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Chapter 73 — THE NIGHT THAT DID NOT END

Night did not fall all at once.

It settled.

Slowly. Heavily.Like a lid being lowered over sothing that was still breathing.

The Azure Dragon–affiliated recovery center drifted silently among layered cloud belts, its defensive arrays glowing faintly like distant stars. From the outside, it looked peaceful. Protected. Untouchable.

Inside, no one slept.

Ling Yifan stood perfectly still outside the recovery chamber.

His spear rested against the wall beside him, upright, hand within imdiate reach. His posture was straight, disciplined, immaculate.

Too immaculate.

The transparent chamber wall revealed Long Hao suspended in restorative fluid, body wrapped in healing sigils and stabilizing bands of light. Tubes fed energy directly into his circulation. Monitors pulsed with soft, rhythmic tones.

Too slow.

Ling Yifan’s jaw tightened.

He had fought monsters taller than towers.He had stood against Dragon-tier horrors and not stepped back.

But watching soone not fight—

Watching soone lie there because they had been too slow by a fraction of a second—

That was different.

"...You always said calculation mattered more than strength," Ling Yifan murmured quietly.

No response.

He clenched his fist.

"And now you’re the one paying the price."

The door behind him opened silently.

i ying stepped out, coat discarded, sleeves rolled back. Her expression was sharp, but her eyes showed fatigue.

"He’s stable," she said. "For now."

Ling Yifan didn’t relax.

"That strike," he said. "If it landed cleaner..."

i Ying nodded once.

"He would be dead."

No hesitation. No comfort.

Just truth.

Ling Yifan exhaled slowly.

"...They didn’t hesitate."

"No," She agreed. "They committed."

Her gaze slid to Long Hao.

"Which tells everything I need to know."

Bai Qianlan replaced Ling Yifan an hour later.

She sat cross-legged near the chamber wall, palms resting lightly on her knees. Her breathing was slow, asured, her illusions suppressed completely.

No masks tonight.

She watched Long Hao’s face.

Pale. Still. Uncharacteristically vulnerable.

Her illusions flickered once—rose petals forming instinctively before she crushed them back into nothing.

"...You always stand where you can see everything," she whispered.

Her fingers curled slightly.

"So why didn’t you see this?"

She didn’t cry.

She didn’t panic.

Instead, she began constructing illusion arrays in her mind—silent, invisible layers ant not to deceive but to alert. If anything approached the chamber, even intent alone would ripple through her constructs.

Control.

She chose control.

But beneath it—

Sothing sharp settled.

A promise she didn’t voice.

Chen refused to sit.

He paced.

Back and forth.Back and forth.

Every few steps, he glanced at the chamber.

Then at the door.

Then at the ceiling.

"...I should’ve been closer," he muttered.

No one answered.

He stopped suddenly, planting his feet.

"They went straight for him," he said aloud. "Didn’t even try to scatter us first."

Qin Shuo, working nearby on reinforcent arrays, didn’t look up.

"That ans he was the only objective."

Chen’s fists clenched.

"So this wasn’t about us."

"No," Qin replied calmly. "It was about removing a variable."

Chen let out a sharp breath.

"...I hate variables."

He leaned against the wall, arms crossed tightly.

"If he wakes up," he said quietly, "I’m not letting him walk around alone again."

Qin finally looked up.

"...That will change things."

Chen t his gaze.

"Good."

OUYANG XUE’ER

No one asked her to take watch.

She never left.

She stood at the chamber wall, hands pressed flat against the transparent surface, forehead resting against it. Her eyes were red, not from tears—but from refusing to blink.

The dical staff had tried to move her earlier.

She hadn’t raised her voice.

She had simply looked at them.

They backed away.

"...You promised you’d be careful," she whispered.

Her voice shook this ti.

"Not brave. Not reckless. Careful."

The monitors pulsed.

Steady.

Fragile.

Her fingers trembled.

"If you die," she said softly, dangerously softly, "I will freeze everyone responsible."

No one interrupted her.

In a sealed briefing room two levels above, i Ying stood before a projection table displaying fragnted data: attack vectors, energy signatures, guild markers blurred by counterasures.

The Azure Dragon Academy dean listened without interruption.

"These weren’t freelancers," Ming said. "They didn’t improvise. They executed."

She gestured, data shifting.

"Multi-angle insertion. No communication chatter. Clean retreat protocols."

The dean’s expression darkened.

"A guild."

"Yes," Ming confird. "And not a small one."

She paused.

"They don’t take academy contracts."

Silence thickened the room.

"...Which ans?" the dean asked quietly.

She t his gaze.

"This wasn’t a bounty."

"This was political sanitation."

The dean closed his eyes briefly.

"...Murong."

"Not the patriarch," Ming said imdiately. "Elders. Acting through interdiaries."

She folded her arms.

"They wanted to erase an embarrassnt before Stage Three put more eyes on him."

The dean exhaled slowly.

"And failed."

"Yes," she replied. "Which makes it worse."

"Do we halt the journey?" one elder asked.

The dean shook his head.

"No."

Her eyes narrowed slightly.

"You’re sending them forward."

"Yes," the dean said calmly. "With increased protection."

"And exposure."

"Yes."

She considered this.

"...Vermilion Academy will know."

"They already do," the dean replied.

Her eyes sharpened.

"Already?"

He nodded once.

"Information travels faster than buses."

Hours later, the lights dimd further as artificial night deepened.

Long Hao did not wake.

But the atmosphere changed.

Bai Qianlan felt it first—a tightening in the air that wasn’t hostile, just aware.

Ling Yifan returned, standing beside Chen.

Qin finished reinforcing the final array.

No one spoke.

They didn’t need to.

Sowhere far away—

A guild adjusted its assessnt.

Sowhere else—

Murong elders realized cleanup had failed.

And sowhere beneath layers of healing light—

A shadow breathed.

The night did not end.

It waited.

[Chapter ENDS]

SIDE MONT — LONGYU

Longyu hovered inside the system space, arms crossed, eyes sharp.

"Stupid," she muttered. "You let them hit that spot."

Data stread past her in rapid lines as she ran scan after scan.

FOUNDATION: STABLE

RECOVERY RATE: ABNORMAL

ACCELERATION: DENIED

Her expression darkened.

"...So that’s the problem."

She flicked her fingers, pushing deeper.

The results made her pause.

"This isn’t damage alone," she said quietly. "Your body’s healing fine. Your soul isn’t agreeing yet."

She glanced toward the surface layer, toward the recovery chamber.

"And the dragon resentnt is resisting forced repair."

Longyu clicked her tongue.

"Tch. Of course it is. Hates being told what to do."

She shut down the scan and sighed.

"I can’t rush this without breaking sothing else."

Her glow dimd slightly.

"But you’ll wake up," she said firmly. "I’ll make sure of that."

She turned away, muttering—

"And when you do, you owe an apology."

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