Before the lamps guttered, Phoenix Hall was awake.
"Cloak," Su Mei whispered, settling winter-blue wool over Lian An's shoulders.
"Incense," another maid said, tucking the phoenix-sealed pouch into the travel chest.
Grand Eunuch Gao stood at the threshold with the pale light of false dawn behind him, breath fogging, a ledger under one arm. "Your Highness. The hour."
Lian An lifted the lacquered tray of offerings—white silk, three candles, the Dowager's incense—then glanced at her three shadows.
Fen Yu hovered so close she nearly put her chin on the tray. "We're really going? We're really going!"
Wei Rong checked the door as if he still had a sword. "I'll walk ahead. If anyone blinks wrong, I'll…growl very loudly."
Li Shen's smile was the quiet kind. "Do not trip on excitement, Fen Yu. Our dignity is already thin at this hour."
They stepped into the blue chill. The courtyard stones held last night's frost; the plain carriage waited with its shutters half-lowered and no ornament at all, exactly as the Dowager ordered. Twelve guards in dark coats flanked it, boots lined in neat pairs of six.
Gao bowed. "One carriage, two spare horses, inner road. No markets, no stops. We will make speed, not show."
"Thank you," Lian An said.
He met her eyes for a heartbeat and nodded toward the tray. "I will see these arrive unbroken."
They rolled out as the palace roofs caught the first silver edge of sun. No banners, no drums—only hoofbeats, the soft squeal of wheels, and Gao's occasional, perfectly timed cough when a servant stared too long. The city gates opened on a yawn of iron and old wood; cold air rushed in like a river.
Fen Yu pressed her nose to the shutter gap. "I forgot the world is so big."
Wei Rong rumbled, softer than usual. "It shrinks when you fight it. Grows when you go home."
Li Shen rested his elbow on nothing and looked out as if the horizon were a chessboard. "Two days there, one to breathe, home the third. The Dowager counts hours; we will count moments."
Lian An let the wheels hum through her bones, let the sky bleed from gray to milk-blue. Somewhere between city wall and low fields, the weight in her chest eased. She did not speak; she had nothing to barter for the feeling except silence.
Gao rapped the carriage frame lightly as they switched horses. "Halfway," he reported, as if announcing the weather. "We should make the Lian gates before the evening bell."
"Good," she said.
"Plain road, plain luck," he added, then resumed being made of angles and caution.
By late afternoon, the hills she knew—hers in this life and not—rose, layered like folded silk. The Lian residence walls appeared: austere gray, warm with age, the stone flecked with the same pale mica as her memory.
The guards changed formation. The carriage slowed. Gao's hand went up—neat, precise—and the gates opened.
The first thing she saw was her mother's sleeves.
Lady Xiu burst across the courtyard like a small spring storm, calling, "An'an!" in a voice that had cried itself hoarse just days before and still found more to spend. She stopped two paces short—remembering Gao, remembering rules—then bent, hands shaking, to touch her daughter's sleeve as if it might vanish.
"My girl," she breathed, tears already slipping, "my girl."
Lian An bowed properly first, like a good woman of the Inner Court, and then, as soon as etiquette had been appeased, stepped into her mother's arms and let herself be held. It was not like the past-life embrace she could never have again, and yet—her throat closed anyway.
"Mother," she managed, smiling into silk.
Duke Lian came slower, dignity intact, eyes bright in ways a duke's eyes should not be. "Your Majesty's Consort," he said for the guard's sake, and then, low enough for her alone, "My daughter."
Lian Hua barreled out next, braid half undone, cheeks pink. "Sister!" She skidded, remembered to bow, and then seized Lian An's hands with a joy that bounced. "You're here—you're really here—"
Gao cleared his throat. The sound tugged the courtyard back into order. "By Her Majesty the Dowager's decree, the Queen Consort will remain within the main hall or inner courtyard. Guests are to be received publicly. No temple visits, no markets."
Duke Lian bowed. "The Lian house understands. We thank the Dowager for her grace."
Gao's gaze flicked around, measuring, satisfied. "The offerings must be burned first." He stepped back, making himself invisible without moving at all.
They went in procession to the ancestral hall. Incense coiled in the dim like a remembered song. Lian An knelt. The white silk lay smooth beneath her palms; the three candles stood like simple oaths; the phoenix-sealed incense hissed when the match kissed it.
She bowed until her forehead touched the wooden step. "I come humbled and clean," she whispered to tablets who had never known her voice. "I stand by you now so I can stand straight when I serve elsewhere."
Fen Yu folded herself on the step, copying the bow, eyes huge. "Hello, Ancestors. We borrowed your daughter. We're looking after her, I promise."
Wei Rong stood behind her like a guard stationed by time. "You have a stubborn one. Good choice."
Li Shen saluted the tablets like fellow elders. "She learns quickly. Keep her safe when we cannot."
When the last curl of smoke thinned, Lady Xiu dabbed at her eyes and smiled a smile that made her younger. "Come. Inside. It's cold. And I—" she laughed, embarrassed by her own eagerness "—I told the kitchen not to make anything fancy because you never liked showy food."
