Shuyin did not react at once.
She remained seated, her posture unchanged, her fingers still lightly holding the stem of her glass. For a brief mont she appeared almost unaware of the comnt, as if it had simply drifted past her.
Then, with slow and deliberate control, she lifted the glass to her lips, took a small sip, and set it back down on the table. The soft sound of glass eting wood seed louder than it should have been in the quieted space.
Only then did she turn her head.
Her jade-green eyes settled on the woman with steady, unhurried focus.
"Sothing else?" she repeated, her voice calm, clear, and completely unshaken.
The woman’s smile deepened slightly, encouraged by the attention now fixed on them both. She took another small step forward, positioning herself where even more eyes could observe the exchange.
"Attention," she said, as if stating sothing obvious. "After all, such a high bid on a... modest piece is bound to make people talk. It’s quite effective."
Around them, subtle movents rippled through the seated guests. A few won shifted in their chairs, angling their bodies for a better view. Others exchanged brief glances, silent communication passing between them. No one interrupted. No one stepped in.
Because this was worth watching.
Shuyin’s gaze remained locked on the woman, her expression composed to the point of near indifference. She did not rush to respond. She allowed the words to exist fully in the space, to settle into every ear present.
Then her lips curved.
Not into warmth.
Not into cold dismissal.
But into sothing far more controlled, a asured acknowledgnt.
"If attention was my goal," she said evenly, her voice carrying clearly across the surrounding tables, "I wouldn’t need to spend money to get it."
The response did not raise in volu or sharpen in tone, yet it landed with precision.
A slight intake of breath ca from soone nearby. A quiet shift of fabric followed as another guest adjusted in her seat.
The woman’s smile tightened almost imperceptibly.
Shuyin continued without pause, her tone steady and deliberate.
"You see, the difference between us is simple. You look at the price and decide its value. I look at the aning and decide its worth."
Silence descended.
Not the polite quiet of a formal gathering, but sothing heavier, denser, and uncomfortable.
The woman’s composure flickered for a mont. Her fingers tightened around the stem of her glass.
"aning?" she echoed, a faint edge now creeping into her voice. "It’s a child’s painting."
"Yes," Shuyin replied, her gaze unwavering. "And yet here you are, unable to see beyond that."
The words were not harsh, but they were precise, and they landed exactly where intended.
Several won lowered their gazes, suddenly aware of how closely they had aligned themselves with the sa judgnt. Others watched more carefully now, their earlier amusent replaced by caution.
The woman let out a short, restrained laugh, attempting to regain ground.
"Or perhaps," she said, "you’re trying too hard to prove sothing. After all, your... recent circumstances have made quite an impression."
There it was, stripped of subtlety, no longer circling.
Her past.
The room reacted with a deepening stillness. Even the attendants along the edges paused, their movents slowing as though instinctively aware that sothing significant was unfolding.
Above, unseen by most, Lu Yuze’s hand tightened slightly against the railing. The movent was small and controlled, but deliberate.
Below, Shuyin remained still.
She did not interrupt.
She allowed the words to sink fully into the awareness of every person present, giving them ti to hear it, to feel its weight.
Then she moved.
One asured step forward.
Another.
Until she stood directly before the woman.
Not close enough to invade her space, but close enough to command it. The distance between them was deliberate and calculated.
"You’re right," Shuyin said calmly. "It does take effort."
Her voice did not rise. It did not harden. But it carried.
"But not the kind you’re thinking of."
For the first ti, the woman’s confidence wavered visibly, a slight tightening at the corners of her mouth, a fraction of hesitation in her posture.
Shuyin leaned forward just enough to lower her voice without losing clarity, forcing those closest to listen more carefully.
"It takes strength to walk back into a room that would rather judge than understand," she said. "It takes control to stand in front of people who smile politely while hoping you fall."
No accusation. No dramatics. Just truth, spoken plainly.
She straightened again, restoring the careful distance between them.
"And it takes intelligence," she added softly, "to know exactly who is worth responding to... and who is not."
The final words settled with quiet finality.
There was no need to raise her voice.
No need to emphasize.
The aning was already clear.
The woman’s face stiffened, her earlier composure cracking completely beneath the weight of the exchange.
Around them, silence held.
No one spoke.
No one stepped in.
Because the conclusion had already been reached.
Shuyin turned away first.
Not abruptly. Not dismissively.
But with the quiet certainty of soone who no longer considered the interaction worth continuing.
She returned to her seat as though nothing significant had occurred, as though the confrontation had not required any real effort, as though the outco had never been in question.
Behind her, the guard shifted slightly, his presence steady and unobtrusive, yet unmistakable, a silent reinforcent of sothing no one in the room could quite na, but all could feel.
Above, Lu Yuze finally exhaled slowly.
His gaze remained fixed on her, unwavering.
The tension that had risen so carefully had been dismantled just as precisely.
Not through force.
Not through volu.
But through control.
Absolute.
asured.
Unshaken.
And in a room like this, that kind of control was not just impressive.
It was dangerous.
The silence did not break imdiately after Shuyin turned away.
It lingered, thick and deliberate, pressing against the room like an invisible weight. Every person present understood that sothing decisive had just taken place, and no one was willing to be the first to disrupt it carelessly.
The woman who had initiated the confrontation remained standing where she was. Her hand still held the wine glass, though her grip had tightened, the faint tremor betraying what her expression tried to hide. The polite smile she had worn earlier had vanished, replaced by a stiffness that made her features appear sharper and less composed.
She did not speak again.
There was nothing left to say that would not make the situation worse.
Around her, the subtle shift in distance began.
It was not obvious. No one moved abruptly or openly withdrew.
But it was there.
The won who had stood closest to her earlier now angled themselves slightly away, their bodies turning just enough to create space. Their eyes no longer lingered on her with the sa shared confidence. Instead, they flickered elsewhere, toward their teacups, toward the stage, toward safer conversations that carried less risk.
Association in a room like this was everything.
And she had just lost hers.
At the sa ti, the attention that had once circled loosely around Shuyin now settled with far more intent.
Not boldly. Not all at once.
But steadily.
A woman seated two tables away adjusted her posture, her gaze drifting toward Shuyin with open curiosity rather than concealed judgnt. Another leaned slightly toward her companion, whispering sothing that carried no mockery, only asured thoughtfulness.
Even those who had remained neutral until now were no longer indifferent.
Because what Shuyin had done was not simply a response.
It was control.
And in this kind of environnt, that was far more important than the argunt itself.
At the front of the hall, the host finally resud her role. Her smile was practiced, her tone smooth as she gently guided the event forward, as though nothing significant had occurred. Her professionalism was flawless, but her eyes flickered toward Shuyin for a brief mont before she turned her attention back to the room.
The program continued.
Tea was poured.
Light refreshnts were served.
Soft instruntal music resud in the background, filling the space just enough to ease the lingering tension without erasing it completely.
But the atmosphere had changed.
It could not return to what it had been before.
Because now everyone was aware.
Shuyin remained seated, her posture composed, her movents unhurried as she reached for her glass once more. She did not look around to gauge reactions. She did not seek out the attention that had naturally settled on her.
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