Chapter 45 When One Man Becomes God
The press arrives at Vale Grace Hospital as night falls.
Perfect timing. The spiraling towers refract the last of the light through fractured amber panes, while beneath them, emerald-veined marble thrums with engineered luminescence.
Even this moment has been choreographed.
Each shadow across the sweeping entrance calibrated to cast our power in its most commanding frame.
This is how legends begin. Not through chaos, but by design.
After leaving Luna at the labs, I made three calls.
One to summon this performance, another to ensure tomorrow’s headlines echo our chosen refrain, and last to see that any footage of today’s unfortunate pursuit through the city meets a timely degradation.
History belongs to those who forge it. The masses don’t crave truth—they crave narrative, structure, and a sovereign voice to align their chaos with destiny.
The hospital’s grand atrium dominates six stories of architectural arrogance, its ceiling a shrine to modern excess. Windows stretch into the darkened skyline, while recessed lights pulse a warm glow across marble and brushed steel. At night, the effect is transcendental.
In alcoves crafted from rare jade-veined stone, patients recline on furnishings that would humble royal chambers.
Nurses glide between monitoring stations, their uniforms shimmering with protective enchantments that repel both mundane and magical impurities.
Each detail murmurs privilege. Every surface demands reverence.
Every breath inside these halls reminds the world that even death itself dares not intrude without our permission.
“Alexander.” Dr. Eric Vale steps from the private elevator, his coat a pristine slash of white against the tension threaded through his curated smile.
Even now, he clings to the image—chiseled features, golden hair sculpted by time and money, the kind of cold-blooded perfection designed for pharmaceutical campaigns—but I note the flicker beneath the polish; the twitch in his jaw; the fidget at his collar.
It’s a Sunday night, and I’ve dragged him from his Founders’ Crest estate like some overpaid intern summoned for triage.
“I must admit,” he says, voice lacquered in faux civility, “this is rather disruptive to my schedule.” The accusation breathes between us: I know about the breach and the girl. But he won’t say it in front of cameras.
“Think of the headlines, Eric.” I infuse my tone with just enough conspiracy to stroke his ego.
“Tomorrow’s coverage led by Vale Grace’s newest miracle.
The elite clawing to reserve their place in medical history.
” I watch the shift in his eyes, how greed effortlessly eclipses grievance.
“Tell me,” I add, “what’s one evening compared to the profits this publicity will generate? ”
His smile sharpens to more genuine now, calculations flickering behind his gaze. So easily baited. Dangle lumes and legacy before him, and he forgets everything else.
“Of course, of course.” He smooths his coat, preening. “Though a warning would’ve been nice. My hair isn’t even properly styled.”
Poor Eric. Still clinging to surface and show, unaware of how tightly the trap coils around him.
I allow myself a quiet satisfaction, already envisioning the collapse. Every rushed trial and corner cut in pursuit of glory, every ethical infraction, catalogued and time-stamped. All waiting to be exposed at precisely the right moment.
The Founding Families were once essential, visionaries born from collapse, architects of a new world. But now? They’re deadweight. Hollow relics clinging to old names and older promises. They’ve forgotten the burden of true power. They cannot protect this city. They cannot even save themselves.
It must be me. It has always been me.
“Spontaneity often unveils the greater truth,” I say, motioning toward the press now flooding the glass entrance. I watch him transform into the benevolent face of Vale Medical. “Shall we begin? I believe the Phase Three chamber would be particularly photogenic tonight.”
The Glimmerhunters align their Illusion Lenses with mechanical elegance. Hoverorbs hum into position as a producer lifts their hand and counts down. “Live in five, four . . . ”
I stand beneath the atrium’s engineered lighting, the marble and steel spine of Vale Grace Hospital rising behind me and creating an imposing backdrop.
“Three, two . . . ”
The SpectraPens flicker to life as the orbs ignite with that sterile blue glow that signals live transmission, and Whispersilk’s top reporters lean forward, primed to consume whatever truth I choose to offer.
“One—we’re live.”
“Good evening, Eclipsera.” I let warmth lace my tone with the practiced intimacy that compels viewers to lean in, hungry for meaning.
“Tonight, I speak to you from Vale Grace Hospital, where medical science continues to push the boundaries of what’s possible.
