Chapter: 7
After handing Lillian over to the butler, Joel lifted the teapot as if thirsty, only to discover it was empty. He set it back down without a word.
Just as Joel reached for the bell to summon a servant, Lisithea covered it with her palm and stopped him.
A beast that didnât even know who held its leash needed to learn how to endure thirst.
âSend her away.â
The purpose and intent were obvious. There was no need to waste time or emotional energy with long explanations.
Lisithea said only that and waited for Joelâs reply.
âLisithea, donât misunderstand. I really have nothing going on with Lady Rose.â
âNothing at all?â
âShe saved my life. I couldnât just pretend nothing happened. And what you sawâLady Rose was about to fall, so I caught her.â
Lisithea almost felt pity for Joelâs stupidity.
Was it really a coincidence that she nearly fell in a spot clearly visible from the drawing room where Lisithea stood?
From the perfectly timed fall into Joelâs arms to her blatant intrusion into the drawing room, it was obvious that everything had been calculated by Lillian Rose.
She couldnât believe he hadnât noticed such a transparent ploy.
Noâshe needed to revise her earlier thought.
The male lead of this world wasnât just a little dense. He was very dense.
âJoel Spencer, does this sound like a request to you?â
âHaah⊠Lisithea. Please.â
Joel let out a heavy sigh, irritation seeping into his voice.
From that familiar tone, Lisithea clearly read reproach and exhaustion directed at her.
Passing the blameâhow laughable.
Who was it that had turned the situation into this mess?
âCanât you try to understand me this time? I have my own circumstances too.â
âI donât care to know. Whatever your reasons are, my demand is simple. Send Lillian Rose out of this house by the end of the week.â
When Lisitheaâs attitude didnât soften at all, Joel looked at her with a fed-up expression.
After going this far, shouldnât she at least pretend to listen?
He really hadnât wanted to say thisâbut she left him no choice.
âDonât you think youâre mistaken about something? You donât have the right to interfere in what happens in the Spencer household. Youâre my fiancĂ©e, not my wife.â
âDo you think I donât know that? If I werenât your fiancĂ©e, I wouldâve dragged Lillian Rose out of this house with my own hands.â
âYou really⊠do you know how suffocating you are? Every time youâre like this, I canât breathe. It feels like Iâm a dog chained by the neck.â
Not once did he ever give in.
Lisithea never allowed even the slightest deviation from the standards and rules she had set.
There was a reason no one stayed by his side despite that face of his.
âJoel Spencer. Are you sick of me? Feel trapped? Suffocated?â
âAnyone would. Who could put up with someone like you?â
As if sheâd been waiting for those words, the woman before him broke into a radiant smile.
It was so bright that for a moment he forgot they were even arguing.
âThen break off the engagement. I donât need a dog that canât even recognize its owner.â
Joel was momentarily captivated by her expression, slow to grasp the meaning of her words.
At first, he bristled at being called a dogâbut then the word engagement annulment finally registered, and his eyes narrowed.
Annul the engagement?
Lisithea Aster wanted to annul their engagement?
Ridiculous.
ââŠNo matter how angry you are, there are things you can say and things you canât.â
It wasnât that the thought had never crossed his mind.
But he had never once said it out loud in front of Lisithea.
âYou seem too emotional today. Letâs talk later.â
âSit.â
Seeing no chance of a productive conversation, Joel tried to leaveâbut Lisithea didnât budge.
âLisithea, go home now.â
âSit.â
She was immovable, like a thousand-year-old rock.
Whenever she was like this, Joel felt like he might burst from sheer frustration.
âYouâno, forget it.â
Scoffing with a weary expression, he nonetheless sat back down obediently, exactly as she ordered.
Seriously, that fiery temper of hersâŠ
Creeeakâ
The chair let out a shrill scream as it tilted sharply to one side.
Joel flailed his arms and barely avoided tumbling to the floor.
âJoel Spencer. I didnât tell you to act shamelessly toward the person who saved your life. Whether with money, Spencer power, connectionsâuse whatever you have and pay your debt properly.â
ââŠâŠâ
âBut this? This isnât it. You bring Lillian Rose into this house and turn me into this?â
As Lisithea enumerated each point clearly, Joel already felt his stomach shrinking.
Still, it wasnât as though he had nothing to say.
