Eliza watched her daughter limp in her own arms.
Limp.
Ling Kwong — the girl who once ruled rooms without raising her voice, who never bowed, never stumbled, never let anyone see her bleed — was half-conscious against Eliza's chest, her weight unfamiliar, frightening.
Her head lolled once, dark hair slipping loose from its perfect control. Her shirt was creased. Her hands were cold. Her breathing uneven.
Eliza tightened her grip instinctively, as if holding her harder could rewind the night.
"This isn't her," Eliza whispered, more to herself than anyone else.
Victor said nothing. He carried Ling's legs, his jaw clenched so tightly the muscle jumped. He had carried boardrooms, wars, empires — but this weight broke something inside him.
Dadi followed behind them, silent for once, eyes sharp with pain she refused to show.
Rina walked beside them, fists clenched, nails biting into her palms. She had seen Ling bleed on courts, laugh through injuries, stand tall under pressure that crushed grown men.
She had never seen her like this.
They reached Ling's room.
Eliza lowered her carefully onto the bed, hands trembling despite her control. The silk sheets felt wrong beneath Ling's body — too soft for someone who had lived armored.
Ling stirred faintly.
Her eyes opened halfway.
For a moment, they were empty.
Then recognition flickered — and something shattered.
"I fell," Ling murmured, lips trembling into a humorless smile. "Did you see that, Mom?"
Eliza's throat closed.
"You didn't fall," Eliza said softly, brushing hair from Ling's forehead. "You were pushed."
Ling laughed weakly, then turned her face away like the words hurt.
"I trusted," she whispered. "That's worse."
Her hand twitched, reaching for something that wasn't there.
Eliza caught it immediately, holding it tight between both of hers.
"You're safe," Eliza said, forcing the words to exist. "You're home."
Ling's eyes filled again, tears slipping silently into her hair.
"I used to be strong," she said quietly. "I used to control everything."
Eliza bent down, pressing her forehead to Ling's temple.
"You still are," she said, voice breaking despite herself. "You were just human for one night."
Ling didn't answer.
Her eyes closed slowly, exhaustion finally winning.
Eliza stayed there long after Ling drifted into restless sleep, watching her chest rise and fall, memorizing every fragile detail — the tremor in her fingers, the faint bruise forming at her wrist, the way her face looked younger without its armor.
The house was silent.
The empire still stood.
But Eliza understood something with devastating clarity:
The world had not beaten Ling Kwong.
Love had.
And whoever taught her daughter that loving meant destruction —
would answer for it.
Eliza climbed onto the bed without caring how it looked.
She gathered Ling into her arms, carefully, reverently, as if her daughter might shatter if she moved too fast. Eliza sat back against the headboard, pulling Ling with her, settling her weight fully into her chest.
Ling fit there too easily.
That was what broke her.
Ling's head rested against Eliza's shoulder, cheek pressed to her collarbone, breath uneven and shallow. One arm hung limply at her side; the other curled weakly into Eliza's waist as if her body remembered where safety used to be, even if her mind no longer trusted it.
Eliza wrapped both arms around her.
Tighter. Closer.
As if she could shield her from memory itself.
Ling stirred faintly, brows drawing together. Her fingers twitched, clutching the fabric of Eliza's dress.
"Mom…" she murmured, voice barely there.
Eliza pressed her lips to Ling's hair, eyes closing hard.
"I'm here," she whispered. "I'm not going anywhere."
Ling's body shook once — a small, involuntary tremor — then another. Tears soaked silently into Eliza's shoulder, hot and relentless.
"I ruined myself," Ling whispered, broken. "I let her in. I broke everything I protected."
Eliza's chest tightened painfully.
"You didn't ruin yourself," she said, voice low, steady despite the storm inside her. "You trusted. That is not a crime."
Ling shook her head weakly against Eliza's chest.
"She laughed about me," Ling whispered. "She laughed… while I was falling."
Eliza's arms tightened reflexively, one hand cradling the back of Ling's head, fingers threading through her hair the way she used to when Ling was small and afraid of the dark.
"Sleep," Eliza said softly. "You don't have to survive this moment. I'll hold it for you."
Ling's breathing stuttered, then slowed slightly. Her grip on Eliza's dress tightened once more before loosening, exhaustion finally dragging her under.
Eliza stayed still.
She didn't move.
Didn't shift.
Didn't breathe too deeply.
She sat there against the headboard with her daughter in her arms, rocking her almost imperceptibly, memorizing the weight of her, the warmth, the fragility she had never been allowed to show the world.
Eliza finally lifted her head and looked toward the others.
Her voice was quiet but firm, the tone she used when decisions were not open for discussion.
"Go," she said to Victor, then to Dadi and Rina. "Go and sleep. I'll stay with her."
None of them moved.
The room felt heavy, thick with the sound of Ling's uneven breathing and the weight of everything that had shattered that night.
Victor's jaw tightened. "Eliza—"
"I said go," Eliza repeated, softer now, but no less final. "She needs quiet."
Rina shook her head immediately, eyes red. "How can we sleep?"
Dadi took a step closer to the bed, her sharp composure cracking for the first time that night.
"How can we sleep," Dadi said, voice breaking despite her effort to keep it steady, "when my piece of heart is like this?"
The words landed hard.
Ling shifted faintly in Eliza's arms, a small sound leaving her throat, and all three of them froze, watching her like she might disappear if they blinked.
Victor looked away first.
He rubbed a hand over his face, exhaustion and fury fighting behind his eyes. "She never cried like this," he said quietly. "Not even as a child."
Eliza tightened her hold around Ling instinctively.
"She trusted someone," Eliza said. "That's what broke her."
Rina swallowed, wiping at her face angrily. "She loved her," she whispered. "I saw it. Everyone saw it."
Dadi nodded slowly, eyes never leaving Ling. "And that's why this hurts more than any enemy ever could."
Silence stretched again.
Eliza finally spoke, her voice lower, edged with something dangerous beneath the grief.
"She will heal," Eliza said. "But not tonight. Tonight she needs her family to still be standing when she wakes up."
She looked at them then — really looked.
"Go rest," she said. "So tomorrow, you don't fall apart when she needs you strong."
Victor hesitated, then nodded once.
Rina bent down and brushed her fingers lightly over Ling's hand, careful not to wake her. "I'll be right outside," she murmured.
Dadi lingered the longest.
She leaned in close, her voice barely a whisper meant only for Eliza. "If anyone thinks this is the end of Ling Kwong," she said quietly, "they don't know what they've started."
Eliza met her gaze and nodded.
They left one by one, the door closing softly behind them.
Eliza remained against the headboard, Ling still curled into her arms, breathing shallow but steady now.
She lowered her head and pressed her lips gently into Ling's forehead.
"Sleep," Eliza whispered. "Your world can wait. I won't."
Outside the room, the house remained quiet, powerful, untouched.
Inside, Eliza held what was left of the girl who once ruled coldly —
and promised herself, without words and without mercy,
that whoever had taught Ling Kwong that love was a weapon
would one day learn
what a mother's revenge truly looked like.
