Font Size
15px

Chapter : 1119

A slow, cold, and deeply predatory grin spread across Lloyd's face. The assassins hunting him in the real world. The political enemies who thought he was trapped by distance and duty. The very laws of physics that governed his world. They were all now just suggestions, flimsy rules in a ga for which he had just been handed the ultimate cheat code.

He could attend a war council in the morning and assassinate an enemy general across the continent by noon. He could retrieve an ancient artifact from an impenetrable vault without opening the door. He could escape any prison, bypass any army, and appear anywhere he had a clear ntal picture of.

He was no longer just a warrior, a lord, or a strategist.

He was now a ghost. An omnipresent, untraceable specter who could be anywhere, at any ti. The board had been reset, and the rules no longer applied to him.

The capital market was a living, breathing creature. It was a chaotic, beautiful symphony of comrce and humanity, a place where the entire spectrum of life in the duchy converged. The air was a thick, heady perfu of a thousand competing scents: the sharp, savory tang of grilled ats from a vendor’s cart, the sweet, intoxicating fragrance of exotic flowers imported from the south, the earthy aroma of fresh-turned soil clinging to vegetables, and the ever-present, dusty, human scent of the crowd itself. Sunlight, fractured by colourful awnings and the steam rising from food stalls, painted the cobblestones in shifting patterns of gold and shadow.

For Jasmin, it was a beautiful, overwhelming hell.

She walked a half-step behind Martha Jr., her hands clutching the handles of a woven shopping basket with a white-knuckled grip. Every shout from a rchant, every burst of laughter from a group of children, every ti soone jostled past her in the throng, her nerves scread. The world felt too loud, too fast, too full of unpredictable variables. Since Pia’s death, the quiet, safe corners of her world had been systematically erased. The manufactory, once a haven of purpose, was now a place haunted by a ghost. And the city, once a place of wonder, now felt like a hunting ground where tragedy could erupt from the most mundane of monts.

“Oh, look, Jasmin! Aren’t they beautiful?”

Martha Jr.’s voice, bright and clear as a songbird’s, cut through her dark thoughts. The younger girl, whose own life was a tapestry of quiet hardship, possessed a resilience that Jasmin found both mystifying and deeply admirable. She was pointing at a stall where a craftsman was selling delicate, hand-carved wooden birds, their wings painted in vibrant, impossible colours.

Jasmin forced a small, fragile smile. “They are. Very beautiful.”

“I’ll get one for Pia’s morial stone,” Martha said, her cheerfulness dimming for only a fraction of a second before reigniting. “She would have loved the blue one. It looks like it’s about to fly away.”

The casual ntion of Pia’s na was a fresh, sharp stab of pain. Jasmin’s breath hitched. She could still see it, the mory that played on a loop in the darkness behind her eyes: the spidery black curse mark on Pia’s neck, the violent convulsions, the life draining from her friend’s eyes while she stood there, frozen, helpless, utterly and completely useless. The guilt was a physical thing, a cold, heavy stone in the pit of her stomach. She had been there. She had done nothing.

“Jasmin? Are you alright?” Martha’s face was a mask of concern, her bright eyes searching Jasmin’s. “You’ve gone pale.”

“I’m fine,” Jasmin lied, the words tasting like ash. “Just… the sun is a bit strong today.”

Martha didn’t look convinced, but she let it go. They continued their shopping, purchasing the fresh vegetables and herbs Lloyd had requested for a new experintal scent profile. For a few, precious minutes, the simple, dostic task was a grounding anchor. The weight of the carrots, the crisp scent of the parsley—it was real. It was normal.

The normalcy was obliterated by a voice that was pure, dripping poison.

“Well, well. If it isn’t the little gutter-rat, playing at being a lady.”

Jasmin froze, her blood turning to ice. The voice ca from a man who had materialized beside their vegetable stall. He was a large, slovenly man with a florid face, small, an eyes, and the sour sll of cheap ale clinging to him. His fine, if stained, clothes marked him as a man of so ans, but his posture was that of a belligerent thug.

Chapter : 1120

Martha Jr. went rigid, all the light and life draining from her face, replaced by a familiar, weary mask of dread. “Go away, Gregor,” she said, her voice a low, trembling whisper.

“Is that any way to speak to your father?” the man, Gregor, sneered. His eyes road over Martha’s simple but clean dress with a look of lecherous contempt. “Look at you. Running around the city, spending money you don’t have on trinkets. Your mother is at ho, working her fingers to the bone, and you’re out here, flaunting yourself like a common trollop.”

