aning: everyone is watching you. Everyone has opinions. Everyone wants to see how you’ll handle yourself in their world.
Gu Lanying’s gaze softened slightly, genuine concern breaking through social convention. "So gatherings," she said gently, "are less about appearances and more about reclaiming one’s rightful place. Your mother held a respected position in certain circles. That respect hasn’t entirely faded, despite the years and the circumstances."
Shuyin t her eyes directly, understanding the layered aning. This wasn’t just about social rehabilitation. This was about stepping back into a world her mother had occupied, claiming an inheritance that went beyond money and property. After a brief pause for consideration, she nodded with quiet certainty. "I will attend."
Both won relaxed almost imperceptibly, tension easing from their shoulders in ways most wouldn’t notice but Shuyin had learned to read. Zhou ilin added carefully, "The event is adults only, given its formal nature. A social occasion rather than a family gathering."
"That will not be a problem," Shuyin replied smoothly. From sowhere in the hallway beyond, faint laughter from Yuyan drifted briefly before fading again, a reminder of the life she kept carefully separate from this world of social maneuvering.
Gu Lanying’s gaze flickered toward the sound but she made no comnt, too practiced to acknowledge what hadn’t been formally introduced. Instead, she rose gracefully, her movent signaling the visit’s natural conclusion. "We will not take more of your morning," she said. "I’m sure you have many demands on your ti."
Shuyin personally escorted them to the entrance hall, a gesture of respect that both won noted with approval. Outside, the morning air carried crisp freshness, sunlight reflecting off the polished car waiting patiently at the gates. Before stepping inside the vehicle, Gu Lanying turned back, her voice lowering just enough to create privacy within the public space.
"High society rembers everything," she said quietly, her tone carrying neither threat nor judgnt, just simple truth. "But it does not always forgive easily. There will be those at this gathering who rember your mother fondly. And there will be others who..." she paused delicately, "...who have their own opinions about recent events. Walk carefully, child."
Not a threat. A warning from soone who perhaps rembered the girl Shuyin had been and wanted to see her survive what she’d beco.
Zhou ilin offered a courteous smile that revealed nothing of her own thoughts. "We look forward to seeing you this weekend, Mrs. Lu."
The car door closed with expensive softness. Monts later, the vehicle disappeared beyond the gates, leaving only settling dust and the faint scent of expensive perfu.
The mansion grew quiet again in their absence. Shuyin stood still for a mont, the invitation box resting lightly in her hands, mind already working through implications and strategies. Behind her, Lu Yuze approached with the silent grace he’d perfected.
"Well?" he asked simply.
She exhaled slowly, organizing her thoughts into words. "It’s not a tea party. It’s an inspection. They want to see if I’m stable, refined, capable of navigating their world without embarrassing myself or my mother’s mory." Her gaze shifted toward the distant garden, thoughtful and calculating. "And judging by how quickly they ca, how carefully they phrased everything..." her eyes sharpened faintly, "...I already have enemies waiting for there. People who don’t want reclaiming anything."
She closed the invitation box with a soft click that sounded almost like satisfaction. "Good," she murmured, her voice carrying that cold edge Lu Yuze had co to recognize as dangerous determination. A calm smile appeared on her lips, elegant and composed and faintly threatening. "Let them look. Let them asure. Let them judge. They’ll see exactly what I want them to see."
The guests’ car had disappeared beyond the iron gates, leaving the mansion wrapped once again in quiet morning light. For a mont, Shuyin stood at the entrance steps, the invitation box still held loosely in one hand. The air carried the scent of trimd hedges and imported roses, sweet but sohow artificial, overly refined in a way that spoke of maintenance rather than natural growth.
She exhaled slowly, sothing unsettled stirring in her chest. "Too quiet," she murmured, more to herself than to Lu Yuze who’d followed her outside.
Behind them, Yuyan and Chen Xiao wandered into the courtyard, drawn by the open doors and morning sunshine. Yuyan shaded her eyes against the bright light while Chen Xiao stayed slightly behind Shuyin as he always did, silent and watchful, his stuffed rabbit clutched in both small hands.
Shuyin’s gaze drifted toward the garden that stretched beyond the courtyard. And then she stopped walking entirely, her body going still in a way that made Lu Yuze imdiately alert.
Rows of exotic orchids stretched across the manicured lawn in precise symtry, each plant positioned with mathematical exactness. Imported bonsai trees stood arranged like decorative sculptures, their twisted trunks and carefully pruned branches creating living art. Pale gravel paths cut through the greenery with calculated perfection, not a stone out of place.
Beautiful. Expensive. Cold. Utterly devoid of personality or warmth.
Her expression changed, not sharply or angrily, but sothing inside her went very still in a way that spoke of recognition and loss. "These weren’t here before," she said quietly, her voice carrying an odd flatness.
A nearby gardener who’d been trimming one of the sculptural bushes straightened imdiately at her words. "Madam Lin redesigned the entire garden several days ago, Miss," he explained with the careful neutrality of soone who’d learned not to take sides in family matters. "Everything was replaced according to her specifications."
Several days ago? Shuyin walked forward slowly, her soft sandals patted against the expensive gravel with each asured step. Her fingers reached out to brush a cluster of white orchids, touching the perfect petals as if they might dissolve under her hand. "They replaced everything?" It wasn’t really a question. "Every plant? Every tree?"
The gardener hesitated, clearly uncomfortable with the direction of the conversation. "Yes, Miss. It was done shortly after... after you were taken away from the estate."
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