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Chapter 23 - purchase

The air in the small shop still smelled faintly of sesame, dust, and old dreams.

Golden sunlight streamed through the cracks in the latticed window, spilling warmth across the worn counter where Ananya rested her palm.

She exhaled slowly, gazing at the walls, the uneven floorboards, the way the light hit the far corner near the stove.

"This could be home," she murmured.

Yao Qing smiled faintly, brushing dust off a broken chair. "It already feels like one."

Fen Yu twirled gleefully in the sunlight. "Our very own shop! I can haunt the kitchen!"

Wei Rong rolled his eyes. "And I'll haunt the customers if they don't pay."

Li Shen's calm voice carried quiet amusement. "Let's buy it before you start scaring off future profits."

As if on cue, footsteps echoed outside.

A round, sweating man stepped through the doorway, his robe dusted with flour from the market streets. "Ah! So you found it! Yes, yes, this is the property I mentioned. Still solid, no termites, honest walls."

Ananya turned, composed and polite. "You're the broker?"

He bowed quickly. "Master Jin, at your service. Fine spaces for fine customers. The previous owner retired to the south. Left everything to his cousin, who needs silver quickly. Lucky timing, eh?"

Wei Rong muttered. "He says that to everyone."

Fen Yu whispered, "He looks like he eats half the deals he makes."

Ananya kept her voice level. "You said it's for sale, not rent."

"Yes, yes." Jin rubbed his palms together. "The cousin's asking fifty taels. Price for a lifetime. You own it outright, no rent, no interference. A bargain if you ask me."

"Fifty taels for cracked beams and a leaking roof?" Ananya replied, her tone smooth as silk. "I've seen palaces with fewer holes."

He blinked. "Palaces don't come with river views."

Ananya stepped toward the window, glancing out at the slow water glinting beneath the bridge. "Forty."

Jin shook his head. "Forty? Lady, that barely covers the land paper."

"Forty," she repeated. "Paid in full, today. No debts, no questions, no gossip."

The broker hesitated, eyes flicking between the women. There was something in Ananya's gaze — calm, unwavering, commanding.

Finally, greed overpowered pride. "Forty-five. Final offer."

Ananya met Yao Qing's eyes, and the younger woman nodded once.

"Done," Ananya said.

Jin nearly tripped over his robe rushing to draw up the contract. He produced the property papers — aged parchment with faded seals — and spread them across the counter.

"Sign here," he said, pointing. "And here. Full ownership, no rent, taxes already cleared for the year. When you sign, this shop is yours."

Ananya turned to Yao Qing. "Your name goes on the document."

Yao Qing blinked. "Mine?"

"Yes," Ananya said softly. "If my name appears, someone in the palace might notice the trail. This way, you stay free, and so do I."

Her voice gentled. "This will be your protection — your new life."

Yao Qing hesitated, eyes bright with emotion. "You're giving me everything. I don't know how to thank you."

Ananya smiled. "Live honestly. Work hard. That's thanks enough."

Yao Qing took the brush with trembling hands and signed her name carefully, the strokes of ink trembling slightly but sure.

Jin pressed the red wax seal onto the parchment, folded it neatly, and handed her the deed with a wide grin. "Congratulations, Madam Yao. You are now the proud owner of this fine establishment."

He placed a small brass key on the counter. It gleamed faintly in the sun. "And that, my ladies, is your door to fortune."

When Jin left, the door creaked shut, leaving only the soft sound of the river outside.

Dust floated lazily through the sunlight. The air felt different now — lighter, yet heavier with meaning.

Yao Qing stared down at the key in her palm. "I can't believe it. It's really ours."

Ananya nodded, her voice calm but full of quiet pride. "Not borrowed. Not gifted. Earned."

Fen Yu drifted closer, eyes shining. "You really bought it? We're landowners!"

Wei Rong grinned. "Better than the Emperor's palace — he can't even leave his own walls."

Li Shen smiled faintly. "Freedom smells like old wood and sunlight."

Ananya took the key from Yao Qing's hand and turned it slowly, watching the light catch on its surface.

"This key," she said softly, "isn't just for a door. It's for everything we've lost — and what we'll build again."

She looked around the small, dusty hall: the narrow tables waiting to be set, the old stove waiting for fire, the quiet corners waiting for laughter.

"It will be called The Whispering Bowl," she said. "A place where no one asks, only listens."

Yao Qing smiled through her tears. "Then let's open it soon."

Ananya nodded. "Tomorrow we start cleaning. Today… let's just breathe."

---

Sunlight stretched across the floor, warm and golden.

The ghosts hovered quietly, for once without mischief, watching the two women who had turned dust into hope.

Fen Yu whispered softly, almost reverently. "You did it."

Ananya smiled faintly. "No," she said, "we did."

And as the river murmured outside, the sound of possibility filled the tiny shop.

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