Silk flowed like water through the halls, incense masked the scent of rot, and behind every smile lay sharpened teeth.
Today was the Festival of Radiance, a celebration of unity between the inner clans.
A chance for alliances.
For show.
And for Zhao Wei, a chance to move the first piece on her board.
They dressed her in pale lilac silk, the color of shadows before nightfall.
A deliberate insult, chosen by Cousin Feiyan.
“It’s humble,” Feiyan had purred,
“for one with no spirit.”
Wei said nothing.
She didn’t need embroidery to cut deeper than steel.
The courtyard bloomed with people.
Disciples from the Lu Clan, Bai Clan, and Jin Sect mingled among Zhao elders.
Lanterns floated in water basins, petals dancing on the surface.
Feiyan stood in the center, her phoenix spirit flaring faint behind her pure, refined, rehearsed.
She recited her poem with the grace of a lotus in bloom.
Applause followed.
Of course it did.
Then came Zhao Lin’s sword form, powerful, but clumsy in transitions.
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And then…
Zhao Wei.
The girl in lilac.
She walked with silence in her step.
No beast behind her.
No announcement.
She stepped into the middle of the courtyard, a single ribbon trailing from her sleeve.
The elders whispered.
“Is she mocking us?”
“An empty child…”
“Even her presence is disgrace.”
But Lu Shenyang watched with narrowed eyes.
Wei raised her hands not in prayer, but in mimicry of an old war dance.
One she had once performed with bloodied hands, in a field of corpses and fire.
She began to move.
Not like a girl.
Not like a warrior.
Like a memory.
Each step was a calculated beat, each gesture a blade between ribs.
It was no performance.
It was a reminder.
That grace could be lethal.
That silence was not surrender.
That absence did not mean she was empty.
When she stopped, not a soul dared to clap.
Even the wind held its breath.
Then
A single sound.
The soft click of a fan snapping open.
Lu Shenyang.
A faint smirk tugged at his lips.
“You call that humble?” he said to Feiyan, whose face had paled.
Zhao Wei bowed low, her ribbon fluttering like a sigh.
“No,” she replied, calm and cold.
“I call it restraint.”
That night, a scream tore through the quiet.
One of Feiyan’s attendants was found in the eastern wing, blood trailing like red threads across the floor.
A warning, they called it.
A message.
But no culprit found.
No trace.
Only a scrap of lilac silk… tied around the hilt of a fallen blade.
The next morning, Zhao Wei stood beneath the plum trees, pouring tea for herself.
Lu Shenyang approached, eyes sharp as ever.
“You wouldn’t be behind last night’s mess… would you?”
She sipped.
“I don’t stain my sleeves with blood,” she said.
Pause.
“But I do know how to pull the thread that unravels a dress.”
As he turned to leave, he asked without looking back:
“What happens when the dress is armor?”
She smiled.
“A good strategist wears nothing they aren’t prepared to lose.”
Above her, a plum blossom fell.
Below, her shadow twitched just once.
And somewhere deep within, the voice returned.
"Blood remembers.
And soon, they will too."