Chapter : 1219
The atmosphere in the room was not one of dread or fear. It was one of cold, professional, and almost joyful purpose. These were n who had spent their entire lives in the shadows, on the bloody, unforgiving frontiers of the kingdom’s conflicts. The glittering, peaceful court of Bethelham had been, for them, a foreign and slightly contemptible land. Now, the war had co ho. And they were, in a strange and terrible way, glad of it. They were wolves, and they were finally being unleashed in the sheep’s pasture.
King Liam’s gaze settled on Lloyd, and for the first ti, a flicker of his usual, disarming warmth returned to his eyes. "Which brings us to you, Lord Ferrum," he said, his tone now that of a commander briefing his most unorthodox, and most interesting, new operative.
"Your appointnt as the head of the wedding preparations was not a whim," the King explained, confirming Lloyd’s own suspicions. "It was a strategic necessity. Your public persona—the brilliant, eccentric, and slightly unpredictable rchant-lord from the North—is the perfect cover. No one will look for a sword in the hand of a man they believe is holding a bouquet of flowers."
He walked around the table and ca to stand beside Lloyd, placing a hand on his shoulder, a gesture of profound, and very public, trust. "Your reputation precedes you. At Ashworth, you did not just fight a battle. You fought a new kind of war. You faced a conceptual, unholy threat, and you t it not just with power, but with a terrifying, and beautiful, ingenuity. That is why you are here. The five n in this room are masters of the old war, the war of steel and shadow. But you… you understand the new war. The war of monsters and madness."
It was a staggering tribute, a public anointnt delivered in front of the kingdom’s most powerful and grizzled veterans. Lloyd simply inclined his head, a silent acceptance of the heavy, and very dangerous, mantle that had just been placed upon him.
"Each of you has a role," the King continued, his gaze once again sweeping over the council of war. "Viscount Nazha, you will be in charge of the outer periter. The palace guard will be yours to command. Nothing gets in or out of this city without your knowledge."
The mountain of a man gave a single, sharp nod, his face a mask of grim, satisfied purpose.
"Baron Cliff," the King said, turning to the slender spymaster. "You will be the whisper in the walls. Your network will be our eyes and ears. I want to know every rumor, every secret, every shadow that moves within a hundred miles of this palace."
The Baron simply smiled, a thin, cold, and utterly terrifying thing.
"Glasias, Euclid, Munro," the King addressed the three Hounds. "You three will be our hidden trap. You will analyze every inch of this palace. You will turn its beautiful halls and its hidden corridors into a perfectly designed kill-box. When the enemy cos, they will not be walking into a wedding. They will be walking into your abattoir."
The three n shared a look, a silent, predatory glee passing between them.
Finally, the King’s gaze returned to Lloyd.
"And you, Lord Ferrum," he said, his voice dropping to a low, final command. "You will be the blade at the heart of it all. You will have the run of the palace. You will be seen by all, but your true purpose will be seen by none. You will be the ghost in the machine. Your public role will be a farce, a beautiful, distracting piece of theatre. But your true role… your true role will be to stand as our final, and most absolute, line of defense. You are not just a sword, Lloyd. You are my executioner. And you will wait, patiently, for the mont when the traitors and the monsters finally reveal themselves."
He stepped back, his briefing complete. "That is all," he said, his voice a final, unarguable dismissal. "You have your orders. You have your mission. Now, go. And turn my son’s beautiful wedding into the most magnificent, and most deadly, trap this kingdom has ever seen."
The six swords of the king, the secret shield of the kingdom, gave a single, unified, and silent bow. The war council was over. The hunt had begun.
Chapter : 1220
The morning after the secret war council, Lloyd’s new, public life began. He was officially installed as the ‘Lord Director of Royal Wedding Aesthetics and Logistics,’ a title so pompous and so utterly ridiculous that he had to actively suppress a sarcastic laugh every ti a functionary said it with a straight face.
His office, the sa sun-drenched study where he had forged his alliance with the Prince, was now officially the ‘Command Center for Decorative Operations.’ The grand, obsidian table where the King had declared a secret war was now covered in bolts of silk, samples of floral arrangents, and a truly bewildering array of competing seating charts.
It was the perfect cover. A masterpiece of bureaucratic camouflage.
His first official act was to call for his ‘assistants.’ He had been given a generous budget and the authority to requisition any personnel he required from the ducal estate. He could have chosen seasoned administrators, renowned artists, or logistical experts from his own thriving AURA empire.
He chose Jasmin and Martha Jr.
They arrived at the royal mansion a few days later, two small, unassuming figures in the simple, practical dresses of ducal handmaidens, looking utterly, and completely, out of place amidst the gilded splendor of the capital. They were two sparrows in a flock of peacocks, and their arrival was t with a wave of silent, condescending sneers from the palace’s elite staff.
It was exactly the effect Lloyd had wanted.
He greeted them not as a lord, but as a friend. "Jasmin. Martha," he said, his smile genuine and warm. "Welco to the circus."
Jasmin, who had been undergoing a quiet, and very intense, training regin with him in the ti-dilated sanctuary of his spatial room, was no longer the timid, trembling girl he had found in the market. There was a new, quiet confidence in her posture, a hard, diamond-like clarity in her eyes. She was a weapon, still being forged, but a weapon nonetheless. She simply gave him a small, knowing smile and a respectful bow.
Martha Jr., on the other hand, was a wide-eyed whirlwind of pure, unadulterated awe. Her ho was a cramped, two-room apartnt in the grimy artisan’s quarter of his own capital. The royal mansion, with its soaring ceilings, its marble floors, and its literal tons of gold leaf, was a place so far beyond her wildest dreams that her mind was struggling to process it.
"My… my lord," she stamred, her eyes darting everywhere at once. "It’s… it’s so… shiny."
"That it is," Lloyd agreed, a flicker of amusent in his eyes. "Try not to touch anything. I suspect that even the dust here is a national treasure."
He led them to his office, his two unassuming handmaidens another perfect layer of his disguise. Who would ever suspect that the quiet, serious girl was a warrior who could move faster than sound, and that the bubbly, cheerful one was… well, a bubbly, cheerful girl who was very good at arranging flowers, a fact that would, in its own way, prove to be a surprisingly effective form of camouflage.
His next order of business was to et the staff that the King had assigned to him. He was inford that a team of twenty maids and thirty butlers, the absolute elite of the Royal Household’s service staff, were awaiting his command in the Grand Hall.
He walked into the hall, a vast, cavernous space that was currently a chaotic ss of scaffolding, rolled-up carpets, and nervous-looking artisans. The fifty servants were assembled in a perfect, silent, and deeply intimidating formation. They stood with a military precision that was utterly out of place for a group of dostic staff. Their uniforms were immaculate, their posture was ramrod straight, and their faces were cold, professional, and utterly unreadable masks.
At their head stood a woman in her late forties, the Head Maid, Annalisa. She was a tall, severe-looking woman with her grey hair pulled back in a tight, unforgiving bun, and eyes the color of a winter sky. She looked less like a maid and more like the warden of a high-security prison.
She gave a bow that was technically perfect, but utterly devoid of any warmth or deference. "Lord Ferrum," she said, her voice a cool, clipped instrunt. "I am Head Maid Annalisa. My staff and I are at your disposal."
The ssage was clear. They were at his disposal, but they were not his. Their loyalty was to the palace, to the Crown, and to their own, rigid, and inscrutable hierarchy. And he, the upstart rchant-lord from the North, was an outsider, a temporary and deeply inconvenient disruption to their perfectly ordered world.
Reviews
All reviews (0)