"I don't," Lian An said, and her voice didn't wobble.
They sat in the great room that had held every Lian winter and summer. Curtains pulled back. A brazier glowed. Gao placed himself where he could see everyone and no one could pretend he was not there.
Dishes arrived that smelled like a life: ginger chicken cut small so chopsticks found it easy; tofu braised in a sauce the color of old amber; greens quick-fried with garlic and sesame; a clay pot of rice that had not been polished to death but still held the sweetness of grain.
Fen Yu drifted above the table with reverence. "Food that remembers your name," she sighed.
Wei Rong took a deep sniff. "I would haunt this pot for a month."
Li Shen gave the tofu a scholar's nod. "Well-tempered sauce."
"Eat," Lady Xiu said, piling Lian An's bowl as if anyone else might snatch it away. "Tell me if anything is wrong and I will scold the cook to tears."
"It's perfect," Lian An said, and meant the food, the room, the way her father kept pretending to adjust his sleeve to hide his emotion.
They ate like a family who had to be polite because of eyes and yet could not help being what they were.
Duke Lian set his chopsticks down. "We owe thanks," he said formally, glancing to Gao, to the guards just outside the door, to the air that would carry whatever it heard. "To the Emperor for declaring what Heaven had already shown. To the Dowager for this leave."
"We will pray for their health," Lady Xiu added, quick, sincere.
Lian Hua leaned forward, chin in hands, forgetting decorum and then remembering and sitting back up. "Sister, you looked like a mountain yesterday. Calm even when everyone was shouting."
"I was not calm," Lian An said wryly. "I was standing very still to keep my knees from giving out."
They laughed, quiet, as if laughter might spook the permission that allowed it.
Gao's voice slid softly into the space. "Her Highness will rest tonight. We depart on the morning of the third day at first bell. The Dowager expects punctuality."
"Of course," Duke Lian said. "We will not make you scold us, Chief Gao."
The old eunuch's mouth twitched a hair. "It is not my hobby."
Later, when the bowls were stacked and the brazier poked to a brighter glow, Lian An walked the inner courtyard with Lian Hua. The sky had deepened to ink; frost wrote delicate alphabets on the paving stones.
"Do you remember," Lian Hua said, "when we used to chase the cat until it hid in Father's study and Father pretended to be angry?"
"Mm," Lian An said, smiling. "And Mother gave us sesame buns to bribe forgiveness."
"We could ask for buns," Lian Hua suggested, very seriously. "To bribe the world."
From the shadowed veranda, Fen Yu whispered, "Yes. Bribe the world with buns. A sound plan."
Wei Rong snorted. "I prefer bribes that involve swords."
Li Shen folded his hands into his sleeves. "Bread and steel have their seasons."
They stopped beneath the old loquat tree whose bark Lian An's fingers remembered without having to look. Lian Hua glanced at the hall where Gao sat and lowered her voice to a conspirator's thread. "Will you be all right when you go back?"
"Yes," Lian An said. "No." She considered and chose truth. "I will be as all right as the palace allows. But I have you. That helps."
Lian Hua bumped her shoulder, a childish gesture sneaked into adult night. "You've always had me."
Inside, Duke Lian set a travel clock by the brazier, knowing he would wake before it, knowing he would not waste the time by sleeping through it. Lady Xiu folded and refolded a shawl for a daughter who had maids to do it for her and did it anyway.
When the house stilled, Ananya—Lian An—sat on the edge of the guest bed that had once been hers. She loosened her hair and let it fall; the weight eased something wordless in her spine.
Fen Yu sprawled backwards in midair and pretended to kick her feet. "Tomorrow we make sweets. Mother will hover and pretend not to taste the batter."
"We'll do the sesame buns," Lian An said, a smile in her voice. "Small ones. So we can bribe the world."
Wei Rong took his usual post by the door. "I'll bribe the guards by glaring until they think better of existing."
Li Shen's gaze traveled the ceiling beams, the joints that had held a family together for more seasons than he could name. "Three days," he said, mostly to himself. "Count them well."
Lian An lay back, the loquat shadow outside painting the paper screen. The house smelled of cedar and soy and the starch of fresh-washed cotton. For the first time in too long, the quiet did not feel like a trap.
"Good night," she said to the room, to her ghosts, to the girl who had once run this courtyard with a cat in her arms and crumbs on her face.
"Night!" Fen Yu sang.
"Hn," Wei Rong grunted, which for him was practically tenderness.
"Rest," Li Shen said, closing an invisible book.
In the outer hall, Gao counted breaths to the rhythm of a clock he had not wound; he did not sleep, but he did not frown either. Outside the wall, the world went on being large. Inside it, a small thing—three days—spread like warm tea through cold hands.
At dawn, they would knead dough. At noon, they would feed everyone who had fed them. At dusk, they would talk small talk that carried big love. And when the first bell of the third morning rang, she would stand, bow to the tablets one more time, and carry the warmth back into a palace that preferred marble.
For now, the house held her. And that was enough.