Chapter : 333

He was not the awkward, brooding figure who paced their suite at night, nor the surprisingly ruthless combatant from the tournament, nor the focused, almost manic, industrialist she had glimpsed at the manufactory. This was another Lloyd entirely. Relaxed. Engaged. Laughing.

He was leaning over a large canvas, a stick of graphite in his hand, his head bent close to that of the fiery, crimson-violet-haired Southern Marquess’s daughter, Faria Kruts. Their proximity was easy, familiar, the comfortable closeness of two people utterly absorbed in a shared task. The sunlight slanted through the pavilion, illuminating the dust motes dancing around them, catching the vibrant strands of Faria’s hair, the intense, focused expression on Lloyd’s face. He would point to something on the canvas, his voice, though inaudible from this distance, clearly animated, enthusiastic. Faria would listen, her amethyst eyes fixed on his, then nod, or shake her head, and launch into an equally passionate, gestured response.

Then, she saw them laugh. A shared, spontaneous burst of amusement at some private joke, some shared understanding. Faria threw her head back, a soundless peal of delight. And Lloyd… Lloyd grinned. A wide, genuine, unrestrained grin, a flash of white teeth in his handsome face, an expression of such easy, unburdened joy that it was utterly, completely, alien to Rosa. She had never seen him smile like that. Not at her. Not at anyone.

A new, strange, and deeply unwelcome sensation began to prickle at the edges of Rosa’s carefully controlled consciousness. It was an unfamiliar emotion, one her logical mind struggled to categorize, to process. It felt… sharp. Acidic. A cold, tight knot forming in the pit of her stomach.

“My lady?”

The quiet, deferential voice of her personal attendant, Laila, broke the silence. The older woman, who had served the Siddik family for decades and whose loyalty to Rosa was absolute, had entered the room silently, bearing a tray with a pot of chilled herbal tea. Laila’s own gaze followed her mistress’s, down to the sunlit pavilion, and her usually impassive features tightened with a flicker of distinct, matronly disapproval.

“It is… unseemly, my lady,” Laila murmured, her voice a low, concerned hum. She set the tray down with a soft, almost soundless click. “The Arch Duke’s heir, spending his days in such open, familiar proximity with another high-ranking noblewoman. A woman known for her… spirited temperament. People will talk. The servants are already whispering. It could fuel… damaging gossip.”

Laila was right, of course. From a purely political, strategic perspective, Lloyd’s behavior was reckless. It invited speculation. It could be spun by their enemies—the still-fuming remnants of Rubel’s faction, perhaps—as a sign of instability in the new heir’s marriage, a potential crack in the Ferrum-Siddik alliance. It was, by the rigid, unforgiving standards of their society, improper.

Rosa should have felt a flicker of annoyance at Lloyd for his carelessness. She should have processed Laila’s warning with cool, detached logic, calculating the potential political fallout. She should have, perhaps, even felt a certain grim satisfaction at the prospect of gossip that might further highlight the sham nature of their marriage, reinforcing her own detached position.

Instead, the cold, tight knot in her stomach twisted, harder now, sharper. The acidic sensation intensified.

She remained silent. Her veiled face betrayed nothing. Her posture was as serene, as motionless, as ever. But her hand, which had been resting on the windowsill, slowly, almost unconsciously, clenched into a fist, her knuckles white, her nails biting into her own palm. She continued to watch the two figures in the pavilion below, her analytical gaze missing nothing.

She saw the way Faria’s hand brushed against Lloyd’s as they both reached for the same pot of pigment. She saw the way he leaned in to murmur something in Faria’s ear, the easy intimacy of the gesture. She saw the way Faria’s amethyst eyes seemed to sparkle when she looked at him.

Her internal monologue, usually a calm, logical stream of data analysis, was now a chaotic, unfamiliar jumble of conflicting, highly illogical, observations.

Subject Lloyd Ferrum exhibiting previously unobserved levels of social ease and positive emotional expression. Stimulus: Proximity to Lady Faria Kruts. Contrast with behavior in my presence is… significant.

Lady Faria’s demeanor is similarly altered. The aggressive, competitive fire displayed at the Summit is replaced by… collaborative enthusiasm. Shared amusement. Frequent, close-proximity physical interaction.

Hypothesis: The shared artistic project is acting as a catalyst for a personal bond. A bond that exceeds the parameters of standard noble collaboration.

