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Now reading: Chapter 223: Flute from Raising the Villain in Wrong Way, a Historical novel by CoffeePrincess.

The sociopathic prince stared at the dancing boy, completely hypnotized, entirely broken by the raw, bleeding vulnerability she was displaying for the world to see.

’Who broke you?’ Yichen thought, his nails digging into the wood of the table. ’What sorrow are you carrying that I cannot see?’

Ji’an spun, the silver blade slicing through the air with a sudden, rising intensity. The tempo increased.

The grief was transitioning into the desperate, agonizing struggle to survive. To keep fighting when all hope was lost.

And then, a sound joined the blade.

It was a single, piercing, impossibly pure note of music.

A flute.

Ji’an didn’t stop dancing, but her eyes flicked toward the dais.

Standing beside the primary table, having descended from his seat without anyone noticing, was Vanguard Commander Lin Feng.

He held a pure white jade flute to his lips. His dark eyes were locked entirely on Ji’an.

Lin Feng didn’t ask for permission to join.

He simply wove his lody into the very fabric of her movents.

The music was devastating. It matched her emotional frequency with a terrifying, absolute precision.

Where her sword expressed the physical agony of loss, his flute provided the weeping soul.

He played the sorrow of the Northern Barrens, the howling winds that buried his n, and the crushing weight of surviving when others did not.

The synergy between the two siblings was a phenonon of cosmic proportions.

They moved in perfect, heart-wrenching synchronization. Ji’an’s blade swept low, mimicking the sweeping of snow; Feng’s flute dropped into a low, mournful hum.

Ji’an leaped, a defiant, desperate strike toward the heavens; Feng’s lody soared into a piercing, triumphant cry of survival.

It was no longer a performance. It was a requiem. It was two souls, scarred by different worlds and different wars, bleeding out onto the floor of the Imperial Palace.

Ji’an felt sothing warm tracking down her cheeks, washing away the soot of the dungeon, washing away the arrogant facade.

For the first ti, she wasn’t hiding.

She was pouring every ounce of her hosickness, her terror, and her sheer, stubborn will to live into the silver blade.

The dance reached its climax.

Ji’an executed a flawless, blindingly fast series of strikes, the blade a blur of silver light, pushing back the shadows, fighting against the inevitable end.

With a final, explosive surge of energy, she dropped to one knee.

She brought the ceremonial sword down, halting the blade exactly one milliter above the polished mahogany floor.

She bowed her head, her dark hair falling forward to hide her tear-stained face.

Lin Feng played one final, lingering, agonizingly beautiful note that slowly faded into the absolute silence of the grand hall.

The music stopped, and the dance was over.

For nearly ten seconds, no one moved. No one breathed.

The Imperial Palace was entirely paralyzed by the emotional payload of the performance.

And then, an old, scarred General sitting near the back of the hall stood up.

He slamd his fist against his chestplate, tears streaming openly down his weathered face.

That was the catalyst.

The hall erupted.

It wasn’t polite, aristocratic applause. It was a roaring, thunderous, earth-shaking ovation.

Nobles were weeping. Soldiers were shouting their praises. The Emperor himself was on his feet, clapping his hands together, his face flushed with profound emotion.

"Magnificent! Peerless!" the Emperor’s voice bood over the roar of the crowd. "A masterpiece of the soul! The Lin brothers have moved the very heavens tonight!"

Ji’an stayed on one knee, her chest heaving, desperately trying to rein her emotions back under control.

She hastily wiped her eyes on her white sleeve, taking a deep, stabilizing breath before standing up to face the dais.

She turned, intending to offer a formal bow to the Emperor.

But as she stood, she found herself face-to-face with Lin Feng.

The Vanguard Commander had lowered the jade flute. He stood three feet away from her.

The applause of thousands roared around them, but in that small pocket of space, it was just the two of them.

Lin Feng looked down at her.

The stoic, emotionless mask of the commander was gone. His silver-flecked eyes were wide, burning with a complex, intense, and terrifyingly knowing fire.

He had felt the alien grief in her dance.

He slowly reached out, but didn’t touch her face this ti.

He placed his large, warm hand firmly on her shoulder, a physical anchor in the storm of applause.

Lin Feng leaned down, his lips re inches from her ear.

"That was not the sorrow of a boy who grew up in an estate," Lin Feng whispered, his deep, resonant voice cutting through the noise, striking directly at the core of her soul.

He pulled back slightly, looking deep into her panicked, wide eyes. The intense, obsessive shadow she had seen at the gates returned, darker and heavier than before.

"Whoever you are mourning, little bird," Lin Feng murmured, a slow, terrifying smile touching his lips. "Let them go. Because you belong to the Lin’s now. And this brother will never let you dance alone again."

Ji’an’s blood turned to ice.

The Vanguard Commander didn’t just suspect she was different; he was so sure.

And instead of rejecting the alien soul inhabiting his sister’s body... he had just laid a claim to it.

The Royal Banquet raged on around them, a celebration of victory. But for Lin Ji’an, the true war for her freedom had only just begun.

***

The thunderous, earth-shaking applause echoing through the Grand Banquet Hall of the Imperial Palace should have felt like the ultimate victory.

It was the kind of ovation that bards wrote epic ballads about, a standing ovation from the Emperor himself, reducing hardened generals to tears and securing the Lin family’s absolute, unassailable glory in the annals of the Azure Empire.

But for Lin Ji’an, the deafening cheers sounded like the mocking laughter of the cosmos.

As the final, haunting note of Lin Feng’s jade flute faded into the rafters, the adrenaline that had fueled Ji’an’s performance violently crashed.

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