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Now reading: Chapter 181 - 180: The Long Patriarch’s Regret from Book 1 of Rebirth of the Technomage Saga: Earth's Awakening, a Fantasy novel by TracyDunwoodie.

Tiline: TC1853.02.17 (Midday)

Location: Wu Family Estate, Western Pavilion, Second Ring

Kaelith Long entered the pavilion with the careful grace of soone whose body still carried muscle mory from centuries of combat. He wore formal robes in Long family colors: forest green with golden dragon-scale embroidery, the family crest prominent but subdued. His cultivation radiated controlled power in peak Divine Ascension Realm.

But beneath that power lay exhaustion. The kind that ca from watching one’s legacy crumble under the weight of lies.

"Patriarch Long," Raven acknowledged with a bow of appropriate respect—neither excessive deference nor deliberate insult. "I wasn’t expecting additional family visits today."

Kaelith returned the bow, deeper than protocol strictly required. When he straightened, his jade-green eyes held carefully controlled emotion. "Forgive the intrusion. Lord Hadrian ntioned the Zhao family was eting with you, and I..." he paused, searching for words. "I couldn’t let another day pass without speaking with you directly."

When he settled onto cushions, his movents showed both military discipline and sothing approaching hesitation.

"I ca to apologize," he said simply. "For my family’s cris against you."

Raven studied him carefully. Looking for manipulation. Political calculation. The kind of practiced sincerity that celestial families deployed when necessary.

But all she saw was genuine grief.

"You didn’t know I existed," she said finally, settling onto cushions with deliberate calm. "Until a few weeks ago, you thought Serenya was your granddaughter."

Kaelith’s weathered face twisted. "That doesn’t absolve my family of responsibility." His voice carried the weight of a man cataloging failures. "My grandsons—Kaivon and Kaelen—used Long family authority to tornt you when they encountered you. Used their power as heirs to inflict cruelty."

His hands clenched. "Serenya—the girl I raised, gave every advantage to—used Long family resources to sche against you. Long wealth. Long connections. Long political weight. All turned toward destroying soone who should have been protected as family."

"They didn’t know who I was," Raven said quietly.

"That makes it worse!" Kaelith’s voice cracked with controlled fury. "They didn’t need to know you were family to show basic human decency. They chose cruelty over compassion. Used strength to crush the weak instead of protecting them. Everything the Long clan claims to stand for—honor, protection, defending those who cannot defend themselves—they perverted it all."

He took a breath, composing himself. "And then there’s my son. Darian. When the truth erged—when evidence proved what had been done to you—he chose protecting the Long family reputation over giving you justice. Chose Caelia over his own daughter. Chose comfort over what was right."

Silence fell. Raven watched jade-green eyes that held thirteen years of accumulated grief.

"But the worst of it," Kaelith continued, voice dropping to sothing raw, "is what that woman did to my wife."

His weathered hands trembled. "Caelia nursed Lian for two years while she was bedridden. Played the dutiful daughter-in-law. And the whole ti..." His voice broke. "She was torturing her. Making her believe she’d failed the prophecy. That she’d dood Ascara by choosing love over duty."

Raven went very still. "What?"

"I only learned recently," Kaelith said, voice thick with grief. "Through investigation. How Caelia showed Lian surveillance footage of you suffering. Whispered what she’d done to the crescent child. Made my wife watch you being abused while believing the prophecy was broken."

His jade-green eyes—so like Darian’s—held anguish that had festered for thirteen years. "Lian died believing she’d destroyed Ascara’s only hope by being selfish enough to marry for love. When the truth was—the prophecy ca true. The crescent child was born. And Caelia stole you, tortured you, and showed my dying wife your suffering as a final cruelty."

"She killed her," Raven said quietly. Understanding the psychological torture that could stop a heart.

"With precision," Kaelith whispered. "Not poison or blade, but cruelty so calculated it murdered soone I loved more than anything in this world. And I never suspected. Never protected her. Let that monster into our ho and gave her access to Lian while she was most vulnerable."

His eyes t hers. "I failed you. The Long family failed you. And no amount of being deceived changes that fundantal truth."

Silence stretched between them, filled with seventeen years of missed connections and complicated family history.

"You look like her," Kaelith said finally, and his voice cracked slightly. "Like Lian. My wife. Your grandmother."

His gaze traced Raven’s features with the kind of desperate observation that ca from grief. "You have her eyes. The way you hold yourself—that sa refusal to bend that drove to distraction and made love her more than I thought possible. Even the way you speak—direct, honest, demanding respect rather than requesting it."

A single tear traced down his weathered cheek. "Lian died believing she’d failed. Believing the crescent child would never co because she’d chosen love over political advantage. If she could see you now—see what her bloodline produced despite everything—"

He didn’t finish. Couldn’t.

Raven felt sothing shift in her chest. This wasn’t political maneuvering. This was a man confronting the ghost of his dead wife in his granddaughter’s features.

"Tell about her," Raven said quietly. "My grandmother. The things that mattered to her beyond prophecy and destiny."

Kaelith’s expression softened despite lingering grief. "Lian was... complicated. Brilliant scholar who could quote ancient texts verbatim but had absolutely no patience for people who used knowledge as a weapon rather than a tool. Believed that wisdom without compassion was rely cleverness, and compassion without wisdom was rely sentint."

A slight smile touched his weathered features. "She had this way of cutting through political nonsense with a single question that exposed all the manipulation underneath. Made her enemies within celestial politics, but also made her invaluable to those who actually wanted truth rather than comfortable lies."

