The mansion was too quiet.
Ling hated quiet. It left room for thoughts.
She stood in the shadowed study, sleeves rolled, knuckles resting on the cold marble table. Screens glowed in front of her—security footage paused at the exact moment Mira's hand brushed Rhea's back.
A brush too precise.
A step too calculated.
An accident rehearsed.
"Play it again," Ling said.
The footage looped.
Mira's face—concerned too late. Panic delayed just enough to look real.
Ling's jaw flexed.
"So you can lie," she murmured.
Behind her, Jian spoke carefully. "We found inconsistencies. Mira altered her route to the pool. She was watching Rhea before the push."
Ling didn't respond.
Her fingers curled slowly into a fist.
"Leave," Ling said.
"But—"
"Now."
The room emptied.
Ling turned away from the screens, breath sharp, chest tight with something she refused to name. The image burned anyway—not Mira's hand, but Rhea sinking. Struggling. Going still.
Her vision darkened.
She almost—
No.
Ling slammed her palm against the table.
"This is not about her," she said aloud, voice harsh, commanding even the walls. "This is about control."
And yet—
Her mind betrayed her.
Rhea's closed eyes.
Water-soaked lashes.
That moment of weightlessness in her arms.
Anger surged—violent, consuming.
At Mira.
At Rhea.
At herself.
The door opened without announcement.
Mira stepped inside.
She looked small here. Smaller than she ever had.
Ling didn't turn.
"I didn't mean for it to go that far," Mira said softly. "You know that."
Ling laughed.
It was ugly. Cold. Cutting.
"You don't get to decide how far anything goes," Ling said, finally facing her. "Not in my space. Not with my people."
Mira's eyes flashed.
"Your people?" she repeated. "Is that what she is now?"
Ling's gaze sharpened. "Careful."
Mira stepped closer anyway.
"I've known you since we were children," Mira said, voice trembling—but not with fear. "You don't jump into pools. You don't carry girls. You don't kneel."
Ling's hand shot out, slamming Mira back against the wall.
The sound echoed.
Mira didn't cry.
She smiled.
"That's why you're angry," Mira whispered. "Not because I pushed her. But because for one second—you thought you lost her."
Ling froze.
The words struck deeper than any accusation.
"You're projecting," Ling snapped.
"No," Mira said quietly. "I'm holding up a mirror."
Ling released her abruptly, stepping back as if contact burned.
"You hate inferiority," Mira continued. "You hate weakness. And yet—she was weak, and you couldn't look away."
Ling's eyes darkened.
"Say her name again," she warned.
Mira laughed bitterly. "You're afraid of it."
Silence pressed in.
Ling turned away, shoulders rigid, fury coiling beneath restraint.
"You endangered someone in my domain," Ling said coldly. "That alone is unforgivable."
Mira's voice dropped. "You'd never forgive me anyway. Not now."
Ling looked at her then—really looked.
And saw it.
Jealousy.
Possession.
Love twisted into entitlement.
"You don't belong near her," Ling said.
Mira flinched. "Neither You."
Ling's voice cracked—not loud, not weak, but sharp with rage.
"It's about me."
She moved closer, towering.
"I don't lose control," Ling said. "And today—I almost did."
Her breath slowed. Her tone hardened.
"That will never happen again."
Mira searched her face, desperate now. "Then punish her. Push her away. You always do."
Ling smiled.
Not cruel.
Terrified.
Mira stepped back, realization settling like poison.
Ling turned toward the window, city lights reflecting in her eyes—fractured, furious.
"She makes me reckless," Ling said quietly. "And anyone who threatens what's mine—"
She stopped herself.
Corrected it.
"—what I protect," Ling finished, "doesn't stay."
Mira understood then.
And Lingling Kwong had just realized the most dangerous truth of all:
Rhea Nior wasn't her enemy.
She was her weakness.
And Ling hated nothing more than something she couldn't destroy.
