Chapter : 303

The crisis, when it came, did not arrive with a whisper or a warning. It detonated in the very heart of the capital, in the center of the main market square, on the busiest, most crowded day of the week.

The scene was a familiar one: a traveling bard was singing a slightly bawdy, very popular ballad about a farmer’s daughter and a surprisingly agile scarecrow, his lute drawing a cheerful, clapping crowd. Merchants hawked their wares, children chased pigeons, and the air was thick with the scent of roasted nuts, spiced wine, and the general, earthy aroma of a thriving city. And woven through it all, like a fragrant, invisible thread, was the whisper of Aura. Two noblewomen, passing by in a litter, could be overheard debating the merits of the Silken Bar versus the Elixir. A wealthy merchant, haggling over the price of saffron, made a point of ostentatiously washing his hands with a small, travel-sized piece of the bar, drawing envious glances.

Then, a scream ripped through the cheerful din.

It was a woman’s voice, high-pitched, ragged with a grief so raw and potent it silenced the bard mid-verse. The crowd turned, a sea of curious faces, as a woman burst into the center of the square, her clothes simple but clean, her face a mask of frantic, tear-streaked despair. In her arms, she clutched a small child, a boy of perhaps four or five, who was whimpering pitifully.

"Help!" the woman shrieked, her voice cracking with anguish. "Gods, someone help my son!"

The crowd parted, murmuring, concern and morbid curiosity warring on their faces. They saw the child, and a collective gasp went through the square. The boy’s skin—his face, his neck, his small, chubby arms—was not the healthy pink of a child. It was covered in angry, weeping, red welts. Patches of his skin were inflamed, swollen, looking as if he had been scalded or whipped with nettles. He writhed weakly in his mother’s arms, his small whimpers a heartbreaking counterpoint to her hysterical sobs.

"What has happened, good woman?" a city guard asked, pushing his way through the crowd, his hand resting on the pommel of his sword, his expression grim.

"It’s… it’s the soap!" the woman wailed, her voice rising to a near-scream, ensuring everyone in the square could hear. She held up the child’s afflicted arm for all to see. "The new soap! The lord’s soap! The AURA soap!"

A new kind of silence fell over the square. Not of curiosity, but of stunned, dawning horror.

"My husband," the woman sobbed, her story tumbling out in a torrent of practiced, theatrical grief, "he is a stonemason. A good man. He… he spent a whole month’s savings, a fortune, to buy one of those fancy bars for me. The 'Silken Bar', they call it. A gift. He wanted me to have something fine, something the high-born ladies have." Her voice caught, a perfect, heartbreaking performance of a simple woman overwhelmed by a rare, tragic luxury.

"I used it this morning," she continued, her voice trembling. "Just once. And then… I bathed my boy. My sweet, innocent boy." She clutched the whimpering child tighter, her tears flowing freely now. "And minutes later… this! This horror! His skin… it’s on fire! The soap… it’s poison! The lord’s fancy, expensive soap… it has poisoned my child!"

She collapsed to her knees, rocking the whimpering boy in her arms, her wails echoing off the cobblestones. "Justice! I want justice! The great House Ferrum, selling poison to the common folk! They must answer for this! For what they have done to my innocent babe!"

The effect was instantaneous. And devastating.

The whispers started immediately, spreading through the crowd like a virus. "Poison?" "The AURA soap?" "Did you hear? It burned the child!"

The two noblewomen in the litter, who moments before had been smugly discussing its virtues, now looked at each other with expressions of dawning alarm. The merchant who had so proudly washed his hands put his own soap away with a look of sudden, profound suspicion. The envy that had surrounded the AURA brand curdled, in an instant, into fear.

The story spread through the city with the speed of a plague. From the market square to the guild halls, from the taverns to the very steps of the Ducal Palace. The whisper of Aura, once a testament to luxury, was now a harbinger of danger. The "Poison Soap." The words were on everyone’s lips.

