Chapter 772: Progenitor Ego and Pride
Chapter 772: Progenitor Ego and Pride
The Heavenchild private estate clung to the western cliffs of Hell’s Paradise Island like a predator that had chosen elegance over brute force, a long, low compound of pale stone and dark wood driven deep into the rock above the resort’s main bay.
From the upper terrace the lake unfurled in slow, patient indigo to the horizon, the late-evening sun melting along its surface in long beaten-gold ribbons that shimmered like the last generous breath of a dying god, and the air carried the intimate, mineral perfume of salt and warm stone laced with the distant, treacherous sweetness of jasmine rising from the cultivated gardens below.
A low teak table had been placed upon the terrace with the quiet precision of ritual. Two crystal tumblers: a decanter of single malt older than most heads of state and a small silver bowl of ice that no one would ever touch.
The small, unobtrusive man in white gloves had already withdrawn to an patient, invisible distance servants instinctively claim when their patriarchs are about to speak words no record will ever be permitted to capture.
The wind off the bay carried even the echo of footsteps away with it, leaving only the hush of two men who ruled empires that most of the world would never know existed.
Elliot Heavenchild, patriarch of the Heavenchild Legacy family, occupied the high-backed cane chair on the ocean side of the table. Mid-sixties, silver threading his temples like frost on ancient steel.
His posture remained patient and still as though he had spent the recent unpleasantness pretending the family had not lost several very public, very expensive points of confidence, and he intended to keep pretending until the pretense itself became reality.
Harold Maxton sat opposite him, swirling the scotch.
He sipped.
He smiled.
"Elliot."
"Harold."
"It has been a difficult week, hasn’t it."
"It has."
There was a pause before Harold’s smile deepened, preparing to offer sympathy he did not feel and never will.
"I cannot imagine," Harold said, his voice smooth, "what this has done to the Heavenchild name. Worldwide. The footage was... well. You have seen the footage."
Elliot had seen the footage.
Everyone and every Legacy family had seen the footage: Marcus Heavenchild—Tier-Zero progenitor of the Heavenchild line—kneeling in the Empyrean restaurant on the floor of the Infinity Chaos Hotel, as if he were only a breath away from pressing his lips to the bare foot of a seventeen-year-old boy.
The clips had been edited, re-uploaded, subtitled, and translated into every major language by sundown of the same day, and the family’s holdings in continental markets had taken serious, measurable hits before the morning bell of the next trading day.
"I can imagine," Elliot answered, tone measured.
"Truly embarrassing. Recoverable, of course. Eventually. The Heavenchilds have weathered worse. But publicly. On a feed..." Harold allowed himself a small, theatrical wince. "Even I found myself flinching on your behalf."
"Thank you, Harold."
"And I want you to know my family is, of course, prepared to support yours through this transitional period. Whatever you need. Whatever resources. You have only to ask."
"That is generous."
"We are family, Elliot. In all the ways that matter."
The lie settled between them on the teak table like a third guest, polished and poisonous, and both men let it sit there without comment.
Elliot took a small, measured sip.
The sea breeze moved the candle-flames in the lanterns along the terrace railing, painting restless gold across the crystal.
’He is enjoying this far more than he pretends not to.’
"Honestly, Elliot," Harold continued, voice dropping to something flatter, colder, the performative sympathy peeling away like old paint, "I did not expect the boy to be this strong this soon."
The words hung there, heavy with genuine unease.
"Fine. Marcus, unlike my Danton, is still a human. He hasn’t awakened yet. I grant you that, with all the love in the world for your son." Each comparison slipped out casual as a stiletto between ribs, delivered as though Harold were barely invested in the scoring.
"But Marcus is still a... progenitor. He has carried his memories for years. He has been Helel in the back of his mind longer than Phei has known who truly he is. Phei should not have been able to do what he did to him at the Empyrean. Not that easily. Not without a real fight."
Harold’s eyes never left Elliot’s.
"The fact that Phei did it anyway—that he accomplished something that disastrous to Heavenchild progenitor carrying full ancestral awareness and made him kneel and do that to his pants—tells me something I did not want to be told. The boy is much further along than any of us projected. Much further along than the dome was ever meant to contain. The witch’s collapse has been more catastrophic than my people initially read."
’Of course, I know how strong Phei is, thanks to my beloved useless sister.’ Harold cackled inwardly.
’There it is. The real reason you came. Not sympathy. Fear wearing a dinner jacket.’ Elliot was in the sea of his own thoughts looking at Harold.
Elliot felt the flex and the quiet alarm beneath the narcissism.
Harold Maxton had not crossed a lake to gloat.
He had come because the clock they had been running in secret had just ticked louder, and the window they had been operating inside had narrowed to a razor’s edge in the last forty-eight hours.
Anger Harold tonight and the entire architecture of the next eighteen months could come crashing down around the small, private satisfaction of a verbal correction.
Elliot nodded, slowly.
"If only Marcus had not rushed."
"If only," Harold agreed, the words tasting of shared regret neither man believed.
A pause stretched between them, comfortable only on the surface.
"Though, Elliot—and I say this as someone who has spent the better part of his life in the same households as progenitor’s descendant and the father of a progenitor’s reincarnation—the pride of a progenitor is not something we manage... it is something we react to.
"We can only respond efficiently enough to ensure their pride and ego of our betters do not, by their natural exuberance, ruin everything for the rest of us."
"You are not wrong."
It was the truest thing Harold had spoken all evening.
He had tried to stop Marcus, had warned him, in the small, careful tone a father uses with a son whose ancestral memories place the son several rungs above the father in the true hierarchy of the house, that the Empyrean was not the place to make an example of Phei and humiliate the dragon before his women and family.
That a public confrontation with a Cosmic Dragon over women Marcus had already lost was self-destructive theatre no self-respecting Helel progenitor should ever indulge.
He was convinced that the plan—to stride in, project authority, reclaim his lover, his sister, and his betrothed in front of the boy who had taken them, all while ensuring the watching room understood exactly who the cosmic adult was—had never been flawless.
Marcus had not listened... blinded by pride.
Marcus had been certain that the moment he stepped into the room his status alone would right the scales, that the women would realize how wrong they’d been after he humiliates Phei and the boy would shrink, and the watching room would whisper for years about the elegant, patient way Marcus Heavenchild had reclaimed what was his.
Ego.
Pride.
Marcus had cared more for the demonstration than the outcome.
He had needed the women he had lost to witness the unworthiness of the boy who now possessed them... he had needed the room to see it, and he had prepared footage to immortalize it.
The footage now existed, indelible and merciless, of a Heavenchild heir on his knees, almost kissing the bare foot of a Phei like a penitent before an altar he had never meant to worship.
Elliot set his glass down with the faintest click of crystal on teak and let the sea wind carry the echo away.
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