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Chapter : 1179

he mused.

A fresh wave of desperate, agonizing grief washed over Rosa. “Who are you?” she sobbed, the words a choked, broken thing. “Are you a god? Can you save her?”

The figure in the shadows let out a soft, silent chuckle, a sound like the shifting of dry, dead leaves.

The last of Rosa’s hope, a tiny, flickering ember, was extinguished. A final, soul-crushing sob tore from her throat.

the silken voice continued, a single, beautiful, and terrible word.

A new, impossible hope, a thing more terrible and more seductive than any she had ever known, was born in the ashes of her despair.

“What… what is the price?” she whispered, her child’s mind already understanding the fundantal grammar of the universe: nothing is free.

The demon, Bael, regarded the small, tear-streaked girl with an expression of profound, almost gentle, amusent. He was a being of imnse, ancient power, a high-ranking noble of the Seventh Circle, a creature who had trafficked in the souls of kings and the fates of nations. And now, he was negotiating with a heartbroken, eleven-year-old child. It was a new, and rather quaint, experience.

his silken thoughts flowed into her mind,

He glided silently across the room until he was standing beside her. He did not loom over her. He knelt, bringing his beautiful, terrible face level with hers. His athyst eyes seed to see not just her, but the very shape of her soul, the raw, screaming, chaotic storm of grief and terror and love that was raging within her.

he whispered, his voice now a soft, hypnotic purr,

Rosa stared at him, her mind unable to process the words.

Bael explained, his tone that of a patient teacher explaining a simple concept to a slow student.

He leaned closer, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper.

He was offering her a deal. An escape. An end to the pain that was currently unmaking her. He was offering to turn her from a helpless, crying child into a perfect, unbreakable weapon. A weapon forged for a single, holy purpose.

Chapter : 1180

For a child who knew nothing but the agony of a world dying, for a soul that was currently drowning in an ocean of its own grief, the choice was no choice at all. It was salvation. It was the only answer in a universe of indifferent silence.

“You… you can really do it?” she whispered, the words a final, desperate plea for certainty. “You can make her wait for ?”

Bael replied, his voice a soft, final promise.

She looked at her mother’s still, beautiful face. She looked at the demon, at the ancient, all-seeing intelligence in his athyst eyes.

She took a deep, shuddering breath.

“Do it,” she said, her voice a small, fragile, but utterly resolute thing. “Take it. Take it all.”

A slow, magnificent, and triumphant smile spread across Bael’s beautiful, terrible face. He had won. He had just acquired the most valuable asset in his long and storied career: a perfectly placed, and utterly loyal, agent in the heart of one of the great houses of the South.

He placed a single, impossibly cold finger on her forehead.

he whispered in her mind.

A wave of absolute, soul-deep cold washed over her. It was not the cold of ice or winter. It was the cold of a dead star, the cold of a universe without a sun. It was the cold of absolute, final emptiness.

The hot river of tears on her cheeks froze and seed to evaporate. The crushing stone of grief in her chest dissolved into nothing. The wild, chaotic storm of love and fear and hope in her soul was simply… stilled.

The crying, heartbroken, eleven-year-old girl was gone.

She blinked, and when she opened her eyes, they were no longer the eyes of a child. They were the eyes of a queen. A queen of a vast, silent, and empty kingdom of one. They were the eyes of a being who had a single, clear, and absolute objective, and who would allow nothing—no law, no morality, no person—to stand in her way.

She stood up, her movents no longer the clumsy motions of a child, but the fluid, economical grace of a predator. She looked down at the still form of her mother, not with grief, but with the cold, dispassionate assessnt of a general surveying a strategic problem.

The problem was containnt. The long-term solution was a cure. All other variables were irrelevant.

She turned and looked at the demon, who was watching her with an expression of profound, almost paternal, pride.

“The first phase is complete,” she stated, her voice a new, clear, and perfectly modulated instrunt, devoid of all emotion. “What is the next step?”

Bael’s smile was a thing of pure, artistic satisfaction. He had not just created a weapon. He had created a masterpiece.

The first, perfect, and terrible iteration of the Ice Queen had been born.

Five years.

For the world, it was five years of politics and seasons, of births and deaths, of the slow, grinding progress of history. For Rosa Siddik, it was a single, unbroken, and perfectly logical equation that she had yet to solve.

She was sixteen now, no longer a child, but a young woman whose beauty was already a legend in the southern courts. They called her the Ice Flower of the South, a na whispered with a mixture of awe and a certain, chilling apprehension. Her skin was flawless porcelain, her hair a river of midnight silk, and her eyes, the color of a stormy sea, held a depth of intelligence and a cold, analytical fire that unnerved even the most confident of suitors.

She was a perfect, beautiful, and utterly impenetrable fortress of one.

Her life was a study in relentless, monastic discipline. She had mastered the art of her family’s Ice-aspected Void power with a speed and a precision that had left her instructors breathless. She had devoured the contents of her family’s vast library, her mind a flawless, logical engine that absorbed and processed information on history, politics, and strategy with a terrifying efficiency. She had a single, all-consuming objective: find the three mythical ingredients required to create the final cure for her mother.

Her mother, thanks to the demon’s intervention, remained in her tiless, living sleep. She had not aged a day. She had not declined. She had simply… waited. A beautiful, silent, and ever-present reminder of Rosa’s one and only purpose.

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