Time/Date: Late Evening, TC1853.01.06
Location: Grand Imperial Hotel - Main Banquet Hall
The moment Raven had been dreading arrived with the soft rustle of silk against marble.
Amara glided through the crowd like she'd stepped out of a fairy tale—rose-gold gown catching light from what had to be a hundred crystal chandeliers overhead. She had two identical glasses in her hands, and the smile on her face was the kind that made Raven's skin crawl.
"Sister!" Amara's voice cut through the ambient chatter. Sweet as honey, which meant it was probably twice as deadly. "I brought you something special from the host's private collection."
The cocktail gleamed in its crystal flute. Amber and gold swirling together, hypnotic little patterns that seemed to pulse with their own light. To anyone else, it was just an expensive drink—the kind of thing you'd expect at a celebration like this.
To Raven, it was the fulcrum on which her entire existence would turn.
"The master vintner created this blessing cocktail specifically for tonight," Amara continued, holding out the glass. That radiant smile never quite reached her amber eyes—it never did. "A New Year's tribute to new beginnings and fresh starts. How perfect is that?"
Around them, conversations stuttered to a halt. Nobles turned to watch what looked like a touching moment between sisters. The witnesses Serenya had positioned earlier started shifting closer, angling for better views.
Raven's fingers closed around the crystal stem.
The weight of it settled on her shoulders like a mountain. The crystal was cold—surprisingly heavy, as if the liquid inside carried more than just chemical compounds. This was it. The precise instant where her previous life had spiraled into a nightmare. Where everything that led to marriage, pregnancy, and the birth of a daughter had started.
But the glass held more than just the Amber Kiss.
Selene had touched it first when she'd prepared the mixture. Then Amara's fingers had wrapped around the stem as she carried it through the ballroom. And now Raven's own grip completed the chain of evidence—three sets of fingerprints linking two conspirators and their intended victim to one illegal substance.
***
Across the ballroom—near the musicians' alcove where golden light pooled like trapped sunshine—a young waitress approached Kael Xuán. She couldn't have been more than sixteen, moving with that careful precision you see in people newly trained to serve nobility.
"My lord." She curtseyed, voice soft but clear. "A gift from the young lady."
Her gesture was delicate, pointing toward where Raven and Amara stood. Two figures in contrasting gowns—one rose-gold and radiant, the other deep navy scattered with silver like captured starlight. The angle was perfect. Ambiguous enough that either woman could've sent it.
Kael's golden eyes followed the gesture. They landed on Amara first—of course they did—before sliding past to the scarred girl he'd dismissed so thoroughly at the Brenner estate. For just a heartbeat, something like confusion crossed his face.
The cocktail on the tray gleamed amber and gold. Identical to the one Amara had just handed Raven. Same hypnotic swirl, same innocent appearance. The Amber Kiss dissolved completely—no scent, no taste, nothing to mark it as anything but a generous gesture from one noble to another.
"My thanks," Kael murmured. He accepted the glass with casual grace, raised it slightly toward the two women across the room. His mind was already constructing the narrative—Amara, his beloved, the woman who held his destiny, arranging this as some kind of connection between them.
***
Back at the center of what was about to become a storm, Raven's heart hammered against her ribs.
She stared into those golden depths. The glass trembled in her grip, liquid seeming to mock her with its beauty. Every instinct she had as a mother was screaming at her to drink. To accept the chemical manipulation that would lead to conceiving the daughter she loved more than life itself.
Novara.
The name echoed through her mind like a prayer and a curse all at once.
Her Starlight. The one pure thing that had come out of all that darkness and pain.
But as she stared into the drugged cocktail, another voice whispered—the voice of the mother she'd become over lifetimes of loss and hard-won wisdom.
What kind of life are you giving her?
***
The memory hit her like a wave.
2nd Life - TC 1858
Twenty-two-year-old Mara stumbled through the streets, thin frame battered by two days of searching without sleep. Her voice was hoarse from calling Novara's name. The tattered shawl did nothing against the storm, and her eyes—muddy brown in this life—darted between shadows, following every sound that might be her daughter.
She'd come home from the tavern to find their single room empty. Novara's few possessions were scattered like there'd been a struggle. Kael's laughter still echoed: "The child needed proper medical attention. Don't worry, she's in good hands now."
An old woman's gesture—pitying, gentle—directed her toward an abandoned clinic behind a rusted gate.
Mara's heart shattered the moment she saw inside.
The room reeked. Antiseptic and blood, and substances she didn't want to identify. Medical equipment was scattered across stained tables. And in the corner, on a bed meant for adults, lay her five-year-old daughter.
