Time/Date: Night, TC1853.01.09 → Early Morning, TC1853.01.10
Location: Brenner Estate, Emberhall Pavilion
The nightmares came for Selene Lin before midnight.
She'd returned from the police station as the sun set, Edmund's confession still ringing in her ears. Cosmic law—that's what the agents had called it. The weight of it pressed against her chest like a stone that wouldn't shift, no matter how she breathed. The blood oath ceremony had stripped everything away, left truth bleeding in the open. Raw. Exposed.
And now—now the DNA testing would confirm what she'd hidden for seventeen years.
The ride back? Silent as a grave. Lord Garrick sat across from her in the transport, those ancient eyes holding questions he didn't voice. (Which, depending on how you looked at it, was worse than if he'd just asked.) Lady Isolde's aristocratic disdain had shifted to something colder—calculation mixed with self-preservation, the look of someone already planning which lifeboat to claim when the ship went down. Even Edmund wouldn't meet her gaze. Just kept his weathered face turned toward the window like he could escape the weight of his own confession if he stared hard enough at the passing cityscape.
When they'd arrived at Emberhall, she'd gone straight to her chambers. Waved the servants away—didn't trust her voice not to crack if she tried to speak. Stood before her mirror and stared at the face that had once launched a thousand schemes. Beautiful still, yes, but marked now with lines that no amount of cultivation could smooth away. Tension had carved itself into her features like water wearing at stone.
Seven to ten days, the SIS agent had said.
Seven to ten days until the DNA results came back. Until the cosmos itself testified against her through blood and genetic markers—irrefutable, absolute, impossible to talk her way around.
She should run. Just—run. Flee the Empire entirely, disappear into the Western Federation or the Southern Confederacy, where celestial bloodlines held less weight, mattered less to people who measured worth in different currencies. But where could she go that the Long and Lin families wouldn't find her? (Nowhere, that's where.) Where could she hide from the wrath of not one but THREE celestial clans once they learned what she'd done to one of their own?
Sleep came despite her terror. Or maybe because of it—exhaustion finally dragging her under like a hand pulling her beneath dark water, despite the screaming voice in her mind that warned her to run, to flee, to disappear before the cosmos itself turned its terrible attention upon her crimes.
In her dreams, she stood in a vast courtroom that defied—well, everything. All laws of geometry and reason, thrown out like yesterday's trash. The space stretched impossibly in every direction. Up became down. Near became far. The walls themselves seemed to breathe with awareness that felt distinctly unfriendly, malevolent in a way that made her skin crawl even though she wasn't sure she had skin here, in this place between sleeping and waking.
The architecture was wrong. That's the only way to describe it—just wrong in ways that made her eyes ache and her mind want to recoil, refuse to process what it was seeing. Angles that shouldn't exist intersecting with surfaces that seemed to fold through dimensions she couldn't perceive, couldn't understand, didn't want to understand.
The judges sat arrayed before her. A semicircle that somehow surrounded her completely—another geometric impossibility she'd stopped trying to make sense of. They wore masks of cosmic law, not carved from wood or metal but formed from something else entirely. Condensed starlight, maybe? Solidified void? Each mask was unique and terrible in its own way. One bore the expression of absolute truth that stripped away all pretense. Another showed justice without mercy. A third displayed the cold mathematics of karmic balance—debits and credits tallied with the precision of an accountant who never made mistakes. Their eyes burned through the masks with fire that gave no heat, only the terrible clarity of seeing everything—every lie, every cruelty, every moment of calculated evil across seventeen years.
When they spoke, their voices came as harmonics that hurt to hear, resonating in frequencies that bypassed her ears entirely and vibrated directly against her soul. The sound carried the weight of cosmic law itself, each syllable a judgment that couldn't be appealed or denied.
"Selene Lin. Also known as Selene Brenner. Also known as Linhai, the name stripped from you by your own failures."
Before the judges materialized something far worse than blood oath documents—cosmic recordings themselves, existing in that space between dream and reality where truth couldn't be hidden. Not parchments signed in ceremony, but the universe's own memory made manifest. Each document pulsed with dark energy that spoke of karmic debts accumulated across years, bearing the weight of cosmic law that transcended mortal authority.
Her own voice began to echo from every impossible wall, a thousand versions of herself speaking in perfect, damning unison:
"I should never have collected that rat from the hospital..."
"Let her rot with the other refuse where she belongs..."
"That creature is not your daughter..."
"Feed her less—she's getting ideas above her station..."
