During the long, silent hours of his training, Wangchen had realized a fundantal truth.
Lin Ji’an was not a bird that could be caught by force. If he displayed his raw, suffocating jealousy, if he acted like the possessive monster he truly was, Ji’an would panic. He would run away, look at him with fear, just as he had in the bathing chamber.
And Wangchen refused to be feared by her.
If raw aggression made her flee, then he would simply eliminate the aggression.
He would beco the perfect, calm, understanding companion. He would indulge her "sworn brother" fantasy.
He would listen to her, support her, and integrate himself so deeply into the fabric of her daily life that she wouldn’t even realize what was happening.
He had changed his tactics. He was no longer the raging blizzard trying to freeze her in place.
He was the spider, patiently, ticulously spinning a web of silk so soft, so comfortable, and so utterly indispensable that the prey would happily wrap itself in the threads.
Wangchen looked down at his own wrist, where a single, microscopic thread of midnight-blue spirit-silk, identical to the ones in Ji’an’s new bracelet, was tied.
The Frost-Silk Pulse Guard was a defensive artifact, yes.
But the specific, ancient array Wangchen had woven into the jade bead had a secondary, hidden function. It was a subtle, undetectable tracking tether linked directly to his spiritual sea.
He would always know exactly where she was. He would always know if her pulse quickened.
"You are not a bro, Ji’an," Wangchen whispered to the empty, freezing room, a slow, terrifyingly beautiful smile spreading across his lips. "You are mine. And you will realize it, soon enough."
The Ice Demon turned back into his room, perfectly content to play the long ga. The fish was in the net, and the water was delightfully calm.
***
For the next few weeks, the Drunken Peak settled into a rhythm that Lin Ji’an could only describe as an absolute, unprecedented culinary utopia.
With the catastrophic misunderstandings of the bathhouse seemingly smoothed over, and Xie Wangchen adopting the deanor of a perfectly placid, supportive sworn brother, Ji’an felt a profound, deeply naive sense of security.
She had successfully navigated the treacherous, emotionally volatile waters of the early plotlines.
Life was finally reduced to its bare, beautiful essentials: prepping, cooking, and aggressively compressing her internal ridians until she could chop a solid block of spirit-iron into julienne strips with a standard kitchen knife.
Her daily routine ran like a well-oiled comrcial kitchen. At dawn, she would wake up to the sound of her little brother, Lin Xuan, enthusiastically hauling buckets of spring water to scrub the woks.
The kid was thriving.
The Harmonious Five-Grain Qi infused into Ji’an’s cooking was safely tempering his Iron-Marrow Physique, turning the previously malnourished, sheltered noble heir into a sturdy, terrifyingly resilient sous-chef who could take a falling tree branch to the shoulder without blinking.
After feeding Xuan and leaving a massive, hangover-curing vat of spicy Mapo Tofu for her permanently inebriated Master, Ji’an would begin her delivery rounds.
She was playing a dangerous, high-stakes ga of culinary diplomacy, ensuring none of the Protagonists felt neglected.
She would drop off delicate, lotus-paste buns for Gu Zhiwei. who would beam like the sun and try to hug her.
She would leave perfectly seared, high-protein spirit-beef skewers for Lu Jianheng, who would huff, cross his arms, and complain about the seasoning while aggressively eating all of them.
She would completely avoid Xiao Yichen, leaving his portions with a terrified courier.
And then, there was Xie Wangchen.
Visiting the Eternal Cloud Peak had beco the highlight of her day. Wangchen was the picture of serene, brotherly perfection.
He would brew her incredibly rare, high-altitude teas. He would listen attentively as she complained about Jiu Zui’s hoarding habits.
He never crowded her, never froze the courtyard, and he never brought up the bathhouse incident either.
Ji’an was delighted.
’I fixed him!’ she would think smugly, sipping her Frost-Lotus tea while Wangchen calmly wiped a stray crumb from her cheek with a pristine silk handkerchief. ’He just needed a good friend and consistent, high-quality carbohydrate intake. The yandere plot is officially canceled!’
She was, of course, completely and utterly oblivious to the fact that she was currently sitting in the center of a ticulously crafted, invisible web.
She didn’t notice how Wangchen’s dark, bottomless eyes tracked her every movent with a heavy, suffocating hunger, or that the "brotherly" tea sessions were systematically designed to monopolize her free ti, isolating her from the other peaks.
She was a happily boiling frog, entirely unaware that the temperature of the water was rising.
Her blissful ignorance, however, was destined to be shattered not by romantic drama, but by the ultimate, unavoidable horror of all organized societies: middle managent bureaucracy.
.
.
.
It happened on a crisp Tuesday morning.
Ji’an was in the middle of manually pounding a massive slab of spiritual dough, utilizing her newly compressed Dao of the Iron Wok strength to tenderize the gluten strands, when a blinding flash of golden light illuminated the kitchen.
A glowing, ethereal origami crane flew through the open window, circled her head twice, and abruptly burst into a shower of golden sparks that rearranged themselves into hovering, glowing calligraphy.
"The Grand Ascendant Hall requires the imdiate presence of all Peak Masters and their appointed proxies for the bi-annual Strategic Cultivation Assembly. Attendance is mandatory."
Ji’an stared at the glowing letters. She wiped flour from her forehead with the back of her wrist.
"A Strategic Cultivation Assembly?" Ji’an muttered, her modern-corporate-worker PTSD suddenly flaring up. "Is that Xianxia speak for a board eting? Are we doing quarterly performance reviews?!"
"Worse," a groggy voice slurred from the doorway.
Jiu Zui stumbled into the kitchen, wearing a set of formal, deep purple Sovereign robes that were half-untied and wrinkled, making him look like a deposed king who had just rolled out of a ditch. He was holding an identical, fading golden ssage crane.
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