Chapter: 215

The System prompt was a bucket of ice water thrown on the raging fire of Lloyd’s suspicion and killing intent. A hundred coins. A major quest. The System itself was validating Ben’s importance, confirming that this meeting, this enigma, was a critical path in his journey. It wasn't just a random encounter; it was a designated nexus point.

Lloyd stared at Ben, the internal battle raging. The soldier screamed for immediate neutralization of the threat. The strategist whispered of intelligence gathering, of understanding the enemy before striking. The System, with its promise of a hundred-coin reward, was heavily tipping the scales towards the latter.

He slowly, reluctantly, reined in the killing intent, pulling the metaphorical predator back into its cage. The oppressive pressure in the corridor receded. Fang’s growl subsided into a low, unhappy grumble, the lightning around him fading. The wary, dangerous Major General retreated, replaced once more by the calm, watchful, but now deeply unsettled, Lord Ferrum.

“Ten days from tonight,” Lloyd said finally, his voice cold, clipped. “The Ironwood Manor conservatory.” He didn't agree, not exactly. He stated it as a fact. A confirmation of the appointment.

Ben Ferrum’s smile returned, serene, knowing. “Excellent. I look forward to our… re-acquaintance.” He nodded to Inari, who, with a final, wary glance at Lloyd, began to push the wheelchair smoothly down the corridor, their silent departure leaving behind a trail of unanswered questions and a profound, bone-deep sense of unease.

Lloyd stood alone in the quiet hallway, his heart still pounding, his mind reeling. Ben Ferrum. A ghost from a past that shouldn't exist, a key to a future he couldn't predict. In a few days, he would get answers. Or, he thought, a grim smile touching his lips, he would get a fight. Either way, the game had just become infinitely more complex. And infinitely more dangerous.

---

The rest of the Ferrum Family Summit passed in a blur of forced pleasantries and simmering, unspoken tensions. Lloyd moved through the closing ceremonies, the formal feast, the endless rounds of polite, meaningless conversation, like a man sleepwalking. His body was there, nodding respectfully to Great-Aunt Esmeralda, offering a brief, non-committal response to Marquess Kruts’s effusive thanks, even managing a strained, vaguely civil exchange with his still-fuming cousin, Kenta. But his mind, his soul, was elsewhere, trapped in the quiet corridor with the impossible, wheelchair-bound boy who knew his greatest secret.

Major General. The words echoed, a persistent, unnerving drumbeat beneath the surface of the celebratory din.

He found himself back in the suite late that night, the opulent room feeling less like a gilded cage and more like a decompression chamber. The silence was thick, heavy, broken only by the distant sounds of the estate settling into slumber and the soft rustle of pages as Rosa, a silent, veiled sentinel in her usual armchair, read by the light of a single, flickering lamp.

Lloyd didn’t bother with the sofa tonight. He didn’t have the energy for its lumpy, judgmental embrace. He paced. Back and forth, across the plush rug that marked the boundary of his designated territory, a caged tiger wrestling with an impossible enigma.

Who was Ben Ferrum? How could he know? Was he a friend? An enemy? A reincarnator like himself? The questions churned, a relentless, unanswerable vortex. The upcoming meeting at the Ironwood Manor felt less like an appointment and more like a summons, a step into a darkness he couldn't yet fathom.

He paced, running a hand through his dark hair, his mind a chaotic whirlwind. His usual internal monologue, the cynical, pragmatic eighty-year-old, was uncharacteristically silent, replaced by the raw, focused alertness of the soldier confronting an unknown, potentially overwhelming, threat. All his carefully laid plans – the soap empire, the slow accumulation of System Coins, the cautious, gradual revelation of his powers – felt suddenly fragile, naive, thrown into disarray by this single, impossible encounter.

He stopped his pacing, staring unseeingly out the tall window at the moon-drenched gardens, his reflection a pale, haunted stranger in the dark glass. His mood, usually a carefully controlled mixture of weary amusement and strategic focus, was now dark, turbulent, a storm of unease and unanswered questions.

It was in this moment of profound, unguarded preoccupation that Rosa Siddik finally spoke. Her voice, cool and crisp as ever, cut through the heavy silence of the room like a sliver of ice.

“You are troubled, Lloyd.”

