Ti/Date: Early Morning, TC1853.01.09
Location: Safe House → DNA Revelation
The safe house exceeded Raven’s every need. Tucked between a closed smithy and a textile warehouse, the small building looked utterly unremarkable from the outside—a weathered stone facade blending seamlessly with the craftsman quarter’s practical architecture. But inside, thick stone walls would contain both sound and spiritual energy fluctuations, while the minor ley line running beneath the foundation would help stabilize the massive changes ahead. A faint tallic tang lingered in the air, remnant of the previous talworker tenant, mixing with the earthy scent of stone and the subtle hum of the ley line like distant machinery.
"Previous tenant was a talworker," Grandpa Coop explained, showing her through the sparsely furnished rooms. "Walls are double-thick for containing heat and sound. Neighbors are used to strange noises from this place."
As they moved through the main room, Raven could feel it—a gentle hum beneath her feet, like the earth’s heartbeat made tangible. The ley line energy rose through the stone foundation, warm and welcoming, carrying notes of ancient power that would cradle rather than fight the transformation ahead.
"It’s perfect," Raven said, aning it completely. The energy flowing through the foundation felt warm and stable, like a gentle current that would support rather than interfere with her work.
"Food’s stocked for two weeks in the pantry. Water from the neighborhood well, plus a backup cistern in the basent." He handed her keys, his expression serious. "And there’s a safe room behind the kitchen, just like mine. The ley line energy down there is even stronger—whatever you’re planning to do, it’ll hold you steady through anything." His pale gray eyes t hers directly. "I don’t know what kind of healing you’re planning, child, but so transformations can’t be undone."
After he left, Raven stood alone in the main room, solitude settling around her like a familiar cloak. For the first ti in days, she was truly alone—no watchers, no enemies, no well-aning allies who might be endangered by what ca next. The faint tallic tang sharpened her focus, a reminder of forged strength in quiet spaces.
The ley line energy pulsed gently beneath her feet, and she knelt to place her palm flat against the stone floor. The power that flowed up to et her touch was ancient and patient, carrying whispers of all the transformations it had witnessed over the centuries. It would hold her steady through whatever ca next.
She retrieved the hidden communicator from her soul space and navigated to the Federation dical Research Institute’s database with practiced precision. Her hands trembled slightly as she entered her identification code.
The results were waiting.
***
COMPREHENSIVE BIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS REPORT - EXPEDITED PROCESSING
Sample ID: FMR-TC1853-0104-URGENT
Client Request: Parental Relationship Analysis & Complete Toxicological Screening
Priority Level: MAXIMUM - Research Institution Special Handling
The data was thorough, detailed, and utterly devastating to everything the Brenners had claid.
GENETIC ANALYSIS SECTION:
Primary Finding: Subject demonstrates extrely rare tri-lineage genetic markers consistent with Long, Lin, and Zhao bloodline heritage. Genetic probability calculations indicate less than 1 in 50 million natural occurrence rate. Recomnd imdiate consultation with Bloodline Genetics Specialist.
Raven’s breath caught. Tri-bloodline heritage was the stuff of legends, whispered about in cultivation texts but never proven to exist in living mory. The blood of three celestial families flowing in her veins—no wonder the Brenners had been so desperate to hide her true nature. One in fifty million. The number hit like a thunderclap, echoing through her mind. Such rarity wasn’t just genetic luck; ancient prophecies in the Living Bible spoke of tri-bloodline heirs as world-shapers, beings destined to upend the balance of power. But destiny ca with danger—a target painted in celestial gold, drawing every ambitious eye in the empire. In her ninety-nine lifetis, she’d seen rare gifts beco curses, drawing predators like moths to fla. This... this could remake her, or destroy her utterly.
This changes everything, she realized, her mind reeling. Not just her identity, but her very place in the world. Tri-bloodline heirs were mythical figures, prophesied to reshape the balance of power itself. In all her ninety-nine lifetis, she had never encountered another being with such mixed heritage. The implications were staggering—power beyond imagination, but also danger beyond asure. History was littered with the corpses of those who had threatened the established order.
One in fifty million, she thought, the number echoing in her mind like a bell tolling destiny.
Secondary Finding: Comparison analysis reveals submitted maternal sample (S. Lin) demonstrates 47.3% genetic similarity to subject, consistent with aunt-niece relationship rather than mother-daughter. Falsified direct maternity claim confird with 99.97% certainty.
The words blurred before her eyes. Selene wasn’t her mother. Selene was her aunt.
Seventeen years of abuse suddenly took on a different, more sinister dinsion. Not just a cruel stepmother figure, but a blood relative who had stolen her from her true family and tornted her for existing. The betrayal cut deeper than any physical wound she had endured.
All those years of calling this woman "Mother," she realized with growing horror. Of desperately seeking even the smallest scrap of maternal affection, of wondering what I had done wrong to deserve such coldness... She knew the truth the entire ti.
The betrayal felt like ice spreading through her chest. Selene had watched her suffer with the detached interest of soone observing an insect under glass.
