Episode-452


Chapter : 903


He looked at the two figures before him. The Sultan, Asad Ullah, was still sitting on his obsidian throne, a look of profound, almost paternal, satisfaction on his handsome, silver-bearded face. He looked like a master craftsman who had just put the final, perfect, and exquisitely carved piece into his life’s greatest work. He was not a king; he was a proud, matchmaking father who had just successfully procured a prize-winning, god-slaying husband for his brilliant, and notoriously picky, daughter.


And Amina. The woman who was Sumaiya. She stood beside her father, her posture a perfect, regal elegance, her face now a mask of serene, and deeply infuriating, calm. The mischievous, teasing glint that had been in her eyes was gone, replaced by a look of quiet, professional satisfaction. She was not a blushing bride-to-be; she was a master strategist who had just successfully concluded the most important negotiation of her life.


They were a terrifyingly competent, and apparently completely insane, father-daughter duo.


Lloyd’s mind, in a desperate act of self-preservation, finally, mercifully, rebooted. The initial, overwhelming wave of pure, static shock began to recede, replaced by the familiar, comforting, and ice-cold flow of pure, tactical analysis.


The Major General was back in command. And the Major General had just been presented with a mission-critical, cascading systems failure.


Priority One: Damage control, the voice in his head commanded, crisp and clear. Do not react. Do not speak. Do not, under any circumstances, mention the existence of your other, very powerful, and very real wife. To do so now would be to turn a complex, diplomatic problem into an immediate, and likely very fatal, international incident.


He ruthlessly suppressed the hysterical, screaming urge to simply point at Amina and shout, “But I can’t marry you! I’m already married to an ice-witch who can freeze a man’s soul with a single, disapproving glance!”


Priority Two: Information gathering, the voice continued. You are operating in a complete information vacuum. You have been outmaneuvered because your opponent possessed a universe of data that you did not. You must rectify this. You must understand the full parameters of this… new arrangement.


He took a deep, steadying breath, a small, simple act that felt like a monumental victory of will over a complete and total mental collapse. He forced his face into a mask of what he hoped looked like dazed, overwhelmed, but ultimately grateful, humility.


He finally found his voice. It was a little shaky, a little strained, but it was his. “Your… Your Highness,” he began, his gaze fixed on the marble floor, a perfect picture of a humble man completely out of his depth. “Your Majesty. I… I am a man of humble birth. A simple healer. I am… I am not worthy of such an honor. To be offered the hand of the Princess… it is a gift so far beyond my station, so far beyond my wildest dreams, that I… I do not have the words.”


It was a brilliant, if desperate, opening move. He was not refusing. He was not accepting. He was playing for time, using the vast, unbridgeable chasm of their social stations as a shield, a temporary barrier against this insane, matrimonial tide.


The Sultan let out a low, warm, and deeply satisfied chuckle. It was the sound of a lion who has just watched a clever gazelle try to outsmart it, and has found the attempt to be deeply, and endearingly, amusing.


“Humility is a fine virtue, Doctor Zayn,” the Sultan said, his voice a low, rumbling purr. “But do not mistake our intentions. We are not offering you this honor because of your birth. We are offering it to you because of your worth. We have seen your courage. We have seen your power. And my daughter has seen the quality of your character. In this kingdom, those are the only metrics that truly matter.”


He had just, with a few, simple words, completely and utterly negated Lloyd’s only defensive strategy. His humble birth was not a barrier; it was, in fact, the very thing that made him so attractive. He was a man of pure, unadulterated, and self-made merit.


Lloyd’s mind scrambled for a new tactic. The wife, his mind screamed again. Just tell them about the wife!


Negative, the Major General countered, his mental voice a whip-crack of pure, cold logic. To reveal the existence of the wife now would be to confess to a profound, and very public, deception. You have entered their most sacred contest, have won the hand of their princess, all while being secretly bound to another. It will not be seen as an unfortunate misunderstanding. It will be seen as a calculated, political insult of the highest order. It will be seen as an act of war.


