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Now reading: Chapter 76: The Vampire Council from Marvel Manifestor, a Action novel by HouseofTales.

"Don't worry, I got every shot," Skye said, handing over the cara. "But seriously, why did you want to photograph those fragnts anyway?"

"To decipher the text, of course," Lucas replied with a grin.

"But didn't you say no human could decode that language?"

Lucas nodded. "Yeah, no human can. But a vampire might."

Skye's eyes widened. "Oh, so now you're playing word gas with ?" She shoved the cara into his hands, annoyed, and walked off toward Frank, clearly done talking to him.

Lucas shrugged. "Hey, I didn't lie."

anwhile, Blade pressed his boot against Quinn's face.

"Quinn, my patience has officially run out," Blade said coldly. "Last chance. Where's Deacon Frost?"

The tip of his silver sword hovered a breath away from Quinn's eye. The vampire could feel the holy tal searing his skin just from proximity.

Quinn stayed silent. He knew all too well—betray Deacon Frost, and his end would be far worse than death.

"Then you're useless."

With a shhk of steel, Blade drove the sword straight through Quinn's eye socket. The vampire didn't even have ti to scream before his body burst into flas and crumbled to ash.

With Quinn dead, the lead on Frost was completely gone. Blade sank onto the floor, sword still in hand, lost in thought and frustration.

Lucas walked over and said, "Don't lose hope. There's still a chance."

He tossed the cara to Blade. "These are photos of the Book of Truth. I'm guessing you know soone who can read this stuff. There's a clue in there—sothing Frost wants."

Blade stared at the cara for a mont, thinking. He did know soone who could decipher ancient vampire script—though calling that person human would be inaccurate.

"…Thanks," Blade said quietly. For once, the stoic Daywalker acknowledged it. Lucas and the others had been helping him this whole ti, after all.

On the way back, Frank couldn't stop asking about The Adjudicator. Anyone could see how much he coveted the gun.

For Frank Castle, firearms weren't just tools—they were extensions of his soul. And The Adjudicator looked like the ultimate weapon, a masterpiece forged for divine judgnt itself.

Still, he wasn't the kind of man to take what wasn't his. He just admired it—openly.

Lucas, seeing that, handed the revolver over. "Take a closer look."

Frank held it reverently, running his calloused fingers along its flawless surface as if caressing a lover. Every line of the weapon was art—the elegant curvature, the golden cross pattern etched along the barrel, the weight that humd with restrained power. He wished, just for a mont, that he had one of his own.

"Lucas," he asked finally, "how the hell do you reload this thing?"

He had examined every inch and found no chamber, no slot, no chanism for loading rounds. The gun was seamless—almost alive.

"Oh, it doesn't use bullets," Lucas said lightly. "It's powered by magic."

Frank blinked. "Magic. Right."

Lucas grinned. "It's not your standard sidearm. Think of it as a divine weapon—made to fight demons. It's been upgraded, too, so no need for ammo."

Frank could only shake his head in envy. For a man without magic, The Adjudicator might as well have been a museum piece—beautiful, but useless.

---

At that sa mont, in a secluded manor deep in the countryside, a group of ancient vampires in tailored suits sat gathered around a long table.

At the head of the table sat an elder with silvery-white hair, dressed in a spotless black robe. A blood-red ruby pendant hung from his neck, glinting like a drop of frozen blood. Every gesture radiated old-world nobility.

"Silence," he said softly.

The command wasn't loud, but the effect was imdiate. The previously noisy chamber fell utterly still.

"You have all lived for over a thousand years," he continued, his voice calm but sharp. "And yet you squabble like those filthy humans. Have you no dignity?"

Not once did he glance at the others. His presence alone was enough to make them lower their heads.

"Now, have you investigated the humans involved in this affair?"

Before anyone could answer, the heavy doors burst open with a loud bang.

A young man swaggered in—casually dressed, looking more like a street punk than a noble.

"Deacon Frost," the elder said icily. "You are interrupting a eting of the Council. You have no right to be here, you ill-bred mongrel."

His words were cold, but the disgust in his eyes was unmistakable.

To him, bloodline was everything. The pureblood vampires considered turned ones—like Frost—to be filthy, impure mockeries of their kind. The fact that this "half-breed" dared step into the Council's sanctum was an outrage.

Frost smirked. "Heh. Still clinging to your dieval garbage about 'pure blood'? Wake up, old man. This is the modern world. Power rules now. No wonder you fossils hide in your coffins while humans run the planet."

"You dare—!" One of the elders slamd the table and stood. "You insolent half-breed! Get out at once! Guards! GUARDS!"

Their outrage filled the chamber. To them, Frost wasn't even a person—just a stain on their lineage, a reminder that vampires had fallen from grace.

But Frost didn't flinch. He leaned casually against the table, watching them rant as if it were a stage performance.

Then, slowly, the elders realized sothing was wrong. The manor was always heavily guarded. No one outside the Council should've been able to enter. Unless…

They paled. Even after centuries, fear still ran deep in these ancient creatures. One by one, the shouting stopped.

"What's wrong?" Frost said mockingly. "Why so quiet all of a sudden?"

He strolled behind one of the elders—a bloated vampire in a velvet suit—and laid a hand on his shoulder.

"A mont ago, you were all so loud. What happened?"

Frost's tone dripped with contempt. These relics of the old world clung to their titles and ceremonies, too blind to see the world had moved on.

"The age of your kind is over," he said softly. "Your dieval aristocracy is dead. Your ti is up."

"You filthy half-breed!" one elder roared, leaping to his feet. "You dare challenge us? You are nothing here!"

Swish!

A flash of steel cut through the air. Frost's dagger pierced straight through the elder's heart before the man even realized he'd moved. The vampire turned to ash instantly.

The remaining elders froze, terror painted across their faces.

"Listen well," Frost said, voice low and venomous. "I've shown you respect only because of your age. Keep talking, and I'll burn this entire council to the ground."

He slamd both hands down on the table, the impact echoing like thunder through the hall. The fat elder beneath his hand didn't dare make a sound—not even a whimper.

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