a confined space is a bigger deterrent than any sword."

He held her gaze, his crimson eyes intent. "But listen carefully, Ignis. This is crucial. If the enemy is too strong, if the situation is truly hopeless, your priority is not to die defending her. Do you understand?"

Ignis's playful demeanor vanished, replaced by a look of solemn responsibility. She swallowed and gave a firm nod. "I understand. Protect Elise. Run if i have to."

"Good." Adam stood up, nodding to Lilith. "We won't be long. Keep your ears open, Ignis. And try to get some actual rest."

Lilith rose with silent grace, a predator ready for a night hunt. "A stroll through the sleeping town it is. Let us see what secrets the shadows hold."

Adam pushed open the window, letting in the cool, dusk-chilled air. The sky was a deep indigo, the first stars just beginning to prick through. He turned to Lilith, offering his hand.

"Ready?"

Ignis gave a thumbs-up from the bed. "Be careful!"

Adam focused, and the familiar shimmer of Deep Camouflage flowed over him, bending the light around his form. He reached out, taking Lilith's slender, pale hand in his. The moment their skin touched, the camouflaging effect extended to envelop her as well, weaving her into the same cloak of shifting shadows and muted colors.

Lilith looked down at their joined hands, then up at him, a faint, almost imperceptible smile on her lips. "This is somewhat inefficient," she murmured, her voice a soft breath in the quiet room. "Maintaining this level of physical contact while navigating uneven rooftops will hinder your movement and my ability to observe independently."

Adam blinked. "It's the only way the skill works on someone else. We need to stay connected."

"Indeed," Lilith agreed, her tone taking on a note of logical sweetness. "Therefore, a more stable and efficient method of maintaining contact would be preferable. Carrying me would free both your hands for climbing and balance, and allow me a wider field of view."

Adam stared at her. "Carry you? Since when did you get so... particular about efficiency?"

Lilith's smile widened, just a fraction, her crimson eyes gleaming in the fading light. "I am always particular about efficiency. And this is the most logical solution, is it not? Or are you suggesting you are not strong enough?"

A flicker of challenge, wrapped in velvet reasoning. Adam knew he was being gently manipulated, but he couldn't argue with the tactical point. "...Fine. You win. But hold on tight."

He turned, and Lilith smoothly moved closer. With a practiced motion, he slid one arm under her knees and the other around her back, lifting her effortlessly against his chest. She was lighter than he expected for someone of her height and presence, but there was a solid, real weight to her—a reminder that this elegant, deadly form was not an illusion. She immediately wrapped her arms around his neck, settling against him with a disturbingly comfortable familiarity.

Her breath was warm against the side of his neck. Her body, pressed against his, was soft and surprisingly warm beneath her dark silks. A distracting heat bloomed where they touched, making it suddenly hard to focus on the mission.

'Focus, damn it,' he scolded himself. 'She's heavy. Well, not heavy, but... substantial. I didn't expect that.'

A soft, amused hum vibrated against his skin. "If you are quite done with your assessment of my weight, we should depart," Lilith whispered, her lips close to his ear. "The night will not wait for your internal deliberations."

Flustered, Adam grunted in response. He pushed off from the windowsill, his enhanced strength and agility making the leap to the adjacent rooftop feel effortless even with his precious cargo. He landed in a silent crouch, the thatch soft under his boots.

"See anything?" he whispered, his senses expanding with Hunter's Tri-Sense.

"Nothing immediate," Lilith murmured back, her head turning slowly as she scanned the darkening lanes below. "The town is settling. This way. The main tavern will have the most ears."

They reached the peak of a slate roof overlooking the town's central square. The main tavern, "The Grinning Boar," was a two-story building of warm, glowing windows and loud, boisterous noise that spilled out into the cool night air. It was the perfect place for gossip.

Adam crouched low, setting Lilith down gently beside him on the sloping roof. Their hands remained linked, maintaining the camouflage field. The contact felt different now—less awkward, more like a necessary circuit completing a circuit of stealth.

