After parting ways with Tian Hao, Lin Mei made her way back to her quarters. Her footsteps were heavy with the weight of recent events.
The sect grounds, usually a source of peace and tranquility, now felt oppressive. The familiar stone pathways echoed the turmoil within her. Each rustle of leaves in the wind, each distant bird call, seemed to amplify the sense of unease that had settled over her since her encounter with Baihu.
The guardian beast's words – "The path you walk is not always the one you intend" – echoed in her mind, a chilling reminder of the precariousness of her situation.
She closed the door behind her, exhaling deeply as she leaned against the wooden frame, the smooth, cool wood a small comfort against the storm raging within.
For a moment, her mask cracked, and she let out a choked sob, the tears she had been holding back finally escaping. Alone for the first time since the outpost, the weight of everything—her secrets, her betrayals, her fear—overwhelmed her. She sank to the floor, her shoulders shaking as she cried, her quiet sobs filling the small, empty room.
With deliberate care, almost as if she were handling a venomous snake, she retrieved the jade coin from the inner pocket of her robes. She held it up to the dim light of the single lantern in her room.
"Why did I take it?" she whispered to herself, her voice cracking slightly. "How did I let it come to this?"
Talking to herself made her fears more tangible, her frustrations sharper. It felt like she could finally admit just how scared she was, how much she regretted getting herself caught between impossible loyalties. For a moment, the vulnerability she’d kept hidden from everyone else became real, even if only within the four walls of her room.
Her own words hung in the air, echoing the questions that had been clawing at her mind since her encounter with Baihu. "I'm so foolish," she muttered, her fingers curling into fists. "I never wanted this... but what choice do I have?"
Lin Mei's mind drifted back to the day the Iron Talon Sect entered her village, a day that marked the end of her innocence and the beginning of a life of servitude. Her family had been farmers—people of the land who valued simple joys, their lives tied to the ebb and flow of the harvest.
It had been a difficult year, made even harder by the Iron Talon Sect’s creeping control over the region. They manipulated the market, undercutting local prices and taxing trade shipments, making it impossible for the ordinary people to survive. The pressure they exerted was like a slow vice, tightening until life itself became unbearable.
Then came the fateful day when Iron Talon Sect disciples moved through the village, knocking on doors, checking each family that had children for cultivation potential.
Lin Mei could still remember the chill in the air as the disciples came to their door. Her father had opened it, his expression set in fear and determination. He tried to resist them, refusing to let them near his children. He had shouted at them, demanding they leave, that they had no right.
The words had barely left his mouth when the lead disciple—a man whose face was etched with indifference—struck him down. It had happened so fast. One moment, her father was standing tall, defiant, and the next, he was crumpled on the step of their house, blood pooling beneath him, sinking into the earth.
Lin Mei could still hear her mother's scream, a sound that seemed to tear apart the very fabric of the world.
They took her then. She was still in shock, barely comprehending what had happened, her eyes fixed on her father's lifeless body. Her mother had clung to her, her grip desperate, her cries pleading. But it was all in vain. The disciples pulled her away, their hands like iron clamps on her arms.
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The last thing she saw as they dragged her out was her mother and younger brother, their faces twisted in fear and despair, her mother’s hands reaching out as if she could somehow pull Lin Mei back.
The disciple in charge had paused, turning to face her mother. His voice was cold, devoid of any empathy. “You will be taken care of, so long as the girl performs her duties.” His words were a promise and a threat wrapped in one, a binding contract that would forever chain Lin Mei to the Iron Talon Sect.
That moment replayed in her mind now, as vivid as if it had just happened. The jade coin in her hand seemed to pulse with the memory, a reminder of the promise she had made that day.
It wasn’t loyalty that bound her to the Iron Talon Sect—it was the promise of safety for her family, a promise that came at the cost of her own freedom. She had sworn herself to them, taken an oath of servitude, knowing that any hesitation, any refusal, would mean the end of her family. The memory of her father’s blood, her mother’s tear-streaked face, her brother’s terrified eyes—all of it weighed on her every choice, every action.
She had been forced to sacrifice her future so they might have one.
Now, in the quiet of her room, with the jade coin cold in her hands, she felt that weight press down on her, crushing her beneath the enormity of what she had done, of what she was still doing. Her heart ached with fear, regret, and anger. She had been pushed onto a path she never chose, and now she was entangled in lies that seemed to have no end, pulling her deeper into the shadows of the Iron Talon Sect.
A part of her wished she could have fought harder, that she could have found another way. But deep down, she knew she had done what she had to—what anyone would have done in her place to protect the ones they loved.
She turned the coin over in her hands, her fingers tracing the delicate carvings—a coiled serpent, its scales intricately detailed, its eyes like tiny chips of ice. She’d stolen it, taken something that didn't belong to her—a betrayal of the trust the Skyward Lotus Sect had placed in her.
She had crossed a line, a point of no return, all for the sake of a promise made long ago. It wasn't just a matter of loyalty versus loyalty; it was about survival, about making choices that might one day have dire repercussions far beyond her and even her remaining family. Choices that could shatter the fragile peace she had found, that could cost her everything.
Lin Mei stared at the coin, her brows furrowed. The weight of her decision settled heavily on her shoulders.
She knew that there would be no turning back if her actions were ever discovered. The potential consequences—expulsion, imprisonment, even death—were undeniably real.
She thought about Tian Hao—his easygoing nature, his genuine warmth, his growing strength. Could she betray him like this? Could she risk everything she’d found here? The fragile sense of belonging, the camaraderie, the… connection she felt with him?
She thought then of the look in his eye, the tone of his voice when he had found her at the well in the outpost. He'd had every right to demand answers, to press her, yet he hadn't. Instead, he had chosen restraint, giving her a chance to speak on her own terms. The respect he'd shown despite his clear curiosity and suspicion was something she hadn't expected, and it had shaken her resolve more than she cared to admit.
The memory twisted in her gut like a knife, a sharp, insistent pain that made her breath catch in her throat.
But what choice did she have now? The Iron Talon Sect would come for the coin, she was sure of it. Bringing Tian Hao into this mess might alleviate some of her guilt about keeping secrets from him, but it would also put his life in grave danger. She knew all too well that the Iron Talon Sect never hesitated to take a life if it suited their needs.
No, if she had to justify herself, she would find a way—twisting the narrative, manipulating the truth until it fit the mold of her desperate need to survive, to protect her family from the looming threat. She felt a pang of guilt at the thought of manipulating Tian Hao and the others, but quickly buried it. It was a necessary evil, she told herself, a price she had to pay for her family's safety.
Even if it meant sacrificing everything she’d gained, she would... do what needed to be done.
Her eyes hardened, the warmth that Tian Hao had sparked within them replaced by a cold, steely resolve. It felt as though she had already become someone else, as though the very act of taking the jade coin had transformed her—pulling her back into the shadows, turning her into a weapon wielded by forces beyond her control.
She slipped the coin back into her robes, the smooth jade a confusing weight against her skin.
The quiet of her room was a sanctuary no longer, but an echo chamber for the lies she had told and the betrayals she was now committing.