#81. I Donāt Need Something Like That
āWhatever feelings you have, they donāt give you the right to claim anything over me.ā
Ophelia unconsciously drew in a sharp breath.
The man standing before her no longer felt familiar.
Netephel looked like a stranger wearing the shell of the friend she once knew.
Noāperhaps that wasnāt even wrong. The person Netephel had shown her all this time had been nothing more than a carefully crafted faƧade.
Ophelia could feel it with her whole body nowāthat even in her previous life, the Netephel she had believed to be a friend had secretly harbored such thoughts all along.
In the past or the present, Netephel had never been honest with her.
Back then, heād helped her, yesābut even that kindness had ulterior motives.
Ophelia didnāt even want to guess what those motives were. If she tried to dig it up, all the time and memories sheād thought were friendship would only turn vile and repulsive.
Perhaps her disgust showed plainly on her face, because Netephel looked pained. His voice trembled as he spoke.
āH-how can you say that to me? Weāre friends, arenāt we? Weāre the only ones for each otherā¦ā
āFriends?ā
She almost laughed at the absurdity of it. Opheliaās lips twisted.
āJust a moment ago, you said I should be your lover because you liked me before anyone else. And now you call me a friend?ā
Her patience snapped. Irritation boiled all the way to the top of her head, and at the same time, she felt disgusted with herself for not recognizing what kind of twisted logic he lived by.
In her previous life, Ophelia had trusted Netephelābelieved him when he said they were friends.
Though it was different from what she had with Haslen, Netephel had been just as precious to her.
She had believed that, because he valued friendship as deeply as she did, he would always see her for who she truly was.
But in truth, all heād done was project his desires onto her and wait for a convenient moment.
Now, as the man who made her regret every moment of trust stared at her with tearful, victimized eyes, she felt nothing but revulsion.
Swallowing the hollow ache that felt like a hole in her chest, Ophelia said quietly,
āIf that friendship is something you only pull out when itās convenient for you⦠then I donāt need it. Take it all.ā
As Idren walked down the corridor toward Opheliaās sitting room, he unexpectedly ran into someone.
It was Netephel Luntalisāhis face pale as if heād seen a ghost.
The sight caught Idren off guard. Not only had the conversation with Ophelia ended far sooner than expected, but Netephelās unsettled expression made it clear he hadnāt left on good terms.
The Second Prince of Egelbam was walking with his eyes down, as if he didnāt even notice Idren. When they drew closer, he stumbled slightly. Idren instinctively reached out to steady himāand immediately felt a strange wave of disgust.
Frowning in confusion, he asked,
āAre you all right?ā
As unpleasant as the man was, Idren couldnāt very well let him collapse in the middle of the castle corridor.
But the prince slapped his hand away and snapped,
āDonāt touch me.ā
Idren hadnāt planned to hold on long anyway, but the gesture was needlessly rude.
Normally, he would have thrown in a biting remarkābut for some reason, his hand still tingled unpleasantly from where theyād touched. He glanced down at it, intending to say something, but the prince was already striding past him, cloak flaring.
Idren watched him go, then turned away. After all, he doubted heād have to see that man again.
When he finally reached Opheliaās sitting room, he found her reclining in her chair, eyes closed, head tilted back, two untouched cups of tea before her. She looked almost exactly as she had the last time heād seen her like this.
Realizing at once that she was in a foul mood, Idren carefully sat beside her and spoke softly.
āOphelia.ā
She opened her eyes, her brows furrowed. Staring at the ceiling, she murmured, almost to herself,
āā¦Why is it that I can never seem to have anything properly?ā
To Idren, it sounded like nonsenseābut Ophelia meant every word.
She genuinely couldnāt understand why her life had turned out like this.
Her body, her heart, even her relationshipsānothing remained intact.
She wanted to throw something out of sheer frustration, but that felt childish too. Breaking more things just because everything else was broken seemed pathetic.