Chapter: 216

It wasn’t a question. It was a statement of fact. An observation delivered with the cool, analytical precision of a scientist noting a change in a specimen’s behavior. Lloyd started, turning from the window, surprise momentarily breaking through his dark reverie. He hadn't realized she was watching him so intently. Usually, when she was reading, the rest of the world, himself included, seemed to cease to exist for her.

He saw her sitting there, her book closed in her lap, her veiled face turned towards him, those unnerving obsidian eyes fixed on him with a focus that was… different. Not just the usual detached, data-gathering observation. There was something else there, a flicker of… something. He couldn’t quite name it. Curiosity? Concern? The latter seemed so improbable it was almost laughable.

“Am I so transparent?” Lloyd replied, forcing a wry, self-deprecating smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes. “My apologies. I’ll endeavor to brood more subtly in the future. Wouldn’t want to disrupt the… serene ambiance of our shared domestic bliss.”

Rosa did not react to his sarcasm. Her gaze remained steady, probing. “Your mood has shifted,” she stated, her voice still level, analytical. “Since the conclusion of the Summit. Before, your demeanor, while often… atypical…” (a subtle, almost invisible eye-roll accompanied this word) “…was one of carefree confidence. Your focus was on… finance. Logistics. The… practicalities… of your soap enterprise.” The way she said ‘soap enterprise’ made it sound like a slightly distasteful, if academically interesting, biological experiment. “Today, however… you are not touching your books. You are not sketching schematics. You are… preoccupied. Distant. Your thoughts are clearly elsewhere. Somewhere… dark.”

Lloyd stared at her, genuinely taken aback. She had been observing him. Not just passively, but actively. Cataloging his moods, his habits, his preoccupations. The thought was both unsettling and, in a strange, unexpected way, almost… touching? That she would expend the mental energy to analyze his behavior in such detail… it was the closest thing to genuine interest she had ever displayed.

He felt the familiar urge to deflect, to offer a glib, meaningless response, to retreat behind a wall of sarcasm. But something in her steady, unwavering gaze, something in the quiet, almost expectant, silence of the room, made him pause. Perhaps… perhaps just a sliver of the truth wouldn’t hurt. Not the whole, impossible truth, of course. But a piece. A sliver.

“I… I met someone today, Rosa,” he said finally, his voice quiet, dropping the pretense of carefree confidence. He walked over to the sofa, sinking onto its lumpy surface, suddenly feeling the full weight of the day, of the past two lifetimes, pressing down on him. “A cousin. One I… I don’t remember ever meeting before. Ben Ferrum. Kyle’s third son.”

He watched her for a reaction. A flicker of recognition? A nod of acknowledgment? He saw nothing. Her veiled face remained a perfect, unreadable mask.

“He is… disabled,” Lloyd continued, his voice low, wrestling with the memory. “In a wheelchair. Missing an eye, a hand, a leg.” He saw a faint, almost imperceptible, widening of her visible eyes. Good. A reaction. Something. “And he… he knew something about me, Rosa. Something impossible. Something no one could possibly know.” He ran a hand through his hair again, a gesture of pure, unadulterated frustration. “It has… unsettled me. Deeply.”

He didn’t expect sympathy. He didn’t expect comfort. He wasn’t even sure why he was telling her. Perhaps just to voice the impossible, to give it form in the quiet darkness of the room, to share the burden, however impersonally, with the only other person on the planet who shared his immediate, physical space.

Rosa remained silent for a long moment, her head tilted slightly, processing this new, unexpected data. A disabled cousin. Impossible knowledge. A source of profound, uncharacteristic distress for her usually unflappable, if eccentric, husband.

“There are many things in this world, Lloyd,” she said finally, her voice still cool, still detached, but perhaps lacking some of its usual icy edge, “that defy simple, logical explanation. Curses. Ancient artifacts. Powers that operate beyond our understanding.” She paused, then, to Lloyd’s utter astonishment, she offered not a dismissal, not a platitude, but a piece of cool, pragmatic, almost chillingly logical, advice. “If this… Ben Ferrum… poses a threat, if his knowledge represents a danger to you, to this house… then the logical course of action is to neutralize that threat. Permanently.”

Lloyd stared at her. Neutralize the threat. Permanently. She was suggesting… assassination? Just like that? With the same calm, dispassionate tone she might use to suggest rearranging the furniture for better energy flow? The sheer, ruthless pragmatism of it was both terrifying and, in a dark, twisted way, almost… admirable.

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