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The day between the semifinal and the final was supposed to be a rest day.

Nobody rested.

Mo Tian spent the morning pacing his quarters, checking the window every fifteen minutes as if a courier hawk might materialize through sheer force of will. The imperial authorization had not arrived. His contacts at court confird the chancellor had received the request and was reviewing it, but the chancellor reviewed everything at the speed of a glacier deciding whether to move.

"He is thorough," Mo Tian said, wearing a groove into his floor. "Thorough is good. Thorough ans when the inquiry launches, it will be ironclad. Thorough also ans I am going to lose my mind before it arrives."

"Sit down," Lan Yue said from the chair by his desk. "You are making dizzy."

"I am a prince. Princes pace. It is in the job description."

"The job description also includes patience."

"That part was written by soone who never waited for a chancellor to read a docunt."

Bai Xuelan used the day to prepare a formal examination frawork for Zhao Lingxi. She spread dical scrolls across her desk and cross referenced them with the restricted texts on parasitic root cultivation that she had been quietly accessing through increasingly creative library requests.

"I told the archivist I was researching historical soil contamination," she said when Lan Yue raised an eyebrow. "Technically accurate."

"Technically criminal."

"Technically necessary." She held up a diagram of a human ridian system annotated with her own notes. "If the gardener’s seed operates the way Zhao Lingxi described, it is not parasitic in the traditional sense. A parasite takes without giving. This appears to be symbiotic. The seed repairs and strengthens the root system while drawing spiritual energy to sustain its own growth."

"Is that safe?"

"Symbiotic relationships are safe as long as both parties benefit equally. The danger is imbalance. If the seed grows faster than the host can sustain, it begins consuming more than it contributes. That is when symbiosis becos parasitism." She set the diagram down. "I need to examine her directly to determine the current ratio. Until then, everything is theoretical."

Tang Xiaoli spent the morning doing what Tang Xiaoli did best. She blew up her lab.

Not entirely. One cauldron. The explosion was contained by the blast ward she had installed after the third incident that month, and the only casualties were a shelf of empty vials and her left eyebrow.

"It is growing back," she assured Lan Yue over lunch, pointing to the singed patch above her eye. "Besides, the batch was a success. Twelve stabilization pills, refined specifically for symbiotic spiritual energy. If the seed starts drawing too much from Lingxi’s reserves, these will slow the absorption rate and give her ti to recalibrate."

"You made pills for a condition you learned about yesterday."

"I work fast under pressure. Also I did not sleep."

"Tang Xiaoli."

"Sleep is for people who do not have friends with ancient demonic gardeners living in their spirit roots. I will nap when the world makes sense again."

Lan Yue spent the morning with Jiang Yi.

She found him at the ditation caves, eating his rice ball in the dim light, his thin face watchful. He had been quiet since the quarterfinal. No new ssages had co through Qin Wen’s network, which was either very good or very bad.

"He has gone silent," Jiang Yi said. "No letters to the elder. No couriers heading east. No instructions to Cui or Peng. It is the first ti in eight months that an entire day has passed without a delivery."

"What do you think it ans?"

"He is either planning sothing too sensitive for written communication, or he has changed his approach entirely." Jiang Yi paused. "When Qin Wen goes quiet, it ans he is doing sothing himself. He only uses ssengers for routine operations. The important things, he handles personally."

That made Lan Yue uneasy in a way she could not quite articulate. Qin Wen operating through channels was dangerous but predictable. Qin Wen operating alone was a variable she could not track.

She thanked Jiang Yi, left him an extra rice ball she had taken from the dining hall, and walked back toward the sect grounds with a knot in her stomach that would not loosen.

She found Zhao Lingxi in the east garden.

Not the dark training circle. Not the isolated corners she had been haunting during the cold war. The garden. The actual garden, with its stone paths and flowering plum trees and the little pond where fat orange carp drifted in lazy circles. She was sitting on the bench near the water, watching the fish with an expression of quiet focus that made it look like the carp were delivering a very important lecture.

