My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! -
Episode : 42
Chapter : 83
Jasmin, still processing the almost magical transformation they had witnessed – turning base ingredients into potential luxury – suddenly remembered the practicalities. Her brow furrowed slightly as she looked back towards the now-darkened smokehouse, then at the remaining, substantial jar of rendered tallow and the carefully stoppered jug of potent lye solution they had left inside.
"My lord?" she ventured, her voice still holding a trace of awe as they walked slowly away from the smokehouse under the gathering dusk. The first stars were beginning to prick the twilight sky. "The… the leftover fat? And the strong ash-water?" She gestured back vaguely. "There is much remaining. What… what will become of it? Do we simply discard it?" The thought seemed wasteful, almost sacrilegious, after the effort they'd expended.
Lloyd stopped, turning to face her under the deepening shadows, a playful glint entering his eyes. He feigned surprise. "Discard it? Heavens no, Jasmin! Did I not explain the full scope of our enterprise?"
Jasmin blinked, confusion returning. "Explain, my lord? You spoke of the hard soap bars, the ones curing now…"
Lloyd chuckled softly, a low, conspiratorial sound. "Ah, my dear Jasmin," he began, reaching out to gently tap the side of her head as if imparting a great secret, "those bars? Those are merely… the prologue. The initial experiment. Proof of concept, you see." He leaned closer, his voice dropping to an excited whisper. "They might succeed wonderfully, or they might fail spectacularly – perhaps they'll be too harsh, perhaps they won't lather well. It's a learning process!"
He straightened up, a wide, almost mischievous grin spreading across his face, chasing away the last vestiges of fatigue. "But the real prize, Jasmin? The true innovation? The product that will make nobles weep with joy and throw gold coins at our feet?" He paused for dramatic effect, his eyes gleaming in the twilight. "Liquid soap!"
Jasmin stared at him, mouth slightly agape. "L-liquid… soap, my lord?" The concept was utterly alien. Soap was hard. A block. Something you scrubbed with. Liquid soap? How could soap be liquid? What would one even do with it?
"Precisely!" Lloyd confirmed, clearly relishing her bewilderment. "Think of it! No more harsh blocks leaving scum in the washbasin! A smooth, cleansing liquid, dispensed perhaps from elegant woodcraft bottles! Easily scented, instantly lathering! Imagine washing your hands, your face, even your hair, with something so… refined!"
He saw the wheels turning in her mind, struggling to reconcile this impossible idea with reality.
"But… how, my lord?" she stammered. "The mixture we made… it became thick. Solid."
"Ah, but that," Lloyd tapped his temple again, the grin widening, "is where the type of lye matters. Remember I mentioned the difference between hardwood ash and softwood ash?"
Jasmin nodded slowly, recalling his earlier explanations during the leaching process.
"The lye we extracted today from the hardwood ash," Lloyd explained patiently, simplifying the chemistry, "the 'hidden fire' in it, naturally encourages the soap to become hard. Solid bars. That's its nature." He gestured back towards the remaining jug of lye in the smokehouse. "But there's another kind of hidden fire, found more readily in the ash of softer woods, or produced through different methods," (he mentally filed away 'potash lye' and 'potassium hydroxide' as terms not to use), "that creates a different reaction. It still transforms the fat, but the resulting soap… it prefers to remain liquid! Or at least, a very soft paste."
He clapped his hands together softly. "And that, my dear Jasmin, is what we shall attempt tomorrow! Using the remaining tallow, perhaps blended with a little olive oil if I can procure some discreetly, and a slightly different preparation of our ash-water – perhaps concentrating it further, or maybe trying ash from a different wood source if available – we aim for liquid luxury!"
Jasmin looked utterly flummoxed, trying to process the cascade of new, almost unbelievable information. Hard lye, soft lye, liquid soap… it sounded like pure magic, spun from the mind of this perplexing young lord who seemed to understand the secret workings of the world in ways no one else did.
"So," Lloyd concluded brightly, his enthusiasm infectious despite the absurdity of the topic, "the leftover fat and lye are not waste! They are vital components for Phase Two! Tomorrow, we experiment with liquidity!" He paused, then seemed to remember something else. "Ah, but before tomorrow's experiments… today's work isn't quite finished."
