Chapter 10
âWhere on earthâ!â
âOh my, raising your voice like that? Lady Philite has always lacked a bit in etiquette.â
âPerhaps itâs you, Lady Sheffield, whoâs lacking. And for the record, itâs not Lady Philiteâitâs Chief Aide.â
As if lightning had struck between a snake and a mongoose, Cooper raised his hand to calm them down.
âThe new aide has arrived, yesâbut what does that have to do with you, Lady Sheffield?â
âIt has everything to do with me.â
Even though both Cooper and Iris openly tried to push her out, Lady Sheffield was not someone who could be easily dismissed.
âHow could it not be related? If Iâm to stand beside him, I must know all of his aides.â
Her tone implied it was only natural, and Iris, dumbfounded, shot back,
âWhat is that baseless confidence of yours?â
âOh my, baseless? Tell meâwho else besides His Highness the Crown Prince could capture me in an instant, just with presence and gaze, noâjust with words? Iâm wagering my life on this. If Iâm to devote my life to someone, they have to be worthy.â
âWhat nonsense about wagering your lifeââ
Iris lunged forward, ready to spit venomous words, but Cooper quickly covered her mouth.
Before Iris could truly explode, the tension-filled air in the room was broken by the sound of a door opening.
Click.
âIâm back. The servants had everything prepared, so I just brought it along. Letâs drink some tea and catch our breath a bit. But whatâs this awful smellâŠ?â
Ophelia, setting down a tray and fanning her nose against the overwhelming perfume, blinked in surprise.
âA new aide?â
Lady Sheffield took a deliberate step forward and looked Ophelia up and down.
Ophelia rolled her eyes at Iris and Cooper, silently asking what was going onâbut the opponent before her was not one to âspeak with the eyes.â
âRed hair and blue eyes⊠Volshake, I see.â
Lady Sheffield furrowed her brow, as if thinking deeply.
âWhat on earth did His Highness see in you to make you an aide? Judging by your appearanceâhmm.â
Pointing at Opheliaâs face and figure with a finger, she sneered and tossed her fan at Ophelia.
The fan struck the toe of Opheliaâs shoe.
âThe fan fell,â Lady Sheffield said with a smirk, flicking her fingersâclearly meaning, pick it up.
This was an old-fashioned act of bullying in high society.
So old, in fact, that Ophelia couldnât even bring herself to be angry anymore.
Sheâd been through far worse storms to be ruffled by something so petty.
But that didnât mean sheâd stoop to picking it up either.
âWhat are you doing?â Ophelia finally spoke.
âLady Sheffield, youâve been speaking quite informally for a while.â
âIsnât that natural? Surely you donât think weâre equals?â
Ophelia, as one of Crown Prince Richardâs aidesâjust like Iris and Cooperâwas someone to whom Sheffield should be speaking politely.
Strictly speaking, working directly for the Imperial family made Opheliaâs position higher than that of a mere marquessâs daughter without any official post.
But the world rarely followed proper logic.
The Sheffield familyâs influence made mutual politeness expected, though the Lady clearly had no intention of showing it.
Iris and Cooper received polite speech only because their families, the Philites and the Halseys, were influential in the Empire.
The Volshake family, however prestigious its name, was now little more than a paper tigerârespected only in memory.
Why would Lady Sheffield hesitate to barge into the Crown Princeâs aide office uninvited? Thereâd be no punishment for her anyway.
âI donât know how you ended up here, but since youâve rolled in, you should know your place.â
Her insults were crude but sharp enough to cut straight to the ego.
Ironically, they provoked not Ophelia, but Iris.
Maybe it was because Iris had been sharing those sleepless, meal-skipping days with Ophelia lately,
or because Ophelia had been quietly, flawlessly handling her duties without complaint.
Whatever it was, a sense of camaraderie had taken rootâjust enough for Iris to open her mouth in Opheliaâs defense.
But Cooper stopped her with a hand on her shoulder.
âWhatâlet go, Cooper.â
He removed his hand and raised a finger to his lips.
