Transmigrated as the Pregnant Villainess: Mr Lu. This Heir is Yours. Chapter 33; Su Wan
Silence settled once more, yet it had changed. It was no longer empty or still; it carried the quiet alignnt of boundaries not yet fully drawn but already being tested.
Lu Shaohan’s gaze lingered on Su Wan a mont longer, as though weighing whether anything further needed to be said. Then he turned and left without another word. The door closed behind him with a quiet, final sound.
The room returned to stillness, but it was no longer the sa. This quiet held awareness.
The Lu Residence did not return to order after the incident. It fractured.
In the guest wing the broken glass remained scattered across the floor, shards still catching fragnts of light where they lay. The air refused to settle, still thick with the tension of what had happened. Voices moved through the halls—low at first, then threading together until they ford a continuous, restless murmur.
The main hall filled quickly, not in any formal gathering but out of necessity. People ca because they needed to speak, and once they began they did not stop.
"She left the house like that—"
"With two n—"
"Right in front of everyone—"
The words overlapped, repeated, reshaped with each retelling. Accuracy gave way to weight; what had been seen beca sothing else entirely as it passed from voice to voice.
Lu iqi stood near the center, her presence sharp and impossible to ignore. When she spoke her voice cut cleanly through the rest.
"I said it before," she declared, certainty rising in her tone. "I said that child might not be Lu Shaohan’s, and now look—look at what we saw."
No one interrupted her. The suggestion had already taken root and was growing.
Second Madam did not raise her voice. She did not need to.
"Enough." The single word shifted the room, not into silence but into sothing more controlled. Conversations lowered; attention redirected.
Her gaze moved across the gathered faces, steady and asured. "This is not sothing to be shouted about without thought."
Yet she offered no denial, no correction. She only slowed the current and gave it structure, making the narrative more dangerous because now it was no longer chaotic. It was forming.
"She left the residence injured," one of the aunts said, more cautiously. "We don’t know what actually happened."
Lu iqi let out a short, sharp laugh. "Of course we do," she replied. "We saw it." Her eyes narrowed as she looked around the room. "Or are we pretending now?"
No one answered. To pretend required certainty, and certainty was precisely what none of them possessed.
At the head of the room Old Master Lu remained seated. He had not spoken since his return. His expression was not explosive, not visibly angered, but sothing in it had hardened—a stillness that made the others uneasy because it ant he was not reacting. He was thinking. And when he thought, decisions followed.
-----
The room where she stayed was smaller, less refined, lacking the careful control of the Lu Residence. But it was hidden well enough for now.
She sat on the edge of the bed, posture careful, one hand resting over her stomach as though guarding sothing that could not yet be seen. The quiet around her felt different—less controlled, more fragile—yet it had kept her unnoticed.
Until now.
The phone in her hand had gone still, the call long ended, but the words lingered. Fragnts of information had reached her faster than they should have: a woman injured, a scene that had spiraled, a na spoken more than once.
Su Wan.
Her fingers tightened slightly around the device. So it had begun earlier than expected, earlier than planned. Which ant the situation was already shifting.
Her gaze lowered slowly to her stomach—hidden, unseen, but no longer without value.
Because now there was space where before there had been none. Instability where once there had been control. Opportunity where silence had been required.
If she remained where she was, if she continued to stay hidden, she would disappear before anyone thought to look for her.
Her hand pressed more firmly against the fabric.
No. That would not be her place.
She stood slowly, carefully, aware of the weight of the decision she had already made. There was no hesitation left in it.
Tomorrow she would appear. Not quietly, not in the shadows, but where she could be seen.
In a house like that, being unseen was the sa as not existing.
And she had waited long enough.
---
By the ti the clock edged toward four in the morning, the hospital had settled into a heavier kind of quiet. It was not the gentle slowing of evening but sothing worn thin by the long hours, stretched across the corridors like a breath held too long. Lights remained on, though dimd, and footsteps passed infrequently, voices lowered more out of habit than necessity. Even the air felt subdued, as though the building itself had grown weary.
Inside the room, Su Wan was already awake. She had not slept.
The bandage around her arm had been reinforced after the stitching, wrapped more tightly now, firm enough to restrict movent. Beneath the layers of gauze the pain had not faded; it had only changed shape. The initial sharpness had dulled into sothing deeper and more persistent, a constant presence that refused to be ignored even when she gave it no outward acknowledgnt.
The doctor had explained the risks in careful, asured terms not long before. Stronger dication was no longer acceptable. Not safe. Not for her. So the pain remained—unmanaged and real.
Su Wan sat upright slowly, her movents controlled and deliberate, refusing to allow the strain any visible space. Her fingers brushed lightly against the edge of the bandage, not testing the wound but simply acknowledging its presence. Her other hand rested briefly over her stomach, still and protective. That mattered more than anything else.
A nurse entered quietly, the door opening just enough to admit her without disturbing the silence further. She carried discharge papers and a small packet of dication, her voice gentle as she placed them within reach.
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