The silence in the aftermath of a revelation is a physical thing. It is not the absence of sound, but the presence of a weight so dense it presses against the eardrums, muffling the world. For Hua Qian, that weight was the colour of a lie—a lie she had told herself, a lie he had lived, and the terrible, beautiful truth that had shattered them both.
She sat on the edge of the meditation platform, her hands folded in her lap, the knuckles white. The air in the hidden valley, usually so crisp and clean, felt thick with the ghosts of Yue's words. Betrayal. A goddess. A stolen heart. The story he had laid bare was not a simple tale of a spurned lover. It was the cosmic anatomy of a curse, the foundational myth of the monster she was bound to.