Lan Yue sat beside her. Their shoulders touched. Neither of them adjusted away.

"How are you feeling?" Lan Yue asked.

"Strange."

"Good strange or bad strange?"

"Both. I told soone my deepest secret yesterday and the world did not end. That is disorienting."

"Welco to having people."

"It is very loud."

"You have t Tang Xiaoli. Of course it is loud."

The corner of Zhao Lingxi’s mouth curved. She was doing that more often now. The almost smiles were becoming actual smiles, small ones, brief ones, but real in a way that made Lan Yue’s chest do sothing complicated every ti.

They sat in comfortable silence. The carp circled. A breeze moved through the plum trees and dropped a scatter of petals across the surface of the pond.

"The final is tomorrow," Zhao Lingxi said.

"Who is your opponent?"

"Li Feng. Wind root specialist. Second in the inner sect rankings before the tournant."

"Do you know his techniques?"

"Bai Xuelan gave a full analysis. He is strong. Disciplined. Conventional." She paused. "He will not push the way Chen Yulong did. His style is defensive. Endurance based. He wins by outlasting his opponents."

"That sounds manageable."

"It is manageable if I stay below the threshold. But the seed is more active since yesterday. I can feel it growing. Reaching. It wants to be used." She looked down at her hands. "It felt good, Lan Yue. In the semifinal, when the dark ice ca. It felt like breathing after holding my breath for years."

Lan Yue did not know what to say to that. The honesty of it sat between them, heavy and complicated.

"Tang Xiaoli made stabilization pills," she said. "Specifically for you. If the seed starts pulling too hard during the match, they will slow it down."

"She made pills overnight for a condition she just learned about?"

"She also blew up a cauldron and lost an eyebrow."

"Naturally."

"She said sleep is for people without friends who have ancient demonic gardeners in their spirit roots."

Zhao Lingxi was quiet for a mont. Then she made a sound. Small. Soft. A sound that Lan Yue had never heard from her before.

She laughed.

Not the controlled almost laugh. Not the faint exhale that passed for amusent. An actual laugh, brief and startled, like a bird that had been sitting still for so long it had forgotten it could fly.

Lan Yue stared. Her brain recorded the sound with the reverence of an archivist preserving a rare manuscript.

"Do not look at like that," Zhao Lingxi said.

"Like what?"

"Like I just perford a miracle."

"You laughed. Out loud. With your mouth."

"That is generally how laughter works."

"I have known you for months and that is the first ti I have heard you actually laugh. I am allowed to be affected."

"You are affected by everything I do."

"That is not... I am not..." Lan Yue spluttered. Her face went red. Zhao Lingxi watched her with the serene satisfaction of soone who had just won a match without lifting a finger.

"You are blushing," Zhao Lingxi observed.

"It is the sun."

"We are in the shade."

"Then it is a dical condition."

"The dical condition of being easily flustered by won who laugh."

Lan Yue pressed both hands over her face. "I am going to drown myself in the carp pond."

"The carp would object."

"The carp would understand. They seem like empathetic creatures."

Zhao Lingxi leaned into her. The pressure was warm, deliberate, her shoulder settling against Lan Yue’s in a way that said I am choosing this. Lan Yue lowered her hands. The blush was still there. She did not care anymore.

They sat together and watched the carp circle in the dappled light, and for one afternoon, the tournant and the inquiry and the seed and the scheming and the danger faded into the background like a painting hung too far away to see clearly.

Tomorrow was the final. Tomorrow might bring the imperial authorization. Tomorrow Qin Wen’s silence would break into whatever shape it was becoming.

But today the plum blossoms were falling and Zhao Lingxi had laughed and the red thread between them humd like a song that neither of them wanted to stop hearing.

Today was enough.

You are reading [GL] I'm Just A Side Character... So Why Is The Heroine Chasing Me?! Chapter 69: Today was enough on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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