Episode-265
Words : 1534
Updated : Oct 3rd, 2025
Chapter : 529
He had left the suite, needing air, needing space, needing to escape the silent, analytical gaze of his wife, which he was sure would be even more intense now after his sudden, unexplained collapse. He needed to find a quiet corner, to properly assess his new capabilities, to speak with the Administrator, to understand the new rules of his existence.
He was just turning a corner into a sun-drenched colonnade overlooking one of the palace’s many serene, formal gardens, when a voice, sharp with a familiar, maternal anxiety, called his name.
“Lloyd!”
He stopped, turning to see his mother, Duchess Milody, hurrying towards him, her usual serene, gliding grace replaced by a brisk, worried stride. Her elegant lavender silk gown rustled with her haste, and her face, usually a mask of calm, aristocratic composure, was etched with lines of genuine, undisguised concern.
“Mother,” he greeted, managing a weak, but hopefully reassuring, smile.
She reached him, her hands fluttering up to grip his arms, her eyes, sharp and intelligent, sweeping over him, taking in his pallor, the lingering exhaustion in his posture. “Lloyd, are you alright?” she asked, her voice tight with a worry she was clearly struggling to contain. “The servants informed me you had finally awoken. Ken’s report... Roy’s message... they spoke of a sudden, violent illness. A magical feedback loop from your cultivation. They said... they said you collapsed.”
He saw the fear in her eyes, a fear that was not for the heir of Ferrum, but for her son. A mother’s primal, instinctual fear. And it sent a strange, unexpected warmth spreading through his chest, a feeling that was a welcome antidote to the cold, lonely realities of his secret life.
“I am fine, Mother,” he said, his voice quiet, steady. He gently patted one of her hands, a gesture of reassurance that felt both natural and strangely new. “Truly. It was... as you said. A feedback loop. I was... overeager in my training. I pushed my new abilities too hard, too fast. My power system... it simply overloaded.” It was the truth. Or at least, a version of the truth, stripped of the inconvenient, unbelievable details about cosmic software updates and sentient IT support technicians.
Milody searched his face, her eyes still clouded with worry. “But the energy surge... the entire estate felt it. It was a power so chaotic, so... immense... he thought the palace itself was under attack.”
“It was... a significant breakthrough,” Lloyd admitted, choosing his words with care. “A successful fusion of my... two primary power sources.” He deliberately met her gaze, a silent, shared acknowledgment of the Ferrum and Austin bloodlines that now raged and, hopefully, coexisted within him. “The process was... more violent than I anticipated. But the result,” he allowed a flicker of genuine, confident excitement to enter his voice, “is a new level of stability. Of control. I am stronger now, Mother. More stable. The incident was a necessary, if rather dramatic, cost of progress.”
He was selling a narrative, of course. A story of a young, powerful, and slightly reckless, prodigy learning to control his immense, newfound gifts. It was a story that was plausible, that fit the facts as she knew them, and that framed his catastrophic system failure not as a weakness, but as a sign of his immense, almost uncontrollable, potential.
He saw her relax, just a fraction. The terror in her eyes began to recede, replaced by a dawning, almost awed, understanding. He was not broken. He was reforged. She looked at him, at the new, quiet confidence in his eyes, at the subtle, but undeniable, shift in his very presence. The awkward, uncertain boy was truly, completely, gone. In his place stood a young man who radiated a calm, contained power that was both deeply familiar—a mirror of his father’s authority—and yet strangely, uniquely, his own.
A slow, proud, and deeply relieved, smile began to bloom on her face. The matriarch, the politician, the guardian of her house’s future, was reassured. But the mother... the mother was still worried.
“You must be more careful, Lloyd,” she chided gently, her hand squeezing his arm, a gesture of pure, maternal affection. “Power is a gift, yes. But it is also a fire. And even the most skilled smith can be burned if he is not wise.” She looked at him, her eyes soft with a love that needed no words. “I am proud of you, my son. Prouder than you can possibly know. But your strength... it also frightens me. Promise me you will be careful.”