"The poison worked beautifully on those violet eyes. No one will recognize Caelia's brat now..."
Each word manifested as physical weight. Pressing down. Down. Making it impossible to breathe—which didn't make sense because she wasn't sure she was breathing anyway, not really, not in the way bodies breathed in the waking world.
But worse—far worse—was the sensation that came with each accusation.
Invisible hooks formed in her spiritual body, latching onto something essential. Something fundamental that shouldn't be touched, couldn't be touched, except apparently it could because they were touching it right now. Not her flesh but the essence beneath it. Her soul.
The pulling began.
Gentle at first. Like fingers testing the boundary between physical and spiritual, seeing where the seams were, finding the weak points. Then it intensified—fast, sudden, no warning. Selene felt herself being drawn in two directions at once. Her body growing heavy, leaden, anchored to the floor by what felt like the weight of every cruel word she'd ever spoken, every blow she'd ever struck. While something lighter, more essential, was being extracted upward.
How do you describe that? The sensation of—it was like being turned inside out while staying perfectly intact. Like having invisible hands reach through your chest (through it, not around it) and grasp something that shouldn't be touched. Her soul body. That ethereal form that existed alongside the physical, that cultivators spent lifetimes trying to strengthen and purify.
It was being pulled free from its mortal shell.
She tried to scream. No sound came out—her voice had become part of the echoing accusations that filled the space, another crime to be catalogued, another cruelty to be weighed and measured and found wanting. The cosmic judges watched with terrible patience, their masks reflecting truths she'd spent decades burying, truths that were surfacing now whether she wanted them to or not.
The pulling grew stronger. More insistent. She could feel individual spiritual threads beginning to strain—connections between soul and flesh that had existed since birth, bonds that should never be tested, weren't meant to be tested. Each thread that stretched sent waves of agony through her essence. Pain that existed on a level below physical sensation, deeper than nerve endings could reach, in that space where consciousness lived when you stripped away everything else.
She could feel it separating. Feel it. The boundary between flesh and spirit that should be inviolate getting breached, violated, torn apart. And with each tug, she experienced a terror more profound than death.
Because death? Death was just the end. Stop existing, lights out, done.
This was different. This was the unraveling of existence itself—the dismantling of everything she was, thread by thread, while consciousness remained to witness every excruciating moment. Being forced to watch yourself come apart at the seams, aware of every single thread as it snapped.
Chains began to form in the cosmic space around her.
They materialized link by link, forged from her own past actions. And she recognized each one—that's what made it worse. Each piece of cruelty she'd inflicted became a link. There—that one was from the day she first struck the child, barely five years old, for asking about her father. (Just asking. That's all the girl had done. Asked a simple question.) The meals withheld, week after week, watching the girl grow thin and hollow-eyed while Selene claimed it was "discipline" and "building character."
The poison. God, the poison. Mixing Nethys Root into the child's food week after week, month after month, until those brilliant violet irises dulled to muddy brown. Watching it happen. Choosing it. Day after day after day.
The casual cruelties spoken with such practiced ease—calling her "creature," "rat," "refuse" within earshot of servants who'd spread the words. Making sure everyone knew, making sure the girl had no allies, no comfort, no escape.
The chains grew longer with each remembered sin. Each materialized link carrying the weight of a specific cruelty, specific and undeniable. There—a link forged from the day she'd burned the girl's hands for "stealing" food when she was starving. Another from the winter, she'd forced the child to sleep in an unheated attic, telling Edmund it was "building resilience." One more from spreading those rumors that kept other children away, ensuring her isolation was complete, absolute, and unbreakable.
Seventeen years of calculated malice, transformed into spiritual iron that wrapped around her soul body as it was pulled further from her physical form. The chains writhed like living things, each link whispering its own accusation, recounting the specific moment of cruelty that had birthed it into being.
The eyes, her nightmare-self remembered with crystalline clarity. Violet eyes with that silver ring around the iris—similar to Caelia's, except for the silver ring. I had to destroy them before anyone else saw. Before Darian recognized his own daughter's gaze.
Then came the fire.
It didn't burn her flesh—that would have been a mercy. This fire existed on the spiritual plane, flames that scorched the soul itself. They licked at the chains, heating them until they glowed with terrible light. Each link became a brand pressed against her spiritual essence, searing her with the accumulated weight of seventeen years of systematic abuse.
The cosmic witnesses began to materialize in the impossible space.
