©Novel Buddy
I will be the perfect wife this time-Chapter 64: A Duel of Silk and Shadows
"Silence your tongue, just for a moment," Olivia commanded, her voice a cold blade cutting through the frantic air. Isabella offered a sharp, hesitant nod, and only then did Olivia’s iron grip release her arm.
Olivia’s eyes narrowed into predatory slits, yet not a flicker of fear disturbed their icy depths. With a clinical detachment that made Isabella’s skin crawl, Olivia reached into the box. She used her silk sleeve as a makeshift shield against the rising stench, tilting the severed head with a gruesome indifference.
It was far from fresh. The eyes had already succumbed to internal pressure, bursting into gelatinous ruin, while a pale writhing of maggots feasted upon the greyed flesh.
"What an utter, abysmal failure," Olivia murmured, her voice laced with more annoyance than horror. She moved to the basin, scrubbing her hands with a rhythmic intensity. "Exposed and butchered in less than a month."
"Do you know him?" Isabella’s voice was a frantic whisper. "Who was he? And who... who could commit such an atrocity?"
Olivia looked up, a sneer curling her lips into a mask of disdain. "Do not insult me with such pedestrian questions. There is only one person with the flair for sending such ’exquisite’ tributes. That harlot."
She let the heavy lid fall back onto the box with a dull, sickening thud. Sinking into the velvet chaise longue with a weary exhale, Olivia stared at the ceiling. "Damn him," she hissed to herself. "I truly accounted for him lasting longer than this."
Isabella could endure the sight no longer. With hands that shook like dry leaves in a gale, she fumbled with the lid, desperate to shroud the grotesque remains. But the copper tang of blood and the sweetness of rot finally betrayed her; she doubled over, her stomach heaving in a violent revolt. When the tremors subsided, she sat beside Olivia, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird.
Olivia extended a glass of water, her expression unreadable. "Here. Drink. You look as though it were your neck beneath the blade, not his."
"Did you see them?" Isabella gasped, wiping her mouth. "The worms... they were crawling inside him. It was revolting."
Olivia paused, a dark amusement flickering in her gaze. "Wait. You aren’t trembling because of the severed head, but because of the vermin?"
Isabella straightened her spine, a strange resolve hardening her features. "The moment I chose to stand by your side, I prepared myself for the darkness of your trade. Why should a head frighten me? I have stood before scaffolds and walked through graveyards. Death is an old acquaintance."
A slow, predatory smile spread across Olivia’s face. "Mmm. Splendid."
"By the way," Isabella continued, her voice regaining its edge, "I know you warned me not to overstep. But this involves the Tharon bloodline. Do not forget—we are woven into this tapestry together. Partners, as you once whispered to me." She paused, locking eyes with the noblewoman. "Now, tell me. Who was he?"
Olivia’s gaze lingered on her for a long, suffocating silence. Finally, with a sigh that seemed to carry the weight of a dozen conspiracies, she spoke.
"That man was a mercenary in my employ. His task was simple, almost menial: shadow my father and keep a watchful eye on my sister. He had his uses, I suppose. He was clever, once." She gestured dismissively toward the box, her smile turning brittle and cold. "And yet, there lies the evidence of his mediocrity. Found out in less than a month, and returned to me... in pieces."
There was no grief in her eulogy, no flicker of regret—only a biting, aristocratic mockery. Isabella sank into a profound silence, a chill settling in her marrow. It was as if she were staring at a ghost—the old Olivia, the ruthless sovereign whose name was once whispered with terror in darkened corridors. She spoke of the man’s demise as if he were nothing more than a hound too dim-witted to fetch a bone.
Olivia rose with a sudden, predatory grace, snatching the wax-sealed envelope that had accompanied the ghastly offering. She turned, her gaze piercing the dim light of the study.
"Isabella, follow me."
Isabella obeyed, her footsteps heavy with a growing sense of dread. They descended the spiral stone stairs into the bowels of the estate—the cellar. Here, the air was a thick shroud of dampness and soot. Olivia came to a halt before the gargantuan iron furnace. Its belly glowed with a rhythmic, pulsing amber, the flames crackling weakly as if gasping for fresh fuel.
"Olivia," Isabella whispered, her voice echoing off the weeping stone walls. "Why have we come to this wretched place?"
Olivia hoisted the box onto a soot-stained bench, a jagged, malicious smile dancing on her lips.
"We are erasing the stains of reality, my sweet. We are sanitizing the evidence."
"Evidence?" Isabella’s breath hitched. "What if Mathias or Leon were to stumble upon us here?"
Olivia cast a look of scathing indifference over her shoulder. "And what business would they have in the dirt? We shall commit this wretch to the fire and return before a single eyebrow is raised in suspicion."
Isabella stood frozen, her limbs turning to ice. Despite her efforts to appear composed, a violent tremor seized her hands.
"Burn him? But... Olivia, he was a man. A living soul. Does he not deserve the dignity of the earth? He served you, surely his spirit—"
"First," Olivia interjected, her voice dripping with the venom of pure contempt, "he was a mercenary—a tool purchased with gold, not a companion bound by blood or loyalty. And second," she stepped closer to the furnace, the orange light twisting her features into something demonic, "his spirit is stained with the stench of failure. And I, Isabella, do not bestow honors upon the incompetent." 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
With a swift, decisive flick of her wrist, Olivia flung the severed head into the hungering maw of the furnace. The fire roared in a sudden, ecstatic burst, devouring the offering.
"Let him carry the shame of his weakness into the void," Olivia murmured. "Perhaps the inferno will provide better company than he earned in my service."
Isabella squeezed her eyes shut, but there was no escaping the visceral crackle of bone or the heavy, cloying scent of scorched flesh. Nausea surged in her throat, a bitter tide she forced herself to swallow.
"Let’s go, we should return. I don’t want to pick up any strange odors."
She followed Olivia back up the stairs, the noblewoman never once glancing back at the pyre she had lit.
They returned to the study, the transition from the hellish cellar to the refined elegance of the manor jarringly seamless. But they were not alone.
A voice, smooth as spun silk and cold as a winter morning, greeted them from the shadows: "My dearest sister, whatever could have delayed you so?"
There sat Elvira, the picture of aristocratic poise, cradling a porcelain teacup. Her lips were curved into a delicate smile, though her eyes glinted with a sharp, predatory intelligence.
"I trust my little memento arrived safely?" Elvira purred, her gaze lingering on Olivia’s composed face. "I truly hope you savored it. Is that why you were detained? Tending to your new... guest?"
Olivia did not flinch. She stepped into the room with an iron-clad serenity, her face a mask of sublime indifference.
"Oh, it was a delightful surprise," she replied, her tone sharpened by a blade of sarcasm. "I must thank you for relieving me of such unsightly rubbish. Rest assured, sister, I shall return the favor with equal fervor very soon."
Isabella watched, breathless, as the two sisters engaged in a duel where words were the only rapiers. But the atmosphere shifted when Elvira’s gaze slid toward Isabella, cold and calculating, as if she were assessing a chess piece that had yet to make its move.
Finally, Elvira set her cup down and rose, smoothing the silken folds of her gown with practiced elegance.
"It has been an eternity since my last visit," she said airily. "I find I can scarcely recall the labyrinthine halls of this house. Lady Isabella, would you be so kind as to grant me a tour?"