Chapter : 304

By the time the sun began to set, the narrative had solidified into a damning, terrifying tale. The great House Ferrum, in its arrogance and greed, had rushed a new, untested product to market, and the common folk were paying the price. The Silken Bar, the ultimate symbol of status, was now a symbol of ducal negligence, of aristocratic carelessness. The carefully constructed image of refinement, of quality, of serene, effortless luxury, had been shattered, replaced by the ugly, terrifying image of a small, whimpering boy covered in angry, weeping welts.

The foundation of Lloyd’s empire, built so carefully on a delicate architecture of desire and aspiration, was cracking. And it threatened to bring the entire, fragrant, profitable enterprise crashing down into a ruin of scandal and fear. The AURA brand was no longer just a success; it was a crisis. A full-blown, public, and potentially fatal, crisis.

[Author Note: Hello readers! What you’re about to witness is Roy’s unexpected burst of rage. But don’t jump to conclusions just yet. His fury isn’t because he’s been made a fool—there’s something deeper at play. Keep reading, and the real reason behind his strange behavior will reveal itself.]

The summons arrived not by a gentle knock or a polite missive, but with the sharp, percussive force of a battering ram against the manufactory gates. A squad of the Ducal Guard, their armor gleaming with grim purpose, their faces set in stony masks, their captain bearing a sealed order from the Arch Duke himself. The message was simple, stark, and utterly non-negotiable: Lord Lloyd Ferrum was to present himself in his father’s study. Immediately.

The walk back to the main estate felt like a condemned man’s final journey. The usual hum of the city's people who are present here seemed muted, replaced by a new, insidious undercurrent of whispers and fearful, sideways glances. Lloyd saw a woman hurry her child across the street to avoid his path. He heard a merchant mutter "poisoner" under his breath as he passed. The AURA brand, his brilliant creation, had become a mark of shame, a brand of a very different, very dangerous, kind.

He entered his father’s study to find the atmosphere thick with a tension so profound it was almost a physical presence. The air, usually smelling of beeswax and old paper, now seemed to carry the faint, acrid scent of impending doom.

His father, Arch Duke Roy Ferrum, sat behind his massive mahogany desk, a figure carved from cold, unyielding granite. His face was not just stern; it was thunderous, his eyes dark pools of controlled, glacial fury. This was not the frustrated but ultimately proud father of the Summit, nor the shrewd business partner of the deed-signing. This was the Arch Duke in his purest, most terrifying form: the ruler whose house, whose name, had been publicly, humiliatingly, tarnished.

The accusing woman was there, seated in a chair before the desk, cradling her afflicted child. The boy whimpered pitifully, his small face a patchwork of angry red welts and swollen skin. The woman herself was a masterpiece of calculated despair, her eyes red-rimmed from weeping, her shoulders slumped in a posture of maternal anguish.

Standing near the hearth, his arms crossed, his face a mask of grim, traditionalist disapproval, was Lord Kyle Ferrum, the new head of the primary cadet branch. His presence was a silent but powerful statement: this was a matter that now concerned the core integrity, the very honor, of the entire Ferrum line.

Master Elmsworth stood near the bookshelves, looking pale, distraught, wringing his hands, his usual economic fervor replaced by a kind of academic, second-hand horror. Grand Master Grimaldi was there as well, his long silver beard practically bristling with a mixture of alchemical curiosity and professional indignation. He stroked his beard, his ancient eyes narrowed, fixed on the child, his expression one of deep, analytical thought.

“Lloyd,” Roy Ferrum began, his voice utterly devoid of warmth, a low, dangerous rumble that seemed to vibrate through the very floorboards. “Explain this.” It wasn’t a question. It was a command. A demand for an answer that would either condemn or exonerate him in the space of a single breath.

Before Lloyd could even open his mouth, the woman let out a fresh, heart-wrenching sob. “Your Grace,” she wailed, turning her tear-streaked face to the Arch Duke. “My boy! My innocent babe! Look what your son’s… creation… has done to him!” She held the child up, a living, whimpering piece of evidence. “This… this ‘Aura’… it is a blight! A poison sold for profit! We are simple folk, Your Grace! We trusted the Ferrum name! And this… this is our reward!”

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