Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 139 - 135 – Blood That Obeys from Transmigration: Into the Life of Severus Snape, a Adventure novel by Transmigration: Into the Life of Severus Snape.

The lab was silent save for the steady hum of rune-lit wards and the faint whir of the enchanted microscope. The air hung heavy with the scent of tal and charred herbs, tinged with the acrid sll of preserved specins. Severus bent over the glass slide, black eyes narrowing to pinpoints of concentration as he compared two samples: Lucian's blood — sluggish and tallic, its dark crimson surface clumping together in unnatural patterns as though it wanted to devour itself — and a vial of wolf's blood he had prepared earlier, its russet hue still vibrant despite hours under preservation charms.

The difference was imdiate and startling.

Where the vampire blood fought itself in microscopic warfare, tearing apart every semblance of cellular structure in a vicious cycle of destruction and regeneration, the wolf's blood t it and… mimicked. The vampire cells pulled at it with hungry tendrils, tested its composition with predatory curiosity, and instead of collapsing into the gray ash that marked most failed experints, the animal blood attempted to regenerate, struggling to copy the unnatural rhythm that pulsed through the cursed sample.

Severus stilled, his pale lips pressed into a thin line of concentration. He leaned back slowly in his chair, the leather creaking softly as he moved, and ran his ink-stained fingers along the worn edge of the mahogany desk. The implications of what he was witnessing sent a thrill of discovery through his analytical mind.

Aurora, perched on a tall stool across the cluttered table, tilted her head with keen interest. Her amber eyes reflected the soft glow of the laboratory's enchanted lighting. "What do you see?"

Severus gestured sharply at the slide, his movent precise and urgent. "Do you see this? Vampire blood isn't decaying as we assud. It's… cannibalizing. Every drop fights itself in perpetual conflict, tearing and repairing in endless, futile cycles. That's why they're never sated — the blood they drink never wins the battle. It's always devoured by the curse itself, consud before it can provide true sustenance."

Aurora leaned closer, her breath fogging the glass slightly as her eyes flicked between the two samples, studying the writhing patterns beneath the lens. "And the wolf blood?"

He tapped the glass with one long finger, his voice clipped but charged with sothing close to scholarly exhilaration. "It tries to imitate. It bends rather than breaks under the curse's influence. Look at the cellular pattern here — imperfect and unstable, yes, but it responds to the vampiric pull instead of simply collapsing into nothing. It's closer to what the curse demands, closer to compatibility than anything we've tested before."

He seized his quill, the feather trembling slightly in his grip as he scrawled across the parchnt with violent precision. His words ca in sharp, muttered bursts: "Every failed Potions Master who ca before tried to cut the curse out, cleanse it like so common infection. Fools, all of them. But this isn't infection. It isn't corruption—not in any way they understood."

Aurora shifted closer to his desk, her brow furrowing as she watched the frantic scratching of his quill. "Then what is it?"

Severus looked up sharply, his eyes dark and gleaming with sudden clarity. "Transformation. A complete rewriting of blood identity at the cellular level. They've all been trying to erase it, to burn it out like a disease." His quill paused mid-stroke, hovering over the parchnt as the words spilled from his lips faster than he could capture them in ink. "But what if—what if I don't need to erase it at all? What if I can trick it instead? Feed it sothing it will accept as legitimate. Sothing close enough to human blood to satisfy the curse's requirents, but stable enough to blunt the violent extres of transformation."

Aurora folded her arms across her chest, studying his animated features with growing concern. "You an like fake blood?" she asked incredulously, her voice rising slightly.

His mouth curved into sothing that might have been a smile, though it was thin and entirely humorless. "Synthetic blood," he corrected, his voice gaining strength with each word. "Not human. Not animal. Sothing engineered to exist between the two. Sothing that obeys my commands rather than the curse's whims."

For the first ti since he had begun this impossible research, the path ahead wasn't a blind wall built from decades of failures, but a door standing half-open in the darkness, waiting for him to gather the courage and knowledge to force it wide.