So small. Impossibly fragile. Lost in sheets that had once been white.
Tubes and crude bandages marked where they'd violated her tiny body—stealing blood marrow, essence, things that should never be taken from a child. Her chest rose and fell in shallow gasps. Her skin had that pallor that meant death was close.
"Starlight!" Mara collapsed beside the bed, hands shaking as she gathered Novara's fevered form. "By the Light, what have they done to you? Mama's here now, baby. Mama's here."
Novara's eyes fluttered open. Hazy with pain. But when she saw her mother's face, she smiled—weak but real. "Mama... you came. I knew you would."
"Always." Mara sobbed, rocking her gently. "I'll always come for you. Tell me what happened, sweetheart. Who did this?"
"Daddy came to see me," Novara whispered. Barely audible. "He said we were going to play a special game. But then there were doctors, and they... they hurt me so much, Mama. I tried to be brave like you taught me, but it hurt so bad."
Her hand found Mara's cheek. Fingers cold as winter rain.
"Why did Daddy let them hurt me? Did I do something bad? Does he... does he hate me?"
That question broke something in Mara's chest that never quite healed.
"No, my love. You did nothing wrong. You're perfect—my perfect, beautiful Starlight. Daddy... Daddy is sick in his heart, but that has nothing to do with you."
"It hurts, Mama. Everything hurts so much."
Later—much later, when Mara confronted Kael with her daughter's blood still on her clothes—his response was casual. Almost indifferent.
"It's not like I killed my own daughter. Just a little bit of bone marrow. Tianlei needed it more."
Novara died in her arms on that rain-soaked street, asking why her father hated her.
The memory let go—like a drowning person finally breaking the surface.
Raven was back in the Grand Imperial Hotel's ballroom. Chandeliers still glittered. Music still played. Nobles still laughed and danced, completely unaware that someone among them was holding a moment of cosmic significance in trembling hands.
She blinked hard. Forced her vision to clear. The weight of the crystal glass anchored her here, now, in this moment. Perfume and wine and expensive food—the scents grounded her. Her fingers tightened on the stem until her knuckles went white.
Tears gathered at the corners of her eyes. Hot. Immediate. Threatening to spill.
But she tilted her head back slightly, looking up at those glittering chandeliers like she was admiring them. The movement forced the moisture away from her lashes. She wouldn't cry. Not here. Not in front of witnesses who'd see tears as weakness instead of what they really were—the weight of maternal love that went beyond selfishness.
If I don't drink this, she realized with absolute clarity, Novara will never exist.
The thought hit like a physical blow.
Her throat tightened with grief so profound it threatened to choke her. This night—this moment—was the conception point. The Amber Kiss would strip away inhibitions while ensuring the highest probability of conception. Leading to the union between her and Kael that would result in pregnancy. Without it, her daughter would be nothing more than a ghost of possibility. A soul that would never find its way into the world.
She swallowed hard. Cleared her throat before she dared speak, buying herself another heartbeat to push the emotion down where it couldn't betray her.
I want her, the selfish part of her heart cried out. I want those precious years when she was small and safe and mine. Her laughter. Her questions. The way she made even the darkest days feel like gifts.
But the mother in her—the part that had learned what love truly meant through ninety-nine lifetimes of loss—whispered something else.
Look at what you'd be giving her.
Her eyes found Kael across the ballroom one last time. He was raising the glass the waitress had delivered, completely unaware. A father who'd see his daughter as a tool to be used. A burden to manage. Or at best, an inconvenience to tolerate. A man who could watch a five-year-old die in agony and feel nothing but mild satisfaction that her death had served his purposes.
He doesn't deserve to be her father, Raven realized. The thought cut through her heart like a blade. And I... I don't deserve to damn her to a life with him just because I want her with me.
More than that—this world she'd be bringing Novara into was heading toward upheaval. Magic stirring. Technology failing. The careful balance that had maintained peace for centuries about to collapse into chaos and war. Children would suffer most when the old certainties crumbled. When the structures that protected the innocent were swept away by forces beyond anyone's control.
She deserves better. The thought broke her heart. She deserves parents who'll treasure her from the moment she draws breath. She deserves to grow up in a world at peace, where her greatest worry is which dress to wear to the spring festival.
The war between desire and love reached its peak as she stared into those golden depths. Every instinct she had as a woman who'd lost everything demanded she drink. That she seize this chance to reclaim the daughter who'd been stolen from her.
But every instinct she had as someone who truly loved that daughter demanded the opposite.
I choose your happiness over my own, she decided. The thought carved itself into her consciousness like words in stone. I choose your peace over my desire. I choose to let you go so you can find the family you deserve.