I never had a mother in the Brenner household. I had a captor.
TOXICOLOGICAL ANALYSIS SECTION:
Critical Discovery: Blood sample contains trace residues of Nethys Root extract, a highly specialized botanical compound used historically to suppress ocular pigntation in celestial bloodlines. Concentration patterns suggest systematic administration over extended period (estimated 15-17 years).
Additional Toxins Detected: Low-level concentrations of Shadewood bark alkaloids, consistent with deliberate nutritional inhibition protocols. Combined with Nethys Root, this represents a comprehensive suppression regin targeting both physical appearance and developnt.
dical Assessnt: Subject’s natural eye color would likely be violet or deep amber based on genetic markers. Cessation of toxin exposure should result in gradual color restoration over 6-8 months.
***
Raven’s hands trembled as she read through the report once, twice, three tis. Each reading only confird the impossible truth staring back at her.
Long, Lin, and Zhao bloodlines. She wasn’t just so stolen child—she carried the blood of three of the most powerful families in the Empire. The tri-bloodline combination was so rare as to be mythical, yet here was scientific proof flowing in her veins.
But now, piece by piece, the puzzle began to assemble itself in her mind.
Raven was even more confused about the Lin bloodline. As far as she knew, while Selene’s surna was Lin, she had never ntioned she was blood related to the celestial Lin family. She had always maintained that her family ancestor had done a great favor for the Lins and they were allowed to carry the surna to give them protection.
But what confused Raven was that if Selene was really blood related to the Lins, she would have shown it off, especially in front of Garrick and Isolde—especially Isolde, as she had always looked down on Selene. If Isolde knew that Selene was a Lin from the celestial Lins, Isolde would have treated her like an ancestor. So why would Selene hide that connection?
Only if it was too dangerous to Selene would she hide that fact away.
Then Raven rembered a past scandal involving the Longs and Lins, sothing about one of the mbers of a branch family of the Lins trying to harm the youngest son of the supre commander. The mory was vague—court gossip she had overheard during her servitude—but it painted a picture of exile and disgrace.
Soone wanted by both families would need to hide in plain sight.
That mory triggered another, more painful one—Serenya Long, whose friendship with Amara had never made sense in her previous life. More than that, the inexplicable hatred Serenya had harbored for Mara in that tiline. How Serenya and her brothers had systematically tornted her, making her life a living hell after Amara’s disgrace.
They had hounded Mara relentlessly, ensuring she couldn’t find work anywhere in the capital. They had paid hooligans to harass her, caused "accidents" that nearly killed her, destroyed any opportunity for peace or stability. They had watched with satisfaction as a pregnant woman struggled to survive on the streets, as if her very existence was an insult to their honor.
The mory crystallized with brutal clarity—Serenya’s face twisted in satisfaction as she watched pregnant Mara struggle in the streets, as if her very existence was a personal insult. Now it made terrible sense. If Serenya knew she was the imposter, her hatred stemd from fear of losing her stolen position—fear mixed with envy of the true heir’s birthright, and a superiority complex that scread she deserved it more, despite being the "inferior" by blood. The cruelty hadn’t been random—it had been personal. Fear. Envy. Superiority. But in this life, with the truth erging, that hatred might turn lethal.
If Serenya was Edmund and Eveline’s biological daughter, and she knew it, then it would explain everything. The cruelty hadn’t been random—it had been personal. The rage of soone who knew her birthright had been stolen and given to an "inferior" replacent.
But then Raven’s analytical mind caught on another detail. Serenya’s appearance.
If Serenya was Edmund and Eveline’s biological daughter, and she knew it, then it would explain everything. The cruelty hadn’t been random—it had been personal. The rage of soone who knew her birthright had been stolen and given to an "inferior" replacent.
But then Raven’s analytical mind caught on another detail. Serenya’s appearance.
Wait. She paused, her thoughts crystallizing around a troubling inconsistency. There’s sothing seriously wrong here.
Serenya looked like a Lin—she had the distinctive features, the bone structure, even hints of the characteristic eye color. She had no resemblance to Edmund or Eveline whatsoever. Yet if the DNA results were accurate, and Raven was truly the daughter of Darian and Caelia Lin...
Which ans Selene is Caelia’s sister.
The revelation hit her like a physical blow.
Caelia—Caelia had a beautiful twin sister, Selene Linha.
The pieces fell into place with sickening clarity. Dumbfounded, Raven wondered how she had never connected it before. But who would have thought Selene Linha, the disgraced woman wanted by both the Lins and Longs for her cris, would hide in plain sight as the wife of a minor noble?
It made perfect sense why Selene rarely socialized. She had basically spent the last eight years hiding in Emberhall, terrified of recognition. The only ti Raven rembered Selene going out was when she attended that charity auction to buy the Lin tea set used by the matriarch of the Lin family—the one and only ti Selene and Edmund had fought, because of the amount Selene had spent.
She couldn’t resist the connection to her lost heritage, Raven realized. Even in exile, she needed that piece of her true identity.