Chapter : 530
“I promise, Mother,” he said, his own voice quiet, sincere. And in that moment, in the sunlit colonnade of a foreign palace, surrounded by the echoes of his impossible secrets, he felt a simple, profound connection to the woman before him. A connection that was not about bloodlines, or power, or politics. It was just... a son, reassuring his worried mother. It was a moment of simple, uncomplicated, human warmth. And it was a gift more precious, more grounding, than any number of System Coins.
—
The warmth of his mother’s concern lingered long after she had departed, a comforting, sun-drenched afterglow in the cool marble colonnade. Milody, her immediate fears for his well-being assuaged by his calm (and carefully edited) explanation, had finally allowed the stern matriarch to recede, replaced by the loving mother. She had fussed over him, insisting he return to his rooms to rest, ordering a servant to bring him a nourishing broth, her practical affection a language more eloquent than any grand declaration. Lloyd had acquiesced, touched by her genuine care, feeling for a fleeting, precious moment not like a reincarnated general or a cosmic anomaly, but simply... like a son.
He was making his way slowly back towards his suite, his body still aching but his mind clearer, lighter, than it had been in days, when another, even more unexpected, visitor intercepted him.
He saw her approaching from the far end of the long, sunlit corridor, and his stride faltered. It was Faria Kruts.
She moved with her usual fluid, confident grace, but today there was a strange, almost hesitant, quality to her movements. She was not dressed in her practical riding leathers or her paint-smeared artist’s smock. She wore a simple but exquisitely tailored traveling gown of a deep, forest green silk, her fiery crimson-violet hair braided neatly, a sign that she was either just arriving at the palace or preparing to depart.
But it was the object she carried that made Lloyd’s mind come to a complete, stuttering halt. In her hands, she held a small, elegantly wrapped cake box, tied with a simple, cream-colored ribbon.
Faria Kruts. Holding a cake box. The two concepts were so utterly, comprehensively, at odds with his entire understanding of her character—the fiery competitor, the passionate artist, the proud Marquess’s daughter—that his brain simply refused to process the image. It was like seeing his father enthusiastically take up knitting, or watching Ken Park break into a spontaneous tap-dance routine. It was a fundamental violation of the known laws of the universe.
She saw him, and for a fraction of a second, he saw a flicker of something in her amethyst eyes—a hint of nervousness, of uncharacteristic uncertainty—before her usual mask of cool, confident composure snapped back into place. She stopped before him, the cake box held between them like a strange, fragile, and deeply perplexing, peace offering.
“Lord Ferrum,” she greeted, her voice the usual clear, melodic tone, but lacking its usual challenging, almost combative, edge. It was... softer. Quieter. “I... I heard you had been taken ill. A sudden fever, the rumors said. I am relieved to see you on your feet again.”
Lloyd could only stare, first at her, then at the cake box, then back at her, his mind still struggling to reconcile the image before him with the formidable woman he knew. “Lady Faria,” he managed, his own voice slightly hoarse with surprise. “This is... unexpected. I was not aware you were still in the duchy.”
“I was preparing to depart this morning,” she explained, her gaze dropping for a moment to the box in her hands, a faint, almost imperceptible, flush touching her high cheekbones. It was a blush not of anger or embarrassment, but of a kind of shy, awkward sincerity that was so utterly alien on her proud features that it was almost disarming. “But then the news of your... illness... reached my father’s residence. He was... concerned. He insisted I postpone my journey, to ensure you were well.”
She looked up then, meeting his gaze, and the blush deepened almost imperceptibly. “And I... I confess I was also concerned,” she admitted, the words seeming to cost her a great deal of effort. She thrust the cake box forward slightly, a gesture that was both abrupt and strangely hesitant. “So... I brought you this.”
Lloyd looked down at the elegantly wrapped box as if it were a strange, alien artifact. “This is...?”
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