Chapter : 919
He then turned back to Lloyd, a final, mischievous, and deeply unsettling twinkle in his eyes. “And you, my Lord Ferrum,” he said, his voice a low, conspiratorial whisper. “Go home. And do try to sort out your… previous entanglements. It would be most… awkward… if your two wives were to meet for the first time at the wedding.”
And with that final, beautiful, and exquisitely painful piece of fatherly advice, the audience was concluded.
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The Sultan’s final, cheerfully delivered piece of advice was a perfectly aimed, and deeply cruel, parting shot. It was a clear, unmistakable message: I know about your wife. I know everything. And I am finding your predicament to be a source of profound, and very personal, amusement. Good luck with that.
Lloyd simply bowed his head, a gesture of a man who has been thoroughly, comprehensively, and masterfully defeated, and who has no choice but to accept the ludicrous, insane, and deeply, deeply complicated terms of his surrender.
The audience was over. He had walked into the throne room as a prisoner, a man trapped in an unbreakable, matrimonial seal. And he was walking out as… well, as a man who was still trapped in an unbreakable, matrimonial seal, but who now had a three-month-long, royally-sanctioned, and deeply, profoundly awkward get-out-of-jail-free card.
It was not a victory. It was a stay of execution. And the executioner was now, apparently, going to be his houseguest.
As he and a silent, and still faintly glowing, Ken Park were escorted from the throne room by a phalanx of Guards of Amiras, his mind was already racing, the strategist having fully, and frantically, re-engaged.
The problem of his betrothal to Princess Amina had been temporarily, and very elegantly, deferred. But in its place, a new, and far more immediate, logistical and political nightmare had been created.
He was returning home. To the Ferrum estate. To his family. To his life. And he was bringing a princess with him. A foreign, powerful, and now very publicly, if unofficially, betrothed princess.
He tried to imagine the conversation he was about to have with his father. ‘Good news, Father! I have secured a strategic alliance with the kingdom of Zakaria and a near-limitless supply of their most valuable resource! The only price is a small, insignificant political marriage that will completely destabilize our current alliances, deeply insult one of the most powerful noble houses in our own kingdom, and will almost certainly trigger an international incident that could lead to a continental war. Also, I may have committed bigamy. How was your week?’
He suspected it would not go over well.
And then, there was Rosa.
The thought of Rosa, of his cold, distant, and terrifyingly powerful wife, was a physical thing, a shard of ice that seemed to form in his gut. How in the name of all the gods and demons was he going to explain this? How do you tell your wife that you have returned from a business trip with a new, and very royal, fiancée in tow? Was there a greeting card for that? A tastefully arranged bouquet?
He pictured the scene. He would arrive at the estate, the magnificent royal carriage of Zakaria rolling up the grand, gravel driveway. He would step out. And behind him, the beautiful, intelligent, and deeply, profoundly inconvenient Princess Amina would emerge. And standing on the steps of the manor, watching this entire, surreal spectacle unfold, would be Rosa, her face a perfect, unreadable mask of arctic calm, her spirit pressure slowly beginning to crystallize the very air around her into a fine, deadly, and very, very sharp mist of ice.
It would not be a conversation. It would be a new, and very personal, ice age.
He was a man caught between a glacier and a volcano. A rock and a very, very hard place. And the only thing he knew for certain was that the next three months were going to be the most complex, most dangerous, and most exquisitely, beautifully, and horrifyingly awkward of his entire, long, and very, very strange two lives.
The carriage was waiting for them at the palace entrance, the same opulent, and now deeply ironic, vehicle that had brought him to this fateful audience. Amina was already inside, her veiled face turned towards the window.
He hesitated for a moment before the open door. This was it. The point of no return. The moment he stepped into that carriage, his new, insane, and deeply complicated future would begin.
He took a deep breath, a man stepping off a cliff into a storm. And he got in.
The door closed behind him, and the carriage began to move, carrying him away from the lion’s den, and towards a new, and perhaps even more dangerous, battlefield: home.
He looked at the woman opposite him. His partner. His friend. His co-conspirator. His fiancée. His greatest ally. And his single biggest problem.