In an age of uncertainty, we offer something remarkable. Hope made tangible through innovation.”
The hoverorbs drift closer, capturing every nuance of my expression. I can already envision tomorrow’s headlines shimmering across the city’s towers, burying whispers of ward failures or chaos.
“Dr. Vale and his extraordinary team will unveil a breakthrough that transcends medicine. This isn’t simply a cure. It’s a future reimagined.” I allow a slow, deliberate smile. “And as always—seeing is believing.”
The press follows our curated procession through the upper levels, every corridor flooded with golden light. The Glimmerhunters’ lenses sweep across the private suites, where the privileged convalesce in rooms indistinguishable from high-rise penthouses. Each detail choreographed to conjure awe.
We pause at an observation window overlooking a standard treatment suite. A young woman lies on a bed equipped with the latest magitech monitoring systems, while a healer channels regenerative magic through her ruby.
“Traditional methods,” Eric explains, tone laced with condescension. “Reliable, yes, but crude, compared to what we’re now capable of.”
The Phase Three wing demands multiple layers of verification, each checkpoint scanning blood signatures and essence patterns. The spectacle is intentional. Security here doesn’t just protect. It provokes envy; a hunger to belong.
The observation suite dominates one curved wall, its smart-glass barrier offering an unobstructed view of the treatment chamber below. No dramatics here, just clinical perfection. Monitors hum, essence stabilizers pulse, and beneath the illusion of restraint, power waits to be revealed.
“What you’re about to witness,” Eric announces, “is the future of enhancement. Through precise genetic modification using stabilized phoenix essence, we can rewrite the very code of human limitation.”
The subject is escorted into place. She is ideal—young, symmetrical, aspirational. The daughter of wealth, but not of name. Expensive enough to grant consent, insignificant enough to disappear.
The reporters lean in, their cynicism dissolving, replaced by awe.
Below, the chamber thrums, and the screens radiate manufactured success. Every variable pre-set, and every reaction orchestrated. They see salvation, I see branding.
When the press retreats, drunk on the promise of legacy, only Eric and I remain. The chamber below dims to functional light, technicians recalibrating instruments in silence.
“A masterful showing,” I offer. He basks in the praise, smug in the aftermath of his own illusion. “Though I am curious about the actual progress on the stabilization formulas. The ones we don’t publicize.”
His smile wavers. “We’re holding at ninety-three percent integration. The serum is stable. Mostly.” A pause. “Though some long-term subjects are showing . . . deviations. Genetic drift, subtle mutations, nothing critical.”
I raise a brow. The silence invites honesty.
“Minor,” he insists. “Adaptations, really. We’re adjusting protocols, nothing we can’t handle.”
Nothing you can’t handle. I suppress a smile. Oh, Eric. You have no idea what’s coming.
“Of course.” I keep my tone neutral, supportive. “Shall we check on our other test subjects?”
His body tenses ever so slightly. He knows what awaits downstairs. The true heart of our work, hidden beneath the polished floors and public success.
The sublevel observation room is nothing like its counterpart above. No marble here. No pretense of medical elegance. Just reinforced steel and containment wards, designed to hold something far more volatile than healing magic.
Through the observation window, rows of subjects float in darker chambers. Lower Ring volunteers, though that word means something different when starvation and desperation drive the choice. Their bodies contort around essences never meant for human integration.
In one chamber, a girl spasms as Deathshade Widow toxin corrodes her nerves, capabilities already manifesting in waves of hallucinogenic energy that make the observation glass ripple.
In another, a man convulses as Bloodmist Wraith power tears through him, his form beginning to unravel into crimson vapor that can phase through solid barriers and dissolve organic matter on contact.
At the far end, a soldier thrashes. Rotvein Scorpid venom pulses in his veins, his skin streaked with black latticework. Acid drips from his jaw, hot enough to sear through enchanted plating.
He will be magnificent once we shatter whatever remains of his mind.
“The military applications are promising,” Eric says cautiously. “Though the stability issues—”
“Are being addressed,” I finish smoothly. “Luna’s recent refinements to the binding serum have yielded remarkable results.” Unlike your clumsy attempts at dominance, which end either in psychosis or a corpse.