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The two sisters converged by Mirror Lake as the afternoon light began its slow descent toward evening, their forms silhouetted against the water's glassy surface. Together, they guided the owl-shaped kite through its final spirals across the sky, Victoria's cheerful laughter punctuating the air while Elena offered occasional, understated smiles—the barest curves of her lips that sohow seed to contain entire conversations.

The scene was achingly beautiful. The sisters' shared joy intertwined with the shimring lake and the mountains beyond, soft with distance and haze, echoing the classical poetry that Marcus had once read: *The lake shines bright on a sunny day.* The mont felt constructed, almost rehearsed—beautiful in the way a carefully arranged painting was beautiful. A dreamscape, perfect and untouchable.

That evening, they retired to the detached villa nestled on Purple Mountain's slopes. The property was sprawling, elegant, the kind of place that whispered old money in every architectural detail.

As night fell, the mountains transford into sothing almost threatening. The silence beca absolute. Despite the estate's top-tier security asures—Marcus had noted the caras, the carefully disguised motion sensors, the way certain sections of the grounds were monitored with obvious precision—the villa felt excessively quiet to him. Every sound beca amplified by that quiet: the occasional quacking of wild ducks outside the windows, the whisper of wind through the eaves, the creaking of century-old wooden beams settling. It all combined into a kind of oppressive loneliness that made Marcus's skin prickle.

They shared a simple dinner in the villa's elegant dining room—nothing elaborate, nothing that suggested celebration. Just three people moving through the motions. Afterward, they congregated in the living room to discuss the banquet details with the ticulous precision of a general planning a military campaign.

Victoria, apparently, loved dogs. So a massive dog-thed poster would dominate the banquet entrance—sothing whimsical, sothing that would allow her to make her grand entrance in an elegant gown, leading a small golden retriever by the leash. The whole production had been choreographed down to the exact angle of her approach, the precise mont the photographers would capture her.

Everything was arranged. The hour grew late. It was ti to rest.

But Elena had other plans.

"I won't be sharing a guest room with you tonight," she announced to Marcus, her voice carrying that particular tone of indifference that sohow felt like violence. "I'll be sleeping with Victoria to facilitate her care."

Marcus imdiately shifted into the appropriate emotional register—abandoned, desperate, longing. He positioned himself in the shadowy corner near the room's entrance, letting his eyes go wide and wet with pleading. He even reached out, his fingers finding the edge of Elena's clothing, tugging gently, his voice pitched to carry just the right note of grievance and coaxing desperation:

"Wife... is it really impossible? Can't I just sleep on the floor in your room? I promise to be quiet. I absolutely won't disturb you."

The silk of her pajamas was delicate and cool beneath his fingertips. As his hand drifted upward along the curve of her waist, Marcus beca acutely aware of the warmth radiating from her skin beneath the gossar-thin fabric—a heat that contradicted everything her cold exterior suggested. She was human, after all. She had a body that generated warmth, that could be affected by proximity and touch.

Elena's eyes half-closed, her thick lashes casting shadows across her cheekbones. When she spoke, her voice carried no emotion, no trace of anger or approval—just lazy scrutiny, the way one might observe an interesting insect:

"Do you think this is... appropriate?"

Her gaze seed to carry invisible pressure, and Marcus felt the weight of her attention like a physical thing. His hand paused mid-movent. With practiced dexterity born from another life, another identity, his middle and index fingers—which had been concealing sothing impossibly small—flexed slightly. The white eavesdropping device, no thicker than a butterflies's wing, was pressed and adhered to the inner side of her ruffled collar in one smooth motion, hidden by the architecture of his gesture.

Task completed, he released her as if burned, stepping back naturally to create appropriate distance, allowing a small, perfectly tid expression of embarrassnt to settle across his face.

"It seems," he said quietly, "it's not quite appropriate."

