What's even more fatal is that Asclepius, who just couldn't sit still, frequently ventured out, wandering among the various city-states to treat complex and difficult diseases.
This coming and going inevitably led to the use of the Elixir of Immortality.
And when Asclepius succeeded in saving the dying fourth son of King Minos, Glaucus, amid a turmoil, such a taboo substance caught the attention of Zeus, the passing Divine King.
After a conversation, the Great God Zeus became furious with Asclepius's act of defying the order of life and death, proclaiming that it threatened the "Immortality" only the gods possessed and, thus, summoned a thunderbolt to strike down his own grandson.
Hearing Medusa's account, Luo En pressed the bulging veins on his forehead and cursed under his breath.
This idiot! He must have not been able to keep his mouth shut!