Font Size
15px

The candle burned low, the wax curling along the base like an exhausted sigh. I hadn’t slept. The war maps on the table were nearly dry from the ink I’d scrawled across them hours ago—movent routes, potential ambush points, chokeholds near the rice terraces. I’d bled Daiyu’s southern terrain dry on parchnt. Now I just had to make the rest of them see it.

A chill wind leaked through the corners of the command tent. I ignored it. Shadow snored softly near the far edge, curled into a crescent of dark fur and heat, his ears flicking at even imagined sound.

Yaozu stood at the table’s edge, arms folded, watching with that stillness he wore like armor.

"We should rest," he said.

I didn’t answer. My eyes were on the northern corner of the map, where a recent rchant convoy had veered strangely off its usual trade route. It wasn’t just wrong—it was stupid. rchants don’t change paths for no reason unless they’re trying to avoid being seen. Or unless soone told them where the eyes were.

I tapped the location with the end of my brush. "They knew we’d be watching the supply roads."

He stepped closer. "Then soone’s telling them what they want to hear."

I set the brush down. "Or soone’s making sure they walk directly into a trap."

The mont hung in silence.

Then Yaozu shifted. "You had a visitor."

"I never have visitors."

"Exactly."

He reached to the side and pulled sothing from beneath a folded blanket. It wasn’t large. Just silk. Black. Delicate. He set it down beside .

A fan.

Red lacquer ribs, inlaid with mother-of-pearl. The cloth was black silk—embroidered with storm clouds. In one corner, faint but deliberate, a single gold dot. Like a mark. Like a signature.

I didn’t move. "Where did you find it?"

"In your war trunk," he said. "It was tucked inside the southern map scroll. No seal. No na."

No one had seen them enter. No guards raised alarms. Whoever left it knew how to slip past my defenses—past Yaozu.

I lifted the fan carefully. It was heavy. Not the kind you’d carry on a hot sumr day. The ribs were reinforced—tal beneath the lacquer. Could be used as a weapon, if one knew how.

I flicked it open slowly.

The storm cloud design was more detailed inside. Tiny plum blossoms scattered across the upper edge, sewn with red thread so dark it nearly vanished into black. A court fan, but not for a woman. Too heavy. Too sharp.

"Do you recognize it?" I asked.

Yaozu didn’t move. "No."

But sothing in his voice was off.

I studied him. "You do. Or you have suspicions."

He t my gaze. "I’ve only ever seen one fan like that. It was years ago. Before you ca to the capital."

"Who?"

He hesitated.

I waited.

"Sun Yizhen," he said finally. "The bastard son of the Sun house. The one no one speaks of."

I raised a brow. "Yan Luo."

He didn’t deny it.

"He’s not really the King of Hell, you know that right?" I sighed, wondering where the problem was.

"No," Yaozu murmured. "He’s just real enough to leave you that without being caught."

I folded the fan. Held it in both hands.

"Why now?" I asked aloud.

There was no answer.

The flap of the pavilion shifted before Yaozu could respond. We both turned as a voice cut through the cold air.

"You’ve been awake for too long," Sun Longzi said, stepping in, still dressed in half his armor, dust streaking his boots.

I didn’t move. "So have you."

He nodded once. "I ca to confirm a shift in rchant routes near the watermills. Two Baiguang wagons changed course again. They’re avoiding our checkpoints completely now."

"They’re being fed false intel," I said.

He tilted his head. "From us?"

"No. From soone working separately. Soone who wants them confused but not dead."

He caught the faint glint of the fan in my hand.

"What’s that?"

I turned it slightly so he could see the design.

Sun Longzi frowned. "That... doesn’t belong to any noble house I know."

"It doesn’t belong to a house," Yaozu said quietly. "It belongs to a shadow."

Longzi’s eyes narrowed. "Soone watching us?"

"Soone watching her," Yaozu corrected. "He’s not loyal to the court."

"Then what is he loyal to?" Longzi asked.

Yaozu’s voice was almost bitter. "He apparently fixated on a particular female, a different type of a fox. The kind that sets fires and watches which way the smoke blows."

I didn’t speak. I was still staring at the fan.

The weight of it.

The intention behind it.

"I don’t like being watched," I said softly, my eyes going back to the fan without wanting them to. I didn’t like being watched... right? Even knowing who was doing the watching? Even knowing that sowhere soone had my back that no one else knew about?

"You’re not being watched," Yaozu said. "You’re being studied. There’s a difference."

"And protected," Longzi added, clearly thinking along the sa lines that I was.

I looked at him sharply.

He gave a slow nod. "He’s feeding Baiguang false directions. You just said it yourself. Whoever this is, they’re rearranging the board to favor you. Not the Crown. Not the Empress. You."

That was the part that was supposed to unsettle . But for so reason, I couldn’t bring myself to be upset.

I wasn’t used to being soone’s purpose, soone’s sole focus. Sure, Yaozu made a priority in his life, but even now, if it ca down to or Mingyu, I don’t know who he would pick.

And there was no way in hell I was ever asking him to choose.

I stood slowly, folding the fan closed again.

"I want every report that’s co through the last week cross-checked for inconsistencies. Trade permits. Caravan manifests. Nas that appear too often."

Yaozu nodded. "Already started."

"Good. Then tell the guards I want a silent periter tonight. No interruptions."

Longzi raised a brow. "Expecting soone?"

"No." I paused. "I just want to see who tries."

-------

Later, I sat alone in the dark, the red fan in my lap.

The storm clouds stared up at like a warning.

Or a promise.

"Who exactly are you protecting from?" I murmured.

And why does it feel like I’m already inside your trap?

You are reading The Witch in the Woods: The Transmigration of Hazel-Anne Davis Chapter 224: The Red Fan on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.