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
Silence ensued after.
Why didnât he divorce Ophelia? It was simpleââItâs worth it.â
Sylvester liked Ophelia as a partner; the more she gets into trouble, the more attention is drawn to her. She is the evil woman of the century, the most vicious woman on Earth, and this notoriety overshadows Sylvesterâs own share of crimes. People preferred gossip to chew and enjoy over big political events. Nobody realised that Sylvester raised the road tax, all they cared about was that Ophelia slapped a young lady she found unpleasant. There were so many instances where Sylvester was shielded by Opheliaâs scandalous behaviour, so he had no intention of letting her go.
âAnd yet.â
âThis time, sheâs determined.â
âWhat?â
âSheâs determined to seduce the Crown Prince.â
âDoesnât she already do that?â
Sylvester smiled instead of answering. As Neil said, Ophelia was already known for her efforts in trying to capture his highnessâs heart, but of course, she always failed due to her selfishness and atrocity. This time, however, she seemed a bit different.
âItâs different,â Sylvester murmured.
Right, Ophelia had changed. If he were to describe the past Ophelia as a bison frantically rushing back and forth, the current Ophelia would beâ
âLike a fox.â
She looked like a fox with her eyes wide open.
âI will seduce the Crown Prince.â
âHow about you give me money every time his majesty expresses his liking to me?â
âWouldnât I need money to live a leisurely life after a divorce?â
Sylvester let out a small chuckle
âHow dare you say that to me!â
Poor Ophelia. No matter how much she tried to pretend to be a fox, she would just be eaten by the wolves of the snowy mountains.
âI wonder what youâll be showing me next?â Amused, he stroked his chin. âIâm looking forward to it,â Sylvester laughed, recalling the many images Ophelia has shown so far.
*****
ââ¦â
I nervously paced back and forth in the estate. Countess Cardell said she couldnât come out because she wasnât feeling well, which sounded like an excuse, but that didnât mean I couldnât force her to come out, so I requested for the Countâs presence.
âI need to talk about the necklace!â
âNo matter how talented I am at extortion, this isnât it.â I heard that the necklace was of such high value that it couldnât be exchanged with mere moneyâat least one whole mine was needed to afford the necklace, and yet I somehow obtained this through intimidation? I couldnât just let this pass by and accept it, I didnât have the guts.
âItâs not for me.â
I took a deep breath and closed the box containing the necklace. The door then opened.
âIâm sorry, Madam. Have you been waiting?â Count Cardell appeared, donning a gaunt face as I greeted him.
âNo, Iâm the one who came here so suddenly, I apologise.â
Count Cardell thought he had heard wrong, so he leaned forward without realising. If it were the original Ophelia, she would have cursed and screamed, âYeah, you stupid bastard!â
âAre you sickâ?â Count Cardell was seriously worried.
âPlease take a seat.â
âAh, yes.â The Count quickly sat across me. I straightened my posture and stared at Count Cardell.
âAs you may have heard from your wife, I received the dragon necklace from her.â
Count Cardellâs face twisted slightly and nodded his head. âIâve heard. My wife gifted you the necklaceâ
âGiftedâ¦â
âMore like surrendered itâ
I shook her head. âI will be giving it back, itâs much too valuable for me to receive.â
âPardon?â Count Cardell leaned forward again unconsciously, wondering once more if he had heard wrong. However, he realised nothing was wrong with his hearing once he saw how determined I was.
He started waving his hands in the air. âB-but didnât my wife give it to you as a gift? To return it back like thisââ
âThatâs right,â Ophelia answered as if she had waited.
âItâs a disgrace to just give back what you received.â
âW- what?â
âItâs an act that hurts not only me, but also the Countess.â
âI-is that soâ?â I felt my dry lips try to come up with an answer. âThen Iâd like to exchange this with something else.â
âExchange?â
I nodded my head and pointed to the portrait hanging above the fireplace. It was a self-portrait of a painter, but I didnât know who painted it, all I knew was that the letter from the Empress Dowager was hidden behind that painting.
And so,
âIâd like to exchange it with that,â was what I said.
I didnât know that that painting was worth a lot more than the necklace in my hands.