He looked at Raven directly. "You have that sa quality. I saw it in the footage from your interrogation—the way you systematically dismantled Selene’s defenses with questions that forced her to confront reality. The way you explained justice versus vengeance to Commissioner Wu with the clarity of soone who’d thought deeply about the distinction."

"She would have been proud," Kaelith continued, voice thick with emotion. "Not because you’re fulfilling so prophecy. But because you’re exactly who you are—refusing to be controlled, demanding respect rather than asking permission, prioritizing truth over political convenience."

Raven studied her grandfather’s face. The grief was real. The regret genuine. And beneath it all, sothing approaching hope that maybe—maybe—family connection could be rebuilt despite everything.

"I don’t hate the Long family," she said finally. "I carry your bloodline. Your son is my father, even if he didn’t raise . Your wife’s legacy runs through my veins alongside Lin healing gifts and Zhao scholar traditions."

She t his jade-green gaze steadily. "But I also won’t pretend the past seventeen years didn’t happen. Won’t act like being blood family erases abuse that occurred under the Long family’s authority. Reconciliation requires acknowledging reality—both the good and the terrible."

"Fair," Kaelith said quietly. "More than fair given what you endured."

He leaned forward slightly. "I ca here today with two purposes. First, to apologize personally for what my family allowed to happen. That apology stands regardless of whether you accept it."

"And second?" Raven prompted.

"To offer what support the Long family can provide for your planetary defense sect," Kaelith said. "We have military resources. Strategic expertise. Connections within the Federation command structure from my years serving as a liaison officer. None of it erases past failure, but maybe it can contribute to preventing future catastrophe."

His weathered face held careful sincerity. "I’m not asking for control. Not requesting special consideration because of bloodline. Just... offering resources that might save lives when cosmic threats arrive. If you’re willing to accept them."

Raven considered. The Long family had military strength that the other families lacked. Strategic thinking that ca from generations of commanding armies. Resources that would strengthen planetary defense significantly.

"Terms," she said directly.

Kaelith’s slight smile suggested approval at the straightforward negotiation. "Long family provides military advisors, combat cultivators, and strategic planning support. We share tactical knowledge and maintain coordination with Federation military leadership."

He paused. "In exchange, your sect remains independent. We don’t get voting authority or decision-making power. Just an opportunity to contribute capabilities and be part of sothing that transcends family politics."

"And Darian?" Raven asked carefully. "Where does your son stand in all this?"

Kaelith’s expression shifted to sothing approaching pain. "Darian is... struggling. Learning that the daughter he raised wasn’t his biological child—that his real daughter suffered while he doted on an imposter—it’s destroying him."

He t Raven’s gaze. "He wants to et you. To apologize. To sohow make ands for seventeen years of not knowing you existed. But he’s terrified you’ll reject him—and honestly, I wouldn’t bla you if you did."

"I’ll et him," Raven said quietly. "When I’m ready. When he’s ready. Not because blood family obligates forgiveness, but because healing requires confronting truth rather than avoiding it."

She leaned back slightly. "But I won’t pretend we have father-daughter relationship we never built. Won’t act like genetic connection creates emotional bonds that only develop through years of mutual care and presence."

"Understood," Kaelith said, and relief was evident despite controlled expression. "That’s more grace than we deserve."

He stood slowly, military bearing evident despite recent exhaustion. "I should go. Leave you to process what’s already been an emotionally intense morning."

But he paused before departing, jade-green eyes eting Raven’s violet gaze with an expression of fierce hope. "Lian believed the crescent child was lost. That she’d failed her destiny and dood Ascara through her choices."

His voice dropped to sothing barely above a whisper. "If she could see you now—see what you’re building, how you refuse to be controlled, the way you’re reshaping prophecy expectations entirely—she would understand that maybe her choices weren’t failure. Maybe they were exactly what was needed to produce soone who’d save the world precisely because they refuse to be defined by it."

Raven felt unexpected emotion well up. Not quite grief. Not quite hope. Sothing in between—acknowledgnt of a connection that transcended abuse and deception.

"She sounds like soone I would have liked to know," Raven said softly.

"She would have loved you," Kaelith replied simply. "Would have been impossible and demanding and absolutely fierce in defending your right to choose your own path. Even—especially—if that path defied prophecy expectations."

He bowed deeply, an old warrior offering respect to soone he recognized as carrying his wife’s legacy. "Thank you. For giving the Long family a chance to do better. For setting boundaries, we should have protected ourselves. For being exactly who prophecy needed, even if it wasn’t what prophecy expected."

Then he departed, forest green robes flowing as he left the pavilion with military precision despite lingering soul exhaustion.

Raven sat alone in the sudden quiet, processing the weight of family reconciliation. Five families acknowledged now—Zhao, Long, Feng, Sun and Wu alliance. Each with their own grief, regret, and desperate hope that maybe bloodline connection could be rebuilt on terms that respected autonomy rather than demanded submission.

The Lin family remained. Her mother’s bloodline. Caelia’s heritage.

That would be... complicated.

But not today. Today, she’d navigated enough family politics and emotional reunions. Today, she’d set boundaries that would shape relationships going forward.

Today was enough.

She stood and made her way out of the pavilion. Ti to return to the guild headquarters. To training. To preparing for what was actually coming rather than drowning in family dynamics she couldn’t have predicted.

The sect needed her attention. The cosmic threats didn’t care about bloodline reconciliation or emotional closure.

And for once, that felt like relief rather than a burden.

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