Chapter 359 --359
Chapter 359 --359
So yes—
This was cruel.
But it was also necessary.
Discipline wasn’t kindness.
It was armor.
’Enough,’ she told herself, snapping her focus forward. ’Back to work.’
With a sharp ’thwack’, her folding fan snapped open.
In an instant, her entire demeanor shifted.
The cold, calculating predator vanished, replaced by a languid, indulgent young master with too much money and too little restraint.
"Samuel," she drawled, her voice pitched just loud enough to carry, "let us browse. I will need something exceptional if I am to attend the upcoming banquets."
For the next two hours, she performed flawlessly.
It was shopping—
On the surface.
In reality, it was war.
She drifted from stall to stall, trailing silk and silver in her wake. Trinkets, fabrics, rare teas—anything that justified conversation.
And with every purchase Samuel paid for, Heena loosened her tongue just enough.
At a jeweler’s stall, she turned a jade thumb ring between her fingers, letting sunlight catch its polished edges.
"I’ve only just arrived," she said idly. "I hear the Marquis is hosting a grand banquet next week. Would this be too... modest? I’m told his adopted sons are rather formidable."
Silver hit the counter.
The merchant leaned in immediately.
"Oh, Young Master, the piece is fine—but compared to them?" He lowered his voice. "Especially the eldest, Kavien... since the Marquis’s true daughter passed, the Marchioness treats him as her own. It’s... excessive."
Heena tilted her head. "Excessive?"
"The others manage affairs—military, estate matters. But him?" The merchant’s lips curled faintly. "He never leaves her side. Commands the guards like he owns the place. The servants fear him more than the Marquis himself."
Later, at a tea pavilion, she tapped her fan lightly against her chin.
"I was thinking of sending something to the estate," she mused. "Perhaps for the late daughter’s shrine. They must still be grieving."
The old tea master let out a dry, involuntary scoff before quickly glancing around.
"Save your silver," he muttered. "That shrine gathers dust. They cry when officials visit. Otherwise?" He leaned closer. "Say her name wrong, and you’re beaten and thrown out."
Piece by piece, stall by stall—
The truth emerged.
A kitchen worker’s cousin revealed private meals behind locked doors.
A maid’s sister confirmed the Marquis’s near-constant absence.
A pattern formed.
Control. Isolation. Fear.
By the time the sun dipped low, Samuel’s arms were filled with purchases—
And Heena’s mind was full of knives.
As they stepped away from the market, Samuel leaned down slightly, amusement flickering in his dark eyes.
"You spent forty taels today," he murmured. "And not one coin was for the items themselves."
Heena snapped her fan shut.
A slow, dangerous smile curved her lips.
"Information," she said softly, "is the most expensive commodity in the capital."
A pause.
"I simply bought all of it."
The walk back unfolded beneath a sky painted gold and amber, the city shifting from heat-stricken chaos into lantern-lit allure.
As they walked, Heena glanced down.
The lion was still trailing behind.
Quiet.
Small.
Trying not to exist.
She exhaled silently.
The lesson had landed.
Now—
She needed her partner back.
’System,’ she called, her tone crisp—but no longer cold. ’Stop sulking. Cross-reference everything we gathered. Strip out exaggeration. Give me facts.’
The lion paused.
Looked up.
Carefully.
When it realized she wasn’t angry—
That she was trusting it again—
Its tail gave a small, hesitant flick.
’[Processing, Host,]’ it replied, voice slipping back into clean, professional cadence. Code flickered faintly in its eyes. ’[Filtering rumor clusters... identifying anomalies.]’
A beat.
’[Three key points: The Marquis is absent—approximately eighty percent of his time spent at military garrisons. The Marchioness controls the inner court through fear, restricting information flow. And... Kavien.]’
Heena’s smile darkened.
’Exactly.’
’[Behavioral patterns indicate abnormal proximity between the Marchioness and Kavien,]’ the System continued, confidence steadily returning. ’[Private meals. Shared command authority. Restricted-access study in the western wing. Probability of illicit relationship—]’
’Possible,’ Heena cut in as they stepped into the inn’s shadow. ’But too simple.’
Her eyes sharpened.
’A woman who controls an estate through fear doesn’t gamble everything on scandal alone.’
A pause.
’This isn’t about desire.’
’It’s about power.’
They reached the room.
The door shut.
And everything changed.
The lazy noble vanished.
Samuel rolled his shoulders, tension loosening from hours of restraint. When he looked at her, his gaze had sharpened into something lethal.
"The western wing," he said.
"The locked study."
He had heard everything.
"Correct," Heena replied, moving to the washbasin, scrubbing away sweat and the last traces of her disguise. "That’s where the truth is buried."
Water splashed. Paint faded. Her real face emerged—sharp, controlled, dangerous.
"Tonight," she continued, "I dig it out."
"The estate is heavily guarded," Samuel said, tossing her a towel. "If the rumors are accurate, the inner court will have elite martial artists. You won’t pass unnoticed."
She met his gaze through the mirror.
"Are you doubting me, husband?"
"Never," he said smoothly, stepping closer. "But your current body lacks the qi and conditioning to bypass grandmasters silently."
She turned, leaning back against the basin.
"And your solution?"
Samuel smiled.
Slow.
Certain.
He pulled a small, carved wooden token from his robe and tossed it onto the table. It landed with a solid ’clack’.
Unmarked.
Black.
Faintly smelling of iron and ink.
"I’ve built more than wealth," he said, closing the distance between them. His fingers brushed a damp strand of hair behind her ear. "If you walk into the shadows tonight... you won’t walk alone."
A pause.
"The guards," he added quietly, "will be... occupied."
On the floor, the lion’s eyes lit up.
’[Oh—this just escalated. He has a network. Host... your husband is dangerous.]’
Heena’s gaze didn’t leave Samuel.
’I know,’ she replied.
A faint, thrilling pulse stirred in her chest.
’That’s why I chose him.’
"Good," she said aloud, her smile turning razor-sharp. "Then we’re done talking."
She pushed off the basin.
"Give me ten minutes."
Her eyes gleamed.
"We’re breaking into a mansion."
Sneaking into a heavily fortified compound in theory was vastly different from actually executing it in practice.
Crouched in the deep shadows of an alleyway across from the Marquis’s estate, Heena mentally calculated the height of the stone wall, the rotation of the perimeter guards, and the physical capabilities of her current vessel. Her eyes moved in quick, precise sweeps — guard at the eastern post, rotation every eight minutes, torchlight radius approximately four meters, wall surface rough-hewn sandstone with adequate handholds at the second and third courses.
She stretched her arm, rolling her shoulder experimentally. Her joints popped with a quiet, unflattering series of sounds.
She frowned.
Seera’s body was healthy now, yes — she had seen to that — but it completely lacked the refined flexibility, the explosive muscle memory, the coiled inner *qi* required for high-level martial work. The body was a fine instrument. It was simply not the instrument she had spent a lifetime tuning.
She took a half-step forward anyway, contemplating risking it, running the numbers one more time—
And then Samuel’s men arrived.
From the darkness of the alley behind them, three figures materialized without making a single sound.
They were dressed in pitch-black from throat to boot, faces concealed behind cloth that seemed to absorb the torchlight rather than merely block it.
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