Aurora studied him in weighted silence for a long mont, noting the way his shoulders had straightened, how his breathing had steadied. When she finally spoke, her voice was soft but pointed. "You sound like you've stopped trying to fight the curse head-on… and started planning to outwit it instead."

Severus's ink-stained fingers tightened around the quill until his knuckles showed white beneath the skin. His eyes never left hers as he spoke with quiet, deadly certainty: "Yes. And this ti, Aurora, I fully intend to win."

The days blurred together in a haze of obsessive determination.

The lab reeked of scorched herbs and old blood, acrid fus hanging in the air like the lingering spirits of countless failed experints. The stone walls seed to absorb the bitter scents, holding them prisoner alongside the shadows that danced in the flickering candlelight. Severus stood in the center of the chaos, his tall fra gaunt from sleepless nights and forgotten als, moving with chanical precision from bubbling cauldron to brass microscope to ink-stained parchnt in an endless, maddening cycle.

Glass bottles cluttered every available surface of the workbenches — so bearing spider-web cracks from violent overreactions, others permanently stained with the stubborn residue of spoiled concoctions that had curdled beyond recognition. Scattered ingredients created a maze of vials and pouches: dried moonstone powder, pickled salamander eyes, and bundles of withered herbs that crumbled at the slightest touch.

Three separate brews had already collapsed into useless, reeking sludge over the past two days, each one rejected with violent prejudice by the vampire's blood sample when examined under the unforgiving lens of the microscope. The curse that infected the blood was like a living thing — it devoured anything too simple with ravenous hunger, yet spat out anything too foreign as if insulted by the offering.

Aurora had maintained her vigil throughout every painstaking attempt, perched on a tall stool in the corner, her presence a silent anchor in the storm of Severus's frustration. For hours she watched without comnt, observing his thodical movents and the increasingly tight set of his jaw. Finally, as he began preparing what must have been his dozenth variation, she broke the heavy silence.

"You look like you've stopped chasing a ghost and started hunting sothing real."

Severus's only reply was a low grunt, his long fingers steady and sure as he thodically crushed hellebore root between mortar and pestle, reducing it to the finest possible dust. "Ghosts are easier than this," he muttered, his voice rough from hours of silence. He scraped the pale powder into the simring cauldron with deliberate care, watching as the brew transford into a vivid, promising crimson. "At least ghosts have the courtesy to fade when you finally manage to strike them."

Aurora leaned her elbows on the counter, eyes following his every motion with the intensity of a student trying to morize a master's technique. "And this one? What do you expect it to do?"

"I don't expect," Severus said sharply, his voice cutting through the humid air of the laboratory. He asured out powdered wormwood with deliberate precision, the silver dust catching the candlelight as he stirred it into the bubbling mixture. "I observe. I alter. I try again."

She smirked faintly, a ghost of humor flickering across her tired features. "You sound like Langford when she's lecturing us about the virtues of failure."

His lips twitched in the closest thing to amusent she'd seen from him in days of relentless experintation. "Failure leaves patterns," he said, his voice softer now, almost contemplative. "Patterns can be broken."

The cauldron hissed violently as he added the final elent: a single vial of anticoagulant, thin and clear as mountain water. Smuggled from a Muggle dical supplier through carefully cultivated Zabini channels, the liquid curled into the mixture like veins of molten glass, creating delicate spirals that seed almost alive. The potion thickened imdiately, its consistency shifting from watery to syrupy as it darkened into a blood-red so deep it was almost black. Its scent rose in waves—tallic, sharp, unsettlingly close to the copper tang of real blood, yet sohow more concentrated, more primal.

Severus siphoned a portion into a glass vial, his hands moving with unnervingly precise control despite the hours of physical and ntal strain etched into the sharp planes of his face. He turned slowly, and his black eyes, rimd with exhaustion but still burning with determination, fixed on Lucian.

"Drink."

The vampire sat slouched in the reinforced chair that had beco his prison and testing ground, arms folded across his chest in a pose of studied indifference. His pale mouth curled in familiar disdain, though Aurora caught the flicker of wariness that crossed his gaunt features. "Another failure to choke down? Another poison to burn through what's left of my throat?"

