Chapter 147: The Devil’s Trade
He sank back into the chair, the wood groaning under the sudden, dead weight of his collapse. His hand clawed at the fabric over his heart, fingers hooking into the fine silk as if trying to physically stitch his chest back together before his soul could leak out.
Every breath he took was a jagged, shallow tremor that rattled in his throat, echoing the sound of a man watching his entire reality crumble into fine, grey ash. The silence of the room felt predatory, pressing against his temples until the pulse there thrummed like a trapped bird.
”Go on,” he choked out, the words scraping against his raw throat. He didn’t look at her; he couldn’t. “I want to know it all. Every godforsaken word. Don’t leave a single shard of this nightmare buried.”
”I will,” Olivia replied.
a slight tremor ghosted through her tone—a hairline crack in the porcelain mask she wore so well. She smoothed her skirts with a slow, deliberate motion, her knuckles white against the dark fabric.
”Before I do… I need you to summon Jeremy.”
”Jeremy?”
Mathias blinked, the name sounding foreign, a jarring note of domesticity in the middle of a massacre. His mind, battered and slow, struggled to keep pace with the shifting tide of the conversation. He looked at her then, searching for a reason in the hollow depths of her eyes.
”The ducal physician,” she clarified.
Her face returned to that unsettling, marble-like stillness, a statue of a woman carved from grief and ice.
”The expert on toxins. I have a question for him—one that has lived in the back of my mind for years, a suspicion I have carried like a lead weight. I need to be certain, Mathias. If I am to finish this tale, I need the clinical truth to bridge the gaps of my memory.”
Mathias stared at her for a long, agonizing heartbeat, his chest heaving. The request was a cold blade of reality cutting through the emotional haze. He offered a dazed, weary gesture of consent, his hand falling limp against the armrest.
”Fine,” he muttered, his voice barely a ghost of its former authority. “Summon him.”
”Olivia,” he whispered, the sound cracking
“Do not force yourself to go further. Your face… you look as though you are bleeding from the inside.”
”No, do not worry for me,” she replied. “I should have told you this an eternity ago, Mathias. All this silence, all this hoarding of ghosts in the dark corners of our marriage… it has only poisoned us. If we are to rebuild anything from these ruins, I must speak. I must drag these shadows into the light.”
She paused for a heartbeat, her eyes clouding over with a grey, suffocating haze. She wasn’t in the drawing-room anymore; she was back in the cold, sunless corridors of her memory.
”During my second pregnancy, with Elias… I was paralyzed. It wasn’t the weight of the child that broke me, but the fear that history was a circle, waiting to repeat its most violent curve.
I was terrified, Mathias. Every footstep in the hallway sounded like my father’s boot. Every closing door sounded like the end of the world.”
She looked at her trembling hands, then balled them into fists.
”That is why I barricaded myself in my chambers, if you recall. I turned that room into a fortress, a tomb of my own making.”
”I remember,” Mathias muttered, his brow furrowing as he tried to reconcile her words with his memories. A flicker of old guilt crossed his face.
“I thought… I truly thought it was merely the exhaustion of the term. I thought you had simply grown weary of me, and of the world outside your door.”
”It was the pregnancy, yes, but not the physical burden of it. It was the terror. I stayed within the walls of this duchy, hiding behind locked doors and heavy drapes until my state was undeniable—until the life inside me was too large to conceal any longer.”
She let out a short, jagged breath, her voice dropping to a whisper.
”I thought that if I stayed hidden, the monsters wouldn’t find us. I thought silence was a shield. But I was a fool, Mathias. I stayed hidden until the news finally reached my father… and the moment it did, the shield shattered.”
”I burned every letter he sent. Every parchment that bore his seal went straight into the hearth, and I watched the flames consume his commands until they were nothing but blackened flakes. I refused every summons, every ’request’ for my presence. I thought that by burning the paper, I could burn the connection. I had to protect my child… at any cost. I thought I had succeeded.”
Her voice faltered, a ghost of a bitter smile touching her lips. “Until that day arrived.”