He sniffed the air theatrically. "The bars we made? Functional, perhaps. But lacking… finesse. Elegance. They need fragrance! Something clean, refreshing, something that speaks of nature, not just… rendered beef."
Chapter : 84
He looked at Jasmin, his eyes sparkling with purpose again. "Rosemary, Jasmin. That’s what we need. The estate gardens have several large bushes near the northern wall, don't they? Hardy, aromatic rosemary. Perfect for distilling a clean, invigorating essential oil to scent future batches, both solid and liquid."
He started walking again, turning towards the direction of the main gardens, gesturing for her to follow. "Come along, Jasmin my dear! Our alchemical adventures continue! We need to gather rosemary before the light fails completely! Snip the freshest sprigs, the ones rich with oil! Enough for a decent distillation! Chop chop!"
Jasmin stared after him for a moment, her mind reeling. Liquid soap? Different types of hidden fire from ash? Distilling fragrance from rosemary? She felt like she’d fallen into one of the fantastical stories her mother used to tell her, tales of clever wizards and impossible inventions. But this wasn't a story. This was Young Lord Ferrum, the supposedly mediocre heir, radiating genius and bizarre enthusiasm, leading her on a twilight herb-gathering expedition after spending a day making caustic liquids and nascent soap.
She shook her head slightly, a bewildered smile touching her lips despite herself. He might be baffling, perhaps even slightly mad in his intensity, but he was undeniably brilliant. And he was keeping his promise about her mother.
"Yes, my lord!" she called out, hurrying to catch up, grabbing the empty bucket again instinctively. "Rosemary! Right away!"
As they walked briskly through the deepening twilight towards the distant scent of herbs, Jasmin found herself looking at Lloyd Ferrum not just with awe, but with a fierce, protective loyalty. He was strange, yes. His methods were unconventional. But he possessed a spark, a vision, that felt utterly unique. And she, Jasmin, the quiet butcher girl, was somehow part of it. Whatever strange paths his knowledge led them down – be it tallow rendering, lye leaching, or midnight herb gathering – she would follow. He was, after all, her genius but weird alchemist Young Lord. And she wouldn't let him down.
-----
A few hours ago.
The late afternoon sun cast long, distorted shadows across the secluded clearing by the pond as Lloyd carefully decanted the last of the precious, correctly concentrated lye solution into a sturdy, stoppered ceramic jug. The air, usually peaceful and smelling of damp earth and willow leaves, now carried a faint, sharp, almost metallic tang – the signature scent of the potent alkali they had painstakingly extracted from simple wood ash. Jasmin stood beside him, wiping her brow with the back of a gloved hand, her dark eyes wide with a mixture of fatigue, lingering apprehension, and undeniable fascination. They had done it. They had created the 'burning water', the hidden fire.
Unseen by either Lloyd or Jasmin, another figure observed the scene from a distance, partially concealed by the thick trunk of an ancient, gnarled oak tree situated on a slight rise overlooking the pond area. Rosa Siddik stood perfectly still, a statue carved from ice and emerald silk. Beside her, a step behind and utterly silent, stood her personal attendant, a stern-faced older woman named Lyra, who had served the Siddik family for decades and accompanied Rosa to the Ferrum estate as part of her dowry agreement.
Rosa had sought the relative solitude of the outer gardens, needing space away from the stifling opulence of the main estate and the lingering, perplexing enigma that was her husband. His performance during the confrontation with Viscount Rubel had been… illogical. His confidence, his knowledge of hidden family secrets (like engagement attempt), his easy dismantling of Rubel’s plot – it didn’t align with any previous data. It was a deviation requiring analysis, and analysis required distance, quiet contemplation.
Her walk had led her, purely by chance, towards this secluded pond, a corner of the vast estate she hadn't explored before. And then she saw them. Lloyd. And a servant girl she didn’t immediately recognize. Engaged in… something peculiar.
From her vantage point, Rosa couldn't discern the exact nature of their activity, only the broad strokes. Buckets. Ash. Water being poured, filtered, collected. Lloyd gesturing, explaining intently. The girl listening, rapt, occasionally assisting. They worked with a strange, focused intensity, an air of shared purpose that seemed incongruous given their respective stations. Lloyd, the Arch Duke’s heir, covered in smudges of grey ash, patiently demonstrating some mundane filtering process to a servant girl. It was… odd.
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