The Snake God with SSS Rank Evolution System

Chapter 111: A Spark of Hope


The afternoon sun slanted golden across Elden Hollow, painting the village in soft, peaceful light. Adam sat on the porch steps, cradling a mug of Aish's herbal cider—cool, faintly sweet, with a hint of spice that warmed the throat. He sipped slowly, letting the quiet sounds of the village wash over him.

Philip settled beside him with his own mug, the pile of split firewood now neatly stacked and covered behind them.

Adam turned to the older man, voice quieter than he intended. "Philip… may I ask about Aish's illness? You mentioned the Silverveil helps, but only for a time."

Philip's gaze drifted toward the open door where Aish was humming softly as she prepared supper. His eyes softened with a love worn smooth by decades, yet edged with helpless pain.

"It's a strange sickness," he said, voice rough. "Started years ago, after that fight. She's weak—can manage light chores, tend the garden, cook—but over time the burden builds. Eventually her whole body goes numb, like ice spreading through her veins. She has to drink the herbal tea right away or it worsens. The relief only lasts a few weeks before it returns."

He rubbed his weathered hands together, knuckles whitening.

"The priests at the temple in the capital examined her. Said there was nothing they could do. No curse, no poison they recognized. Just… damage that won't heal. I've watched the strongest woman I ever knew fade a little more each year, and there's been nothing I could do but gather flowers and pray."

The words hung heavy in the air. Adam felt them like a weight on his own heart—echoes of every time he'd been powerless to save someone he cared about. Alice's flickering presence in his soul pulsed faintly, as though reminding him why he couldn't let that happen again.

He set his mug down, expression serious but gentle. "Would you allow me to examine her? Just for a moment."

Philip hesitated, brow creasing with old, familiar despair. "Lad, the temple healers—"

"I know," Adam interrupted softly, meeting his eyes. "But I've seen things they might not have. I've… lost people because I didn't try everything. Please. Let me try."

Philip studied him for a long moment—searching, perhaps seeing the quiet pain behind Adam's calm. Then he nodded slowly, voice thick. "If it would ease your mind… I'll ask her."

He rose and stepped inside. A quiet exchange followed, tender and low. When Aish appeared in the doorway, wiping her hands on her apron, her tired smile carried decades of resilience—and quiet fear.

"If it'll put you at ease, young man," she said, "I don't mind. Though I've long since stopped hoping for miracles."

Adam stood and approached her carefully, heart unusually tight. "May I take your wrist? Just to feel your pulse."

Aish extended her arm without hesitation. Adam gently clasped her wrist, closing his eyes as Hunter's Tri-Sense flared to life—not the combat version, but the deeper diagnostic mode he had honed over countless evolutions.

At once he felt it.

A subtle fracture in the flow of ambient mana through her body. The natural currents that every living thing drew upon—faint, invisible to most—were disrupted. Her channels were scarred, cauterized in places, as though exposed to an overwhelming surge of heat in a single, violent instant.

He opened his eyes, voice steady despite the surge of empathy in his chest. "Your body struggles to absorb ambient mana. The natural energy all around us—it can't flow properly. That's why activity builds up fatigue that never fully releases. The numbness is the warning before the system collapses temporarily."

Philip's face paled. He reached for Aish's hand as if to anchor himself. "How… how could you know that?"

Adam met his gaze, choosing his words with care. "Because I've seen the cause before. Intense, instantaneous heat—enough to burn the mana pathways without fully destroying the body. A sudden explosion of fire or superheated force."

Aish's hand flew to her mouth, eyes widening with long-buried memory. Philip's grip tightened on hers, knuckles white.

"It's true," he whispered, voice breaking. "Decades ago… we were adventurers. Fought a Blazefrog Matriarch in the southern marshes. The beast spat a condensed sphere of plasma—hit Aish directly. We thought she'd survived unscathed because the burns healed… but ever since… Gods, all this time…"

Tears welled in Aish's eyes—not of sorrow, but of stunned recognition. She looked at Adam with fragile, desperate hope.

"Can… can it be mended?"

Adam's heart clenched. He thought of Alice, silent and fading within him. Of every time he'd clawed power from the dungeon's jaws only to arrive too late. This time, he wouldn't be too late.

He smiled—small, genuine, and full of quiet conviction.

"Yes. I can guide mana through the damaged channels—slowly repair the scarring so your body can absorb it naturally again. It won't be instant, but it will be permanent."

Philip's breath caught. Aish pressed a trembling hand to her chest, afraid to believe.

In his mind, doubt flickered. 'I'm not human anymore. My mana is monster. What if it's incompatible?'

He silently asked the System a question, 'Are human and monster mana fundamentally different?'

[Response: All living creatures in this world draw upon the same universal mana field. Affinity and elemental alignment vary, but the base essence is identical. Exceptions: Void and Divine/Light essences exist outside natural law and may conflict with standard mana.]

The answer struck him like a quiet thunderclap—vital knowledge delivered without warning, yet perfectly timed.

He exhaled slowly, steadying the sudden rush of gratitude and resolve.

"Aish," he said gently, "close your eyes and relax. This won't hurt."

She obeyed, tears slipping down her cheeks as decades of quiet suffering surfaced. Philip stood beside her, one arm around her shoulders, eyes fixed on Adam with wordless thanks.

Adam placed both hands lightly on her forearms. He drew upon his own vast reserves—carefully filtered, pure neutral mana without draconic or void taint—and let it flow in a gentle, steady stream.

Soft azure light bloomed around them, warm and soothing, like sunlight seen through clear water. It swirled gently over Aish's skin, seeping inward along the scarred pathways—mending, soothing, restoring.

Aish gasped softly—not in pain, but in wonder—as feeling returned in places long numb. Warmth spread through her limbs, chasing away the lingering cold that had become her constant companion. Tears flowed freely now, but her face shone with joy.

The light pulsed for nearly a minute, then faded.

Adam released her, stepping back, his own chest tight with emotion he hadn't expected.

"Try moving," he said quietly.

Aish opened her eyes, flexed her fingers, then took a tentative step—then another. Color returned to her cheeks. Strength—true, vibrant strength—flowed through her like it hadn't in decades. She laughed, a bright, trembling sound of pure, astonished joy, and threw her arms around Philip.

"I feel… light," she whispered against his shoulder. "Like I did thirty years ago. Like I could run through the fields again."

Philip held her tightly, face buried in her hair, shoulders shaking with silent sobs of relief and gratitude. When he finally pulled back, his eyes—red-rimmed but shining—met Adam's.

"You've given us back our life, son," he said, voice breaking. "Whatever you need—anything we have—it's yours. Always."

Adam swallowed hard, the weight in his chest easing into something warm and steady.

"I'm glad I could help," he managed, the words rough with his own unspoken emotion.

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