Chapter : 957
“A partnership of minds,” Milody repeated, savoring the words. “How beautifully put, Your Highness. It is a sentiment that, sadly, is not universally understood.” She took a delicate sip of her tea, a gesture that gave her a moment to aim her next, more direct, strike. “Some, you see, are forged in ice. They are magnificent, strong, and unyielding. They make for formidable fortresses. But a fortress, by its very nature, is a cold and lonely place. It is not suited to the… warmth of a true partnership. It is a cage, however beautiful, that a rising sun will inevitably melt.”
The metaphor was as sharp and clear as a shard of glass. It was a direct, devastating, and utterly undeniable critique of her absent daughter-in-law. She had just, in the most elegant and deniable way possible, declared Rosa Siddik unfit for the throne of her son’s heart. She was now watching, with a hawk’s intensity, to see how the princess would respond to this new, more aggressive move.
Amina did not flinch. She placed her teacup down with a soft, deliberate click. “A rising sun,” she mused, her voice a quiet, thoughtful echo of Milody’s words, “needs a sky vast enough to hold its light. It needs a world that can not only withstand its heat but can reflect its glory.” She met Milody’s gaze, her own eyes now holding a new and different kind of fire. It was not the passionate, emotional fire of Faria. It was the cold, brilliant, and absolute fire of a star being born.
“Your son, Duchess,” she stated, her voice now stripped of all courtly artifice, a blade of pure, unvarnished truth, “is not a sun. Not yet. He is a supernova in the making. A force that will not just melt the old world but will shatter it and forge a new one from the pieces. Such a force does not need a partner to keep it warm. It needs an equal to help it rule.”
The declaration was breathtaking in its audacity. She had not just accepted Milody’s premise; she had taken it, amplified it, and claimed it as her own. She had declared herself the equal, the only one in the world who could stand beside the supernova and not be consumed.
Milody felt a genuine, exhilarating thrill. She had come here expecting to play a game of chess with a skilled opponent. She had found, instead, a fellow grandmaster, a woman whose ambition, intellect, and ruthless clarity of vision were a perfect mirror of her own.
“Then it seems, Your Highness,” Milody said, her voice a low, conspiratorial purr, “that we are in complete and profound agreement. The future requires a new kind of queen. Or perhaps… queens.”
The unspoken word hung in the air between them, a shared secret, a foundation for a new and terrifyingly powerful alliance.
The delicate, diplomatic dance was over. The war council had just begun.
Meanwhile, a different kind of storm was still brewing in the corridors of the estate. Faria Kruts, having been left in a state of stunned, emotional chaos by Lloyd’s clumsy, beautiful, and utterly infuriating confession, was not content to simply retreat and process. Her heart was a battlefield of conflicting emotions: the sting of his initial betrayal, the disarming warmth of his apology, the maddening complexity of his new matrimonial entanglements. She could not find a single, solid piece of ground on which to stand.
So she did the only thing a passionate, determined, and slightly unhinged artist could do. She followed him.
Like a beautiful, crimson-haired ghost, she haunted his steps. When he retreated to his study, she was there, pacing in the corridor outside, a silent, furious sentinel. When he was summoned to his father’s war council, she was a blur of motion in a distant gallery, watching him go. She was not spying. She was… orbiting. She was a planet caught in the gravitational pull of a chaotic, unpredictable sun, unable to find a stable path, unable to break free.
Chapter : 958
She did not know what she wanted. Did she want to scream at him again? Did she want to kiss him? Did she want to throw a pot of expensive oil paint at his handsome, stupid, and impossibly complicated face? She didn't know. All she knew was that she could not, would not, simply walk away. He had started a fire in her soul, and she would not let him be the one to decide when it was extinguished. She would be the one to control the burn. And so, she followed, a passionate, beautiful, and utterly unpredictable variable in an equation that was growing more complex by the second. Lloyd, for his part, was completely, blessedly, and perhaps fatally, unaware of the fiery satellite that was now tracking his every move.
Arch Duke Roy Ferrum’s private study was the antithesis of his wife’s sun-drenched solarium. It was a place of shadow and steel, a grim, functional sanctuary designed not for comfort, but for command. The walls were lined not with flowers, but with racks of gleaming, perfectly maintained weapons—ancient greatswords that had carved a kingdom, formidable war-hammers that had shattered legions, and elegant rapiers that had settled matters of honor in a whisper of steel. The air was cool and smelled of old leather, whetstone oil, and the faint, metallic tang of power. This was the heart of the Ferrum war machine, the room where the fate of the North had been decided for generations.
Roy sat behind a massive desk carved from a single piece of black, petrified ironwood, a throne of grim, absolute authority. The reports from his own intelligence network lay spread before him, a series of stark, brutally concise documents that painted a picture of a world on the brink of a new and terrible war. He had been staring at them for hours, the cold, hard facts confirming his deepest, most primal fears. The age of fragile peace was over. The storm had come.
A soft, almost imperceptible knock on the heavy oak door broke his concentration. "Enter," he commanded, his voice a low, resonant rumble that seemed to be part of the room’s very foundation.
Ken Park materialized from the shadows, his movements as silent and unobtrusive as a thought. He stood at perfect, parade-rest attention in the center of the room, a pillar of quiet, absolute competence. He was no longer the humble butler or the fearsome Demon Lord. He was the spymaster, the Arch Duke’s most trusted and lethal instrument, here to deliver his report.
"My Lord Duke," Ken began, his voice a dispassionate, level monotone. "I have completed my preliminary debrief of the prisoner, Kael, and my own after-action assessment of the ambush."
Roy leaned forward, his massive frame casting a long shadow across the desk. "Report," he ordered.
Ken’s report was a masterpiece of clinical, brutal efficiency. He began by detailing the assassins' capabilities. "The primary, Jager, is confirmed as a King-Rank spirit user. His spirit, an iron-scaled alligator, possesses a rare, parasitic ability to siphon an opponent’s spiritual energy. He is a master of deception and forbidden magic. The secondary, Kael, is a Crown-Rank user, merged with a hornet spirit, specializing in high-speed aerial assault and venom-based attacks. Their coordination was flawless. Their intelligence on our initial capabilities, however, was catastrophically flawed."
Roy grunted, a sound of grim acknowledgment. "They underestimated him. A common, and often fatal, mistake."
"Indeed, my lord," Ken continued, his tone unchanging. "The most critical intelligence pertains to their use of a forbidden-class artifact: the Soul Catcher. It is a device of Old World magic, believed to be a myth. It creates a localized, absolute spirit-sealing field. The prisoner confirms it was provided to them by their benefactor for this specific mission. This confirms our enemy is not just a rival house, but a state-level actor with access to artifacts of immense and terrible power."
Roy’s jaw tightened. The Soul Catcher. The name alone was a chilling echo from the darkest chapters of the kingdom’s history. It was not just a weapon; it was a blasphemy, a tool designed to unmake the very gods of their world. For the Altamirans to deploy such a thing against his son was not just an act of war; it was a declaration of absolute, existential hatred.
"The prisoner, Kael," Ken went on, "was broken by Lord Lloyd. Under interrogation, he confirmed his orders came from a shadow directive within the Altamiran court, authorized by the Crown Prince himself. Their handler is a high-ranking minister known only as ‘The Curator.’ Their stated objective was not just the assassination of Lord Lloyd, but the complete destabilization of the Northern territories, intended as a prelude to a larger military action."