Chapter : 783
Lord Qadir walked ahead of him, his posture subtly changed. The crushing weight of his despair had been lifted, replaced by the fragile, terrifying burden of hope. He had placed his faith, and the future of his house, into the hands of the strange, slum doctor behind him. He had made his wager, and now all he could do was pray it paid off.
Sumaiya, who had remained a silent, awestruck witness throughout the entire ordeal in the vault, looked at Lloyd with an expression that was close to worship. He was a man who commanded not just the respect of the poor and the downtrodden, but who could now command the very secrets of the kingdom’s most powerful lords. He was a paradox, a being of humble origins and divine power, and her fascination with him had deepened into something far more complex and dangerous.
When they emerged back into the sickroom, the heavy, obsidian door sealing the vault behind them with a final, resonant thud, it felt like they had returned from another world. The Royal Physicians and the alchemist were still there, huddled in a corner, their faces pale and drawn. They looked at the small, velvet satchel in Lloyd’s hand as if it were a holy relic, or a venomous snake.
Lloyd, ever the actor, did not allow his triumph to show. He was still the humble, serious doctor, now tasked with a burden of immense, terrifying responsibility.
“I have what I need, my Lord,” he said, his voice a low, solemn murmur. “But the preparations will be delicate and will take time. I must return to my clinic. I need the tools and the solitude of my own laboratory to study the stones, to understand their unique properties, and to prepare the necessary elixirs. The surgery cannot be rushed. The boy’s life depends on my preparations being perfect.”
His request was perfectly logical. It bought him the time he needed to return to the safety of his clinic, to analyze his prize with the System, and to formulate the final stages of his plan. It also reinforced his image as a meticulous, careful practitioner, not an arrogant miracle worker.
Lord Qadir, now completely under his spell, nodded immediately. “Of course, Doctor. Whatever you require. How long will you need?”
“Two days,” Lloyd replied after a moment of feigned, careful consideration. “I will return on the morning of the third day, at dawn. In the meantime, I will provide you with a simple herbal tonic. It will not cure him, but it will help to strengthen his body and prepare him for the ordeal to come.”
He quickly wrote down the recipe for a simple, nutritional broth on a piece of parchment—a common, harmless remedy that would give the family a sense of purpose and make them feel they were a part of the healing process.
With the final arrangements made, he and Sumaiya were escorted from the estate. The guards, who had looked at him with such contempt upon his arrival, now bowed their heads in a gesture of profound, fearful respect. The news of the seer in the sickroom was already beginning to spread through the household’s rumor mill.
The carriage ride back to the Lower Coil was a quiet, contemplative one. Sumaiya was lost in her own thoughts, her mind still reeling from the revelations in the vault and the sheer, audacious scale of the events she had just witnessed.
Lloyd, however, was a silent, humming engine of pure, triumphant energy. He had done it. He had breached the fortress, identified the weakness, manipulated the king, and had walked away with the crown jewels. It was a perfect, flawless intelligence operation, a masterpiece of social engineering and psychological warfare.
But as he looked down at the velvet satchel in his lap, he knew that the hardest, most dangerous part of his mission was yet to come. He had promised a miracle. He had promised to cure the incurable. Now, with the eyes of one of the kingdom’s most powerful families fixed upon him, he actually had to deliver one. He was a con artist who had just sold the dream of a lifetime. And now, he had to find a way to make that dream come true. The game was far from over. In fact, it had only just begun.
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The humble clinic in the Lower Coil had never felt more like a sanctuary. After the oppressive, gilded grandeur of the Qadir estate and the ancient, humming silence of the vault, the simple, familiar space was a welcome refuge. The air here smelled not of secrets and sorrow, but of honest work—the clean, sharp scent of herbs, the dusty smell of old books, and the faint, lingering warmth of the day’s patients.
Chapter : 784
Sumaiya, her mind still reeling from the day’s incredible events, bid him a quiet goodnight at the door. She was a different person from the one who had left that morning. The fierce advocate had been replaced by a quiet, reverent acolyte. She looked at him as if he were a holy man, a being who walked in a world far beyond her own understanding.
