In the final, horrifying stage, the body turned on itself. Organs failed in a catastrophic, cascading shutdown. The victims died not peacefully, but in screaming, writhing agony, their bodies contorting as if possessed. The local healers, wise old men who could set a bone or soothe a fever with ancient knowledge, were helpless. Their herbs and remedies were as useless as whispers against a hurricane. Many were now dead themselves, consumed by the very plague they had tried to fight. The death toll was not just rising; it was accelerating with terrifying speed. What had started with a single sick child a week ago was now a firestorm, an invisible inferno that was consuming the entire village, house by house, family by family. Oakhaven was not just dying; it was being erased. Arch Duke Roy Ferrum sat on his throne, his face a mask of granite, his powerful form utterly still. The usual fire of the warrior in his eyes, the calculating gaze of the strategist—all of it was gone. In its place was the grim, heavy solemnity of a king watching a part of his kingdom burn to the ground, helpless to stop the flames. He listened to every broken, horrifying word without interruption. When the messenger finally fell silent, his story told, Roy dismissed him with a quiet, dangerous rumble, his voice a low thunder that promised action. He then sent a summons. Not to his generals. Not to his spymaster, Ken Park. Not to his council of advisors. He sent a summons for a single, impossible person. He sent for his son. When Lloyd entered the throne room, the air was thick with a gravity he had never felt from his father before. This was not a test of his wits. This was not a lesson in power. This was a crisis of a magnitude that had stripped away all the usual games of their relationship. For origınal chapters go to 𝓷𝓸𝓿𝓮𝓵⟡𝓯𝓲𝓻𝓮⟡𝓷𝓮𝓽 “Reports of your… activities… in the south have reached my ears,” Roy began, his voice devoid of its usual sharp, challenging edge. It was flat, heavy. He spoke of the impossible surgery on the Qadir heir, of the growing legend of the “Saint of the Coil” in Zakaria. He recounted the whispers and rumors that had reached even the stone walls of his own fortress, stories he had initially dismissed as the fantastical fables of peasants and gossiping merchants. “They say you are a miracle worker,” Roy continued, his gaze locking onto Lloyd’s. “That you possess a sight that can see the very heart of a sickness, a power to heal what others have deemed incurable.” He stood, a mountain of a man, and the shadow he cast fell over Lloyd not as a challenge, but as a burden. “I do not care for fables, Lloyd. I do not traffic in whispers. But I care for my people. The reports from Oakhaven are not a political problem; they are a catastrophe. Our healers are useless. Our soldiers can only draw a line in the dirt and watch them die. The duchy is bleeding, and I have no way to staunch the wound.” Roy’s gaze was hard, heavy, and for the first time in Lloyd’s memory, it was filled with a desperate, pleading weight. It was the look of a king who had reached the absolute limit of his power. “The boy who played with soap is gone,” Roy declared, his voice a low, solemn pronouncement. “The man who commands armies of coin and innovation stands before me. I have tested your mind. I have tested your steel. Now, I test your soul.” He gave the command. It was not a roar, not a shout. It was a quiet, solemn order, a transfer of responsibility so immense it was the heaviest gauntlet he had ever thrown. “Go to Oakhaven,” he commanded. “Not as a lord. Not as my son. Go as the healer they say you are. Find the source of this plague. Find a cure. Stop its spread before it consumes the entire western territory. This is not a request. It is your duty as a Ferrum. The lives of my people are now in your hands.” He paused, and the final words were a quiet, terrible benediction. “Do not fail them.” In that moment, the entire, chaotic, tangled mess of Lloyd’s personal life—the orbits of his three magnificent, complicated queens, the political games, the romantic entanglements—all of it simply… vanished. It became background noise, a distant and suddenly trivial drama from another lifetime. A singular, cold, and absolute purpose took its place, a purpose as sharp and clear as a shard of glass. The general, the engineer, the doctor—all the fractured, warring pieces of his soul—snapped into a single, unified, and terrifyingly focused identity. He was a weapon, and he had just been aimed at the heart of an apocalypse. He gave his father a short, sharp nod, his back ramrod straight. It was the response of a soldier acknowledging a direct order, not a son accepting a task. “I will leave within the hour.” The apathetic boy was dead and buried. The brilliant, fractured man now had to prove he could be the guardian his people so desperately, and tragically, needed. The journey to the western territories was a silent, grim procession that moved with the urgency of a military operation. Lloyd traveled in a simple, unadorned ducal carriage, its luxurious fittings stripped away and replaced with crates of medical supplies, alchemical reagents, and sealed containers for sample collection. His retinue was small and hand-picked: a dozen veterans from the ducal guard who had been personally vetted by Ken Park and seconded to his manufactory’s security force. They were quiet, disciplined men who had seen the brutalities of the border wars; they understood the gravity of the mission and asked no questions. They were his shield. An unexpected, and not entirely welcome, addition to his party was Princess Amina. Her presence was a political complication of the highest order, a potential diplomatic incident waiting to happen. But she had been unmovable. When he had informed her of his mission, she had listened to the details of the plague with a cold, analytical focus. Then, she had delivered her own non-negotiable term. “I am coming with you,” she had stated, not as a request, but as a fact. “Amina, that’s insane,” he had argued. “This isn’t a diplomatic visit. It’s a hot zone. It’s a biological crisis of unknown scale.” Her response had been swift and unassailable. “You promised me the future, Lloyd. A future built on logic, innovation, and a new way of thinking. This plague is a biological equation I do not understand. Its speed, its lethality—it defies the principles I have studied. I will not sit in a palace reading edited, second-hand reports. I will be on the ground. I will be at the source. I will observe your methods, analyze your data, and understand the mechanism of this threat. This is a matter of state security for both our kingdoms, and I am the state.” He knew it was a fight he could not win. Her mind was an asset, and her will was absolute. So now she sat across from him in the carriage, a quiet, observant specter in simple, practical traveler’s clothes, her royal aura carefully suppressed beneath a mask of intense, scholarly focus. She was not a princess; she was an intelligence analyst, and he was her primary subject. They arrived not at a village, but at a hastily constructed military encampment a full mile from Oakhaven’s borders. A hard quarantine line had been established, a physical cordon of ducal soldiers in polished steel armor, their grim, determined faces a stark contrast to the dying, unnaturally silent forest beyond. The air was still, heavy with a sense of dread. The usual vibrant sounds of the Whisperwood—the birdsong, the rustle of animals—were gone, replaced by an oppressive, waiting silence. The captain in charge of the quarantine was a hard-bitten veteran named Brolin, a man whose face was a roadmap of old scars and new fears. He met Lloyd with a crisp salute, but his eyes were haunted, the eyes of a man who had been forced to watch his own people die from a distance, helpless to intervene. “My lord, Your Highness,” he began, his voice a low, gravelly rasp that spoke of sleepless nights and too much shouting. “The situation is… contained. But it is not controlled. The perimeter is secure.” He delivered the grim statistics with the blunt, emotionless finality of a man reciting a casualty report. “As of this morning’s count, seventy-one dead. Another sixty-eight are confirmed sick. That leaves fifty-or-so… waiting. The local healers are all gone. The first one died three days ago.”