---

Alone in his assigned guest room, Marcus locked the door. The embarrassnt dissolved from his features instantly, replaced by sothing cold and calculated. He stretched across the ridiculously expensive bed—the mattress was obscenely springy, the kind of luxury that made him briefly grateful he'd chosen this path—and smiled to himself at the sheer absurdity of the wealthy.

He retrieved a matchbox-sized receiver and a white adhesive earphone, fitting the latter to his right ear with practiced precision.

At first, there was only static—that white noise that sounded like the universe's default setting. But within monts, clear audio began transmitting. He heard the rolling sound of a wheelchair, followed by Sophia's voice, warm and professional:

"Miss, the bed is prepared. You and Miss Victoria should rest early."

Elena's faint response: "Thank you for the trouble."

The door closing. The soft *click* of the light switch.

Then silence.

Marcus waited, his breath controlled, his body still. The moonlight through the window had turned silver, painting everything in shades of pewter and shadow.

Ti moved strangely through the earphone. He could hear only the most subtle sounds—fabric shifting, movent barely perceptible. And was Victoria humming? A children's song, off-key and whispered, almost inaudible.

Then, after an indeterminate stretch of ti, he heard it: the faint sound of bare feet on the floor.

Soone was getting out of bed.

Marcus sat up imdiately, covering his ear with his hand to ensure he didn't miss a single syllable. His heartbeat accelerated. This was the mont. This was the mont when—

In the darkness of that distant room, a slender figure moved toward the door. There was a soft *click*—the lock being engaged. Then the figure turned back, apparently searching the table for sothing.

*Tzzzt.*

The sound of a match striking.

And then—a faint yellow glow seed to transmit through the earphone itself. A candle was being lit.

"*Sister.*"

A voice cut through the audio with crystalline clarity. Adult. Articulate. Steady in tone. Completely, utterly devoid of the childish uncertainty, the stuttering confusion, the ntal fog that had characterized Victoria's speech throughout the day.

It was Victoria's voice.

But not Victoria as Marcus knew her.

Marcus's heart stopped. Then restarted, hamring with such force he thought he might be having a cardiac event.

*She's faking.*

The realization hit him like a physical blow. Victoria—gentle, childlike, intellectually limited Victoria—was completely lucid. Completely aware. Everything had been performance. Every giggle, every mont of confusion, every instance of her reaching for him with apparent innocent affection while he internally panicked about boundaries—all of it had been *calculated*.

His suspicions, the paranoia that had been building like pressure in his skull, crystallized into absolute certainty.

He pressed the earphone tighter, desperate to hear what ca next.

But the universe had other plans.

The sound that erupted from the earphone in the next instant was catastrophic.

A rushing, roaring, amplified-to-hell-and-back sound of a toilet flushing—loud enough to shatter reality itself. The noise was impossibly magnified, distorted beyond anything natural, and it hit his eardrum with the force of a sonic weapon.

Marcus ripped off the earphone, his eyes going wide. He stared at the small white device in his hand, his entire body trembling.

The flushing continued for several impossible seconds.

Then: silence.

Dead, complete, absolute silence.

---

In the candlelit bathroom, Victoria pressed the flush chanism one final ti, watching with grim satisfaction as the water swept away the small white listening device, carrying it down into the pipes where it would dissolve into components and fragnts, unrecoverable.

She stood there for a mont, hands on her hips, catching her breath, then whispered to the empty air with a mixture of anger and dark amusent: "Well, well. This Marcus Chen. How *dare* he eavesdrop on us."

The candlelight danced across her features, and in the shifting shadows, there was nothing childlike about her expression. Nothing soft. The flas were reflected in Elena's eyes as Victoria returned to the bedroom—two clusters of dark ghost fire, burning with sothing that went beyond re intelligence. Sothing older. Sothing hungry.

"Sister, co back to bed," Elena said quietly, lifting the corner of the quilt in invitation. "You'll catch a cold."