“I’m buying vegetables for my work,” Martha said, her voice gaining a sliver of defiance. “The money is my own. I earned it.”

Gregor let out a harsh, barking laugh that made people at the nearby stalls turn and stare. “You earned it? Don’t make laugh. Every coin you have is because I’m generous enough to let your worthless mother keep a roof over your head. A roof I own. A debt she repays every night. Do you understand , girl?”

The insult was so vile, so brutally and publicly delivered, that the air around them seed to crackle. Martha’s face, which had been pale with fear, now flushed with a deep, furious crimson. Her small hands were clenched into fists at her sides.

Jasmin felt a surge of cold, protective rage. She stepped forward, instinctively moving to place herself between Martha and the monster. “Sir, that is enough. We will be leaving now.”

Gregor’s piggy eyes shifted to Jasmin, dismissing her with a glance. “And who is this? Another one of your little street-friends? Stay out of family matters, you little waif, before you get hurt.” He turned his attention back to Martha, his voice dropping to a venomous hiss. “You’re coming with . We’re going to have a long talk about respect. And about your mother’s… outstanding debts.”

He reached out, his thick fingers wrapping around Martha’s arm like a vise. Martha cried out, a small, sharp sound of pain and fear.

And that was the final straw.

With a speed that shocked even herself, Martha twisted and slapped him. It wasn't a tentative tap, but a full-force, open-pald strike, delivered with all the desperate fury of a cornered animal. The sound was like a gunshot in the bustling market.

CRACK.

The world went silent. The haggling, the laughter, the music—it all ceased. Every eye in a twenty-foot radius was now fixed on their small, terrible drama.

Gregor stood frozen, his head turned to the side, a bright red handprint blooming on his bloated cheek. His small eyes were wide with a kind of stunned, animal disbelief. He slowly turned his head back to face Martha. The shock in his eyes was gone, replaced by sothing ancient, murderous, and absolutely terrifying.

“You… hit ?” he whispered, the words a low, guttural rumble. He smiled, a slow, ugly stretching of his lips that didn't reach his eyes. “You stupid little bitch. You have no idea what you’ve just done.”

His hand dropped from Martha’s arm to the hilt of the short sword at his belt. The movent was slow, deliberate, a piece of horrifying theatre for the silent, watching crowd. The blade slid from its scabbard with a slick, tallic whisper, the polished steel a slash of cold, deadly light in the warm afternoon sun.

He raised the sword. His eyes were locked on Martha, and in them, Jasmin saw not anger, but a cold, killing intent. He was going to cut her down. Here. In the middle of the market. For the cri of a single, defiant slap.

Ti seed to slow. Jasmin saw the terror on Martha’s face, a mirror of her own. She saw the horrified gasps of the onlookers. She saw the blade, a thing of terrible beauty, begin its short, brutal descent.

And in that frozen, perfect instant of horror, the ghost of Pia scread in her soul.

No. Not again.

The cold stone of guilt in her stomach didn’t just shatter. It detonated.

The world broke.

It was not a conscious thought, not a decision. It was a reflex, a primal, soul-deep rejection of reality. The image of the descending sword, the glint of steel aid at the soft, vulnerable flesh of her friend, superimposed itself over the mory of the spidery black curse mark on Pia’s neck. The two monts, separated by weeks, beca one. The sa terror. The sa helplessness. The sa chilling certainty of a life about to be extinguished while she stood by and watched.

The universe scread NO. And Jasmin scread with it.

You are reading My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! Episode-570 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

Data-Driven Daoist cover
Similar genre

Data-Driven Daoist

CatVI ·Action

Theycalledhimtrash—untilhestartedtreatingtheDaolikeaDataset.Whendemonsslaughterhisnewfamily,computerscientistJohan—nowrebornasYuHan—survivesbypurew...

Grasping the Evil cover
Similar genre

Grasping the Evil

I'm Ink我是墨水 ·Action

Mastersaid,thewomanIheldinmyhands,ImustprotectfortherestofmylifeMastersaid,it’shardtocultivateasaDemon,andonceyouentertheDemonDao,youshouldneverloo...

Marvel-ous Ninjutsu cover
Similar genre

Marvel-ous Ninjutsu

Pewpewcachoo ·Action

IdonotownanythingfromMarvelorNaruto.Ijustenjoybothuniverses. Socontentwarningfirst,thisisafanficofhotsteaminggarbage.Ihopeyouenjoyit.Iwillmostlikel...

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