And then, a new, intrusive, and utterly irrational data point, a feeling, not a fact, inserted itself with the force of a physical blow.

This… is unacceptable.

Chapter : 334

Why? Her logical mind demanded. Why is this unacceptable? It has no direct bearing on my own objectives. My cultivation is unaffected. My political position, while nominally tied to his, is secure. His personal associations are strategically irrelevant to my long-term goals. So why this… this visceral, negative, physiological and emotional response?

She couldn't answer. The cold, tight knot twisted again, a feeling akin to… something. Something she had read about in poetry, in tales of tragic heroines and spurned queens. A feeling her own mother had tried to describe to her once, a long time ago, before the illness, a feeling Rosa had dismissed then as illogical, inefficient, a weakness of the spirit.

Jealousy?

The word itself felt alien, absurd. She, Rosa Siddik, jealous? Of him? The awkward, sofa-dwelling lout who had blundered into her life, who smelled faintly of soap, who asked monumentally stupid questions about babies? It was impossible. It defied all logic.

And yet… the feeling was there. Cold, sharp, undeniable. A proprietary anger. A sense of something… hers… being appreciated, enjoyed, by someone else. A feeling she had never experienced before, and did not, in any way, understand or welcome.

She continued to watch, her grip on her own composure tightening as she felt the unfamiliar, unwelcome emotion churning within her. Her silence was no longer serene; it was a fortress, desperately holding back a confusing, chaotic, and deeply, profoundly, unsettling new siege from within. She was the Ice Princess. And her own personal glacier, for the first time in her life, was showing the faintest, most terrifying, signs of a thaw.

The garden pavilion had become a crucible of creativity, the air thick with the scent of linseed oil and the fervent, often clashing, energies of its two occupants. The initial, easy collaboration between Lloyd and Faria had evolved into a spirited, passionate, and occasionally quite loud, debate. Their shared project had become a battlefield of artistic philosophies, a clash between the classical traditions of Riverio and the stark, persuasive pragmatism of a world Faria couldn't even imagine.

“No, Lloyd, absolutely not!” Faria declared, her voice ringing with the passion of a true believer defending her faith. She stood before the large canvas, a dab of crimson paint on her cheek like a warrior’s mark, her amethyst eyes blazing with artistic indignation. She gestured with her paintbrush at the charcoal sketch they had been arguing over for the better part of the morning. “It is… it is vulgar! It is artifice without artistry! You cannot simply… draw a line down the middle of a woman and declare one half ‘sad’ and the other half ‘happy’! It lacks subtlety! It lacks grace! It is the work of a sign-painter, not an artist!”

Lloyd, leaning against a stack of empty canvases, his own hands stained with charcoal, sighed a long, weary, but not entirely unamused, sigh. He felt like he was back on Earth, trying to explain the principles of modern advertising to a particularly stubborn, and very talented, Renaissance master.

“Faria,” he began, his voice patient, reasonable, “I am not suggesting it lacks artistry. Your skill will provide the artistry. I am suggesting it possesses something far more important for our purpose: clarity. The message must be instant, undeniable, understood by everyone from a Duchess to a dust-man in the space of a single glance.”

“Art should not be a 'message' to be 'understood' like a public notice!” Faria retorted, her paintbrush jabbing at the air for emphasis. “Art should be an experience! It should evoke emotion, inspire contemplation, hint at deeper truths! It should not be… a diagram for soap!”

She turned back to the canvas, her own vision clear in her mind. “I still maintain that a more allegorical approach is superior. Imagine it, Lloyd! A beautiful, goddess-like figure, perhaps a nymph of the streams, rising from a pool of murky, stagnant water. On one side of her, the water is dark, filled with grime. But where she has passed, where she has cleansed herself, the water becomes pure, crystalline, sparkling with light. It’s elegant. It’s beautiful. It tells the story through metaphor, through beauty.”

“It’s also,” Lloyd countered dryly, “completely ambiguous. A common farmer looking at your beautiful painting will see… a pretty wet lady in a dirty pond. They will admire the artistry, yes. But will they feel a sudden, desperate, undeniable urge to go out and buy our soap? Unlikely. They will be too busy wondering if the nymph is going to catch a chill.”

Faria shot him a look that could have curdled milk. “You have the soul of a… a merchant, Ferrum! A cold, calculating, soul-less merchant!”

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