Victoria shook her head, moving to sit on the edge of the bed instead. Her face was transford now that the mask had been discarded. There wasn't a trace of idiocy remaining, no artificial simplicity. Her eyes were sharp—sharper than Marcus had ever seen them—and they fixed on Elena with the intensity of a predator assessing its mate.

"I'm not tired yet," she said. She paused, considering. "It seems your instinct was correct. Marcus Chen remains... untrustworthy."

Elena reclined slightly, propping herself up on one elbow. The candlelight softened the sharp lines of her face while sohow making her eyes appear deeper, more complex. Like looking into a well that descended forever.

"He saved ," Elena said carefully. "His behavior has been vastly different from the intelligence we gathered. I thought perhaps... there might be a slight possibility." She exhaled slowly. "But judging now—"

She let out a cold laugh that didn't quite reach her eyes.

Victoria leaned forward, her analysis thodical and precise: "Didn't you say he preferred gentle, gracious, beautiful, and voluptuous won? Based on his previous behavior, when I 'threw myself into his arms' today, even if he didn't seize the opportunity, he shouldn't have reacted with such obvious avoidance."

Elena considered this. "His ex-girlfriend was similar to you—both in temperant and figure."

"Exactly," Victoria said. "So his 'virtuous restraint' when facing today leaves only two possibilities."

She counted them off on her fingers. "First, he's changed. Second, he's performing. And that listening device..." She smiled, and it was the smile of sothing predatory. "It shows he wasn't rely unaffected by beauty. He's beco *suspicious* of us."

Elena's expression cooled further, if such a thing were possible. "But what does he want? If he had genuinely ulterior motives, wouldn't approaching you be simpler than approaching ?"

"I can't say," Victoria admitted. The candlelight flickered across her features. "But unusual events often signal danger. Sister, you said he isn't lustful and didn't approach closely. Perhaps it was simply the wrong setting, too many eyes. But privately..." She paused, rembering. "He touches you frequently. They seem affectionate, but I've noticed they're actually *tests*. Probing. Searching for sothing."

Elena's gaze sharpened. "What do you an?"

Victoria smiled slightly, and there was sothing almost teasing in her expression—the expression of a younger sister who had caught her older sister in sothing amusing. "How has he been treating you privately? Besides this listening device, I've noticed he's been extrely 'caring' toward you. Tea, water, ticulous attention to every detail. If it's because he likes you, then the occasional marital 'rubbing shoulders' seems... not entirely inappropriate? After all, you are his wife in na."

Elena didn't take the bait. Her expression remained frozen, calm as still water—ice-thin, ice-cold. "In this world, besides you and Grandfather, I trust no one. Marcus Chen is ultimately an outsider of unknown origin and strange behavior. Before we understand his true background, we must be even more cautious."

The two sisters exchanged a look in the candlelight. Understanding flowed between them—silent, complete, and deeply unsettling. There was an intimacy to their silence, but it was the intimacy of predators, not prey. The night stretched ahead of them, vast and patient.

Victoria observed the heaviness settling between her sister's brows and felt the familiar ache in her chest. She had pretended to be mad and foolish for years, and at least that masquerade had given her permission to vent her emotions freely, to rage and weep without seeming inconsistent. But Elena...

Elena had to suppress all the storms in her heart. She had to endure everything alone, sober and aware, without even allowing herself a single mont of visible weakness.

"I'll test him again on the day of the birthday banquet," Victoria said, her voice low and steady, carrying the patience of a hunter who understood that rushing was for amateurs. "A fox will show its tail eventually. When that day cos, we'll know exactly what he is—man or ghost."

Elena breathed quietly, her chest barely rising and falling. Her beautiful eyes were hollow, reflecting no light at all.

For her, compared to the faint warmth that trusting soone might bring, she would rather push everyone away from the start. If there was no trust, there would be no expectation, and naturally... there would be no more heartbreaking disappointnt.

It was safer that way.

Safer, at least, than believing.

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