Chapter : 791
Sumaiya, who had stood against the wall like a statue throughout the entire ordeal, felt her own knees grow weak. She looked at Lloyd, at the quiet, exhausted man who had just defied death itself, and the admiration in her heart blazed into something close to worship.
Even the professionals, the men of science and logic, were undone. The elder Royal Physician took off his spectacles and wiped his eyes with a shaking hand, muttering, “Impossible… by all the gods, impossible…” The alchemist, the sneering skeptic, simply stared, his face pale, his mind clearly broken by an event that his every principle, every formula, every law of his craft, declared could not have happened.
Lloyd let them have their moment. He let the raw, powerful wave of emotion wash over the room, a necessary and cleansing storm after the long, terrible drought of despair. He himself felt a strange, hollow echo of their joy. He had done a good thing. A truly, unambiguously good thing. The boy would live. A family had been saved. The feeling was a clean, warm glow in the center of his chest, a sensation so unfamiliar that he didn't quite know what to do with it.
After several long, emotional minutes, Lord Qadir finally regained a measure of his composure. He rose to his feet, helping his still-weeping wife. He turned to face Lloyd, and the look in his stormy eyes was one of such profound, absolute, and humbling gratitude that it was more powerful than any royal decree.
He walked to Lloyd and, in a gesture that shattered every protocol of their stratified society, he took the slum doctor’s bloody, unwashed hands in his own. He then did something that made every other person in the room gasp. The great Lord Timur Qadir, Master of the Royal Armories, second only to the King in power and influence, bowed. It was not a shallow nod of the head, but a deep, formal bow from the waist, the gesture of a vassal to his rightful sovereign.
“Doctor Zayn,” he said, his voice thick with an emotion that was close to reverence. “I am a man of few words, and I do not have the words to express the debt my house now owes you. You have not just saved my son. You have saved my wife. You have saved my name. You have saved my very soul.”
He straightened up, his gaze unwavering. “I made you a promise of pain if you were a fraud. I now make you a new promise. From this day forward, you, your clinic, your work—it is all under the personal, absolute protection of House Qadir. You will want for nothing. Any man who dares to speak ill of you will answer to me. Any enemy you have is now my enemy. You are not just a healer to my house; you are a brother.”
The declaration was a political earthquake. He had just elevated a nameless, station-less slum doctor to the level of a protected, high-ranking vassal of one of the kingdom’s most powerful families.
Lloyd, playing his part to the very end, simply bowed his own head in a gesture of humble, almost overwhelmed, gratitude. “You owe me no debt, my Lord,” he murmured. “To heal is its own reward.”
The perfect, saintly answer was the final seal on his legend. The miracle of Rizvan was complete. And its whispers were about to become a roar that would shake the entire city.
The news of the miracle at the Qadir estate did not just spread; it detonated. It was a firestorm of rumor and disbelief that swept through the capital’s high society with the speed and force of a hurricane. The story, passed in hushed, awestruck whispers over glasses of wine in elegant drawing rooms and in the coded gossip of the palace corridors, was too fantastic, too impossible to be true. And yet, it was.
The initial source was the Royal Physicians and the master alchemist who had been present. These men, who had entered the sickroom as proud, skeptical guardians of the establishment, emerged as shaken, humbled converts. They did not speak of the details—Lord Qadir’s threat had ensured their absolute silence on that front—but their changed demeanor, their sudden, reverent respect for the previously unknown ‘Doctor Zayn’, was a story in itself. When the most respected medical minds in the kingdom suddenly fall silent in the face of a miracle, the world pays attention.
Chapter : 792
The second wave of confirmation came from the Qadir estate itself. The house, which had been a fortress of somber, funereal silence, was transformed overnight. The heavy draperies were thrown open. The sound of laughter was heard in the gardens for the first time in months. Lord Qadir, who had been a grim, reclusive shadow, was seen riding through the city with his honor guard, his face no longer a mask of grief, but one of fierce, triumphant joy. The change was so dramatic, so absolute, that it was an undeniable testament to the truth of the rumors.
And then, the legend of Doctor Zayn began to take shape. He was no longer just a skilled healer; he was a mystical figure, a holy man touched by the gods. The stories of his work in the Lower Coil, which had been dismissed by the nobility as the fanciful tales of the poor, were now re-examined, re-framed as the early signs of a great, hidden power. The weaver’s son, the old fisherman, the dozens of other small, quiet miracles—they all became part of the larger, magnificent tapestry of his legend.
He became known as the ‘Saint of the Coil,’ a title that started as a whisper in the slums and was now being spoken with a new, profound respect in the halls of power. He was a man who had walked out of the city’s darkest corner and had brought light to one of its brightest houses.
For Lloyd, the aftermath was a delicate, strategic dance. He did not bask in his newfound fame. He retreated. He returned to his humble clinic, to his simple scholar’s robes, to his quiet, daily work of healing the poor. This act of profound humility was, of course, the most brilliant piece of public relations he could have possibly engineered. It cemented his image as a true, selfless servant of the people, a man utterly uninterested in the power and wealth that was now being laid at his feet.
Lord Qadir, true to his word, became his most powerful and fervent patron. A discreet but bottomless line of credit was opened for the clinic at the city’s most prestigious apothecary guild, allowing Lloyd to access any herb or reagent he desired. A detachment of Qadir’s own household guard was permanently, if discreetly, stationed at the end of his street, a silent, iron-clad statement that the Saint of the Coil was now under the protection of a great and terrible power.
And then came the true prize.
Three days after the surgery, a small, unmarked carriage arrived at the clinic after dark. A trusted servant of House Qadir stepped out, bearing a heavy, velvet-lined wooden chest. He presented it to Lloyd with a bow of profound reverence.
“A token,” the servant explained, his voice hushed. “From my Lord and Lady. For your… future research.”
Lloyd opened the chest. Inside, nestled on a bed of dark silk, lay a dozen raw, milky-white Lilith Stones, each one the size of a pigeon’s egg. They were all of the same modest, B-minus grade as the ones he had first acquired. To the Qadirs, this was a gift of immense value, a small fortune in raw magical reagents, a gesture of their staggering gratitude.
To Lloyd, it was so much more. It was the first shipment of raw materials for his new world order. It was the fuel for his Aegis suit, the processing cores for his technological revolution. He had come to Zakaria seeking a single stone and, through a masterstroke of manipulation and a terrifying, high-stakes medical gamble, he was now being supplied with a steady, reliable source of them.
He accepted the gift with his usual quiet, humble grace. He thanked the servant, sent his profound gratitude to the Lord and Lady, and then closed the door, the heavy chest in his hands.
He stood in the center of his small, quiet clinic, the place where his new life, his new legend, had been born. He looked at the chest of priceless, strategic assets, and then his gaze drifted to the simple cot in the back room. The boy, Tariq Qadir, was still there, recovering under his watchful eye, his breathing deep and even, his life a testament to the miracle that had been performed.
The mission was a resounding, unqualified success. He had the trust of a great house. He had a new, powerful protector. He had a supply line for the most critical component of his future plans. And he had a legend that made him virtually untouchable.