"Another test," Severus corrected with cold patience, extending the vial toward him with steady fingers. The dark liquid within seed to pulse in the candlelight. "If you wish to leave, the door is there. Otherwise, drink."

Lucian's gaze lingered on him for a mont, storm-grey eyes sharp with reluctant respect that seed to war with his inherent distrust. The silence stretched between them, heavy with unspoken implications. At last, he snatched the vial from Severus's outstretched hand and lifted it to eye level, studying the viscous crimson liquid that swirled within the glass like liquid garnet. "If this kills , I'll haunt you."

"You'd have competition," Severus said flatly, his tone carrying the weight of old ghosts and older regrets.

Aurora almost choked back a laugh at the unexpected dry humor, pressing her lips together to contain it.

Lucian cast one final, asuring look at Severus before tipping the vial back and swallowing its contents in one decisive motion. His throat worked once, the muscles contracting visibly beneath pale skin. Twice. The motion seed almost human, almost vulnerable. And then he stilled completely, as if his entire being had paused to assess what coursed through his veins.

The change was subtle but undeniable to those who knew what to watch for. His shoulders loosened gradually, the rigid tension of perpetual hunger uncoiling like a released spring. His jaw unclenched, the sharp angles of his face softening increntally. For the first ti since arriving at their makeshift laboratory, he seed less apex predator and more man—or at least, more like the man he had once been. He drew in a breath he did not need and exhaled slowly, deliberately, like soone who had been holding it far too long.

"This is…" His hollow voice faltered, as if searching for words that had no precedent in his experience, then steadied with growing wonder. "…full. Complete. Not the sharp fire of human blood that burns and fades. But close. Like a al that lingers, that satisfies rather than rely sustaining."

Severus was already scribbling furiously, his quill flying across parchnt with practiced efficiency. Reduction in hunger spikes. Delayed pallor. Stable eye pigntation for three minutes longer than baseline. Subject reports sensation of satiation rather than temporary suppression.

Aurora moved closer, her scholarly excitent overriding her usual caution, her own eyes widening with fascination. "Severus… his skin—look, it's actually warr. And his eyes aren't blackening at the edges like they usually do when he's fighting the hunger."

Severus did not look up from his notes, his voice remaining low and clipped, but underneath the professional detachnt pulsed the first genuine spark of triumph he'd allowed himself in months. "This is not suppression. This is replacent."

Aurora's hand lingered over the cauldron's rim, her fingers trembling slightly from the residual heat of the brewing process. When she spoke, her tone was carefully asured, almost warning. "Don't call it a cure yet. Don't make the mistake every other Potions Master did before us."

"I won't," Severus murmured, though his quill pressed harder into the parchnt as he scrawled his observations, the sharp tip nearly tearing through the yellowed surface. Inside his mind, he was already dissecting the endless possibilities this breakthrough presented.

Not a cure—that would imply an end, a permanent solution.

A leash—sothing to control what had always been uncontrollable.

A key—one that might unlock doors they'd never dared to imagine.

Across the dimly lit laboratory, Lucian sat back in his chair, the wood creaking under his weight as he stared at the empty crystal vial in his pale hands. His expression held sothing approaching awe, a wonder that seed foreign on his ancient features. "For the first ti in two hundred years," he said quietly, his voice barely above a whisper, "I don't want to tear anyone's throat out. The hunger... it's still there, but it's distant. Manageable."

Aurora glanced sideways at Severus, catching sight of the faintest flicker in his dark eyes—not pride, not yet, but sothing dangerously close to it. Sothing that spoke of possibilities and power, and perhaps the first taste of a victory that had eluded him for far too long.

The next morning, the laboratory felt transford—colder sohow, its sterile air heavy with the tallic tang of iron and the acrid, herbal remnants of last night's experintal brew still clinging to the stone walls. Severus stood motionless at the edge of the testing chamber, his black robes pooling around his feet as ancient shutters groaned in protest above him. With thodical precision, he adjusted the protective wards, allowing only the most delicate veil of filtered daylight to penetrate the enchanted barriers. The specially treated glass caught the morning sun and transford it into sothing softer—cloud-grey and muted—but unmistakably sunlight nonetheless.