“Rest well, Zayn,” she had said, her voice a soft, awestruck whisper. “The fate of that boy… it is in your hands now.”
Lloyd had simply nodded, his face a mask of somber, weary responsibility. But the moment the door closed behind her, the moment he was truly, finally alone, the mask dissolved. The humble doctor, the sad-eyed saint, the solemn scholar—all of it vanished in an instant.
A slow, cold, predatory smile spread across his face, a look of pure, unadulterated triumph. It was the smile of the Major General after a perfectly executed mission, the look of a wolf who had just successfully disguised himself as a sheep and had been invited to guard the entire flock.
He bolted the door, drew the heavy curtains across the grimy window, and lit a single, fresh candle. The small, flickering flame cast dancing, monstrous shadows on the walls. In this self-imposed isolation, he could finally be himself.
He opened the velvet satchel and carefully laid its contents out on his rough wooden desk. Four stones. One was the palm-sized specimen he had chosen as his primary tool, its milky-white surface cool to the touch. The other three were smaller, no bigger than his thumb, the ‘calibration’ stones he had requested as a brilliant afterthought. They looked like simple, dull, ordinary rocks. Unimpressive. Unassuming.
But Lloyd knew better. He was looking at the key to a new age.
He sat down at his desk, his heart beating a steady, excited rhythm. He had waited for this moment, had planned for it, had risked everything for it. It was time to talk to his god.
He closed his eyes, shutting out the mundane reality of the clinic. His consciousness plunged inward, into the sleek, sophisticated, star-filled void of the System 2.0 interface. The world of flesh and wood was gone, replaced by the silent, infinite cosmos of his own power.
‘Administrator,’ his mental voice was a crisp, clear command, sharp with anticipation. ‘I have a new acquisition for analysis. Designate: Item Alpha.’
The calm, synthetic, genderless voice of the System’s AI responded instantly in his mind, its tone as cool and dispassionate as the void itself.
[<Aknowledged. Present Item Alpha for full-spectrum analysis.>]
Lloyd focused his will, creating a perfect, high-fidelity mental image of the largest Lilith Stone, projecting every detail of its crystalline structure, its weight, its subtle internal resonance, directly into the System’s matrix.
There was a moment of silence, a pause that felt like a supercomputer processing a universe of data. Then, the Administrator spoke again, and its monotone voice began to deliver a lecture that would fundamentally change Lloyd’s understanding of magic, technology, and the very nature of the world he was in.
[<Analysis Complete. Item Designation: Lilith Stone. Grade: B-minus. Composition: Silicate-based psycho-receptive crystalline matrix with trace elements of solidified spiritual energy.>]
‘Psycho-receptive?’ Lloyd queried, latching onto the key term. ‘Explain.’
[<The crystalline lattice of a Lilith Stone is uniquely structured to receive and store imprinted psychic or spiritual intent. It is, in its raw form, a passive, non-sentient recording device. It does not possess the capacity for independent thought, logic, or decision-making.>]
This confirmed his initial theory. It wasn't a brain. It was a hard drive.
‘You said it can be programmed,’ Lloyd prompted. ‘The process you called ‘Will Engraving.’ Explain the mechanics.’
[<Will Engraving is the process of imprinting a single, complex, and continuous ‘Task Protocol’ onto the stone’s core matrix. The user must project a clear, unwavering, and precisely defined intent directly into the stone. This intent must be a complete, self-contained instruction set. For example, the protocol ‘Maintain a constant internal temperature of 300 degrees’ is a valid command. The protocol ‘Heat this room’ is not, as it lacks precise, continuous parameters.>]
Lloyd’s mind ignited. It was exactly as he had hoped. The stones were programmable, but they were literalists. They required a perfect, clearly defined instruction, an algorithm. This was the language of a computer.
‘Once a protocol is imprinted,’ he asked, his excitement growing, ‘how is it powered? How is the task executed?’