Font Size
15px

Laziel Wynn stepped into the manor like it was a cri scene he’d been summoned to fix. He was draped in slate-gray robes trimd in matte black silk, his gloves tight, his boots soundless. He carried no luggage nor sketchbook, just an air of doom and taste so refined it could cut through glass.

His eyes swept the sunroom like it might disappoint him.

It did.

"You’re late," Elias said, because he couldn’t help himself.

Laziel’s green eyes moved to him like the sun deciding whether to bother shining.

"I’m early, darling," Laziel said, voice smooth and polished like lacquer. "You’re late to self-awareness."

Victor coughed into his hand, utterly entertained by this man’s audacity. "He’s been under pressure."

"And it shows," Laziel replied, already walking past them. "The furniture is trying to compensate for his posture."

Elias opened his mouth to retort but closed it again when Laziel snapped his fingers.

Three quietly terrified attendants appeared from the hallway, dragging wheeled racks of garnts behind them. The racks were covered in dark fabric, which made Elias reconsider his choices and consider seclusion as a good point in his life.

The fabric shielding the garnts wasn’t just for drama; it had weight. Texture. The cloth whispered that you can’t afford to touch unless your net worth cos with a comma and generational trauma.

Laziel didn’t spare the racks a glance. He reached into the folds of his robe and retrieved a thin tablet, matte black and edged in silver. A single tap sent a soft chi through the room, and suddenly the lighting shifted, just subtly. The warmth bled out of the afternoon sun filtering through the glass, replaced with sothing cooler, sharper. Tailor-lighting. Judgnt lighting.

Victor raised an eyebrow. "Do you travel with your own preset?"

"I don’t trust natural sunlight," Laziel said flatly. "It has no taste."

Elias pressed a hand to his temple. "Of course it doesn’t."

"Now," Laziel said, without looking up, "strip."

Victor blinked. "He’s pregnant."

"And?" Laziel replied, calm as glass. "Not modesty. I ant your ego." He finally t Victor’s eyes with the kind of look that had ended lesser n. "You’re going to hate one of these designs and pretend not to. I advise you to lie better."

Victor leaned back, clearly delighted. "I’ve missed you."

"I haven’t changed," Laziel replied, waving an assistant forward.

The assistant peeled back the first cover like unveiling a weapon. And it was one, just made of Italian wool, crushed velvet, and a kind of design arrogance that ca from knowing you were dressing a demigod and his irritated, hormonal fiancé.

Elias squinted. "Is that... a cape?"

"It’s a coat," Laziel said, with the disdain of soone correcting a child’s grammar in public. "With drama."

Victor made a soft, appreciative sound. "It has structure."

"It has purpose," Laziel corrected. "A double-split hem for motion. Collar reinforced with brushed steel mory sh. Hidden zips for modular lining, in case your sudden taste for aesthetic martyrdom requires transformation mid-event."

Elias gave him a flat look. "Is that supposed to make feel better about walking into a ballroom full of caras while my ankles look like overstuffed marshmallows?"

"Sweetheart," Laziel said, not unkindly, "no one will be looking at your ankles. This," he gestured grandly at the coat, "is designed to make grown billionaires forget their safe words."

Victor choked.

"I am not wearing sothing that screams ’co collar , Daddy,’" Elias said.

"You say that now," Laziel murmured. Then clapped once.

Another rack was unveiled: more silk, less nace. Still an insult to subtlety.

Elias slowly lowered his feet from Victor’s lap and sat up, one hand bracing his stomach and the other pointed with precision. "No. No, absolutely not. If I wanted to look like a walking ransom note with imperial trauma stitched into the seams, I would’ve worn what Ego prepared."

That got Laziel’s attention. His gaze snapped to Elias like he’d just said a slur.

Victor’s eyebrow rose, elegant and very much amused. "You say that like it’s a bad thing."

"It is a trap," Elias hissed. "A velvet-covered trap designed to make look like a Nun heirloom while you stand next to looking like a villain with a moral compass."

Victor considered that. "Flattering."

"It’s manipulative," Elias said. "Extravagant. The kind of outfit that gets auctioned off for charity and ends up owned by a private collector with a vault full of weird perfu and opinions about ivory."

Laziel looked vaguely affronted. "You’re describing my last client."

"I’m describing a cult leader’s dream closet," Elias said. "This is sabotage. High fashion sabotage. And I swear if you make wear anything that costs more than a mortgage, I will bite soone."

Victor stood slowly, like the air had suddenly beco richer in oxygen. "You’ll bite anyway," he murmured.

"Don’t tempt ."

Laziel arched a brow. "If you’re worried about the price, darling, don’t be. Victor’s net worth regenerates faster than his skin cells."

"I know that," Elias said. "I also know he’s not vain. He doesn’t care if his cuffs are lined in silk or barbed wire so long as they match. But this?" He gestured to the garnt with the kind of disdain usually reserved for tax evasion. "This is a scam. A very beautiful, well-stitched scam. I’m not wearing it."

Victor’s smile turned slow and sharp, a little too entertained. "So you’d rather wear what Ego picked out? The outfit ca with a folder titled ’Controlling the Narrative: How to Dress Your Uterus’?"

Elias narrowed his eyes. "That’s not the point."

"No?" Victor stepped closer, his tone warm and dry. "You think I’m doing this for ?"

"I think you’re trying to distract with style cris," Elias snapped, "and bribe with ankle support."

Victor leaned in, voice soft at the edge. "I’m giving you whatever you want. But I’m not stupid enough to let you wear sothing chosen by a man who once said accessorizing is a sign of weakness."

Laziel gave a small, scandalized sound in the background.

"I hate how reasonable that sounds," Elias muttered.

Victor lifted one shoulder in an elegant half-shrug. "Then hate in a better outfit."

Elias looked down at the rack again.

Then at Laziel, who had silently shifted into position like a predator sensing hesitation.

"...Fine," Elias said. "But I swear if there’s a second cape..."

Laziel snapped his fingers again.

Three more racks arrived.

Elias stared. "You’re dead to ."

Victor smiled. "Still not wearing Ego’s pick, though."

And Elias grudgingly, tragically, was not.

You are reading [BL]Hunted by the God of Destruction Chapter 263: Fashion Scam on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

(BL) Taming the Field Guide cover
Similar genre

(BL) Taming the Field Guide

CalyB ·Yaoi

ThesequeltoHuntingtheFieldGuide.Kellenthoughtthathistroubleswereover.He'ddealtwiththeissueofthePoisonGate,he'dsavedhissister,andhefoundoutthelocati...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.