They appeared one by one, then in groups, then in masses that filled the courtroom beyond counting. Every soul she had wronged across the years—servants dismissed for imaginary offenses, rivals destroyed through calculated whispers, those who had suffered and died because of her schemes. They stared with eyes that saw through every deception, every carefully crafted lie, every moment of cruelty disguised as necessity.
Lieutenant Holt's sister stood among them, young and broken, holding the photographs that had driven her to suicide. The hotel workers who had vanished after the banquet, their throats still bearing marks of violence. Grandma Wang's daughter Trina, Eveline's loyal handmaiden, whose knowledge of the truth had sealed her fate.
And at the center of it all stood Mara.
But not the broken, cowering servant girl. Not the creature Selene had spent seventeen years systematically crushing into nothing.
This was something else.
The truth she'd worked so hard to bury, now blazing forth like starlight breaking through storm clouds. Undeniable. Impossible to look away from.
The girl's form shifted, revealing bloodline markers that made Selene's breath catch. Those violet eyes she'd poisoned into muddy brown—restored now, brilliant and unmistakable, with that distinctive silver ring around the iris. The exact shade and pattern she'd seen the moment the infant drew her first breath, when Selene had stood over Caelia's birthing bed and recognized immediately what her twin sister and Darian Long had created together.
Perfect, she'd thought in that moment seventeen years ago. The jealousy had curdled her insides even then, hot and bitter and overwhelming. Of course, Caelia would birth perfection. Of course, Darian's child would carry markers of such extraordinary purity. Just like everything else in her sister's life—effortless, flawless, beloved without even trying.
Golden undertones glowed in the girl's skin now. Long's dragon blood running strong and true, stronger even than it ran in Darian himself. (The product of two powerful bloodlines merging into something that transcended either parent alone, which absolutely shouldn't have been possible but apparently was.)
And something else, a third element that Selene had seen the moment the child was born—markers that suggested Zhao ancestry, the rarest genetic legacy in the known world. The crescent-shaped birthmark on her left shoulder blade glowed with ethereal light, the same distinctive mark that had been on Darian's mother. Lady Lian Zhao's legacy, passed through her son to his daughter—a mark so rare it appeared perhaps once every three generations, signifying exceptional spiritual gifts and strategic brilliance.
Tri-bloodline heritage.
The statistical impossibility made manifest, glowing with cosmic significance that couldn't be denied or hidden. The judges' masks reflected that impossible light, and Selene understood with dawning horror the magnitude of what she had done. Not just abused a child. Not just stolen a daughter from her rightful parents.
She had systematically tortured and broken someone whose bloodline value exceeded that of minor emperors. Someone carrying the blood of THREE celestial families—Long, Lin, and Zhao. Someone the cosmic order itself would protect. Someone whose suffering had accumulated karmic debt so massive that not even death would be sufficient punishment.
I saw those markers the day she was born.
The nightmare forced her to remember with crystalline, excruciating clarity—no escape, no mercy, just truth laid bare.
I saw the violet eyes. The silver ring. The golden undertones beneath her skin. I knew exactly whose child I was stealing.
Standing over Caelia's birthing bed while her twin sister slept, exhausted from labor. Holding the perfect infant, feeling the spiritual weight of her bloodline even through baby-soft skin. Seeing the crescent birthmark and understanding immediately what it meant.
Lady Lian Zhao's legacy. Marking this child as something extraordinary even among celestial nobility.
And I took her anyway.
I poisoned those beautiful eyes. Week after week. Month after month. Fed her Nethys Root until those brilliant violet irises dulled to muddy brown, watching it happen, choosing it, never once stopping to think—or maybe thinking too much, thinking about how satisfying it felt to destroy something so perfect.
I hid that birthmark under powders and salves. Claimed it was a "disfiguring blemish" that needed covering. Said it with such conviction that even I started to believe it sometimes.
I starved that perfect body. Stunted her growth. Broke her piece by deliberate piece, methodically, patiently, with the dedication some people brought to cultivation or art.
All to punish my sister for being everything I could never be.
All because I couldn't bear for Caelia to have what I'd lost—Darian's love, a perfect child, a life blessed by the cosmos itself.
All because watching her suffer—or at least watching her daughter suffer, same thing really—was the only thing that made my own failures bearable.
There it was. The truth she'd never spoken aloud, barely acknowledged even in the privacy of her own thoughts. Not strategic planning. Not calculated political maneuvering. Just petty, bitter jealousy dressed up in prettier clothes.