Chapter : 904


He was trapped. Every move, every path, led to a different, and equally spectacular, form of disaster.


He looked up at Amina, his eyes a silent, desperate plea for some kind of… of an out. An escape clause. A footnote in this insane, matrimonial contract that he had somehow, unknowingly, just signed in blood and fire.


She seemed to understand his silent, panicked plea. She stepped forward, her movements a fluid, graceful dance.


“My father is correct, Lord Zayn,” she said, her voice a calm, reassuring, and deeply unhelpful melody. “Your worth is beyond question. And the alliance between us, the partnership we have already begun to forge… this is simply the formal, and most logical, conclusion of that partnership.”


She was framing their impending, catastrophic marriage not as a romantic union, but as a business deal. A merger and acquisition. And he was the one being acquired.


“The dowry,” she continued, her voice as smooth and as cool as polished silk, “the fifty percent share in the royal mine, is a testament to the value my father places on this new alliance. It is a joining of our houses, our futures, our… assets.”


She then delivered the final, beautiful, and exquisitely cruel twist of the knife.


“And the twenty-five percent share that you have won, that is now yours by right,” she concluded, a faint, almost imperceptible, and utterly terrifying smile in her voice, “is simply your own, personal, and now legally binding, stake in our shared, and very prosperous, future. It is a way to ensure that your own fortunes, and the fortunes of our kingdom, are now one and the same. An unbreakable bond.”


He had not just won a wife. He had won a set of golden, diamond-encrusted, and utterly, completely, and inescapably unbreakable shackles. His own prize, the very thing he had come here for, had just been revealed to be the lock on his own, personal, and very gilded cage.


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The full, breathtaking, and almost poetically perfect architecture of the trap was now laid bare. It was a masterpiece of strategic, political, and matrimonial engineering. Lloyd was not just a participant; he was the central, load-bearing pillar of the entire, magnificent structure. To try and remove himself now would be to bring the entire, glorious edifice crashing down on top of his own head.


He felt a strange, almost out-of-body sensation, a sense of profound, cosmic detachment. He was a character in a story, a story that was being written by two, brilliant, and deeply insane royal authors. He had been so focused on writing his own legend that he had failed to realize he was merely a supporting character in their much grander, and far more chaotic, epic. Official source is novel※


His mind, in a final, desperate act of rebellion against the sheer, overwhelming absurdity of it all, began to play a game of what-if. What would happen if he just… said no? If he stood up, thanked them for the generous, if deeply misguided, offer, and then politely, but firmly, declined?


The scenario played out in his mind with a swift, and brutally clear, logic. The Sultan’s warm, paternal smile would vanish, replaced by the cold, hard, and deeply insulted gaze of a king whose generosity had just been thrown back in his face. The Princess’s amused, strategic calm would be replaced by the fury of a woman who had been publicly, and very personally, rejected.


He would not be seen as an honorable man, trying to correct a misunderstanding. He would be seen as a northern barbarian, a crude, uncultured fool who had insulted the honor of the Princess and, by extension, the entire kingdom of Zakaria. The offer of an alliance would be rescinded. The prize, the share in the mine, would be declared forfeit. He would be, at best, unceremoniously, and very forcefully, ejected from the kingdom. At worst… at worst, he would be quietly, and very permanently, disappeared. The Saint of the Coil would be declared a fraud after all, a manipulator who had tried to play the throne and had lost, his legend turning to ash.


And then there were the assassins. Jager and Kael. They were still out there. Without the protection of his new, powerful, and very public royal connection, he would once again be a lone, hunted man. A very rich, very powerful, but still very mortal man, with a target on his back.


So, refusal was not an option. It was a suicide.


What about acceptance? What would happen if he simply… played along? If he accepted the betrothal, smiled, bowed, and then, at a later, more opportune moment, tried to untangle himself from this matrimonial knot?