Chapter 149: The Mourner’s Petals
Jeremy gasped, a sharp, choked sound of pure medical horror that seemed to echo against the stone walls. “What? Your Grace, that is… that is catastrophic! Why would you even ask such a—”
”Tell me,” she growled. This time, her voice wasn’t just cold; it was a low, lethal rumble, the sound of a predator losing its patience. “What happens to them?”
Jeremy swallowed hard, his Adam’s apple bobbing painfully in his throat. He forced himself to speak, his voice shaking with a clinical dread.
”In most cases, the mother might perish from the sheer magical shock. However…” he paused, his eyes flickering toward the floor. “Since the dose is magically calibrated to claim only one soul, it behaves like a heat-seeking gale.
It seeks out the weakest spark of life to extinguish. In such a case, the toxin would bypass the mother’s stronger constitution and concentrate entirely on the fetus. It would… it would wither the unborn life within the womb instantly. Like a frost killing a bud before it can ever bloom.”
The room seemed to tilt. Olivia felt a phantom chill bloom in her womb, It was as if the ghost of that stolen life was suddenly kicking against her ribs, demanding to be heard through the clinical horror of the physician’s words.
”I see,” Olivia said.
Her voice was now completely devoid of emotion, a flat, terrifying void that was far worse than any scream. She sat perfectly still, a statue of a woman who had just heard the confirmation of her own damnation.
”That is all. Leave us.”
The physician bowed, his movements frantic as he scrambled toward the exit, but her voice caught him one last time, pinning him to the spot.
”Oh, and there is one more thing,” Olivia added, her voice dropping to a haunting, melodic whisper that made the hair on the back of Mathias’s neck stand up. “Is it true what the old texts say? That on the grave of one poisoned by this specific alchemy… small, indigo blue flowers will bloom?”
Jeremy turned back, his face a mask of sorrow. “Yes, Your Grace. They are called The Mourner’s Petals. They bloom from the residual magic that the body could not absorb. It is a sign of a soul that… that never truly left.”
She bit her lip, her teeth sinking into the sensitive flesh until the sharp, copper tang of blood filled her mouth, grounding her in the agony of the present.
”I see,” she whispered against the metallic taste. “Go.”
The physician didn’t need a second dismissal. He practically fled the room, his footsteps frantic on the carpet until the heavy door snapped shut behind him with a final, echoing thud.
Mathias remained motionless, sitting as if his soul had been hollowed out by a jagged blade, leaving only a shell behind. The color of his skin had transitioned from pale to a deathly, ashen grey, his eyes wide and unblinking.
”What was the meaning of that, Olivia?” he asked, his voice sounding thin, as if it were coming from a great distance. “Why ask him those things? What do blue flowers and unborn children have to do with this… this nightmare?”
In response, she reached out. Her hand was trembling—a rhythmic, violent shaking she could no longer suppress—as she flattened the crumpled parchment onto the table between them. She smoothed it over and over, her palm dragging against the rough fiber until the words scrawled there were stark, jagged, and undeniable:
The Lesser Death.
”I don’t understand, Olivia,” Mathias rasped, his gaze fixed on the ink as if it were a serpent ready to strike. “Speak to me. Please.”
”Do you remember the maid?” Olivia asked, her voice eerily calm, “The one who stood before the council? The one who testified against me with such practiced tears, telling you I had murdered your mother?”
”Vaguely,” he choked out, his throat tightening. “There were so many lies then. What of her?”
”First, she is dead,” Olivia stated flatly. “Second… she was never your servant, Mathias. She was a viper in our nest—a spy planted by Elvira the moment I entered this house. She served her faithfully, reporting my every breath, my every weakness.”
Olivia paused,
”And…” she started, her voice fracturing. “Before she died, she confessed. She confessed to a sin so great it makes a simple murder look like a mercy. She told me how she slipped into my chambers during those final weeks of my pregnancy… with Elias.”
”Before she died, she confessed,” Olivia continued, her voice gaining a haunting, rhythmic quality. “She confessed to poisoning me. At first, I couldn’t place her face—the time had blurred her features into a sea of nameless enemies. But now… now the memory is sharp, like a shard of glass twisted in my mind.”
She squeezed her eyes shut for a second, but the image was burned into her retinas. ” She was the one who brought me my tea, the one who smoothed my pillows while whispering sweet, lying comforts.”
Mathias shook his head, a frantic, desperate denial taking root in his chest and spreading like a cancer.. “I don’t… I don’t follow. What are you saying, Olivia? You’re talking in riddles. You survived.”
She turned her vacant, hollowed eyes toward him, and in their depths, he saw a void that had no end.
”Elvira used the same poison on me, Mathias. The Lesser Death. She didn’t need my consent to kill you, and she didn’t need my help to destroy this house. She simply chose a different target. A weaker spark.”
”But you… oh, no. No, no, no. That’s Impossible.”
Mathias reached for her, his voice a ragged, broken plea that lacked all his former ducal power. “Olivia, tell me you don’t mean what I think you mean. I beg of you! Look at me! The boy was cold… he wasn’t breathing… the doctors… the doctors said—”
Mathias’s hands clawed at the air, grasping for a logic that no longer existed. His ducal pride, his carefully constructed walls of hatred—all of it was being incinerated by the cold fire in Olivia’s eyes. He looked like a man watching his own home burn while he stood locked inside.
Her lip trembled then—the very first crack in her perfect, porcelain mask. It wasn’t a graceful break; it was a jagged, painful splintering of her soul. A single, solitary tear escaped her deadened eyes, tracking a slow, scorching path down her pale cheek.
”The doctor just told us, Mathias,” she whispered, the words shattering the heavy silence of the room like a death knell tolling in an empty cathedral.
”The poison doesn’t kill. It mimics death. It withers the life, but it doesn’t extinguish the soul immediately. It waits. It lingers in that cold, silent slumber.”
She leaned in, her face inches from his, her breath ghosting over his skin like a winter wind.
”I remember the blue flowers on his tiny grave, Mathias. I remember how they bloomed even in the frost. I think…” her voice broke into a dry, agonizing sob, “…I think we buried our son alive.”
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