So if Selene was Caelia’s disgraced twin, then Serenya could only be the missing child of Edmund and Eveline. But since she looked like a Lin despite supposedly being a Long, then soone in the Long family had to be complicit in the deception. Wait. Serenya’s Lin features couldn’t be natural if Edmund and Eveline were her biological parents. Which ant soone had actively altered her appearance—potions, perhaps, or more permanent thods. Soone who wanted to ensure the Long family heir looked authentically celestial.
But that made no sense. The Longs were well known for their honor and integrity. They had been warriors for generations, fighting against the enemies of the empire. Even with the shadow beasts and strange creatures that had started appearing, they were always the first to rush to the battleground. They were heroes in every sense of the word.
Raven couldn’t see the older generation doing sothing so dishonorable as facilitating a bloodline deception. The Long family had many outstanding sons—a daughter would be no threat to any inheritance. If anything, a daughter would be an asset, soone who could be used to create valuable political alliances.
So if it wasn’t the Longs, then it must be the Lins.
And the only Lin in the Long family was Caelia Lin, Darian’s wife. A famous healer and renowned pharmacology expert whose reputation extended even to the Federation, where she was regularly invited for technology exchanges.
Caelia is the only logical suspect. But why? What the hell are Selene and Caelia up to?
The implications made her stomach turn. Her own mother—if Caelia truly was her mother—might be complicit in her disappearance. The woman who should have searched the empire for her stolen daughter might instead have been part of the conspiracy that hid her away. But why would Caelia... her own sister? The thought trailed off, unfinished, as a wave of nausea hit. In her second life, she’d known maternal betrayal, a queen sacrificing her daughter for political gain. The mory flashed—cold palace halls, a mother’s indifferent gaze as guards dragged her away. Now it echoed here, blending past pain with present revelation. But this ti, she wouldn’t shatter. This ti, resolve hardened the hurt into sothing sharper, more useful.
***
A cold, familiar emptiness settled in her chest. In ninety-nine lifetis, she had never known what it felt like to be truly wanted by a family. To belong sowhere without question or condition. She had glimpsed it briefly with so of her rit world families, but it had always been temporary, always shadowed by the knowledge that she was playing a role rather than living a truth.
Maybe I’m not ant to have a family, she thought with bitter clarity. Maybe that’s the price of carrying the mories of so many lives—to never truly belong to any single one.
But even as the thought ford, she felt a spark of defiance. Blood ant nothing if it ca without love, without loyalty, without trust. Grandma Wang and Grandpa Coop had shown her more genuine care in a few months than her supposed family had in seventeen years.
True family isn’t about blood, she realized. It’s about choice. About who stands with you when the world turns dark.
And if her biological family had participated in her suffering, if even her mother had chosen conspiracy over maternal love, then they had made their choice long ago.
The Long family may have lost a daughter, Raven thought with grim determination, but I have no intention of returning to them.
Not when Serenya and her brothers had tortured her in her previous life. Not when the current generation had shown such casual cruelty. The Long family’s honor might be legendary, but their descendants clearly carried different values.
I choose my own path. I choose my own family.
She had Grandpa Coop and Grandma Wang, who had proven their loyalty without any blood connection at all. She would make herself strong enough to protect them, strong enough to forge her own destiny without depending on the families that had failed her.
The Eastern Empire itself is crumbling if people like Serenya and her brothers represent its future heroes. But I don’t need their approval to beco what I’m ant to be.
Raven decided she would investigate this further eventually, but only after she had undergone the integration of the first Dragon Blood Essence Bead. Right now, she desperately needed to increase her strength. There were too many secrets swirling around her, too many enemies with resources she couldn’t match through cunning alone.
In my past life, I was blind to so many things. This ti, I’ll be strong enough to see clearly, powerful enough to act decisively.
***
She folded the dical report carefully and placed it in her soul space alongside the communicator. The Dragon Blood Essence Bead pulsed once in response to her decision, warm and ready—a small sun waiting to reshape her very bones.
Tomorrow, she would begin the process of awakening her true bloodline—not to reclaim so fantasy of loving family, but to gain the power necessary to protect what she had chosen to value.
I don’t need the Long family’s acceptance, she told herself firmly. I don’t need Caelia’s maternal love or Darian’s paternal pride. What I need is strength.
The Long family had lost their daughter eighteen years ago. But that daughter was dead and buried with Mara Brenner’s false identity.
Raven would rise from those ashes as sothing entirely new—soone who belonged to no one but herself.
First, however, she had to survive becoming who she was always ant to be.
Raven settled into the safe house’s simple bed, her mind already turning toward the transformation ahead. The minor ley line humd beneath the foundation like a lullaby, promising stability through the changes to co.
Outside, the city continued its restless turning, unaware that in a small house near Ring 6’s edge, the future was quietly preparing to reshape itself around the will of a girl who had died too many tis to fear transformation, and who had finally learned that family was sothing you chose, not sothing you were born into.
The awakening would begin at dawn.
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