She looked back at him, and behind the veil, he could see the faint, almost imperceptible, and deeply, deeply amused smile on her lips.
The game was on. And he had the distinct, and very sinking, feeling that he was still, somehow, losing.
Chapter : 920
The oppressive weight of the Sultan’s throne room, with its silent, judgmental Go board floor, dissolved into the warm, inviting glow of a private solar. Sunlight, filtered through intricately carved marble screens, painted the room in stripes of gold and shadow. The air, once thick with the tension of a royal judgment, now hummed with the quiet, professional energy of a negotiation between equals. The masks of “Doctor Zayn” and the attendant “Sumaiya” had been shed, not just physically but metaphysically. In their place stood Lord Lloyd Ferrum, heir to a great Northern Duchy, and Her Highness, Princess Amina of Zakaria.
Lloyd felt a profound sense of whiplash, a mental recalibration from the desperate performance of a lifetime to the cold, familiar calculus of high-stakes politics. His heart, which had been hammering a frantic rhythm against his ribs, settled into the steady, measured beat of a strategist assessing a new and fascinatingly complex battlefield. He was no longer a pawn in her game, but a player in his own right, and the board had just been cleared for a new match.
“A diplomatic mission,” Amina began, her voice losing the gentle, earnest timbre of Sumaiya and taking on the crisp, precise authority of a monarch. She sat opposite him at a low, polished teakwood table, a steaming pot of jasmine tea between them. “That will be the public narrative. You, Lord Ferrum, have successfully negotiated a preliminary cultural and economic exchange on behalf of your father. I, in turn, will be leading a small delegation to the Ferrum Duchy to assess the potential for a long-term treaty. It is a plausible fiction, one that will satisfy the courts of both our kingdoms and mitigate the… considerable scandal of a princess traveling unchaperoned with an unmarried… ah, a married nobleman from a rival power.”
A faint, almost imperceptible smile played on her lips at the correction. It was a masterful, subtle jab, a reminder of the catastrophic complexity of his situation and her absolute knowledge of it.
Lloyd met her gaze, his own expression a mask of cool professionalism. The frantic internal monologue of the man who had just accidentally won a princess had been ruthlessly suppressed. In its place was the calm, analytical mind that had built an empire from soap and salt. “A plausible fiction is the bedrock of all successful statecraft, Your Highness. I concur with the framework. However, a treaty of this nature requires more than just a public face. It requires a private understanding.”
“Indeed,” she agreed, pouring him a cup of tea with a steady hand. The gesture was both a courtesy and a display of absolute control. “And that is the true purpose of this meeting. Your ‘three-month trial,’ as you so poetically framed it, is not a romantic interlude. It is a probationary alliance. We will operate under a protocol of full and transparent intelligence sharing. My father’s network, The Whispers, will provide you with everything we have on the Altamiran conspiracy, their assets within Zakaria, and any known sympathizers. In return, you will provide us with a complete and unedited dossier on the assassins who have been hunting you.”
Lloyd’s eyes narrowed slightly. This was a breathtakingly generous offer. The Sultan’s intelligence network was legendary, a web that spanned continents. To be given access to it was a gift of incalculable value. “You offer the keys to your own kingdom’s security with remarkable ease, Princess.”
“We do not see it as a risk, but as an investment,” she countered smoothly. “The Altamiran threat is a cancer that affects us all. The assassins hunting you are merely a symptom of that disease. By pooling our resources, we can more effectively excise the tumor. My father believes you are a… uniquely motivated surgeon in this matter.” She took a delicate sip of her tea, her obsidian eyes watching him over the rim of the cup. “And, of course, there is the matter of your own objective. The true reason for your elaborate performance.”
The Major General, the part of him that was pure, cold strategy, felt a flicker of genuine admiration. She was a grandmaster, moving her pieces with a beautiful and terrifying precision. “I require the Lilith Stones,” he stated simply, dispensing with all pretense. “A consistent, high-volume supply line and a secure laboratory, sponsored by your throne, to begin my work. That is my non-negotiable price for this alliance.”
“You ask for the very heart of my kingdom’s power,” she mused, though there was no surprise in her voice.