Not the kind of promise spoken lightly and forgotten when inconvenient. Not the kind that could be broken when circumstances shifted or better opportunities arose. The kind that demanded blood. The kind that required sacrifice. The kind that would reshape the world if necessary to protect what it encompassed.
His expression hardened just slightly as that realization settled into his bones. He didn’t lose the softness, the tenderness that ca from looking at his sleeping family. But sothing darker grew beneath it, sothing more primal and absolute. Protective instinct that transcended reason. A possessiveness that would accept no threat, tolerate no danger.
Anyone who dared to touch what was his, anyone who tried to harm these three people sleeping peacefully in this bed, would face consequences beyond their comprehension.
Anyone who tried to take this away from him, who thought they could destroy his family the way so much had been destroyed before....
His jaw tightened, muscles working beneath his skin as he imagined the various threats that existed in their world. Lin Feng and Madam Chen were already being handled, broken and imprisoned in Black Water Ridge where they belonged. But there were always others. Always people who saw power and wanted to take it, who saw happiness and wanted to crush it, who saw vulnerability and sought to exploit it.
He would destroy them all.
Without hesitation. Without rcy. Without a mont’s regret.
Not because he was cruel or enjoyed violence for its own sake. But because for the first ti in twelve long years, for the first ti since he’d held his dying wife and watched the light leave her eyes, he finally had sothing worth sacrificing everything for apart from his daughter.
Soone worth becoming a monster to protect.
Three soones, actually. A wife who’d survived impossible odds and erged stronger. A daughter who’d endured poisoning and loss and still maintained her kind heart. A son not of his blood but of his choice, a traumatized child who needed safety and love and the promise that abandonnt would never co again.
His family.
Lu Yuze straightened slowly, his hand lingering one mont longer against the mattress before he withdrew. He took one last look at the peaceful scene, at the life he’d sohow been given a second chance to build, and felt that dark protective vow settle deeper into his soul.
Let them sleep. Let them rest and heal and feel safe in this space he would defend with everything he possessed.
He had work to do. A dress to acquire, arrangents to make, a world to navigate on their behalf. The Orchid Charity Society and its pretentious mbers didn’t matter in themselves, but they mattered as pieces on a board he was learning to play in new ways. Shuyin deserved to walk into that room and command the respect that should have always been hers. He would ensure she had everything she needed to do exactly that.
But more than social gas or business strategies or any of the usual concerns that occupied his days, what mattered was this room. This bed. These three people breathing peacefully in the sunlight.
Everything else, the money, the power, the influence, the reputation, it was all just tools. Weapons to be wielded in defense of what actually mattered.
And what mattered was sleeping peacefully before him, unaware of the vow he’d just made. Unaware of how completely and irrevocably they’d claid him. Unaware that he would burn the world down before he let anything threaten them.
Lu Yuze turned and walked quietly to the door, casting one final glance over his shoulder before stepping into the hallway and closing the door with careful silence behind him.
The bedroom returned to its peaceful stillness, undisturbed except for the soft sounds of sleeping. But outside that door, Lu Yuze moved with renewed purpose, his mind already cataloging threats and counterasures, opportunities and obstacles, everything that stood between his family and the future they deserved.
Instead of returning to the guest wing to oversee the final relocations, Ting Fei had that well in hand, Lu Yuze made his way to the mansion’s formal dining room. The large space was quiet at this mid-morning hour, the breakfast service long cleared away and lunch preparations not yet begun. Sunlight stread through the tall windows, casting warm patterns across the polished mahogany table.
He settled into one of the chairs and retrieved his laptop from Ting Fei, along with his tablet. Setting both devices on the table, he opened them and began what would normally seem like an unusual task for a man of his position and temperant: researching won’s fashion for a high-society charity event.
But Lu Yuze had learned long ago that taking care of details others might overlook was what separated adequate from exceptional. And if Shuyin decided she was well enough to attend the Orchid Charity Society event, he wanted everything to be perfect and ready for her. She shouldn’t have to worry about what to wear or scramble to find sothing appropriate while exhausted and sore. That was sothing he could handle for her.
He started by pulling up the Orchid Charity Society’s website on his laptop. The organization was one of the city’s most exclusive philanthropic groups, composed entirely of wealthy won from established families. Their events were notorious for being as much about displaying status and fashion as they were about actual charity work.
The website’s photo gallery from previous events gave him his first clues. He scrolled through images of elegantly dressed won at last year’s spring fundraiser, taking ntal notes. The dress code was clearly formal but not quite black-tie. The won wore cocktail dresses or elegant day dresses in sophisticated cuts and rich fabrics. Nothing too flashy or attention-seeking, but definitely expensive and tasteful.
Lu Yuze pulled up his tablet and began searching for high-end boutiques that could provide sa-day delivery. His fingers moved across the screen with surprising deftness for soone who usually delegated shopping tasks to assistants. But this was different. This was personal. He wanted to choose sothing himself, sothing that would make Shuyin feel beautiful and confident when she walked into a room full of won who’d once looked down on her.
The color palette in the event photos leaned toward pastels and jewel tones, soft pinks, elegant blues, deep eralds and sapphires. No one wore black, which made sense for a spring afternoon event. The dresses were modest without being matronly, showing sophistication rather than sex appeal.
He opened several boutique websites simultaneously, filtering for their most elegant cocktail dresses. One caught his eye imdiately, a silk dress in a deep jade green that would complent Shuyin’s coloring beautifully. The color reminded him of her rmaid eyes when they flashed with power. The cut was classic and elegant: fitted bodice with a boat neckline that would cover the marks on her neck and collarbone, three-quarter sleeves in delicate lace, and a flowing skirt that ended just below the knee. Sophisticated, expensive-looking, and appropriate for the event.
But he hesitated. What if green wasn’t her preference? He’d never actually asked Shuyin about her favorite colors or fashion preferences. Their relationship had developed so quickly from arrangent to genuine partnership that so of the normal getting-to-know-you conversations had been skipped entirely.
He expanded his search, looking at several other options. A dusty rose dress with elegant draping. A sapphire blue sheath with subtle beading. A champagne-colored dress with delicate embroidery. Each was beautiful, each appropriate, but he kept coming back to the jade green silk.
It was perfect. The color, the cut, the overall aesthetic, it would make Shuyin look like exactly what she was: a woman of power and elegance who belonged in any room she entered.
He checked the sizing information carefully, ntally comparing the asurents to Shuyin’s fra. She was slender but not overly thin, with curves that the fitted bodice would flatter. He selected what he estimated was her size, making a ntal note to have the boutique include the next size up and down as well, just in case.
The price made him pause for just a mont, the dress cost more than many people earned in months, but he dismissed the concern imdiately. Money was aningless compared to Shuyin’s comfort and confidence. If she attended the event, she would do so wearing sothing that made her feel like the formidable woman she’d beco.
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