Mathias leaned in, the movement instinctive. His voice dropped to a dangerous, thrumming low that seemed to vibrate. “What do you mean? What happened that day? How did they get past the gates?”
”The day Elvira arrived,” Olivia began, her voice dropping into a chilling, rhythmic monotone—the sound of someone reciting a death sentence.
”She didn’t come with a carriage or a fanfare. She came in secret, a shadow slipping through the cracks of the manor like a cold draft. I was in my solar, the doors locked, but somehow… she was just there.
She didn’t argue. She didn’t scream at me for hiding the pregnancy, though I could see the fury simmering beneath her skin—a dark, roiling heat that made the very air feel heavy.”
Olivia’s fingers curled into the upholstery, her knuckles white.
”She didn’t use threats, not at first. Instead, she wore that filthy, serpentine smile—the one that never reaches her eyes. She walked toward me with a haunting, predatory grace, and before I could even draw breath to call for help, she pressed a small, strange vial into my hand.”
Mathias’s breath hitched, a sharp, audible intake of air. His eyes were fixed on her lips, wide and fractured, as if the words themselves were a poison he was being forced to swallow.
”I don’t understand,” he whispered, his voice trembling with a dawning, horrific realization. “What are you saying? A vial? What did she want you to do with it?”
”Listen,” she snapped, the word cutting through his confusion like the sharp crack of a whip.
”She looked me in the eye—those pale, soulless eyes—and said, verbatim: ’Father is pleased with your pregnancy, Olivia. You are in your ninth month already; he will be so delighted to meet his grandson.’”
Olivia paused, a ghostly shiver tracing her spine, her shoulders hunching as if she could still feel the phantom touch of her sister’s shadow. She recalled her own silence that day—the cold, paralyzed stare she had fixed on Elvira, her heart hammering against her ribs like a bird hitting the bars of a cage.
”What is this vial?” she had asked, her voice a fragile thread.
”A gift,” Elvira had replied, her voice smooth as oil on water.
”A gift?”
”She lunged then,” Olivia whispered, her hand instinctively reaching up to touch her scalp, her fingers ghosting over the skin as if checking for old wounds.
”She grabbed me by the hair with a savage, practiced strength, yanking my head back until I felt the follicles tearing from the roots. My neck strained, my vision blurring with the sudden, sharp agony of it. She leaned in close, her breath cold against my skin, and hissed in my ear:
’Do you think that by carrying a brat and birthing an heir for this wretch, you’ve somehow become superior? Do you think a swollen belly buys you freedom? Be grateful our father still treats you with such mercy, little sister.’”
Olivia’s eyes narrowed, her pupils shrinking to pinpricks as the scene played out in the dark theater of her mind. She could almost taste the iron of her own fear.
”She pointed to the vial—that sickly, translucent liquid. ’Its name is the Lesser Death.’”
”What?” Mathias gasped. He looked as if he had been struck, his face draining of what little ashen color remained, leaving him looking like a man carved from salt.
”As you heard,” Olivia continued, her voice dripping with a bitter, concentrated irony that burned.
”She smiled as she explained the trade. ’You want to keep your child? Fine. No problem. In fact, it’s perfect. A grandson for Roland, a pawn for the future. But in exchange, Olivia, you must dispose of the father.
We cannot allow this Duchy to grow stronger with a legitimate heir and a living Duke. But if Mathias dies… everything falls to your hand. And your hand? It belongs to our father. Is it not a brilliant plan?’”
She looked directly at Mathias, her eyes reflecting the raw, jagged edges of that old terror—a reflection of a woman who had been pushed to the very brink of her sanity.
”I recoiled,” she whispered, her body leaning away from him now as if he were the shadow of her sister. “I was trembling so violently I thought the child would be shaken from me right then and there. I looked at her, at that monster wearing my sister’s skin, and I asked: ’You want me to murder my husband?’”
”’Your husband?’”
Olivia’s voice morphed, the pitch shifting into a jagged, mocking lilt that mimicked Elvira’s poisonous tone with terrifying accuracy. It was a sound of pure, biting condescension.
