The garden was still.
Even the crickets seemed to hold their breath after Yao Qing's confession.
Moonlight slid across the pond like silver silk, glinting on the single tear that trembled on Ananya's lashes.
She tightened her grip on her friend's cold hands. "You won't marry that man. I won't allow it."
Yao Qing shook her head, voice trembling. "An'an… they'll sell me by dawn. My father has no power left, and Mother can't stop them."
"You'll not return to that house tonight."
Her friend blinked. "Then where will I go?"
Ananya glanced at the shadows where her ghosts hovered unseen. "Someplace no one thinks to look — among noise, not silence."
Fen Yu tilted her head, whispering to Li Shen, "She's planning again. That look means trouble."
Li Shen murmured, "No, that look means she's building hope out of nothing."
Ananya drew a steady breath. "Listen to me, Qing'er. I have silver, enough to rent a small shop — maybe near the spice market by the west gate. You and I will open something together. Quietly. It will be under your name, not mine."
Yao Qing stared at her, disbelief flickering through fear. "A shop? Now? You're a queen, and I—"
"A woman with talent and two hands," Ananya said softly. "That's enough. We'll start small, with food and tea. No one will question two women selling warmth in a cold world."
"But you're bound by palace law—"
Ananya smiled faintly. "The palace doesn't own my heart or my past. I know what I can hide."
She squeezed her friend's hands again. "Meet me tomorrow at the morning market. After the first bell. Bring only what you can carry."
Yao Qing hesitated. "An'an, what if they follow me?"
"Then you'll pretend to sell incense for the temple," Ananya said. "I'll find you near the spice stalls. Fen Yu and the others will keep the eyes away."
At her name, Fen Yu puffed up proudly. "Finally, a mission!"
Wei Rong muttered, "And risk another porcelain pot flying over a guard's head."
Ananya ignored them both, her gaze steady on her friend. "Do you trust me?"
Yao Qing nodded slowly, tears shining again. "Always."
"Then don't lose that faith," Ananya whispered. "Not tonight."
She slipped the folded ledger page back into her sleeve and touched Yao Qing's cheek. "Go now, before the patrol returns. Lian Hua will take you through the servants' path. Rest in the old temple by the market wall — I'll find you there when dawn breaks."
Yao Qing's voice broke. "You still sound like the girl who used to dream about feeding half the city."
Ananya smiled, her eyes soft in the moonlight. "Maybe I still will."
---
When Yao Qing and Lian Hua vanished into the mist, the garden fell silent again.
The wind tugged gently at Ananya's cloak, carrying the faint fragrance of night jasmine.
Fen Yu floated beside her, whispering, "Do you think this will work?"
"It has to," Ananya murmured. "She deserves to live without begging for mercy."
Li Shen's tone was thoughtful. "Dreams born in darkness burn brightest, if they survive till morning."
Ananya looked toward the dim horizon where the first edge of dawn was still hidden.
"Then we'll wait for morning," she said softly, "and build something the Dowager can't destroy."
The ghosts hovered quietly around her, their forms glimmering faintly in the pale light — silent witnesses to the promise of two women against a kingdom.