âWhat the hell is going on?â
I looked at the necklace in front of me in confusion. There seemed to have been a big misunderstanding again, so I thought to try and resolve it quickly. âIâm sorry, but Iâm not here for thisââ
âSo youâre here to take something else?â Countess Cardell asked in a rather sharp tone. Despite her defensiveness, you could see tears threatening to spill from her eyes.
âNo, why are you cryingâ?â
I quickly handed her a handkerchief I found on the table and consoled her, âDonât cry.â I even tried smiling to look kind. This proved to be ineffective, however, as Countess Cardell clearly saw my supposedly kind gesture as patronising and condescending; the act of handing over the handkerchief also screamed âIâll hit you if you keep cryingâ to her.
Countess Cardell started letting out uncontrollable hiccups.
âHere.â I reached out to pat her on the back. âAre you okaââ
The Countess leapt up and shouted, âIâm sorry!â And then she burst into tears. She thought I was going to hit her again! It would be less humiliating to apologise than to be beaten up in front of the other young ladies; the countess thought so and thrust the necklace box into my hand. âI apologise, so please just return with the necklace! Please!â
I looked down at the box without saying anything. âThey donât even care about what I actually want to do, they just want me out,â I thought seriously. âOphelia must have had a talent for extortion.â
******
âHm?â Sylvester saw someone familiar outside the window; there exists only one woman in the Empire with such striking silver hairâhis wife.
âWhy is she here?â
Sylvester was also visiting the estate because he had some business with the Countâbusiness that Ophelia had nothing to do with.
âAnd donât you hate the Count?â Sylvester muttered as he recalled his past memories of Ophelia, who frequently ordered servants to burn letters from the Count of Cardell.
âYour Excellency? Are you all right?â Count Cardell called out to Sylvester, who was busy staring outside the window.
In response, Sylvester slowly turned his head to face the Count. âItâs nothing; I saw my wife.â
âPardon?â The Count, surprised, snapped to look in the same direction as Sylvester and there he saw the famed Duchess Ophelia. âThatâsâ¦â He unconsciously clicked his tongue at the sight of the Duchess.
Sylvester raised his eyebrows, âWhatâs wrong with you?â Tilting his head at the Count, he continued, âYou donât seem to welcome my wife.â
Count Cardell waved his hands in disagreement, refuting the Dukeâs words, âOh, thatâs not true! Itâs just that I donât think she was on my wifeâs invitation list.â
âWhen did my wife start to be invited?â Sylvester turned his body completely towards Count Cardell, his face basking in the sunlight pouring from the window.
Count Cardell lowered his eyes in haste, âI apologiseâ¦â He was embarrassed; he wiped his hands on his thighs and was covered in cold sweat. The Count couldnât help but glance outside, worrying over how âthatâ Ophelia was with his wife, so he risked being rude and asked the Duke for his patience. âIâm sorry, but may I be excused for a while? I think I should go visit my wife.â
The corners of Sylvesterâs lips curled up. âYes, take as much time as you want,â he replied, remembering how Ophelia burned the ends of the Countess Cardellâs hair once in the past. âMy wife shouldnât be playing tricks after all.â
ââ¦â The Count thought the same thing, but his face turned pale and he bent down in a hurry, leaving with a short, âI will be right back.â As if someone was chasing him.
After the door closed, Sylvester leaned his head against the window and looked out once more; Countess Cardell was in tears while Ophelia sat still beside her without a change in her expression.
âYou mustâve done something,â Sylvester grinned and folded his arms knowingly. Ophelia had always been like this; everywhere she went, misfortune followedâjust like a parasite and its hostâwhether or not she intended for them to happen didnât matter. Everyone around Sylvester hated Ophelia because of this bad luck that surrounded her; âItâs hurting your reputation,â they said.
But, âI like it.â Sylvester had liked Ophelia from the beginning; other than the Emperor, she was the first woman who wasnât phased by his charms. If Sylvester didnât know it was because of her skill in black magic, he wouldâve doubted the effectiveness of his own abilities. Ophelia had exceptional talent as a black magic userâexceptional enough to be immune to demonic deception. However, she never bothered to develop this talent and instead used it to curse people she didnât like.
âWhat a shame⦠Well, maybe itâs not so bad.â
âAs long as you donât bring the soul in,â he mumbled, touching the window. Anyhow, if Ophelia caused any more trouble in the Cardell estate, it would be hard to handle. âNow is the right time.â
White fingers laid atop the transparent window, blocking the light from coming in, replacing what was supposed to be sunshine with dark shadows.
Knock
âMay I come in?â A familiar voice came from behind the door.
Sylvester took his hand off of the window and replied, âCome in.â As soon as the two words left his lips, the door burst open showing a man with light brown hair and sturdy buildâhe was Neil, Sylvesterâs aide.
Neil leaned slightly towards Sylvester and pointed at the door with his thumb. âI was late âcause I was chatting with the coachman, but I just ran into the count and he looked like he was in a hurry, what happened?â
âWell.â Sylvester stroked his chin slowly. âMust be because my wife is here.â
âPardon?â Neil came closer to Sylvester and looked out the window, seeing Ophelia. âWhy is the madam hereââ
âThat I donât know,â Sylvester answered back, shrugging his shoulders as if he were talking about a random stranger. âMaybe sheâs here to help her husband with his work.â
âYeah, I bet she is,â Neil gritted his teeth and replied, then he slapped his mouth and said mockingly, âOh myâ Iâm so sorry. I canât say that about the madam.â
âJust try saying that in front of Ophelia herself and your tongue will be cut off.â
âI canât work with a severed tongue, so maybe I can finally quit my job as an assistant.â
âThen Iâll use your son as my assistant.â
âI canât believe you would hire an unborn childâIâm crying because Iâm thankful, by the way, Iâll be happy.â Sylvester burst into laughter as he watched Neil shivering, causing the latter to smile alongside him.
âI heard that the Madam talked about divorce again yesterday,â Neil said, observing the laughter that lingered on Sylvesterâs face, âbut you refused her again.â
âThatâs right.â
âWhy?â He asked. âActually, isnât it a great offer? If you look at the madamâs behaviour, even filing a divorce is not enough.â
Sylvester frowned at his statement, but Neil chattered on, eventually asking again, âWhy wonât you divorce your wife?â