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Echoes of the Gilded Cage

Cuong_Nguyen_2941
21
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Synopsis
To uncover the truth behind her mother's mysterious death, prima ballerina Tô Mộng Dao becomes the prized possession of Hoắc Kình Thiên—the most powerful man in Cảng Vân, and the very man she suspects of murder. Trapped in a luxurious golden cage, her dance becomes her weapon. Every plié is a rebellion, every pirouette a clue. But as she gets closer to unraveling the "Phoenix Project," a sinister psychological manipulation conspiracy, she discovers Hoắc Kình Thiên's obsession may not be simple possession, but a desperate, twisted form of protection. In a deadly game of shadows, will her dance be enough to break free, or is she destined to be the broken butterfly in the hands of a thorn-crowned king?
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: DANCE IN A GILDED CAGE

Elara Meng stood before the immense, floor-to-ceiling glass, her fingers lightly grazing the hidden dagger tucked into her sleeve. Below, the city of Port Sterling glittered like a river of diamonds—a promise of freedom she could never touch. This city was an arena for colossal corporations, a place where power was measured in billion-dollar deals and secrets never saw the light of day. And she was at the very top of it all, in the most magnificent gilded cage.

The soft ding of the private elevator echoed, sharp and sterile. Kian Huo's footsteps were steady on the marble floor, each sound a deliberate, invisible chain tightening around her.

"The night air is cold," he said, his voice a low baritone.

"Not as cold as what I'm feeling," Elara replied without turning.

A beat of silence. She felt him approach, the warmth of the cashmere coat he draped over her shoulders. A tenderness laced with possession. He presented a velvet box, deep blue. "A gift for you."

Inside lay a diamond necklace, brilliant and breathtaking. Another beautiful shackle.

"Wear it to the Sterling Dynamics gala tomorrow night," he said. "I hear they've been wanting to challenge Huo Enterprises. You will be my trump card."

Elara turned, her gaze no longer a placid lake but as sharp as shattered glass. "Diamonds are beautiful, but they can't buy wings."

A flicker of something—uncertainty, perhaps—crossed his eyes, so fast it was almost imperceptible. The hand that was about to touch her tightened into a fist for a split second. He smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "But they can keep you by my side."

He moved to fasten the necklace. At that exact moment, Elara began to dance.

There was no music. No softness. Her dance was a silent storm. Every step was a coiled spring of tension, every spin an attempt to break free. Her arms were no longer trembling butterfly wings; they were silver blades slicing through the air. The dance culminated in a flawless pirouette, stopping her abruptly, just a breath away from him.

A challenge flashed in her eyes. She deliberately let a pearl earring drop to the floor, landing right at his feet.

A subtle act of defiance. A sophisticated reversal of power.

Kian Huo froze. He looked at her, then down at the earring. The world seemed to hold its breath. Then, slowly, he bent down and picked it up. When he straightened, his eyes were deeper, more complex. There was no anger.

"You dropped something," he said, his voice a fraction rougher. He stepped forward, personally reattaching the earring, then fastening the diamond necklace around her neck. His breath was warm against her ear. "But everything that belongs to you, no matter where it falls, will always find its way back to my hand."

After he left, the silence returned. This time, it wasn't suffocating; it was electric with tension. Elara walked into her bedroom, to the old wooden box hidden deep within her closet.

Inside, the silver butterfly hairpin lay still. It was a relic from her mother, a brilliant dancer who had died in a mysterious "accident."

She picked up the hairpin. This time, she didn't just feel the warmth of memory. Her fingers traced a strange etching on the inner side, a symbol she had never noticed before. It wasn't a letter, but a tiny, almost worn-away sigil.

A phoenix in flames.

As she stared, stunned, a small, yellowed piece of paper, folded into a square, fell from a secret compartment beneath the box's lining. It had never been there before. It must have been hidden too well. Trembling, she unfolded it.

Her mother's handwriting, rushed and shaky.

Only three words.

"Don't trust Huo."