Lucian remained frozen near the threshold, every line of his pale form taut with tension. His lips slowly peeled back to reveal gleaming fangs, sharp as polished ivory in the dim light. "You'll kill ," he said, his voice barely above a whisper yet carrying clearly through the chamber. Though his words spoke of death, his dark eyes betrayed a complex mixture of primal wariness and sothing far more dangerous—anticipation that bordered on hunger.

"No," Severus answered without hesitation, his tone carrying the weight of absolute certainty, flat and uncompromising as granite. He did not look away from the shaft of light as he commanded, "Step forward."

The vampire's entire body seed to coil like a predator preparing to strike, his teeth bared again in an instinctive snarl. But despite every instinct screaming at him to flee, he obeyed. With movents slow and deliberate as a man approaching his execution, Lucian extended one pale hand toward the waiting beam of transford sunlight.

The reaction was imdiate and startling—not the violent, flesh-destroying sizzle that Severus had so carefully docunted in his previous experints, but a soft, almost gentle hiss, like droplets of water spattering against sun-heated stone. Lucian's alabaster skin flushed to a warm rose, the delicate network of veins beneath rising to prominence as if mildly irritated, but the flesh remained whole. No charring. No smoke. No dissolution into ash. He flexed his long fingers experintally, watching them move in the filtered light with an expression that could only be described as profound shock.

"It itches," Lucian finally managed, his voice rough with wonder and disbelief. He turned his wrist with growing confidence, deliberately exposing more of his pale skin to the gentle beam. "Like… like standing too close to a hearth fire, when the heat bites and prickles but doesn't break the skin. But it isn't pain. Not death." He paused, seeming to search for words adequate to describe this impossible sensation. "It's warmth without destruction."

Severus leaned forward in his chair, every nerve in his body sharpened to a razor's edge, his dark eyes fixed intently on Lucian's outstretched hand. "Describe it in detail. Every sensation. Is there pressure? Tingling? Does the heat burn beneath the skin, or does it remain only on the surface?"

Lucian's pale brow furrowed as he concentrated, his ancient mind carefully cataloging each unfamiliar sensation coursing through his undead flesh. "It's layered," he said slowly, his voice carrying a note of wonder that he hadn't experienced in centuries. "The surface sensation cos first — sharp and imdiate, like brushing against stinging nettles. But beneath that initial sting, there's sothing else entirely. A heaviness, a pressure that settles deep into the tissue. It's not agony, not the searing tornt I've known for so long. It's more like… weight pressing down steadily, as if the curse itself is fighting sothing but can no longer identify what it should be fighting against." He flexed his pale fingers again, turning his hand this way and that in the golden shaft of sunlight, almost fascinated by his own ability to do so without bursting into flas. "Normally, you understand, the sun tears through vampiric flesh like a blade through parchnt. This feels fundantally different… blunted, sohow. As though there's sothing substantial standing between and the light, dulling what should be a lethal blade."

Aurora, who had been standing silently behind Severus with her arms folded tightly across her chest, spoke in a voice barely above a whisper, her tone heavy with the weight of realization. "That's more progress than any healer has managed in recorded history. Even wolfsbane at its most potent doesn't create this kind of blunting effect. Severus… what you've accomplished here — you've actually interrupted the fundantal chanics of the curse itself."

Severus's quill moved across the parchnt with frantic urgency, scratching furiously as he attempted to capture every detail, every nuance of this unprecedented breakthrough. Ink blotted the page in his desperate haste to record his observations. Irritation versus combustion, he scrawled. Stabilized regeneration versus cellular destruction. Conflict reduced but not entirely erased. His brilliant mind spun with possibilities, theories, and potential modifications to his formula.

Lucian slowly lowered his hand, withdrawing it from the stream of sunlight, and both Severus and Aurora watched with fascination as the angry redness that had blood across his pale skin faded completely within re monts of leaving the light's touch. He flexed his fingers experintally once more, testing for any lingering effects, then lifted his gaze to et Severus's dark eyes. His expression was unlike anything either of them had seen from the ancient vampire before — neither his usual sharp mockery nor his characteristic disdain, but sothing far more genuine, sothing that approached actual respect.

