home

search

Chapter 4: The Whispering Mask

  By day, Zhao Wei walked like a forgotten whisper.

  By night, she listened to the wind's secrets.

  It was in the dark that the world peeled back its veil when masks slipped, and true things crawled out from beneath silk and civility.

  That night, the moon was a slit of silver.

  Barely enough light to see with, but more than enough to feel what shouldn't be seen.

  Zhao Wei sat in the ancestral library, a scroll unfurled before her, ink fresh, forbidden.

  “Treatises on Spirit Dissonance,” a relic tucked behind false walls, guarded by dust and contempt.

  Her fingers traced the old symbols.

  Not just cultivation techniques but diagrams of severed bonds, shattered cores, broken awakenings.

  She read with the hunger of a ghost trying to remember how to breathe.

  


  "When the spirit flees before the soul awakens,

  The silence left behind is not emptiness

  But invitation."

  A flicker.

  A breath.

  A whisper too close to her ear.

  


  "Still reading your way into ruin, Little General?"

  She turned slowly.

  Standing half-draped in moonlight was a figure in black robes, a porcelain fox mask gleaming under the moon.

  She rose calmly.

  “Did you come to haunt me,” she asked, “or help me?”

  The masked figure tilted its head.

  No threat in its posture yet every inch of it screamed danger.

  “I came to remind you,” it said, voice soft, “of who buried you.”

  If you encounter this story on Amazon, note that it's taken without permission from the author. Report it.

  Her pulse didn’t quicken.

  She stepped closer.

  “And who are you to remind me?”

  The figure reached up slowly and removed the mask.

  What stared back was a face from her former life.

  An old ally. Or perhaps a traitor. Or worse… both.

  Their smile was sad.

  “I watched you die, Zhao Wei.”

  “And yet here I am.”

  “Yes,” they said. “Here you are. No spirit. No beast. But the same eyes.”

  “Then you should know,” she murmured, “those eyes have not forgotten.”

  Later, after the figure vanished like a fading nightmare, Zhao Wei sat by her paper window, the mask they left behind cradled in her lap.

  Beneath her fingers, the porcelain seemed to pulse alive, or remembering.

  And from the shadows at her feet, something stirred.

  Not wind.

  Not memory.

  The spirit.

  Not quite formed.

  Not quite gone.

  A whisper in a language no mouth could speak.

  


  "The mask you wear is not the one they fear."

  She didn’t flinch.

  “What do they fear then?”

  Silence.

  Then

  


  "The one you haven't made yet."

  In the morning, her cousins found her in the garden,

  reading poetry aloud to the koi fish.

  Lu Shenyang appeared, arms folded, expression unreadable.

  “I hear you walk the halls at night,” he said.

  She looked up.

  “Then your hearing’s better than most.”

  “Who was your visitor?”

  She smiled, serene as moonlight on a blade.

  “Perhaps just a dream.”

  “You’re dangerous,” he said after a pause.

  She dipped her brush in ink.

  “That’s what they said before they killed me.”

  In the weeks that followed, whispers began to shift.

  Servants no longer looked through her.

  Some bowed a little deeper.

  One even dared to ask if she needed tea.

  Feiyan, sensing the change, grew colder, more venom behind her smile.

  Zhao Lin grew wary, confused.

  And Lu Shenyang?

  He started walking beside her, but never in front.

  She was still a shadow.

  But one beginning to cast its own.

  The game had begun

  And Zhao Wei?

  She was no longer just a player.

  She was rewriting the rules.

Recommended Popular Novels