”’How strange, Olivia. Have you grown a heart for him all of a sudden? Or is it just that you’ve grown fond of the silk sheets he provides?’”
Olivia’s face returned to its hollow, porcelain mask as she looked back at Mathias, her expression devoid of life.
”I told her no. I told her he was the father of my child, and I asked her if she had gone mad—if she truly expected me to orphan my own son before he had even drawn his first breath. But she only laughed.”
Olivia’s chest heaved as she imitated it—that dry, rattling sound of Elvira’s laughter, like dead leaves scraping against a gravestone.
”She told me I wouldn’t be ’killing’ you in the literal sense. She said the poison was subtle, elegant. You would merely fall into a slumber so deep, so profound, that it mimicked death in every clinical aspect. No pulse, no warmth, no breath. A magical toxin designed to fool even the most skilled physicians.”
She leaned forward, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial, lethal hum.
”She said the one who would truly kill you wouldn’t be the one who gave the vial… it would be whoever buried you alive. She wanted the blood to be on the hands of your own people. Your own grieving family.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 164: Inside Me Forever
- Chapter 163: Warm hearts
- Chapter 162: The Man Wrapped in Gold
- Chapter 161: Grim Vows
- Chapter 160: Dead Ties
- Chapter 159: A Vintage of Betrayal
- Chapter 158: Responsibility
- Chapter 157: Scraps of Compassion
- Chapter 156: Weight of Silence
- Chapter 155: Generations of Rot
- Chapter 154: Fallen Empress
- Chapter 153: Between Siblings
- Chapter 152: Crystalline Teeth
- Chapter 151: The Return to the hell
- Chapter 150: a husband’s vow
- Chapter 149: The Mourner’s Petals
- Chapter 148: The Fortress of Regret
- Chapter 147: The Devil’s Trade
- Chapter 146: The Long-Awaited Confession
- Chapter 145: A Pale Shadow of Jealousy
- Chapter 144: The Misplaced Devotion
- Chapter 143: The Weight of a Bow
- Chapter 142: A Lucky Charm
- Chapter 141: The Mirage in the Midnight
- Chapter 140: A Sovereign in Hell
- Chapter 139: Reflections of Hell
- Chapter 138: A Magnificent Travesty
- Chapter 137: Hollow Sacrifices
- Chapter 136: The Currency of Souls
- Chapter 135: A Chalice of Crimson Vows
- Chapter 134: The Butcher’s Mirror
- Chapter 133: Snake in Silk
- Chapter 132: Divine Justice
- Chapter 131: The Falling Heir
- Chapter 130: The Gilded Swamp
- Chapter 129: Eyes of the Hound
- Chapter 128: A Spring Without Flowers
- Chapter 127: The Second Gift
- Chapter 126: Borrowed Vision
- Chapter 125: the beast suffered
- Chapter 124: A Gift Written in blood
- Chapter 123: The Weight of an Empty Finger
- Chapter 122: The ring
- Chapter 121: The Reckoning
- Chapter 120: Atone
- Chapter 119: The Leash of Forgiveness
- Chapter 118: Vortex
- Chapter 117: The Altar of False Mercy
- Chapter 116: A Cradle of Thorns
- Chapter 115: A Covenant of Shadow
- Chapter 114: The Shroud of White Lace
- Chapter 113: Begging the Devil
- Chapter 112: The Fallen Idol
- Chapter 111: Broken Oaths
- Chapter 110: Shadows on the Lips
- Chapter 109: mirror of guilt
- Chapter 108: Web of Lies
- Chapter 107: Unwanted Company
- Chapter 106: A Madman’s Mercy
- Chapter 105: The Broken Cage
- Chapter 104: Veil of Denial
- Chapter 103: Bitter Truths
- Chapter 102: The Noble Lie
