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Chapter : 1057

Rosa, the Ice Queen, the Silver-Haired ghost, the quiet, beautiful, and now utterly, completely, and absolutely terrifying woman who was his wife, finally, slowly, and with a deep, and profound, and almost, almost sympathetic, patience, turned her gaze fully upon him.

Her deep, profound, and now utterly, completely, and absolutely, and magnificently alive eyes, t his. And in their depths, he saw not a glacier. He saw an ocean. A deep, dark, and very, very dangerous ocean.

“The conclusion you assu, my lord husband,” she said, and her voice was a quiet, beautiful, and utterly, completely, and absolutely terrifying sliver of pure, unadulterated, and wonderfully, magnificently forged ice. “May not be the one that cos to pass.”

The finality in Rosa’s voice was not the cold, dead finality of a closed door; it was the quiet, absolute finality of a drawn sword. She had not just refuted his assumption; she had issued a challenge, a declaration of a new, unspoken war, and had done so with a grace and authority that left him utterly, completely disard. The battlefield of his life, already a chaotic and overcrowded ss, had just had a new, and very old, queen retake the field.

With her cryptic, devastating pronouncent still hanging in the air like the promise of a coming winter, she did sothing even more shocking. She did not engage the other won. She did not acknowledge their presence with so much as a flicker of her gaze. To do so would have been to legitimize them as rivals, to grant them a status in this conflict that she, with a silent, magnificent, and utterly regal arrogance, was refusing to concede. They were not players in her ga; they were simply… noise. Irrelevant, and soon to be dismissed, background noise.

She turned, her movents a slow, graceful, and utterly, completely, and absolutely dismissive glide, and swept past them, into the grand, imposing entrance of the mansion. She was not retreating. She was ascending to her throne. She was leaving the chaotic, ssy, and deeply, profoundly undignified squabbles of the garden to the lesser nobles and was returning to the quiet, dignified, and absolute seat of her own power.

Lloyd was left in a state of profound, absolute, and almost comically catastrophic confusion. He felt like a man who had ticulously, and with great, logical precision, set up a series of dominoes, only to have a beautiful, silver-haired cat walk through the middle of them, knock them all over in a completely random and unpredictable pattern, and then look back at him with an expression of serene, and utter, indifference.

The tea party, which had been a tense, chaotic, and deeply, profoundly stressful affair, was now sothing else entirely. It was a ruin. A beautiful, magnificent, and utterly, completely, and absolutely hilarious ruin.

The silence that Rosa left in her wake was a profound, and deeply, deeply awkward thing.

Faria, who had been a simring, incandescent ball of furious, passionate energy, was now… deflated. The righteous, beautiful fire of her own romantic and political crusade had just been utterly, completely, and absolutely extinguished by a single, quiet, and impossibly, terrifyingly cold wave. She stared at the empty doorway through which Rosa had disappeared, her teacup still held, forgotten, in her hand, her expression one of pure, unadulterated, and deeply, profoundly baffled disbelief.

Amina, the grandmaster, the queen of a thousand political chess gas, was, for the first ti since Lloyd had t her, at a complete, and utter, loss. A flicker of sothing—surprise? admiration? a deep, and very real, professional respect for a fellow, and utterly, completely, and absolutely ruthless, queen?—crossed her usually serene, and perfectly composed, features. She had co here expecting to play a ga against a fiery, passionate, and ultimately predictable artist. She had just discovered that there was another, older, and infinitely more dangerous, player on the board.

And Jothi… Jothi simply, slowly, and with the deep, profound, and utterly, completely, and absolutely world-weary resignation of a long-suffering sibling who has just witnessed her idiot brother once again, and with a kind of magnificent, awe-inspiring genius, set his own life on fire, put her face in her hands. A low, quiet, and deeply, profoundly heartfelt groan of pure, unadulterated, and completely, utterly, and absolutely understandable despair escaped her lips.

