Zhao Wei stood at the mouth of the cavern that once served as the Ember Guard’s hidden command.
Now, it echoed only with silence and the scent of burned parchment.
“The bones of our past lie here,” she whispered. “But I will build again from ash.”
Behind her, Li Xian knelt and offered a black scroll bound in crimson silk.
“Every survivor. Every operative who stayed hidden. The signal fire reached them.”
Zhao Wei opened it, and names spilled like old blood across the page,
Faded ink, forgotten titles, the last ghosts of her loyal ones.
“Call them,” she said. “But only those who remember the old oath.”
“Even if some might betray you?”
“Especially those,” she murmured, eyes sharp. “Better to know who plays both sides.”
The first to arrive was a girl with silver bells in her braid and venom in her smile.
“The Phoenix returns,” she said with mock awe, twirling her blade. “Did death change your taste in vengeance, or do we still bleed nobles first?”
Zhao raised a brow. “Still feral, Jian Yu.”
Jian Yu grinned. “And you’re still terrifying.”
One by one, they came, some cloaked, some limping, some bearing old grudges like weapons.
But they came.
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And by dusk, the cavern breathed again.
Outside the Ember stronghold, in the Golden Lotus Academy, Feng Ren watched the skies darken.
A messenger knelt at his feet, blood on his lips.
“She’s returned, my lord. The old Guard is moving.”
Feng Ren’s expression didn’t shift.
He sipped tea. Pale smoke curled from the cup like a sigh.
“Good,” he said softly. “Then the trap is set.”
Back in the mountains, Zhao Wei stood before a map stitched in war-lines and inked memories.
Old fortresses. Secret paths. Supply caches only she knew.
“We strike first,” she declared.
“But our strength is splintered,” Li Xian protested. “The scouts haven’t returned from the Vale. It may be”
“A trap?” She turned to him. “Let it be. I want them to believe I’m reckless. That I’m desperate.”
Her gaze darkened.
“Then when they come to bury me, I’ll be waiting in their grave.”
But even the best gambits can be read.
As Zhao’s forces slipped through hidden paths toward the Vale, Feng Ren stood in a garden of white chrysanthemums, their petals already stained red.
A shadow knelt behind him. Hooded. Breathing raggedly.
“You followed her,” Feng said. “You walked with the Embers again.”
The shadow shuddered. “I didn’t speak a word”
“And yet your eyes say everything.”
The blade fell before the wind could scream.
Feng Ren stepped over the body.
“Let her remember why she died the first time.”
In the valley of the whispering stones, Zhao Wei halted.
Something was wrong.
No birds. No wind. No scent but smoke.
“Positions!” she barked.
Too late.
Flames erupted from the cliffside, no ordinary fire, but cursed flares that devoured air itself.
From the rocks rose soldiers not of any known faction, faces masked in bone, and their eyes
They glowed blue.
Li Xian’s voice was hoarse. “This isn’t Feng Ren’s work…”
“No,” Zhao said. “This is something worse.”
Steel clashed. Screams echoed. But even as chaos unfurled, Zhao Wei fought with the grace of memory and rage.
At her back, Jian Yu bled and laughed.
“You always bring the fun.”
And above them, again, the masked watcher remained unseen.
He did not draw his blade.
Not yet.
But he whispered the words Zhao Wei once taught him long ago:
“In betrayal, be patient. In war, be cruel. In love… be silent.”