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The Guardian gods-Chapter 490
Chapter 490: 490
The passing years were not idle for Roth. Though time meant little to him now, its slow rhythm brought a quiet kind of fulfillment. His people—his children—were thriving. From the seed he had planted, a race had flourished, and what had begun as an experiment born of defiance now stood as a civilization in its own right.
What pleased him most, however, were not the numbers, nor the growing reach of their culture. It was the emergence of the hybrids—those born of vampire and human blood, beings who retained the strength, longevity, and instincts of their full-blooded kin, yet walked freely beneath the sun. These were not mere anomalies. They were, in many ways, a refinement—what many began to call the perfected kind. They represented a future unshackled by the ancient weaknesses of vampirism. To Roth, they were both blessing and omen.
Beyond the veil of mist that clung eternally to the old forest, these hybrids had built a city—elegant, cunning in design, harmonized with the wilderness yet radiant with ambition. Towers of dark stone crowned with copper roofs pierced the clouds. Aqueducts carried water laced with blood and wine. Markets bustled at dusk, and lanterns of colored glass lit the streets by night. Their culture was their own—echoes of the old empire could still be heard in their accents and rituals, but their identity was wholly new.
Meanwhile, the misted forest remained sacred. It was the cradle of their beginning and the last true haven for the full-blooded vampires—those for whom the sun was still death, not warmth. They lived in the twilight beneath the trees, in quiet groves and deep burrows beneath the roots, forming a society of their own. They revered Roth not just as their progenitor, but as a living myth—half-forgotten by the younger generations, remembered only in song and symbol. Few had seen him in recent years.
And that was no accident.
As the decades passed, Roth found himself drifting ever further from the civilization he had nurtured. Their councils, their disputes, their hunger for expansion and innovation—all of it began to feel hollow. Mortal concerns. No longer his. Their voices, once vibrant to his ears, grew dim and distant. He listened less, watched from afar, and in time, even his direct guidance ceased.
He might have ascended then, joining the others beyond the veil of mortality, claiming his rightful place among the divine. Yet he lingered. Not out of doubt in his people’s future—but because of Murmur.
He had not forgotten the continent in which he had made his claim.
Though his people now thrived, Roth could not shake the unease that curled in his chest like cold smoke. Their success, their unchecked growth so far—it was too easy. Too... allowed.
The land they had made their home, this southern continent so rich in mana and unguarded by the Empire’s long reach, did not belong to him. It belonged, in spirit if not in claim, to Murmur—a being of mystery and madness enough to challenge the origin gods, whose dominion touched the shadows between thoughts. Roth had expected resistance, a reckoning, a price. But none had come.
Not a whisper. Not a sign.
This, more than anything, unsettled him.
Was Murmur watching? Waiting? Did the demon truly care nothing for the creeping civilization forming beneath his gaze? Or was this the quiet before something far worse?
So Roth had hidden himself away, allowing rumor and legend to paint him as a god long ascended. In truth, he lingered in stillness, watching from his tower, his presence a shadow behind the mist. He hoped that by playing the part of the vanished deity, he might coax a reaction. That Murmur, mistaking Roth’s absence for departure, might make a move, reveal something—anything.
But nothing came. Years passed. The hybrids built temples. The full-bloods retreated further into their traditions. And Murmur, if he still watched, did so in silence.
Still, Roth waited.
Still, he listened.
And though he told no one—he feared the silence more than he ever feared the storm.
Roth was drawn from his thoughts by the soft creak of the library doors swinging open—a sound that rarely interrupted his solitude. What followed was a distinct, unnatural noise: a metallic ting, sharp and rhythmic, echoing through the silent chamber with each step. It was not the sound of ordinary footsteps, but something heavier, deliberate, almost ceremonial.
He did not look up at first. The scent was familiar. The presence even more so. He knew who it was before the figure even crossed the threshold.
The steps drew closer, stopping just beyond the pool of lamplight that illuminated the white table where Roth sat with his book and cup of thick red liquid. The silence that followed was not hesitant, nor respectful. It was confident—deliberate, even.
Finally, Roth lifted his gaze.
Before him stood Ethan.
No longer the youthful, wide-eyed boy who once called him Father with reverence and fear. Gone was the eager apprentice, the child who used to bow his head and lower his eyes in Roth’s presence. What stood before him now was something else—taller than most men by far, nearly reaching three meters, with a posture that spoke of experience hard-earned and strength carefully measured.
Ethan’s body bore the signs of transformation—of uncontrolled potential forced into shape by sheer will. Veins of blood-red crystal lined his limbs, glimmering in the low light like living armor. The growth had begun in his adolescence, a consequence of his gift being too potent for his mortal frame. The crystal had formed as a mutation, a defense mechanism. A prison. A power source. No one knew for certain. Least of all Ethan himself.
The crystalline structures encased his feet and shins like armored greaves, explaining the sharp ting that followed him wherever he walked. They cracked slightly with each motion, but never broke—constantly growing, constantly reforming. They had become as much a part of him as his name.
Yet it was not Ethan’s size, nor his mutation, that gave Roth pause. It was the gaze.
He no longer bowed.
He no longer flinched beneath Roth’s crimson stare.
Instead, he met it with one of his own—cold, unwavering, sharp as a blade yet hollow in a way that made Roth feel, for a brief moment, as though he were the one being judged.
The boy had changed.
Roth had watched it happen, slowly, inevitably. Years of leadership, and the burden of being the first—the original—had forged Ethan into something other than what Roth had intended. He had inherited the first blood, the purest strand of Roth’s own power, and with it came expectations, praise, fear... and a creeping distance.
There were days Roth wondered if Ethan even realized the change within himself.
How his voice had grown quieter, colder.
How the weight of command had replaced the warmth of curiosity.
How his once-bright dreams had dulled into grim resolve.
This change... this coldness in Ethan’s eyes... it was not unique.
It was a flaw Roth had begun to see more clearly with each passing year—a pattern, a creeping rot hidden beneath the beauty and strength of his godling race. Vampires, born of his divine blood, were not evolving into a unified people as he had once dreamed. They were fracturing.
There was too much intrigue—whispers in shadows, silent rivalries simmering beneath polite smiles, and ambitions masked behind false loyalty. Even within his inner circle, Roth could feel it: the weighing of power, the measuring of favors, the unspoken calculations of what might be possible after he was gone.
Perhaps it was the human nature in them—something his blood gift could not entirely erase. His creation had been born from mortals, after all. Their base instincts lingered beneath the surface: the hunger not just for blood, but for control, for dominance, for meaning.
They were not like the godlings of the North, or the deep-forest godlings of the east. Other divine lineages seemed to move as one—unified, directed, almost hive-like in their singular devotion to a cause, an ideal, a god.
His children? They wandered. They splintered. They whispered.
They fought each other more than they prepared for the world beyond.
And while they had not yet descended into chaos, had not yet drawn true blood from one another... Roth knew the only reason was him. His presence—his authority, his shadow—was the dam holding back the flood.
But what would happen when he finally took the next step?
What would happen when he was gone?
He could see it clearly now. The silence he once mistook for harmony was merely stillness before the storm. The factions already forming. The feuds disguised as philosophy. The future he feared was etched behind Ethan’s eyes—a future where blood would run freely, not from prey, but from kin.
And what troubled Roth most was not the inevitability of it.
It was that he did not know if it was wrong.
For a race born of blood, was conflict not its natural evolution?