âYou never cared about what other people thought in the first place.â
What did public opinion matter?
To Lisithea, the only thing that mattered was the standard she set for herself.
âRight. I donât care what people gossip about. But if youâd thought about me even a little, you wouldnât have pulled a stunt like this.â
âWhat did I do that was so wrongâŠ?â
âDid you really not know what it means to bring a mana channeler into your home?â
That hit the mark precisely.
Joel, whoâd been talking endlessly just moments ago, shut his mouth.
Magic in this land was essentially a miracle borrowed from the starsâbut the fuel that activated it was human mana.
The scale of magic depended on the amount and purity of mana offered.
To wield special, powerful magic, more mana was required.
But just as oneâs blessing from the stars was determined at birth, so too was the amount of mana a person possessed.
That was why mages were obsessed with collecting substitutes for mana.
Yet greedy stars accepted nothing indiscriminately.
High-purity gemstones.
A mageâs body parts or memories.
Or a mageâs very life.
The sole hope of magesâwho never knew when their guardian star might claim their livesâwas the mana channeler.
A mana channelerâs magic consisted of lending their own mana to other mages.
The reason Lillian Rose had been able to save Joel Spencer in the Black Forest was precisely because she was a mana channeler.
Romances between mages and mana channelers were a staple of popular fictionâbut there was one story more famous than all the rest.
Emma Dawson, daughter of a fallen baron, who fell in love with Lisitheaâs biological father.
She was the mana channeler who had appeared once every sixty years.
A fallen baronâs daughter and a promising high noble.
A man wounded by an unwanted political marriage and the daughter of his deceased mentor.
A young mage and a beautiful mana channeler appearing once in sixty years.
Their love was hailed as the romance of the centuryâand the daughter left behind by the first wife was nothing more than an obstacle.
The reason their names had resurfaced after being forgotten was the emergence of a new mana channeler: Lillian Rose.
From being a rare mana channeler to being the daughter of a fallen baron, Lillian Rose bore many similarities to Emma Dawson.
To those who remembered the love story of Marquis Aster and Emma, the meeting of Lillian and Joel felt like time looping back on itself.
Even the obstacle between them was the sameâLisithea Aster.
Lisithea felt sick of this fate-like repetition.
How lazy was this world?
What made their love so special?
Why did misfortune always have to belong to her alone?
âI didnât know you cared about things like that. You never talked about your parents in front of meâŠâ
Lisithea wished she could.
She wished she could live as someone completely unrelated to her parents.
But there was no escaping a tragedy known to the entire world.
All she could do was endure, wearing a noble mask as if nothing hurt.
âIâll say it again. Send Lillian Rose out of this house. Or we end our engagement here. Thatâs all I have to say.â
Lisithea stood up.
Joel rose hurriedly and grabbed her arm.
âLisithea, letâs talk this through. If you leave like thisââ
âWhy? Afraid of an annulment? Worried your grandfather will be angry?â
Perhaps because they hadnât known each other longâ
Their love didnât seem that deep.
If Joel truly wanted to maintain his engagement with her, that was proof enough.
âI told you. I donât need a dog that doesnât know who its owner is. You shouldâve known who held the leash before you barked.â
Lisithea Asterâowner of the Cullinan Mine and the wealthiest unmarried woman in the Empire.
It was Joel and the Spencers who had pushed for the engagement because they needed that.
The Spencer family were mage-artificers who revered the Star of the Blacksmith.
They amassed wealth and power by producing and selling magical items.
But recently, a series of costly magical tools had failed, plunging them into financial trouble.
The engagement between Joel Spencer and Lisithea Aster had been their solution.
ââŠDogâha, fine. I didnât think deeply enough. I get why youâd be upset, but⊠letâs not take this too far. Calm down.â
Having been called a dog twice in one day, Joel chose not to argue and instead decided to placate his sulking fiancée.
Lisithea had never been particularly easygoing, but today she was especially sharp.
Almost as if she were someone who had already been told the day of her death.
He expected her to be upset about Lillianâbut not this furious.
Then again, Lisithea had always been unusually possessive of him.
âItâs not like youâd really break off our engagement anyway. I know you didnât mean it.â
At Joelâs softened, soothing tone, Lisithea let out a short laugh.