"Focus on the groups near the windows," Adam murmured, his voice barely a breath. "Listen for any talk of Melium, royalty, or strange occurrences."

Lilith nodded, her gaze fixed on the scene below. Her enhanced hearing, a product of her arachnoid senses, filtered through the cacophony of drunken songs, clinking mugs, and boisterous laughter.

For several minutes, they heard nothing of note—complaints about harvests, bragging about hunting trips, the latest news from a traveling merchant about silk prices in the capital.

Then, a lower, more serious conversation filtered up from an open window near the back of the tavern. Two men, their voices edged with the rough tones of professional soldiers, were speaking over half-empty mugs.

"...passed through the east gate today. Log says 'Elise of Melium, with companions.' Used a royal seal."

A grunt from the other. "The cursed princess? Here? Thought she'd be holed up in some temple or dead by now."

"Apparently not. Border sergeant said she looked pale but was walking on her own. Had a knight with her—Seraphina, the one who never leaves her side. And three others. Odd bunch."

"Odd how?"

"Don't know. Log just says 'travelers.' But the sergeant said the man with them moved... fast. Caught a smuggler who bolted. Said it was like watching a hawk strike."

A low whistle. "Sellswords? Or something else?"

"Who cares? Not our problem. She's Duke Arkwright's headache now. But mark my words—where that princess goes, trouble follows. Remember the stories from Melium? Whole villages gone quiet when she passed through. The lich's shadow."

"The Deathless King's hunting her. You think he'd dare cross into Solaria? Into the Duke's lands?"

"Would you stop an ancient, pissed-off necromancer? I wouldn't. Hope she keeps moving east. Fast."

The conversation shifted to grumbling about pay and poor ale.

On the rooftop, Adam and Lilith exchanged a glance. The information was troubling, but not immediately threatening. The guards saw them as a potential problem to be passed along, not a target to be detained. That was good.

Lilith leaned closer, her lips almost brushing his ear. Her whisper was so soft it was more a vibration in the air than a sound. "The seed of rumor is planted. They fear what follows her, not her directly. This works to our advantage. Fear breeds caution, not immediate action."

Adam nodded. "But it also means eyes are on us. The Duke will be informed."

Before Lilith could respond, her head snapped to the left, her gaze sharpening on a narrow alley across the square. "Movement," she breathed. "Three figures. Hooded. Not walking like townsfolk."

Adam followed her gaze. Three shadows detached themselves from the deeper gloom of an alley mouth. They moved with a fluid, predatory grace that was entirely out of place in a sleepy border town. They didn't speak. They scanned the area, their attention lingering on the front of The Traveler's Rest Inn, before melting back into the darkness, heading east out of the square.

"Not guards," Adam stated quietly. "Their posture is suspicious."

"Assassins?" Lilith mused. "Or scouts. They showed particular interest in our inn."

"Could be after Elise. Could be after us. Could be coincidence." Adam didn't believe in coincidence. "We've seen what we needed. Time to go back."

He shifted, preparing to lift her again, but Lilith placed a hand on his chest, stopping him. Her touch was light but arresting.

"One more thing," she said, her crimson eyes glowing faintly in the starlight. "Before we return to the others... the way you instructed Ignis. To prioritize escape over a futile defense. That was... unexpectedly ruthless. And correct."

Adam met her gaze. "Sentiment gets you killed. You know that better than anyone."

"I do," she agreed, her thumb tracing a slow, almost unconscious circle on the fabric of his tunic. "But it is a philosophy you have not always extended to us. You refused to leave us behind in the dungeon. Yet you would counsel abandoning an ally for strategic gain."

"That's different," Adam said, his voice rough. "You're... you're mine to protect. Seraphina is Elise's. Her duty is to die for her princess if needed. My duty is to make sure the mission—saving Alice—succeeds."

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