[BL]Hunted by the God of Destruction-Chapter 203: Rot
The storm hadnβt hit yet, but the skyline already glowed with that pre-electric haze, neon lights flickering against the low clouds, thunder murmuring somewhere behind the glass. Victor sat at his desk, half in shadow, a tablet open in front of him, data feeds from the city scrolling in thin, luminous lines. π³ππ²ππ¨ππ―πππ§ππΉ.π°πΌπ
Across the room, Elias lay sprawled on the couch, still in his training shirt, damp hair curling at the ends from the earlier shower. Heβd given up pretending to read; the book sat open beside him, ignored in favor of tracing idle circles against the soft fabric of the couch. The hum of ether stabilizers built into the walls filled the silence, a quiet, rhythmic pulse meant to calm, but lately it only reminded him of how tense everything was.
Then came the knock, two sharp raps, urgent.
Victor didnβt look up. "Come in."
The door slid open, and Aswin stepped through, rain still glittering on his jacket. He looked like heβd run from the rooftop helipad straight here, breath short, eyes sharp. "Sir," he said, voice clipped. "We have movement from Adler."
Elias sat up immediately. "What kind of movement?"
Aswinβs gaze flicked briefly to him before settling on Victor. "Heβs activating ether seals around the Adler estate. Internal feeds confirm heβs locked the perimeter. His wife is under house arrest."
Victorβs pen stilled over the tablet, a grim smirk appearing on his face. "So he found out about what Annaβs child really is. Didnβt he?"
Ashwing took his coat off with slow movements. "We donβt know yet, but..." He looked at Victor, dressed in a cream blouse and navy pants with house shoes, looking perfectly at ease. "You are not going after him."
"No." Victor answered simply.
"Why? He plans to kill his wife and child." Ashwin said, thinking about the rules that applied to gods.
"He is not killing or interfering with anyone." Elias said while putting his book away. "Theobald is waiting for the fateless child to be born and kill Anna. Then nobody can stop him from devouring it."
Victorβs eyes flicked toward Elias, the faint light from the tablet painting sharp lines across his face. "Youβve been listening," he murmured, voice low but not displeased.
Elias stood, the soft fabric of his shirt clinging to his skin where it hadnβt fully dried. "You werenβt exactly subtle," he said. "Besides, I know what that kind of seal does. Heβs isolating the ether flow. It means heβs preparing for extraction."
Aswin crossed his arms, still damp from the rain. "Thatβs why I came straight here. The ether levels are off the charts. Heβs building something divine and unstable. The woman wonβt last through the night if it detonates."
"He wonβt do it. She is not giving birth yet." Victor said, his voice still low while watching Elias, his eyes fixated on the still flat belly of his pregnant mate. "He will wait while his followers are pouring their ether through the wards."
"What do you want to do?" Elias asked, his hands now clenched on the couch, tense from the thought of Victor being away; he barely cared that Anna was hurting. The last time heβd seen her, sheβd looked at him like he was a disease, a reminder of everything their family wanted buried. Whatever she had chosen to marry into, sheβd chosen it with open eyes.
He looked at Victor, who was still standing by the desk, tablet glowing faintly against the dark. "Youβre not staying still because of her," Elias said quietly.
Victorβs gaze flicked up, crimson eyes glinting with amusement. "No," he admitted. "Iβm staying still because of you."
Eliasβs pulse kicked once. "Me?"
"You think Adlerβs goal ends with his child being born?" Victor asked. He stepped closer, the soft sound of his bare feet on the marble floor the only noise in the room. "Heβs barely a nationβs god, that alone means almost nothing compared with me. He wants more power."
Elias frowned. "Meaning?"
"Meaning that he would try to get to the powerful, yet vulnerable being of a barely born demigod. After he devours his son, he will try to get to you and our child."
Eliasβs brow furrowed, the dim light from the window outlining the tension across his face. "You said he wants more power. I thought once someone ascended..."
Victorβs low laugh cut him off. "theyβd be satisfied?" he finished for him. "No. Ascension does not eliminate hunger; rather, it magnifies it.
He leaned back in his chair, the tablet screen casting a cold gleam across his features. "Theobald Adler was a low-grade god, he barely could be called that. Barely stable, held together by the ether his followers feed him. He was supposed to be grateful for that. Instead, he decided to devour his own worship."
Elias stared. "Youβre saying he plans to eat them."
Victorβs crimson eyes glinted in the dark. "Not them," he said softly. "Their children. The unborn are the purest ether reservoirs a god can touch."
Elias started to pace even if he knew that there was no way Victor would let Theobald touch him, but something didnβt add up. Something irked him about the entire situation; it was like a shiny apple, perfectly good, until you bite it and its core is already rotted.
"What about their fate?" Elias asked softly, stopping in front of Victor.
The alpha took the chance and got his mate closer to him, guiding him to sit in his lap. Ashwing sighed at that and tried to look away from it.
"Well, Adler found a way to wipe it. His child has no fate strings and Uno is curious about that."
"Uno is more curious about how to date Connor at this point."
Victorβs mouth twitched, that rare flicker of genuine amusement breaking through the cold composure that had settled over him. "You noticed that too," he murmured.
Aswin made a low sound that mightβve been a cough or a strangled laugh. "I wish I hadnβt," he muttered under his breath, focusing very intently on the rain slicking down the windows instead of the Emperor of the modern age casually holding a half-dressed omega in his lap.
Victor ignored him. "Unoβs distractions are none of my concern. What matters is what Adler learned from him."
Elias leaned back slightly, his expression sharp despite the faint flush on his cheeks. "You think Uno told him something?"
Victorβs thumb brushed absently over the inside of Eliasβs wrist, a grounding gesture that belied the edge in his voice. "Uno doesnβt teach. He tempts. He wouldβve whispered about whatβs possible when you strip fate away from a being before itβs born. Adler, in his arrogance, decided to test it."
Elias frowned. "By turning his own child into an experiment, what a heartless jerk."
"Exactly." Victorβs eyes glinted, deep crimson catching the dim light. "He devoured the ether fate should have claimed. The child became fateless, pure potential without limit or direction. Thatβs why Unoβs fascinated. He calls it a miracle. I call it rot."







