Episode-297 - My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! - NovelsTime

My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife!

Episode-297

Author: LordNoname
updatedAt: 2025-09-22

Chapter : 593

The new data points were not just anomalous; they were impossible. The display at the family Summit had been the first major system error. The legendary Steel Blood of the main line, a power lost to history, was not just awakened but wielded with the casual, terrifying precision of a master assassin. Then came the second, even more profound anomaly: the Black Ring Eyes. A mythical Austin family Void power, something out of a storybook, used to dismantle an opponent's psyche from the inside out.

Following that was the AURA empire, a venture born from such a simple, mundane concept yet executed with a level of strategic and psychological genius that had captured the imagination—and the coin—of the entire capital. It had earned him the direct, personal patronage of the King, a political coup of staggering proportions.

And now, there was this. His growth. It was a statistical impossibility. She was a prodigy of Spirit cultivation. She understood the laws that governed power. Growth on the scale she had sensed from him—the violent, reality-warping surge during his "fusion" incident, the overwhelming pressure she’d felt even from a distance during his duel with the Arch Duke—required a colossal and constant expenditure of energy. It demanded resources. It demanded battle. A cultivator needed to grind their body against the whetstone of physical training, to spar with powerful opponents until their core ached, to consume vast quantities of priceless Spirit Stones to fuel their progress, or to throw themselves into the crucible of life-or-death combat.

Lloyd Ferrum did none of these things.

He attended his lectures, a duty he now performed with an unnerving competence. He oversaw his business from a distance, delegating with the skill of a seasoned executive. And then, for hours on end, every single day, he locked himself in a room. To "meditate."

The very notion was an affront to her logical mind. Meditation was the delicate art of refinement. It was for polishing one's existing power, for achieving greater control, for harmonizing the flow of energy within one's core. It was the slow, patient work of a jeweler faceting a gemstone. It could not, under any known law of this world, be the forge in which new gods were made. His growth was not that of a jeweler; it was that of a volcano building toward a cataclysmic eruption.

So, the question remained, a single, sharp point of dissonance in her otherwise perfect world: What was he doing in that room?

Her mind, a marvel of Siddik intellect, processed and discarded theories with cold efficiency. Was he using a forbidden cultivation technique? The energy signatures would have been different, more corrupt. She was sensitive to such things. Was he being supplied with legendary, one-of-a-kind elixirs by the Arch Duke? Possible, but unsustainable. His growth was too consistent, too linear, to be the result of sporadic boosts.

That left the most disturbing possibility. A pact. A contract with some external entity. The flicker of demonic, shadow-fire energy that the Arch Duke had spoken of after their duel was a powerful indicator. It was a theory that fit the data. But it also created a new contradiction. In every known case of a demonic pact, the mortal was the servant, the vessel, the slave to a greater, more malevolent will. Yet Lloyd seemed to be in absolute control. He wielded his powers with a calm, focused authority that spoke not of servitude, but of absolute mastery.

This single, unsolvable equation—this man—was beginning to consume an unacceptable amount of her processing power. He was a ghost in her machine, a piece of code that was causing the entire system to lag.

Her handmaiden, Laila, seeing the subtle tension in her lady's shoulders, risked breaking the silence again. "My lady, your presence is requested at the evening meal. The Duchess sent word she wishes to dine with you."

The mention of Duchess Milody was a sharp, clarifying jolt. Rosa's focus snapped back from the abstract puzzle of her husband to the very real, very dangerous political game she was playing. The Duchess, with her gentle smiles and eyes that saw everything, was a player of consummate skill. Her recent words to Rosa—He requires a partner now, not an armistice—had not been a suggestion. They had been a command performance review, and Rosa knew she had been found wanting.

"I will be there," Rosa said, her voice regaining its usual icy composure. "You may prepare my attire. The silver-and-blue gown."

"At once, my lady." Laila bowed, a flicker of relief in her eyes, and slipped from the room as silently as she had entered.

Chapter : 594

Left alone once more, Rosa stood. Her feet, acting on an impulse her conscious mind had not yet approved, carried her across the vast, silent suite. She crossed the invisible line she had drawn between their lives, a border she had not breached in weeks. She stopped before the sofa, his designated territory.

The blankets were folded, as always, with a stark, functional precision. On the small end table, next to a stack of business ledgers from his AURA enterprise, sat his latest silent offering: a small, exquisitely carved wooden box. She knew what it contained without opening it. It was the new "Silken Bar," the perfected version of his soap that was causing a new wave of frenzy among the capital's nobility. He hadn't said a word about it to her. It had simply appeared one morning, a gift given without expectation of thanks, an upgrade provided as a matter of course.

It was another maddeningly illogical act. He was a man who commanded spirits of mythic power, who debated economics with the King, who could forge steel from his very will. And he was also a man who remembered to leave a new bar of soap for the wife who offered him nothing but a frozen wall of silence.

The contradictions were becoming a physical weight. He was a warrior and a merchant. A genius and a fool. A monster and… a thoughtful husband. It was impossible. He was impossible.

Her gaze lifted, drawn to the heavy, carved door that led to the main corridor, and from there, to his sealed study. The heart of the mystery. The source of the anomalies.

The urge to know, to understand, was a powerful, gravitational pull. She possessed the power to get answers. Her own Spirit cultivation was immense. A focused pulse of her ice-based energy could render his seals brittle and useless. Laila could be tasked with planting listening devices, with bribing servants, with uncovering the truth through the shadowy arts of espionage. The options were there. They were logical. They were efficient.

And she rejected them all.

To stoop to such methods would be a confession of weakness. It would be an admission that this puzzle had defeated her, that she was so desperate for data that she had to resort to crude, undignified force. It would be acknowledging that he, this impossible man, had become the central, driving question of her existence. It would be, in the cold, hard calculus of her world, a surrender.

A surrender of control. A surrender of her legendary composure. A surrender to the chaotic, unpredictable variable that was her husband.

She would not allow it.

She returned to her side of the room, to the cold, pristine safety of her frozen kingdom. She picked up her book again, her eyes scanning the complex theorems, but the words were just shapes on a page. The silence in the room was no longer her ally. It was a void, and in that void, the mystery of Lloyd Ferrum grew, a dark star consuming all the light.

Down the hall, behind a door sealed by powers she could not comprehend, he was becoming something else. Something more. And Rosa Siddik, the prodigy, the Ice Princess, the master of every system she had ever encountered, was faced with the one thing she had never before experienced.

The chilling, terrifying feeling of being utterly and completely outmaneuvered.

The foul, coppery tang of goblin blood was a perfume Lloyd had become intimately familiar with. It clung to the damp air of the Shadowfen Forest, a constant reminder of his bloody, unending work. He leaned his back against the rough, damp bark of a black-hearted yew tree, the physical world a distant, secondary input. His primary focus was internal, a cool assessment of the resources expended versus the progress made.

Before him, the remains of a goblin war party lay cooling in the perpetual twilight of the woods. This one had been more challenging. It had included not one, but two, of the brutish hobgoblins, their massive forms now still and broken, Iffrit’s fiery handiwork evident in the scorched earth around them. The fight had been a drain, a significant expenditure from his unified power core. He felt the familiar pull of mental fatigue, the deep weariness that came not from tired muscles, but from the immense concentration required to command two Transcended spirits, analyze a chaotic battlefield in real-time, and execute his own precise, lethal attacks simultaneously.

He was not physically tired. His young, reforged body was a resilient vessel. But his mind, the eighty-year-old soul of Major General KM Evan, felt the strain. This was not the mindless repetition of the slime plains; this was a continuous series of high-stakes tactical problems, and solving them was mentally taxing.

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