***
The soul space technique had taken three lifetimes to master. It was more than just creating a pocket dimension—it required understanding the boundary between consciousness and the physical world. Between the soul realm and matter.
What she was about to do went beyond storage. Way beyond.
This was a molecular-level reality interface. The kind of precision that came from centuries of manipulating that boundary. Reality programming at its most fundamental level—not hiding objects in a spiritual dimension, but swapping substances between realms while maintaining perfect physical continuity.
The golden blood bead pulsed in her soul space. Warm. Encouraging. Like it sensed the cosmic significance of what was about to happen.
She brought the glass toward her lips. Perfect composure. The expression of a grateful sister accepting a thoughtful gift. But the moment the crystal touched her mouth, her consciousness split between the ballroom and the vast space within her soul.
The switch happened between heartbeats. In that infinitesimal gap between intention and action, where reality could be rewritten by those who understood its deepest patterns.
The physical glass stayed in her hand—same crystal bearing Selene's fingerprints, Amara's fingerprints, and now her own. But the liquid inside transformed.
The Amber Kiss vanished into her soul space. Preserved in original state. Evidence secured.
In its place, harmless fruit juice flowed from her soul realm into that same physical glass. Color-matched. Temperature-controlled. Viscosity identical. The substitution was perfect—molecular signatures maintained through spiritual energy manipulation that would've been impossible for any other cultivator in the hotel.
Golden liquid flowed past her lips. But not the liquid Amara had prepared.
Sweet, innocent refreshment. Just enough alcohol to sell the illusion.
The glass never left her hand. Never disappeared. Never changed. Only its contents had been replaced in a way that defied observation.
To anyone watching—even someone trained in detecting substitutions—she was just enjoying the glass Amara had handed her.
***
"Delicious," Raven murmured, lowering the empty glass. That satisfied smile didn't quite hide the tightness still in her throat. "The vintner truly outdid themselves. I can already feel a lovely warmth spreading through me."
Carefully chosen words. Planting seeds of expectation.
In twenty minutes—when the effects should've started—she'd display the appropriate symptoms. Flushed cheeks. Slightly unsteady movements. That heated restlessness that would make seeking privacy seem natural instead of suspicious.
Around them, conversations resumed. The moment of sisterly affection concluded. Witnesses drifted back to their own entertainments, primary objective accomplished. They'd seen Raven drink from the glass Amara provided. Whatever followed would be accepted as a natural consequence.
Raven turned slightly. Using the movement to survey the ballroom while positioning her body to block the glass from direct view. The crowd provided perfect cover—nobles shifting, servers moving, that natural flow of celebration creating constant motion. One woman adjusting her stance was entirely unremarkable.
In that brief moment of obscurity, her consciousness split again.
The Amber Kiss flowed back from soul space into the physical glass. Filling it with the same amber-gold liquid that had been there originally. Evidence restored—original glass, all three sets of fingerprints, untouched illegal substance. Perfect proof of conspiracy.
Simultaneously, she pulled an empty crystal flute from her soul space. One she'd stored earlier for exactly this contingency. The timing had to be perfect. The switch invisible to watching eyes.
A young server passed nearby, balancing a tray of empties.
Raven caught her attention with a graceful gesture, offering the empty juice glass with a warm smile. "Thank you, dear. It was lovely."
The girl curtseyed—practiced, automatic—adding it to her collection before moving on. Just another empty glass from another noble guest. Nothing worth a second glance.
Raven's hand tightened around the glass she'd kept. The real one. The evidence. The proof that would bring down everyone who'd conspired against her.
The crystal felt warm now, like the preserved Amber Kiss inside carried the heat of justice waiting to be served.
She could slip it into soul space later, once she was out of direct observation. For now, she held it loosely—the way you might hold an empty glass while contemplating whether to seek another drink or move to a different part of the ballroom.
But as the crowd's attention shifted fully back to the evening's festivities, something strange settled into Raven's chest.
Emptiness.
The sacrifice had been made. The choice carved in stone. Somewhere in the vast tapestry of possibility, a soul that might've been her daughter would find its way to different parents. A different world. A better life.
It was the right choice.
The loving choice.
It was also the choice that would haunt her across whatever lifetimes remained. A wound that might never fully heal.
Goodbye, my Starlight, she whispered in the privacy of her own thoughts. Find the happiness I could never give you.
Then she lifted her chin. Straightened her shoulders. And began the performance that would reshape the destiny of everyone who'd dared to underestimate her.
The trap was springing exactly as planned.
But the predator was about to discover that her prey had grown fangs of its own.