The courtyard was empty, moonlight spilling across the ground and making the gravel path glare white. The wooden automatons were nowhere to be seen. The water bucket lay on its side, the well mouth was bare, and not a drop of water had been drawn.
A wave of panic rose in my chest. I hurried toward the room where Senior An usually received guests, pushed the door open, and called out, “Senior An? Senior An!”
No response.
Only a single silver box sat on the table, lonely and cold under the moonlight, gleaming faintly like an eye fixed on without blinking.
My scalp tingled. I turned to Hua. “What do we do? Senior An… he can’t be in trouble, can he?”
Hua ca over and bent down to inspect the box, his brows knotting together tightly. He shook his head and was about to speak when a sudden pressure slamd into my chest. A wave of dizziness washed over .
The world flipped upside down. It felt as though countless unseen hands were dragging at my ears, and the room blurred in front of .
I struggled to lift my head. A silhouette appeared instead—soone was walking slowly toward us from outside the courtyard. Against the moonlight, his shadow stretched long across the ground. I couldn’t see his face, only those steady, deliberate steps, as though he were stepping out of a dream.
I tried to shout, but no sound left my throat.
“Who… is it?” That was my final thought.
Then everything spun. Darkness swallowed all. It felt like a cold hand pressed down into the depths of water.
When I woke, a ringing filled my skull. My chest was weighed down as if by a thousand catties. The wind howled around , and sowhere close by ca the sound of running water. I pushed myself up with effort—and saw a bridge.
The river beneath it had dried long ago. Cracked mud stretched in jagged lines, abandoned and lifeless. The bridge was weathered and blotched with age; weeds sprouted from the crevices, swaying in the wind.
A chill crept through . I was inside the silver box again.
Just monts ago I had been in Senior An’s courtyard. The box had been sitting on the table. Hua had opened his mouth to say sothing—and then everything went black. How had I ended up sowhere this desolate the mont I opened my eyes?
I raised a hand to my forehead. My palm felt cold. Before I could gather my thoughts, a voice drifted from the bridge above, lazy and teasing.
“Little Gong, you’re awake?”
I snapped my head up. Hua was leaning over the railing, the moonlight falling across his face. His expression looked cheerful at first glance, yet sothing in it made the back of my neck prickle.
“Hua?” I murmured.
“Who else?” He arched a brow. “Looks like we’ve really fallen into the silver box’s world again. We’re back.”
My chest tightened. I scrambled to my feet, brushed the dust off my clothes, and asked urgently, “But how did we get here this ti? We didn’t drink that tea, didn’t light any incense. How did we just—”
I broke off. A feeling of unease was already rising.
Hua shrugged with open palms, smiling. “No idea. But if that red-robed person is really Lian, then this ti we might finally get so answers.”
I stared at him, half convinced, half doubtful. If this was an illusion, it felt far more like soone was guiding us here on purpose.
We followed the path off the bridge, and the outlines of the marketplace gradually erged.
I was just about to speak when sothing caught my eye. I froze.
A figure draped in red was moving through the market. His steps were light, almost buoyant, yet there was a faint confusion in his movents. His expression—familiar, painfully so—carried a strangeness that made my heart tighten.
“Lian,” I breathed.
But the man only tilted his head slightly, as if puzzled, as if he didn’t truly recognize .
A jolt went through . Doubt crept in. Was this really him? Or so echo crafted in his likeness?
Before I could stop myself, I rushed forward, half stumbling, half reaching toward him. Lian was caught off guard. A flush rose swiftly across his cheeks, his posture shrinking inward like a shy bride startled on her wedding night.
A wicked impulse stirred. My fingers brushed against him lightly. His body jolted. I suppressed a grin and reached lower. My hand touched sothing cool and smooth. I pulled it out—it was the purple jade I knew so well.
I stared for a heartbeat. Relief surged through .
It was him. Without a doubt.
“You two…” He blinked, as though trying hard to recall sothing but failing each ti. After a long pause, he managed, “I feel like we’ve t.”
Hua and I exchanged a glance. The unease between us was unmistakable. Whether this truly was him, we had no way to know yet. But refusing the opening would only cut us off further.
I braced myself and introduced myself again, giving a brief account of what had led us here. Hua embellished the tale extravagantly, painting us as his long-lost old friends.
But Lian only gave a soft nod. His face remained calm—neither surprised nor particularly close to us—as if we had no deep connection at all.
The air grew heavy. I finally ventured, “What are you looking for?”
Lian thought for a mont, his gaze stubborn and unyielding. “I keep feeling that two spots on this street look familiar. But no matter how I try, I can’t rember why. If I walk it a few more tis, maybe I could…”
He didn’t finish. He simply turned and started forward.
I stared after his back, an odd taste rising at the bottom of my chest.
We followed him for half the day. Lian kept looping through the sa streets, stopping the longest at two places in particular—a bookshop and a tavern.
I paused at the corner and studied the scene. Sothing felt off.
“Hm… this setup…” I murmured. “Why does it look more and more like the layout outside in Heling City?”
Hua leaned in, his mouth quirking. “You noticed too? The two places Lian keeps circling—one’s a bookshop, the other’s an eatery. But look closely: the arrangent is reversed from the outside.”
“Reversed?” A thought clicked sharply in my mind.
“Outside, Spring-Co Inn is packed wall to wall with tables and chairs, loud and bustling. The bookshop, on the other hand, has scrolls tossed everywhere, hardly anywhere to sit.” Hua lowered his voice. “But in this silver-box world, the bookshop looks more like a teahouse—tables neatly lined up, scrolls spread cleanly on the desks as if ant for browsing. As for the tavern, it’s down to two or three lonely tables, utterly deserted. More like the bookshop outside.”
Understanding hit , cold and sudden.
“No wonder it felt familiar… so that’s it.”
But what made my scalp prickle wasn’t the furniture.
Behind the counter of the bookshop stood a chubby, pale-faced middle-aged man, smiling obsequiously, flanked by several eager shop boys. He looked exactly like the proprietor of Spring-Co Inn outside.
And in the deserted tavern, the only people inside were a sober-faced middle-aged man in a plain blue robe and a lone assistant—both of them unmistakably the owner and clerk of the bookshop from the real Heling City.
The world looked flipped. People and settings had been swapped, everything inverted. The more I compared, the colder my gut beca.
I stiffened, about to speak, but Hua had already narrowed his eyes. His voice dropped. “Gong, have you considered this… The silver box was a treasure we found in the tomb. Logically, it should reflect sothing from the tomb’s past. Yet the mont we step inside, we see Heling City.”
His gaze settled on Lian’s back ahead of us, his voice almost a whisper. “This isn’t a simple misplacent. It’s a kind of… reflection. Inside and outside exchanged, lining up piece by piece. Even the people may have had their temperants swapped.”
A dull roar went off in my chest, like being struck hard beneath the ribs.
Lian kept walking with that sa dogged persistence, pacing between the two locations again and again, as if trying to stitch together whatever mories he’d lost. There was sothing lonely about his silhouette, sothing that pulled faintly at .
My fingers curled without thinking. Only one thought ford clearly:
This world inside the silver box is no re illusion. It feels like a mirror—warped, inverted—and what it reflects is the truth outside, shown in another shape.
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