- Chapter 101: In the Dark
- Chapter 100: A Sacrifice
- Chapter 99: Digging for a Ghost
- Chapter 98: The Silent Grave
- Chapter 97: Dust and Deception
- Chapter 96: Forgotten princess
- Chapter 95: Debt
- Chapter 94: The Saint and the Beast
- Chapter 93: The End of Our Partnership
- Chapter 92: A Terrifying Confession
- Chapter 91: Cold Possession
- Chapter 90: Burning Dreams
- Chapter 89: A Dance with the Devil
- Chapter 88: The Duchess’s Hidden Warmth
- Chapter 87: The Occult Bargain
- Chapter 86: Burnt into Memory
- Chapter 85: Silence
- Chapter 84: Glacial Walls
- Chapter 83: The Pride that Blinds
- Chapter 82: Silver Strands
- Chapter 81: A Dawn Without Her
- Chapter 80: The Taste of Copper
- Chapter 79: A Midnight Feast
- Chapter 78: Pride Buried in Marble
- Chapter 77: The Sound of Treason
- Chapter 76: The Beast Behind the Crown
- Chapter 75: The Truth Behind the Crown
- Chapter 74: The Daughter of Doubt
- Chapter 73: A Legacy of Ashes
- Chapter 72: Traitor’s Final Words
- Chapter 71: The Rat in the Trap
- Chapter 70: The Lamb with Teeth
- Chapter 69: The Wrong Target
- Chapter 68: The Price of Womanhood
- Chapter 67: The Fragment of Madness
- Chapter 66: The Hunger of the Damned
- Chapter 65: The Ghastly Supper
- Chapter 64: A Duel of Silk and Shadows
- Chapter 63: Shattered Pride and Severed Heads
- Chapter 62: The Wilted Blessing
- Chapter 61: A Crown of Thorns
- Chapter 60: A Ghost in the Mirror
- Chapter 59: The Shattered Pride
- Chapter 58: The Silent Justice
- Chapter 57: Toxins of the Soul
- Chapter 56: Cruel Mercy
- Chapter 55: A Grave of Blue Petals
- Chapter 54: Elias
- Chapter 53: The Mirror of Deception
- Chapter 52: Shadows of Grief
- Chapter 51: Mine
- Chapter 50: The Bitter Release
- Chapter 49: Broken Trust
- Chapter 48: The Silent Agony
- Chapter 47: The Golden-Eyed Demon
- Chapter 46: Settling the Debt
- Chapter 45: Evidence of the Night
- Chapter 44: Between regret and desire
- Chapter 43: Tears of the Night
- Chapter 42: Hollow Warmth
- Chapter 41: When the Serpent Fails
- Chapter 40: The Last Mercy
- Chapter 39: Cell Number Fifteen
- Chapter 38: Broken Marriage
- Chapter 37: Shadows of Then
- Chapter 36: The Broken Marionette
- Chapter 35: Unmasked
- Chapter 34: A Villainess is Still a Villainess
- Chapter 33: How A Woman Fight
- Chapter 32: The Predator’s Trap
- Chapter 31: The Eyes I Never Saw
- Chapter 30: Dignity Among Ruins
- Chapter 29: Echoes of a Buried Past
- Chapter 28: Be My Wife For A Night
- Chapter 27: Advice
- Chapter 26: Brands of Agony
- Chapter 25: Condition
- Chapter 24: The Price of Lineage
- Chapter 23: Partnership
- Chapter 22: The Butterfly Message
- Chapter 21: The Weight of the Crown
- Chapter 20: The Morning Of The Scandal
- Chapter 19: How Rats Die
- Chapter 18: Fight
- Chapter 17: Please, Blame Me
- Chapter 16: The Inevitable Divorce
- Chapter 15: He Knows
- Chapter 14: The Weight of Memories
- Chapter 13: The Silence of Undeniable Truth
- Chapter 12: Unnamed Heir
- Chapter 11: A Brother’s Secret and a Sister’s Fury
- Chapter 10: The Proposal Of Despair
- Chapter 9: Layla’s past
- Chapter 8: Price Of Love
- Chapter 7: The Reckoning at Dawn
- Chapter 6: The Duchess’s Lesson
- Chapter 5: Scars of the past
- Chapter 4: Meeting the Enemy
- Chapter 3: A Cold greeting
- Chapter 2: Second Chance
- Chapter 1: A Crimson Farewell