"So they were your twins," the Azure Dragon mused, his voice low and thoughtful, like distant thunder rolling across a mountain range. His gaze, ancient and penetrating, lingered on Ling Li with quiet reverence. "I’ve heard whispers from the elders... that the seal has reappeared. Then I must meet them." Ling Li’s expression softened, pride and urgency mingling in her eyes. "You will," she promised, her voice steady with conviction. "I just need to rush back. One of my daughters is competing in the Asian Gymnastics Olympics in Shanghai next week. And the ’Eye’ will soon open at Hidden Valley. It may take time, but I’ll return — with all of them." The Azure Dragon nodded slowly, his silver-blue robes stirring with the wind, rustling like storm-touched silk. "No rush," he said, his tone warm and teasing. "Come back after you give birth to those three little girls. Bring them with you to play." Ling Li smiled, her heart swelling with emotion. The thought of her future daughters — bright, wild, and full of potential — filled her with a quiet joy. Red stepped forward, her crimson hair trailing behind her like a comet’s tail, catching the light in fiery strands. She reached out and clasped Ling Li’s hands, her phoenix eyes glowing with warmth and certainty. "You’ll come back," Red said — not as a question, but as a vow etched in flame. Ling Li nodded, her voice barely above a whisper, yet resonant with promise. "I will. With my children. And with stories to share." Red’s smile deepened, and she leaned in, her breath warm against Ling Li’s ear. "Tell your twins they’re welcome to set the mountain on fire. I’ll rebuild it with better feng shui." Ling Li laughed, the sound light and crystalline, echoing through the celestial grove. "You might regret that invitation." "Never," Red replied, her grin mischievous and fierce. "Chaos is just another form of joy." The Azure Dragon stepped forward, his presence commanding yet serene. As he raised his hand, a soft glow bloomed in his palm — a blessing sigil, shaped like a coiling dragon entwined with a rising flame. The sigil pulsed with ancient power, its light shifting between gold and sapphire. "For protection," he said, his voice imbued with solemnity. "Until you return." Ling Li accepted it with both hands, the warmth of the sigil sinking into her skin like sunlight on spring soil. She bowed again, deeper this time — not out of obligation, but from the depths of her gratitude. "Thank you," she said, her voice trembling slightly. "For everything." The Azure Dragon inclined his head. "May your daughter soar higher than any gymnast before her. And may the Eye reveal only truth when it opens." Thıs content belongs to 𝙣𝙤𝙫𝙚𝙡⁂𝙛𝙞𝙧𝙚⁂𝙣𝙚𝙩 Red added with a wink, her tone playful yet fierce, "And may your three little girls inherit your stubbornness. The world needs more women who refuse to bend." Ling Li turned to go, her robes trailing behind her like moonlight on water. The Seven Shahs, silent and regal, formed a quiet procession behind her, their footsteps barely disturbing the sacred ground. As she stepped onto the cloud ferry — an ethereal vessel woven from mist and starlight — it shimmered beneath her feet, responding to her presence with a soft hum. She paused at the edge, turning once more to look at the couple standing beneath the celestial pines. Red waved with both hands, her smile radiant, eyes gleaming with affection and fire. The Azure Dragon watched, his gaze steady, timeless, as if etching her silhouette into memory. And then, with a final shimmer of light, Ling Li vanished into the sky — carrying with her the blood of a phoenix, the blessing of a dragon, and the promise of return. The catacombs throbbed with a lingering warmth — echoes of ancient conflicts entombed deep within the mountain’s spine. Above the flickering fireglass, the bell emitted a haunting, ethereal toll, a sound more felt than heard, reverberating like sorrow resonating through bone. From the depths of the shadows, Solaris emerged, his cloak trailing behind him like a shroud draped over the memories of the fallen. The burn across his chest, a testament to Ling Li’s assault during Lily’s Dance Competition in Geneva, pulsed with an eerie glow beneath his robes, a constant reminder of his suffering and a harbinger of his imminent retribution. Before him knelt two Ironsworn, their hoods cloaked in layers of ash, their breaths swirling in the cold air like fleeting specters. They had come without a sound, summoned by the bell’s mournful cry and the unwavering command of Solaris’s will. Solaris offered no greeting, his countenance as sharp and unyielding as obsidian. "What is the status of our preparations?" he demanded. The taller of the two raised his head just enough for their eyes to meet. "The illusions are ready. The light will sow seeds of doubt that whisper in the shadows of her mind." "And the sigil?" Solaris pressed, his tone laced with urgency. "Bound tightly to the gold," the second replied, their voice low and steady. "When Lily stands on the brink of victory, it will awaken." A chill flickered across Solaris’s lips — not a smile, but a twist of something far more sinister. "Excellent. Let her win. Let her bask in the false light of safety, unaware of the storm closing in around her." Solaris turned his gaze toward the altar, its surface cracked and veined with dried blood, a grotesque canvas of past sacrifices. His fingers traced the stone, which hissed softly in response, as if it were eagerly absorbing the fury radiating from him. "Lily will take the stage at the Gymnastic Olympics in Shanghai next week," he whispered, his voice low and filled with foreboding. "The arena will bathe in bright lights. The crowd will roar like a tempest. But beneath the jubilant shouts — beneath the facade of celebration — there lurks something far more sinister." From the shadowy depths of the chamber, a new figure emerged. A girl, not much older than Lily herself, stepped forward. Her eyes, rimmed in dark soot, reflected a depth of sorrow, while her leotard, intricately stitched with shimmering runes, glimmered like bruises under the dim light. She moved with a calculated grace, yet her presence was marked by an aura of fragmentation — grief sculpted into a semblance of elegance.
