Episode-231
Words : 1493
Updated : Sep 29th, 2025
Chapter : 461
“You have a wife, my lord,” Airin stated, the words simple, direct, and utterly, completely, unassailable. “Lady Rosa Siddik. She is a great lady. Powerful. Beautiful. She is your present. She is your future. Your focus, your heart, your... attentions... they belong to her. To the living woman who shares your name and your life. Not,” she concluded, her voice gentle but with an edge of steel that was as sharp and clear as any princess’s command, “to a ghost from the past who happens to wear my face.”
She stood up then, her small frame radiating a quiet, simple dignity that was more powerful than any display of Spirit Pressure he had ever felt. She offered him a small, polite, and very final, curtsy.
“Thank you for the tea, Professor,” she said. “And for the apology. I understand now. And I accept.” She paused, then added, her final words a gift of gentle, but firm, advice. “I hope, my lord, that you can find a way to let your ghost rest in peace. For your sake. And,” she added, her gaze holding a universe of unspoken meaning, “for your wife’s.”
And with that, before he could even think of a response, she turned and walked away, her back straight, her steps no longer hesitant, but firm, steady. She left him sitting alone at the small, wrought-iron table, the fragrant steam from his cooling tea rising into the quiet afternoon air. He had come here to apologize to a market girl. And he had, instead, been given a profound, and deeply necessary, lesson in duty, in honor, and in the art of letting go, from the very ghost he had been chasing.
—
The conversation with Airin had been a strange, unexpected, and deeply humbling, exorcism. Her gentle, yet firm, admonishment—focus on your wife, not on a ghost—had been a bucket of cold, clear water thrown on the smoldering embers of his grief. She was right, of course. Utterly, completely, and infuriatingly, right. His past was his to bear, not hers to be haunted by. The encounter had not solved the mystery of her impossible resemblance, but it had... settled something within him. It had cleared the air, allowing the cold, pragmatic focus of the Major General to reassert its dominance over the wounded heart of the widower.
His conscience, if not entirely clear, was at least significantly less burdened. And with that newfound clarity came a renewed, sharp focus on the immediate, tangible threat. The counterfeiters. The Gilded Hand. The slow, insidious poison they were pumping into the veins of his burgeoning empire.
The time for observation was over. The time for apology was past. Now, it was time for the hunt.
He left the serene, sun-dappled peace of the Academy grounds behind, the memory of Airin’s quiet dignity a strange, poignant counterpoint to the grim task that now lay before him. He did not return to his opulent royal quarters. He did not summon a carriage. He melted into the teeming, anonymous crowds of the capital city, his fine professorial tunic replaced once more by the dark, practical, and utterly unremarkable, clothes of a common traveler. He moved with a new purpose, a predator’s silent, focused stride, his senses on high alert.
His destination was not the grand avenues or the wealthy merchant districts. It was a descent. A journey into the city’s dark, forgotten underbelly. Into Rais. Into the tanner’s district.
Following the precise, detailed directions from Ken’s intelligence report, a map seared into his memory, he navigated the labyrinthine, stinking alleys of the slum. The oppressive atmosphere, which had felt so alien, so shocking, during his first visit as the White Mask, now felt... familiar. A necessary part of the operational terrain. The stench of the open sewers, the cloying decay, the sour reek of poverty—it was no longer just a sensory assault; it was camouflage. A perfect environment for a ghost to move unseen.
He found the derelict warehouse easily. It was a rotting heart in a decaying body, a large, sagging structure of blackened, splintered wood and crumbling brick, slumped between two equally dilapidated tenements. Its windows were boarded up, its great double doors barred and chained, a thick layer of grime and filth proclaiming it abandoned for decades. It looked dead. But Lloyd, his senses sharpened, could feel the faint, almost imperceptible, signs of life within. A low, muffled thrum of activity. A flicker of illicit light from a heavily shuttered basement window. And the smell.
Oh, gods, the smell.
Chapter : 462
It was a physical, malevolent presence that hit him from twenty paces away. It was a scent profile from the deepest, most foul pits of hell. The dominant note was the overwhelming, nauseating stench of the rancid fish oil Ken’s report had mentioned, a smell of greasy, aquatic decay that seemed to cling to the very air, to coat the back of his throat. Layered over it was the sharp, caustic, chemical bite of the slaked lime, a smell that burned the nostrils and made the eyes water. And beneath it all, a sour, funky, almost fungal aroma—the Froth-tongue moss, he presumed—and the cheap, cloying sweetness of the synthetic perfume oil, a desperate, pathetic attempt to mask the underlying olfactory horror. It was the smell of greed, of desperation, of a product so vile it was an insult to the very concept of cleanliness. It was the scent of his enemy.
He did not approach the main entrance. He circled the building, moving with a silent, fluid grace, a shadow among the deeper shadows of the alley. He found what he was looking for at the rear of the building: a small, barred, basement-level ventilation grate, half-hidden behind a mountain of stinking refuse. It was from here that the foulest concentration of the stench was emanating, along with a faint, warm, humid draft. The factory’s exhaust port.
He knelt, the grimy cobblestones cold and slick beneath his boots. He peered through the rusty iron bars of the grate. And he looked down into the rotting heart of the Gilded Hand.
The scene below was a vision from an alchemist’s nightmare. It was a low-ceilinged, cavernous cellar, its stone walls slick with a permanent, greasy dampness, the air thick with a foul, choking steam that glowed a sickly yellow-green in the light of a few sputtering, smoking oil lamps. The floor was a treacherous landscape of puddles of viscous, foul-smelling liquid, piles of discarded moss, and empty sacks that had once held the caustic slaked lime.
In the center of the cellar, over a series of crude, smoking braziers, sat three massive, dented iron cauldrons. They bubbled sluggishly, their contents a thick, swirling, bluish-grey sludge, releasing the foul, chemical-laden steam that filled the room. This was the source of the counterfeit AURA, the birthplace of the bilge in a bottle.
Around the cauldrons, a handful of workers moved like listless, hollow-eyed ghosts. They were gaunt, their faces pale and slick with sweat, their clothes little more than rags. A few of them had angry, red chemical burns on their hands and arms, which they seemed to ignore with a kind of dull, weary resignation. They stirred the bubbling sludge with long, splintered wooden paddles, their movements slow, lethargic, as if they were already half-poisoned by the very fumes they were forced to breathe. This wasn't a workshop; it was a slave pit. A place where desperation had been refined into a toxic, profitable slurry.
Lloyd watched, his face, hidden by the shadows, a mask of cold, clinical disgust. He saw a man carelessly scoop a bucket of the slaked lime powder, a cloud of the caustic dust billowing up, making him and the workers around him cough, their hacking echoes lost in the general din. He saw another worker, his hands raw and red, bottling the finished, still-warm sludge, his movements clumsy, spilling a good portion of the corrosive liquid onto the filthy floor. There was no quality control. No safety. Only the desperate, grim, and dangerous, pursuit of a few silver coins.
This wasn't just commercial sabotage; it was a public health crisis waiting to happen. The product wasn’t just inferior; it was dangerous. The men and women being forced to produce it were being slowly poisoned. And the people buying it, the common folk of the city who couldn't afford the real AURA but craved a taste of its status, were rubbing this foul, caustic concoction onto their skin, onto the skin of their children.
The cold, righteous fury that had been simmering within him since his discovery in the market now solidified into a hard, sharp, and absolutely unforgiving, resolve. This was not just about protecting his brand anymore. This was about cleansing a rot. This was not a business dispute. This was a necessary act of sanitation.
Comments (0)