Elena's paralyzed legs were utterly useless in the water—she possessed no ability to generate propulsive power through kicking. Her arms thrashed desperately in what should have been helpful movents, but instead proved counterproductive. Against the imnse water pressure and the relentless downward inertia, her movents were insignificant, almost comical in their futility. Worse, the frantic motion only accelerated her oxygen consumption, hastening her descent into unconsciousness.
The heavy wheelchair—denser, heavier, more prone to sinking than her own body—had long since separated from her form. It plumted downward at a velocity faster than her own, driven by gravity's inexorable pull. The chair descended toward the bottomless, swamp-like mud that existed far below, disappearing from any possible view or recovery.
Is it... going to end here?
The question erged with crystalline clarity—a final surge of lucidity cutting through Elena's increasingly blurred consciousness like a blade through fog.
She still possessed too many unfinished tasks, too many missions incomplete:
She hadn't yet discovered the true culprit behind her parents' car accident from all those years ago. The investigation remained unresolved, the truth still hidden.
She hadn't avenged her loved ones. She hadn't had the opportunity to celebrate Grandfather Jiang's eightieth birthday at his side.
She hadn't tasted the custom-made cake from Victoria's thirtieth birthday celebration—a detail that suddenly seed impossibly important.
She hadn't yet determined whether Marcus Chen, this strange man who had suddenly entered her life with his bizarre behavior and contradictory patterns, was genuinely kind or rely performing an elaborate deception. She needed to know the truth about him.
I don't want to leave yet.
Her survival instinct seized control, forcing her to hold onto her final breath of air. She attempted to relax her tense, rigid body, trying to reduce the speed of her descent, desperately hoping that water's natural buoyancy might sohow lift her back toward the surface, back toward life.
But the icy lake water seed to possess its own malevolent will. It dragged her downward with rciless determination—down, down, down... eternally downward into bottomlessness.
She forced herself to raise one arm with trendous effort, extending it upward toward salvation. Her fingertips strained to reach the halo of light—that faint, refracted glow that represented life, hope, the world of the living—that shimred down through the water from the distant surface.
If there's truly light in this world...
The thought fragnted into individual words, each one requiring imnse concentration:
I no longer fear having it scar my eyes, already accustod to darkness. I no longer want to hide.
I'm truly... I've truly had enough of always hiding in dark corners, always remaining in shadow.
Please... save .
But that fragile wisp of light ultimately slipped rcilessly through her cold, trembling fingers, departing without leaving even a trace of warmth behind.
Elena couldn't hold her breath any longer. The oxygen that had sustained her lungs was completely depleted. An intense sensation of suffocation—like a tide, like drowning within drowning—engulfed the last remnants of her consciousness, drowning even her thoughts in darkness.
Her hand, suddenly losing all strength and coordination, began to drop downward in slow motion. The gesture was one of absolute despair—a puppet with severed strings, a marionette whose controls had been cut, descending toward oblivion.
On the Shore
"Damn it! I'm not waiting anymore!"
Behind the concealing banana trees, Marcus suddenly stood upright. The last trace of hesitation in his eyes had been completely incinerated by urgency and rage.
What nonsense about plot requirents!
What System warnings!
What ridiculous insistence that Adrian must be the hero who saves the beauty!
To hell with all of it!
The rational voice in his mind scread "no," it shrieked warnings about mission failure and plot disruption—but his body moved faster than his thoughts, faster than the System's electronic warnings.
His long, powerful legs—the legs of soone trained in combat and athleticism—erupted with astonishing speed. Like a leopard poised to strike, launching toward prey, he covered the distance to Mirror Lake in a handful of explosive bounds.
Rather than placing hope on "others" who might appear at an unknowable mont in the future, it was far better to rely on himself. This was the ultimate truth Marcus had learned through blood and tears, having lived two lives in sequence.
I will not be a spectator to Elena's death.
"SPLASH—!"
Another violent impact with the water's surface—a thunderous, earth-shaking crash that shattered the suffocating silence surrounding the lake.
The icy water instantly surged from all directions, enveloping Marcus's entire body in a shock so complete and overwhelming that it was almost ditative. The bone-chilling cold was like being imrsed in liquid ice—a sensation that paradoxically extinguished the surging anxiety and rage in his heart, replacing it with strange clarity, an almost mystical sense of "at ease."
Only after falling into the water did Marcus truly understand what action ant, what control ant, what it felt like to take command of a situation rather than be controlled by external forces.
He held his breath with absolute determination, forcing his eyes open despite the reflex that wanted to keep them closed. The water stung, but he pushed through the discomfort.
The light was dim, fractured and refracted by the water's movent. He quickly adapted to underwater vision—a skill that required forcing his pupils to adjust, his mind to reorient itself to an alien sensory landscape.
His gaze frantically searched downward through the murky water—
And found her.