The Ice Queen had not just returned. She had, with a single, quiet, and devastatingly elegant move, completely, and utterly, and absolutely, and magnificently, checkmated them all. And she had just, with a quiet, beautiful, and utterly, completely, and absolutely terrifying declaration of war, announced that she had no intention of surrendering her throne. The ga, Lloyd realized, with a new, and very, very deep, and very, very profound, sense of soul-crushing, and yet sohow exhilarating, dread, was only just beginning.

Chapter : 1058

The delicate, impossibly complex architecture of Lloyd’s personal life had settled into a state of magnificent, terrifying equilibrium. It was a solar system of his own accidental creation, with him as the baffled, frequently overwheld sun, and three celestial bodies of imnse and contradictory gravity locked in orbit around him. There was Rosa, the glacier, a continent of ice whose silent, slow, and inexorable drift was beginning to calve icebergs of terrifying emotional significance into the once-frozen sea between them. Then there was Amina, the supernova, a partner of the mind whose dazzling, ferocious intellect was a perfect, challenging, and exhilarating match for his own. And finally, Faria, the blazing cot, a chaotic, beautiful, and incandescent force of nature whose trajectory had beco alarmingly, wonderfully, and very, very dangerously aid directly at the core of his heart.

His days had beco a masterclass in psychological compartntalization. He was a high-stakes diplomat navigating the treacherous borders of three warring kingdoms that all, sohow, claid territory within the sovereign borders of his soul. In the morning, he might engage in a silent, high-stakes chess match of unspoken aning with Rosa over a teacup. By afternoon, he could be locked in a thrilling intellectual duel with Amina over the schematics for a new industrial process. And in the evening, a chance encounter with Faria could ignite a debate on art and passion that left him feeling both creatively energized and emotionally exposed. He had beco a virtuoso of the polite, noncommittal smile, a grandmaster of the strategic retreat to the blessed, logical sanity of his manufactory—a place where the only explosions were gloriously chemical and the only tears were Borin’s, shed in monts of destructive, artistic rapture.

This fragile, intricate, and utterly exhausting peace was shattered not by a pointed whisper from a rival queen or a cutting remark from a suspicious wife, but by a sound the Ferrum estate had not heard in a generation: the frantic, desperate, and soul-chilling ringing of the crisis bell at the main gate.

It was not the cheerful peal that announced a festival or the steady toll for a formal assembly. This was a deep, tolling clang that resonated in the bones, a frantic, hamring rhythm that spoke of imminent, unfolding disaster. It was a sound reserved for war, for invasion, for the kind of news that could break a kingdom. Every servant in the sprawling estate froze, their blood turning to ice. Every guard instinctively reached for the hilt of their sword. The sound was a primal scream of alarm, and it cut through the serene morning air like a blade.

The ssenger who was half-dragged, half-stumbled into the Grand Hall was a man who had been hollowed out by terror and remade in its image. He was a junior officer from the western territories, his ducal uniform spattered with mud and sothing darker. His face was a pale, sweat-sheened mask of horror, his eyes wide and unfocused, still seeing the nightmares he had ridden so hard to escape. He collapsed before the Arch Duke’s throne, his breath coming in ragged, painful sobs, his words a broken torrent of panic and grief.

He spoke of Oakhaven. The na itself was barely a whisper in the politics of the duchy, a small, isolated logging community nestled deep in the vast, ancient Whisperwood. A place known for its stoic, hardy lumberjacks, its towering oaks, and little else. A quiet, forgotten corner of the world. But the words the officer used to describe it now painted a picture of a charnel house, a village that had beco the epicenter of a biological apocalypse.

He spoke of a sickness, a horrifying plague the terrified survivors were calling the “Red Blight.”

His description was not the clinical report of a soldier. It was the haunted testimony of a man who had stared into the abyss. It began, he stamred, with a fever, a raging, unquenchable fire that boiled the body from within, a heat that no poultice could soothe and no prayer could cool. Then ca the cough. It was not a simple cough, but a deep, ragged, barking sound that tore at the lungs, a sound that seed to echo the victim’s own soul being ripped apart. And with the cough ca the spray, a fine, bloody mist that hung in the air like a crimson fog—a mist of aerosolized death that turned every breath into a gamble.

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