The car screeched into the driveway.
Ling was out first.
She yanked Mira out by the wrist and dragged her inside the mansion, heels echoing like gunshots against marble.
"Mom," Ling shouted, voice cutting through the house.
"Mom!"
Eliza Kwong appeared at the top of the stairs, composed as ever, silk robe pristine.
"What happened?" she asked calmly. "Slow down, my tiger."
Ling snapped her head up.
Eyes blazing.
"Did you tell her," Ling demanded, dragging Mira forward, "that I'll marry her?"
Silence.
Dadi froze mid-step in the hallway.
Rina appeared behind a pillar, heart dropping.
Eliza's gaze flicked to Mira—then back to Ling.
"Mom?" Ling pressed, voice shaking now, fury barely bridled. "Answer me."
Eliza descended the stairs slowly.
"I told her," Eliza said evenly, "that she is suitable. That she understands our world. That Rhea Nior does not."
Ling laughed once—short, incredulous, hurt.
"So you did," Ling said. "You gave her permission to believe something I never promised."
Eliza straightened. "I was protecting you."
"By deciding my future?" Ling shot back.
Eliza's eyes hardened. "By guiding it."
Ling stepped closer, towering now, voice low but shaking.
"She pushed someone off a terrace," Ling said. "Because she believed she owned me."
Eliza's lips parted slightly. "That's not—Mira wouldn't—"
"You spoke about my life," Ling said, stepping closer, towering over her mother, "like I wasn't breathing in it."
Eliza's eyes hardened. "I spoke as a mother. That girl is fire. She will burn you."
Ling's voice dropped.
"She almost died today."
The room went still.
Mira flinched.
Eliza stiffened—but recovered quickly. "And you think that means—"
"It means," Ling cut in, "that you will never say my name next to hers again."
She shoved Mira forward slightly—not cruel, but dismissive.
"Get this through your head," Ling said to Mira looking at her. "There is no 'us.' There never was."
Mira's lips trembled. "But you don't even know what she—"
Ling's head snapped toward her.
"You don't get to say her name."
Mira broke then—crying openly now.
Eliza stepped forward. "Ling—"
Ling turned back to her mother, eyes shining—not with tears this time, but resolve.
"I respect you," Ling said. "I love you. But you don't get to decide who I destroy myself for."
The words landed heavier than any shout.
Dadi inhaled sharply.
Rina felt it—this wasn't rebellion.
This was choice.
Ling stepped back.
"She is dangerous for you," Eliza said quietly. "She provokes you. She destabilizes you."
Ling's voice dropped.
"She was hanging in the air," Ling said. "And I was holding her."
Eliza looked back at her then.
Saw the red in Ling's eyes.The crack beneath the discipline.
"I don't need you to choose for me," Ling said. "I need you to trust me."
Eliza's voice softened—but stayed firm. "I love you. That means stopping you from walking into fire."
"Rawen," Ling called without turning.
From the shadows, Rawen appeared.
"Take her home," Ling said. "She's done here."
Mira stared at Ling, shattered. "You'll regret this."
Ling met her gaze calmly.
"I already am," she said.
Mira was escorted out.
The doors closed.
Only family remained.
Eliza looked at her daughter—really looked this time—and for the first time, doubt flickered behind her certainty.
Ling stood there, breathing hard, control barely stitched back together.
Somewhere across the city—
Rhea Nior was planning to break her.
And Ling Kwong had just burned every bridge except the one that terrified her most.
Dinner passed quietly.
Too quietly.
Victor spoke about work. Dadi teased Rina half-heartedly. Plates clinked. Cutlery moved. But one chair stayed empty.
Ling noticed everything.
"She didn't come?" Ling asked finally, voice neutral.
Victor paused. "She said she isn't hungry."
Ling nodded once.
She knew what that meant.
The hallway upstairs was dim, lights softened for the night. Ling stopped outside Eliza's room.
She knocked.
Once.
No answer.
She knocked again—firmer. "Mom."
Silence stretched, then the door opened just enough to reveal Eliza standing stiffly behind it.
"Come in," Eliza said, stepping aside.
Ling entered.
The room smelled faintly of jasmine and something metallic—tears dried too quickly.
Eliza stood near the window, arms folded. Her posture was controlled, but her eyes betrayed her.
Slightly swollen. Red at the edges.
She had cried.
Ling's chest tightened—annoyance, guilt, something sharper she refused to name.
"You didn't eat," Ling said.
"I wasn't hungry," Eliza replied flatly.
Ling closed the door behind her. "You are upset."
Eliza let out a small, humorless breath. "You embarrassed me."
Ling didn't flinch. "You endangered someone."
Eliza turned then, eyes flashing. "For you."
Ling stepped closer. "For control."
Silence again.
Then Eliza's voice softened, losing its edge. "I am your mother. I see what others don't. I see how she affects you."
Ling's jaw tightened.
"She doesn't control me," Ling said.
Eliza's lips trembled before she steadied them. "You don't look at anyone the way you look at her."
Ling's fingers curled slowly at her side.
"She makes you reckless," Eliza continued quietly. "You cried in public. You bled. You screamed. That is not you."
Ling's voice dropped. "Maybe you only loved the version of me that never felt anything."
That landed.
Eliza swallowed, blinking once too hard. "I raised you to survive."
"I survived," Ling said. "I just don't want to live hollow."
Eliza turned away, shoulders stiff—but her voice cracked despite herself.
"You think I don't see the danger?" she whispered. "Fire doesn't just burn what it touches. It spreads."
Ling stepped closer—not touching, never pleading.
"She was almost killed today," Ling said quietly. "And all I could think was—"
She stopped.
Caught herself.
Eliza waited.
Ling exhaled, regaining control. "I won't let anyone decide my life for me. Not Mira. Not you."
Eliza closed her eyes.
When she opened them, they were glossy.
"I only wanted to protect you," she said.
Ling nodded once. "Then trust me to protect myself."
A long pause.
Then Eliza looked at her daughter—not the heir, not the ruler—but the girl she had carried, trained, hardened.
"Stay away from her," Eliza said softly. "If not for me—then for yourself."
Ling held her gaze.
"I can't promise that," she said honestly.
Eliza's shoulders sagged, just a fraction.
Ling turned toward the door.
At the threshold, she paused. "Eat something."
Eliza didn't answer.
Ling left.
Behind the closed door, Eliza finally sat down on the bed, pressing her fingers to her eyes.
For the first time, she wasn't afraid of losing control over her daughter's future.
She was afraid of losing her daughter to something she couldn't fight.