Not far below, Elena's pure white dress floated and spread in the water like wilting petals fallen from a dying flower. The fabric billowed gently with the water's movent, creating a hypnotic, tragic beauty.
Her arms and legs were pale as fresh snow—completely devoid of color, completely devoid of any visible sign of life. They drifted in the water like the limbs of a marble statue.
Her long hair—dark as spilled ink—floated with an almost seductive quality in the water, intertwining with her pale face and spreading dress, creating an image so beautiful and so heartbreaking that it transcended tragedy. She resembled a white callia that had suddenly blood in the depths of the lake and then, just as rapidly, withered and died. The image was simultaneously the most beautiful and most terrible thing Marcus had ever witnessed.
Marcus didn't hesitate for even a microsecond. He kicked his legs with brutal force, propelling his body downward like an arrow shot from a bow.
He cut through the cold current, struggling against the water's resistance, fighting his way deeper. Finally—finally—his fingertips made contact with that cold, seemingly lifeless white form.
He had reached her.
The sunlight, refracted and scattered through the water's surface far above, created a diffuse, wavering illumination. Under that strange, blurry underwater light, Elena's small face seed to glow with an unreal, almost ethereal halo. Her expression was serene to the point of coldness—the peace of surrender, the tranquility of the dying.
Her small mouth was slightly puffed outward, and from between her lips, a string of tiny bubbles—like broken pearls, like the last remnants of her consciousness—was slowly, stubbornly, desperately escaping one by one...
Marcus's pupils constricted to pinpoints.
She's still holding her breath. She still possesses a faint trace of consciousness.
His heart seized with urgency and desperate tenderness. He kicked his legs even more forcefully, propelling himself through the heavy water, rapidly closing the distance to the sinking white figure.
He extended his strong arm and wrapped it around Elena's impossibly slender waist. The force of his movent pulled her cold, soft body toward him with sudden, irresistible intensity.
Her astonishingly delicate abdon pressed against him through the soaked fabric of her clothing, creating a sensation so clear, so real, that it shocked him—this was no longer abstract fear, this was tangible: Elena was real, present, corporeal, and dying.
Marcus didn't allow himself even a mont's hesitation. He held her tightly with one arm while his other arm provided propulsion. His legs kicked with violent urgency, driving them both upward toward the illuminated surface that represented salvation, toward air and breath and life.
But just as they began their ascent—
Elena's waist, still enclosed within his embrace, trembled with sudden, violent force. It was the kind of movent a drowning person made—the last instinctive struggle of a dying swan, one final surge of reflex before surrendering entirely to death.
Imdiately after that tremor—
Elena's eyes, which had been tightly closed as though covered in frost, actually managed to struggle open. The effort seed to cost her everything, but her eyes opened nonetheless, forming the barest slit through which consciousness could peer.
Her hazy, unfocused gaze—the gaze of soone caught between dream and reality, between life and death—gradually sharpened in the blurry underwater environnt. It focused with increasing clarity, finally settling with absolute, startled precision on Marcus's face.
In that gaze, there was no anticipated gratitude, no relief, no expression of thanks for being rescued. Instead, there was only complete surprise—and sothing far more complex, sothing that defied easy categorization.
Marcus's heart inexplicably skipped a beat.
Of course this is wrong. If Adrian had been the one to save her at this mont—if Adrian had plunged into the water and pulled her back from the brink of death—Elena would be smiling with relief even in this underwater space, wouldn't she? Why would she have such a ghost-struck expression?
As this thought flashed through his consciousness—before he could even process the implications—
Elena's arms suddenly moved with all the strength and desperation of a drowning person grasping a lifeline. Both her slender arms wrapped around his neck, pulling his head downward with irresistible force. The movent was so sudden, so powerful, that it caught him completely off guard.
Elena's pale yet still delicate face magnified before his vision until it was impossibly close—closer than close enough to see every detail.
He could see the distinct, thick, deeply curled eyelashes that frad her eyes. Soaked with water, they resembled two small fans dampened by tears—fragile, beautiful, captivating beyond asure.
The next second—before Marcus could process what was happening—
Elena tilted her head upward and, with extraordinary accuracy and intention, pressed her bloodless yet still petal-soft lips directly onto his.
Marcus's pupils dilated to their absolute maximum. His breathing stopped completely. His mind went entirely blank, as though he'd been struck by divine lightning—scorched on the outside, rendered helpless on the inside, utterly stunned into complete incomprehension.
Elena's lips were impossibly close. They were cold from the water, yet sohow they transmitted warmth. Her newly opened eyes blinked slowly, gradually, the movent graceful even in this mont of drowning. Her long eyelashes—water-soaked and delicate—brushed across the water's surface, and the sensation felt as though they were brushing directly against his heart.
In her clear, conscious pupils—pupils that should have been clouded by drowning but sohow retained perfect clarity—Marcus could see his own reflection. And that reflection showed an expression of complete astonishnt, an expression almost comically foolish in its shock.
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