Thinking of the two men who had lingered longest in her lifeāMahanas and Netephel, both disappointments and obstaclesāOphelia closed her eyes again.
After a moment, Idren quietly asked,
āā¦What did the Second Prince do?ā
It was a gentle question, but Ophelia didnāt answer.
If she were honest, the one who had ādone somethingā was herself.
It was she who had severed a relationship that had lasted over a decadeāone she no longer wanted to call friendship.
Besides, Idren was another man who claimed to love her.
She believed he was different from Netephel, but she couldnāt be sure heād understand the repulsion she felt.
Then it hit herāhow strange her thoughts had become.
Understand? Was she expecting Idren to understand her?
Since when did she need that from anyone?
Hadnāt she always told herself she didnāt need anyoneās understanding?
And then she remembered what sheād once said:
āI thought you understood me.ā
What a pitiful thing to say. The memory made her cringe.
Annoyance and embarrassment flared at once. To hide it, she sharpened her voice.
āWhy did you come here?ā
Idren flinched slightly at her sudden outburst, but his expression remained composed as he replied,
āThe confiscated property from the Nebel estate has arrived. As you instructed, the gold and silks were sent to Sianaāwell, I suppose I should call her Siana Rerck now.ā
He paused briefly, lowering his head. Ophelia watched him, his hands clasped together in his lap.
āI was also worried that the Second Prince of Egelbam might be bothering you too much.ā
Then he turned slightly toward her, glancing up with his golden eyes.
āI shouldāve come sooner.ā
Those sharp-edged eyes somehow managed to look gentle.
There wasnāt a trace of irritation in his gaze.
Ophelia let out a short, humorless laugh.
He was ridiculousāaccepting her even when she treated him unfairly. It made her feel sorry, then angry, then irritated all over again.
What was this tangle of emotions?
She stared at him for a long moment, then frowned and pushed at his chest. After all, Idren was acting this way because of his so-called love.
As if that meant anything.
How absurd to be comforted by something she didnāt even understand.
āDonāt you have any pride?ā
She snapped suddenly and stood up. Idren blinked, startled, and rose with her.
āWhere are you going?ā
āā¦To Siana.ā
Her tone was softer now, calmer somehow. Her anger had clearly ebbed a little.
Good enough, Idren thought.
As he followed the woman who walked away without another word, he stopped at the door and told the knight standing guard,
āMake sure the Second Prince has completely left the castle.ā
Since the day sheād testified at the trial, Siana hadnāt left her room.
There was no reason to.
Life in the castle was peaceful, comfortableālike wearing clothes made perfectly to fit.
Maybe it felt all the more precious because sheād once lost it all.
Even the servants treated her with a subtle warmth now, so she never felt lonely.
After all, wasnāt escaping her fatherās house what truly mattered? Loneliness didnāt stand a chance.
About ten days later, her room suddenly filled with extravagant goodsāluxurious silks clearly from the southern regions, and chests brimming with glittering gold coins.
Siana had never seen such splendor up close. Her father had always owned everything.
As she stared wide-eyed at the opulent treasures, one of the servants explained,
āThese are the goods recovered from the Rerck estate in Nebel. Her Majesty the Queen has graciously granted them to you.ā
Siana could hardly believe it.
All of thisāthese coins, these silksābelonged to her?
The Rerck family had been her late motherās lineageāone she could barely remember. She recalled the Kingās decree at the hearing: that the Rerck familyās assets would be seized and given to the Queen.
She hadnāt remembered muchāsheād been too frightened that dayābut seeing the gold now, she was glad she had listened to the Queenās words.
She was still admiring the coins when a voice came from beyond the door:
āHer Majesty the Queen is here.ā
Startled, Siana quickly stood up. The door opened wide, and the Queen entered, followed by her attendants and guards.
The Queenās expression was as cold as ever. Siana shrank slightly under that icy gaze.
The Queenās eyes swept across the lavishly decorated room, and she asked coolly,
āDo you like it?ā