The judges' masks seemed to gleam with satisfaction at the admission. Or maybe that was just her imagination. Hard to tell in this place where geometry didn't work right and up could be down if it felt like it.
The pulling intensified.
Her soul body was being extracted completely now, torn free from the physical shell that had housed it for forty-nine years. She could feel the final connections beginning to snap—those essential threads that bound spirit to flesh, consciousness to corporeality. The sensation was of being flayed alive on a level more fundamental than mere skin and muscle.
Each thread that broke sent shockwaves through her essence. The first few felt like lightning strikes—sharp, agonizing, but survivable. But as more threads severed, the pain transformed into something worse than agony. A hollowness began spreading through her, as if parts of her were simply ceasing to exist, erased from reality one connection at a time.
And she knew—with the terrible certainty that only dreams can provide, that gut-deep knowledge that bypasses logic entirely—that when those final threads severed, she wouldn't simply die.
Death would've been mercy.
Her soul would fly away into the cosmic void, untethered from existence itself. Not reincarnation (which at least offered another chance, however slim). Not spiritual transformation (which some cultivators achieved if they were lucky and virtuous). Just... nothing. An annihilation so complete that even the memory of her existence would eventually fade from the universe's record, erased like words written in sand when the tide came in.
No afterlife. No second chance. No opportunity for redemption or rebirth or making things right.
Just the absolute, eternal void.
The punishment reserved for those whose crimes offended not merely mortal law but the cosmic order itself. For those who had deliberately harmed one marked by three celestial families, protected by bloodlines older than the Empire, precious beyond measure to forces that transcended human understanding and didn't care about excuses or justifications or how things had seemed like a good idea at the time.
The cosmic recordings pulsed with increasing darkness, spreading outward like ripples across reality itself. Every noble house in the empire would know. Every power that mattered would learn that she had stolen and abused a child of such cosmic significance—daughter of Darian Long, daughter of Caelia Lin, granddaughter of Lady Lian Zhao—that punishment was inevitable.
Daughter of her own twin sister, the woman she'd hated more than life itself.
The chains tightened. The fire intensified. Her soul body stretched further from her physical form, the connection growing gossamer-thin.
And through it all, Mara stood watching.
No satisfaction in those restored violet eyes. No cruelty. No triumph. (Which somehow made it worse—if she'd been gloating, Selene could've hated her for it, used that hatred as armor.) Just patient, terrible certainty. Cosmic justice is finally asserting itself after being denied for far too long.
Those eyes with their silver rings seemed to look directly into Selene's unraveling soul, seeing every crime, every calculated cruelty, every moment she'd chosen malice over mercy, chosen convenience over compassion, chosen her own bitter satisfaction over another person's fundamental humanity.
You knew.
Not spoken aloud, but Selene heard it anyway. Felt it.
You knew whose child I was from the moment I drew breath. You knew what you were doing when you poisoned my eyes to hide their color. You knew when you starved me. Beat me. Broke me piece by piece, day after day, year after year.
You knew that I carried the blood of three celestial families. You knew that harming me would accumulate karmic debt beyond mortal reckoning, the kind of debt that follows you across lifetimes if you're lucky enough to get another lifetime.
You knew.
And you chose it anyway.
Chose cruelty over kindness. Chose revenge over mercy. Chose your own bitter jealousy over the life of an innocent child who'd never done anything to you, never had a chance to, had only existed as a symbol of everything you'd failed to become.
And now the cosmos demands payment.
The girl's expression didn't change, but Selene felt the weight of cosmic judgment settling like a shroud that would never lift, never ease, never offer even a moment's respite. Not Mara's judgment—the child had no power here, no voice in what came next, was just standing there being herself, being the truth Selene had tried so hard to bury.
This was something far larger. Far more terrible.
The universe itself. Balancing scales that had been tipped too far for too long. Extracting payment for debts that could never be satisfied through mortal means, debts that had compounded over seventeen years like interest on a loan she'd never intended to repay.
Seventeen years of systematic cruelty against a child marked by the cosmos as precious. Seventeen years of deliberate harm inflicted on one who carried legacies from Long, Lin, and Zhao. Seventeen years of choosing malice, day after day, moment by moment, knowing full well—always knowing, never able to claim ignorance—the magnitude of her crime.
The price for such transgression was absolute.
The chains tightened. The fire intensified. Her soul body stretched further from her physical form, the connection growing gossamer-thin, spider-silk fragile, ready to snap at the slightest—