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Sun Longzi

Sun Longzi was a man who believed in clean lines and the idea that there was a place for everything and everything should be in its place.

Spears were stacked in the sa corner every night. Maps were weighted down so that the edges didn’t curl. Argunts needed to be ended where they should without being drawn out.

Controlling his environnt ant that the world was less likely to surprise him.

And when his very life depended on the control he had, it was very hard to get him out of his comfort zone.

When a ssenger from the Red Demon Army ca to tell him what the rumors were, the news did not surprise him.

Technically, Mingyu and Xinying had been married for a year; the day of their coronation had only been waiting for its hour to arrive. Still, when the runner reached his office and bowed until his forehead nearly touched the floor, Longzi said nothing for a long ti after the boy left. He stood with his palms on the table and looked at the pins marking the river fords north of the capital.

"Problem?" Deming asked from the doorway, a slight smirk on his face like he knew the answer without having to even ask the question.

Longzi didn’t turn. "Just deciding where to move the n we don’t want anyone to know we moved."

Zhu Deming ca in without needing permission and set a sealed packet on the edge of the map. "Mingyu wants the guest compounds watched tighter. Not loud. Just... tighter."

"Bai Yuyan?" Longzi asked, already rearranging three counters in his head and two on the table.

"And whatever the Baiguang loyalists call themselves this month," Deming shrugged. "They don’t take losing well."

"Does anyone?" Longzi asked mildly amused. He slid one of the counters half a finger’s breadth without looking down. "Heirs. Envoys. rchants who reinvent themselves as patriots when the tax man arrives. It will all co."

Deming watched him a mont. "You’re surprisingly calm."

"I’m standing still," Longzi shrugged in response. "Calm is a luxury. We can afford discipline, and anyone who has ever stepped on a battlefield knows that life rarely goes the way you want it to."

He allowed himself an exhale when he realized he’d been keeping his breath on a short leash since the dawn bell.

He wasn’t grieving anything. He wasn’t jealous of anyone. He was simply adjusting to the fact that the woman who had changed the shape of the war, and his life, had now been placed at the center of the room where wars were prevented or invited with a sentence.

And all that much further out of his reach.

"Do you think they’ll test her?" Deming asked, though he already knew the answer.

"They’ll test him through her," Longzi replied. "It’s more polite and therefore more dangerous. They don’t understand that they are simply poking at a tiger for the fun of it."

Deming’s mouth twitched. "And you?"

"I’ll do what I always do," Longzi said, finally lifting his hands from the table. "I’ll make sure the knives they think they’re hiding are the ones we handed them in the first place."

He broke the seal on the packet. Inside were stacks of papers...lists.

They contained the nas of n who still owed favors from a winter three years gone.

The nas of won whose kitchens fed more mouths than the palace liked to count.

The nas of boys who ran ssages faster when their sisters had dicine.

Not a single one of them were soldiers... but they were threads. He would knot them where they needed to hold and cut them where they frayed.

"And if she decides to walk out of the silk room and back into the mountain one morning?" Deming asked, not because it was likely but because it was possible.

Longzi looked up then and let the piece of truth show in his eyes. "Then we’ll follow," he said. "Or we’ll get out of the way."

Deming nodded once. "Good answer."

"It’s the only one," Longzi shrugged, going back to the maps and information in front of him. There was no second option. Zhao Xinying might not know it yet, but she had just inherited an army and two n who would never let her out of their sight again.

------

Xinying

By afternoon, the palace had sung itself hoarse and settled into the quieter business of rembering how to keep an empire standing. I sat with a stack of petitions that thought they were more urgent than they were and signed my na where ink mattered.

A girl from the kitchens brought tea without trembling. I liked her imdiately. She set the tray down and didn’t stare at my eyes, which ans she’ll live long and well if no one teaches her bad habits.

"Thank you," I said, and she startled at being seen, then smiled like a secret she’d decided to keep.

When she left, Yaozu leaned a shoulder against the doorfra in that way that tells anyone paying attention that the person inside the room is not alone.

"’Untouchable,’" he quoted, because sotis he collects words the way other n collect coins.

"They’ll get used to it," I said.

"And if they don’t?" he asked.

I signed another line that would set soone free or bind them tighter, depending on whether they deserved it. "Then they’ll learn the way everyone else did," I said, and let the pen rest.

He didn’t answer, which was its own agreent. I closed my eyes for a heartbeat and let the quiet find . Outside the lattice, a bell marked an hour that belonged to no one important. Sowhere in the guest compound, a woman whose na will not be rembered tried a new tactic in an old ga.

Sowhere beyond the borders, a man I don’t owe anything to decided wanting was the sa thing as deserving.

Here, in the small square of space the palace thinks it owns, I set my palm flat on the table and felt the wood answer—solid, stubborn, mine.

They could whisper.

They could watch.

They could even write essays about what they thought an Empress should be.

I would be the one to decide what I am.

And then I will be it, until the world learns the new shape of my na.

You are reading The Witch in the Woods: The Transmigration of Hazel-Anne Davis Chapter 265: The Shape Of My Name on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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