Nothing happened on the day before Míng Xīn awakened.
That was the thing he would rember most clearly afterward, in the years when people asked him to describe it and expected an answer full of ons and dramatic signs. Nothing happened. It was an ordinary evening in the east wing of his father's residence, with the nightti hollow light moving slowly through its familiar blue, and the clan tree standing in the courtyard below, and his father sitting in the chair beside the window reading administrative docunts he kept aning to finish and never quite did.
Míng Xīn was reading too. Actually reading this ti, not holding a book while thinking about sothing else. A text on the theoretical properties of dual bloodline cultivation that one of his tutors had given him more as a kindness than an expectation, sothing to read rather than sothing to practice.
It was interesting in the way that things are interesting when they describe your own situation from the outside, in the neutral language of theory, as though you are a case study rather than a person.
His father fell asleep sowhere around the second hour.
Not intentionally. His head tilted gradually, the way it always did when he stayed too long in the chair, and the docunt in his hands relaxed and then settled into his lap, and his breathing changed into the slower rhythm of sleep, and that was that.
Míng Xīn looked at him for a while.
His father's face in sleep was different from his father's face awake. The careful composure was still there but softer, like a held breath finally let go. The lines that the years of Courts politics had put around his eyes looked different in sleep. Not gone. Just resting.
Míng Xīn thought about the fear he had seen there two days ago. The real fear, briefly visible before the careful face reassembled itself. He thought about his father's arm around his shoulders and the steadiness of it.
He thought about seventeen countries and thirty nine missions and a burning building in Prague and two broken fingers and a bullet in a shoulder that went unntioned until the job was done.
He did not know why he thought about these things. They were not his mories. He had no mory of Prague or missions or any of it. They arrived in his mind the way certain feelings arrived, without invitation, from sowhere he could not identify, and felt true in a way he had no frawork for.
He set them aside. He was good at setting things aside.
He looked back at his father sleeping in the chair and felt sothing so complete and heavy in his chest that he did not have words for it. He had looked through every text in the east wing library for a word that described exactly this feeling and had not found one that was sufficient. The closest he had co was a line in an old Courts poem his grandfather had quoted once: the weight of what we would not lose.
That was close. Not quite right. But close.
He pressed his hand flat against his chest over the place with no na.
Sothing there pressed back. Stronger than it had ever pressed before. Warm and vast and awake in a way it had not quite been awake before, turned fully toward him now, toward the feeling in his chest and the sleeping man in the chair and the ancient tree in the courtyard below and the deep pulse moving through roots and rock and the long patient dark.
Míng Xīn sat very still.
He felt it the way you feel a held breath before it releases. Everything gathered. Everything ready. Sothing that had been building since before he was born, since before the hidden civilization existed, since before the hollow rock learned to think, reaching the last mont before the first mont.
He sat still and let it gather.
Outside the clan tree stood in its seven hundred year patience and the hollow rock held its ancient thoughts and the nightti blue of the compound moved slowly toward the particular quality of darkness that cos just before dawn.
His father slept in the chair beside him, breathing slow and steady.
Míng Xīn kept his hand pressed against his chest and felt everything gathering and did not move and did not speak and did not try to make anything happen.
He simply waited.
As he had always waited.
As he had always known, in the quiet place beneath all his patient observation, that he would have to wait.
The darkness outside reached its deepest point.
And sothing inside Tiān Míng Xīn, ancient and vast and carrying the weight of everything it had been holding for thirty years across a life that was not his and a life that was, took one long breath in.
And held it.
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