Episode-196 - My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! - NovelsTime

My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife!

Episode-196

Author: LordNoname
updatedAt: 2025-08-01

Chapter : 391

Roy Ferrum shook his head slowly, a faint, almost imperceptible smile touching his lips. It was a smile of grim, paternal amusement. “I do not believe, Lloyd, that His Majesty has summoned the heir to a great Ducal house and dispatched an honor guard of the Lion Guard to discuss the logistics of rosemary-scented soap, however revolutionary it may be.”

He leaned forward, his expression becoming serious again, the brief flicker of amusement gone. “The missive does not state the King’s purpose, son. It is a direct, personal, and entirely unexplained, summons.” He paused, his dark eyes locking with Lloyd’s, the full weight of his next words settling like a shroud.

“This is not a business meeting, Lloyd. This is not a social call. This is a command performance. The Lion has called. And you, it seems, are the one he wishes to see dance.” The mystery, the gravitas, the sheer, unnerving, unknown purpose of the summons, hung in the air between them, a new, and potentially very dangerous, move in a game that was growing more complex, and more high-stakes, with every passing day.

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The royal missive sat on the desk between them, a small, deceptively simple piece of parchment that felt heavier than a block of solid lead. The crimson wax seal, with its proud, roaring lion, seemed to pulse with a silent, absolute authority. A summons. Not a request. A command. From the King himself.

Lloyd stared at it, his mind still struggling to process the sheer, unadulterated strangeness of the situation. King Liam Bethelham, the man he had met as the eccentric ‘Lord James’, the man who had invested in his soap empire with a twinkle in his eye, now wanted to see him. Urgently. And with no stated reason. The political implications were a labyrinth of terrifying possibilities. Was this a reward for his recent successes? A test? A trap? With a mind as shrewd and multifaceted as the King’s, it could be all three at once.

He looked up at his father, who was observing him with that same unnerving, analytical stillness. Roy’s face was unreadable, a granite mask of ducal authority, but Lloyd could sense the undercurrents. The pride, yes, that his son had attracted the direct attention of the monarch. But also, a deep, profound caution. A silent warning. The Royal Court was a nest of vipers, and a personal summons from the King was a move that would be watched, analyzed, and dissected by every ambitious noble and rival faction in the kingdom. This was a dangerous honor.

“When am I to depart, Father?” Lloyd asked, his voice steady, masking the whirlwind of speculation in his mind.

“At dawn, two days from now,” Roy replied, his tone crisp, business-like. “It will give you time to make the necessary preparations. I will assign a retinue from the Ducal Guard to accompany you. A small, elite squad. It must be a display of respect, but not of overt military force. Appearance, in these matters, is everything.” He paused. “And Ken will, of course, accompany you. In his… usual capacity.”

As a shadow, Lloyd understood. A silent, unseen guardian.

“I will begin my preparations at once,” Lloyd said, rising from his chair. He knew what he had to do first. This journey was not just a political duty; it was an opportunity. An opportunity to test the waters of his new, strange, and incredibly complicated, domestic reality.

He left his father’s study, the royal missive feeling like a hot coal in his mind, and made his way back to his suite. The journey through the echoing halls felt different now. The portraits of his ancestors seemed to be watching him with a new intensity. The weight of his name, of his position, felt heavier, more real, than ever before.

He entered the suite to find it in its usual state of cool, silent tranquility. Rosa sat in her customary armchair by the fireplace, a thick tome on her lap, her veiled face turned towards the pages. She did not look up as he entered, but he felt her awareness register his presence, a subtle tensing in the air.

He walked over to the sofa, his designated territory, but did not sit. He stood, looking at her, at the graceful, unyielding line of her back, the elegant sweep of her dark hair. He took a deep breath, marshaling his thoughts. This was a calculated move. A test of their evolving, almost non-existent, relationship. A probe into the cracks that had, perhaps, begun to form in her icy facade.

“Rosa,” he began, his voice quiet but clear in the silent room.

The rustle of a turning page was her only response.

Chapter : 392

“I have just come from my father’s study,” he continued, his tone formal, direct. “I have been summoned. By the King.”

The page-turning stopped. He saw her shoulders stiffen almost imperceptibly. Her head did not turn, but he knew, with an absolute certainty, that he now had her full, undivided attention.

“I am to travel to the royal capital of Bethelham,” he stated. “I depart in two days’ time. The King’s purpose is… unknown. But the summons is a direct one.”

He let the information settle, let her process the political weight of it. A personal summons from the monarch was a significant event, one that would have repercussions for both their houses. As his wife, as his political partner, she had a right to know. And a duty to react.

He waited, watching the still, elegant line of her back. He had expected, perhaps, a simple, non-committal nod of acknowledgment. Or maybe a cool, clinical question about the potential political ramifications. He had even prepared himself for a simple, dismissive “I see,” followed by a return to her reading, a clear signal of her continued, profound indifference to his life and his duties.

What he did not expect was for her to slowly, deliberately, close her book, place it on the table beside her, and turn in her chair to face him fully. Her obsidian eyes, visible above her veil, were sharp, focused, their depths unreadable but holding a new, almost startling, intensity.

The silence stretched for a long, pregnant moment. Then, he took the plunge. He made the request. The test.

“As my wife,” he said, his voice carefully neutral, framing it not as a personal desire, but as a matter of political propriety, “and as the daughter of the esteemed House Siddik, your presence beside me at court would be… appropriate. It would present a unified front, a symbol of the strength of our alliance.” He met her intense gaze without flinching. “I ask, Lady Rosa, if you will accompany me to the capital.”

He held his breath, waiting for the inevitable, cold refusal. He had given her a perfect, logical, political reason to say yes. And he fully expected her to find a cool, logical, and utterly unassailable, reason to say no.

But Rosa did not refuse. Not immediately. She simply sat there, her gaze fixed on him, her mind, he knew, processing his request with that unnerving, analytical precision. He saw the flicker of calculation in her eyes, weighing the political advantages of accompanying him against her own ingrained, deeply personal, desire for distance.

He saw her lips part slightly behind the veil, as if to speak, to deliver the cold, logical refusal he was expecting. But then, she hesitated. Her gaze dropped, just for a fraction of a second, to her own hands, clasped tightly in her lap. A flicker of something—an emotion too complex, too fleeting for him to name—crossed her visible features. It wasn't anger. It wasn't disdain. It was something… else. Something that looked almost like… regret? Or sadness?

When she looked up again, the moment of vulnerability was gone, her expression once more a mask of cool, unreadable composure. But her answer, when it came, was not what he had anticipated at all.

“I cannot, Lloyd,” she said.

The refusal was there, yes. But the tone… the tone was different. It lacked the usual sharp, dismissive edge. It was quiet. Flat. Almost… apologetic?

And then, she did something truly, profoundly, shocking. She gave him a reason. A real, personal, and utterly unexpected, reason.

“I have… already made arrangements to travel,” she stated, her voice a low murmur. She looked away, her gaze drifting towards the window, towards the distant, southern horizon. “I must go south. To my family’s estate.”

She took a slow, deliberate breath, and her next words were imbued with a quiet, almost painful, vulnerability that was so at odds with her usual icy persona it was like seeing a glacier weep.

“It is my mother,” she said, her voice so soft he had to strain to hear it. “Her condition… it remains unchanged.”

The words hung in the air between them, a sudden, stark, and deeply personal, revelation. Her mother. The Viscountess Nilufa. Who had been in a mysterious, wasting coma for seven long years. A fact he knew, a piece of political intelligence, but one he had never, not once, associated with the cold, unfeeling statue who was his wife. He had never considered the reality of it, the pain of it.

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