"You've given sothing I haven't felt in centuries upon centuries of existence," Lucian said, his voice dropping to a quiet, almost reverent tone. "Ti. Precious ti under the sun, however brief and limited it might be." He paused, allowing the weight of that gift to settle between them, before his tone shifted back toward his more familiar sardonic register, though notably the razor-sharp edge that usually characterized his words had dulled considerably. "You'd better be careful, little lord. If word of this spreads and you continue making progress like this, you'll have half the night clans in Europe crawling to your doorstep, begging and pleading for your miracle cure."

Severus t the vampire's ancient gaze without the slightest flinch, his own dark eyes steady and determined. "It's not a miracle," he said firmly, his voice carrying the weight of scientific precision. "It's deception. Pure and calculated deception. A carefully crafted lie fed directly to the curse's fundantal nature, sustained just long enough that the magic begins to forget its own ancient hunger."

Aurora's eyes narrowed at him, her gaze sharp as a blade. "And you think you can perfect that lie?"

"I don't think," Severus replied coldly, his voice carrying the weight of absolute certainty. His eyes flicked deliberately from Lucian's fading redness—the unnatural flush that had begun to drain from the vampire's pale features—to the faintly glowing vial still pulsing with ethereal light on his desk. The liquid within seed to pulse in rhythm with so unseen heartbeat, casting shifting shadows across the stone walls. "I will. Vampirism is nothing more than a rewriting of blood, a corruption of what once was human. If blood can be rewritten once, it can be rewritten again. The curse will obey my will, as all magic must."

For a mont, the chamber fell into an oppressive silence, broken only by the faint, persistent hum of the ancient wards that protected this place. The very air seed to hold its breath, waiting. Then Severus spoke again, his voice softer but edged with iron determination that brooked no argunt:

"If Voldemort thinks to rule this world with beasts chained to his endless night, then I will give those beasts the gift of day. And blood that obeys no master but its own choosing."

Lucian's pale lips curved into the barest suggestion of a smile, neither wholly pleased nor entirely troubled by what he had witnessed. "Then, Lord Shafiq… you may have just begun a war of your own making."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hi everyone,

Thank you so much for your continued support!

I hope you're enjoying the story so far—your feedback truly ans the world to . I'd love to hear your thoughts on where you'd like the story to go next, so feel free to share any ideas or suggestions in the comnts.

Get early access to up to 20 advanced chapters by joining my Patre on!

Stay ahead of the story, enjoy exclusive perks, and support my writing while helping this content grow!

Please visit :-

Patre on (slash) Maggie329

You are reading Transmigration: Into the Life of Severus Snape Chapter 139 - 135 – Blood That Obeys on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Tree of Aeons cover
Same genre

Tree of Aeons

Spaizzer ·Adventure

Thisisareincarnation/isekaistory,aboutMatt(laterTreeTree),anoverpoweredtreeinafantasyworldthatservesasthebattlefieldforanongoingconflictbetweendemo...

The Lucky Farmgirl cover
Trending now

The Lucky Farmgirl

Bamboo Rain ·Romance

TheFourthBrotherhadsquanderedhiswealththroughgambling,leavingtheirmotherinacriticalstate.Tomakemattersworse,thecreditorsevenaskedthemtosellManbaoto...

I'm the Culinary God cover
Trending now

I'm the Culinary God

Greedy kitten ·Fantasy

LinXu,whoisabouttograduatefromuniversity,suddenlygetsboundtotheCookingGodsystemandhasbecometheownerofarestaurant.Totastehishandmadenoodles,customer...

Supreme Vision Master cover
Trending now

Supreme Vision Master

Mo Yan ·Fantasy

Cultivationdestroyed,eyespoisonedblindandrobbedofherstatusinthehousehold? LuoQingtongnarrowshereyesandsneers,“Bringiton!Letmeteachyoualesson!” A24t...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.