âShh. Just watch.â
Though his lips still smiled pleasantly, his brown eyes were sharp as blades.
Ophelia, meanwhile, simply stared at Lady Sheffield.
âWhat are you waiting for? Are you deaf as well as clueless?â
Before Sheffield could finish, Ophelia smiled brightlyâthen lifted her leg.
Seeing her raise her skirt slightly, Lady Sheffieldâs eyes widened.
Iris smirked; Cooper reached out, trying to stop her.
But contrary to what everyone expectedâOphelia didnât kick Lady Sheffield.
Instead, her foot came crashing straight down.
Crunch.
Something shattered loudly.
Ophelia said calmly, âFan? What fan? I donât see one.â
Lady Sheffield gaped, eyes darting between the crushed remains of her fan and Ophelia.
Ophelia made sure to grind it into the floor with her heel for good measure.
âSurely you donât mean this piece of trash under my foot is your fan?â
She tilted her head, feigning surprise.
âOh my! If thatâs the case, Iâm terribly sorry. I didnât know you used trash as a fan.â
She nudged the broken pieces toward Sheffield with her shoe, batting her eyes innocently.
âIâd rather not touch garbage, but since you seem to want it so badly, Iâll push it your way. Anyway, I have work to do.â
Turning lightly, Ophelia added over her shoulder,
âOh, and by the wayâthis is the aidesâ office. Youâre the one who rolled in.â
Lady Sheffield stared, speechless, while Ophelia, ignoring her entirely, poured herself tea.
Cooper glanced between them, then whispered to Iris,
âSheâs definitely no ordinary ladyâŠâ
But his words trailed off as Lady Sheffield murmured in awe,
âMy goodness⊠there is someone like that.â
Her eyes gleamed as she stared at Ophelia as if sheâd just found a rare treasure.
The day Ophelia crushed a fan into trash and accidentally became the person Lady Sheffield decided to âdevote her life to,â the world did not reset.
And so, the long-awaited day of the hunting tournamentâbrought to life by Opheliaâs blood, sweat, and tearsâfinally dawned.
Before heading to the palace, Ophelia closed her eyes and took a deep breath.
Her mother approached quietly.
She had countless questions built up but had missed every chance to ask them because her daughter always left too early for the palace.
Today, she intended to demand answersâhow did she become the Crown Princeâs aide, and what responsibilities did that entail?
âOphelâoh my!â
Her mother recoiled, clutching her chest, as Opheliaâs eyes flew openâsharp and intense.
Without so much as a glance at her startled mother, Ophelia strode off toward the palace.
Her back was straight, her aura grim and resoluteâlike a general marching to war.
Her mother could only watch, murmuring softly,
âWhen did that childâs eyes⊠become like that?â
Ophelia, unaware of her motherâs presence, pressed her dry lips together and exhaled.
âPlease, just this onceâlet the regressions end within three⊠no, five times.â
A desperate wishâbut only a wish.
She hadnât slept all night.
After tossing and turning endlessly, she could only mutter bitterly to herself now:
âWhat is a hunting tournament, really?â
A game.
A sport where nobles chase pre-captured prey within a limited area.
But if that were all it was, why did people train year after year for it so fiercely?
âDamn that champion!â
The winner of the tournament earns a private audience with the Emperorâor the Crown Prince.
In an empire where loyalty to the Imperial family was absolute, even a monkey could understand what that meant.
And of course, the hunting ground would be full of armed participants, wild forests, and beastsâsome captured, some not, all unpredictable.
In short: the perfect setting to secretly kill someone and bury the truth forever.
She didnât even need to experience it to knowâ
Today will be another day of regression.
âUgh.â
Ophelia rubbed her aching stomach.
Her temples throbbed; her eyes burned as if she could wash them clean if only she could take them out.
âStress really is the root of all evil.â
Yesterday, after finishing her work, sheâd gone home feeling light as air.
Sheâd planned to fall into blissful sleepâŠ
until she suddenly remembered what kind of event the hunting tournament truly was.
And thenâshe kicked off her blanket and shot upright.
âThe hunting tournament is dangerous!â