Lian hesitates. He sees himself not as he is, but as he dreams—standing on a bridge of bone-white jade, hand-in-hand with a figure whose face is always turned away. Snow falls upward. A clock ticks backward. In that illusion, he is never lonely. In that illusion, the Imperial City is not a cage but a cradle.
Lian whispers it— Leng Ran . The name falls into the left scale. It does not sink. It floats , trembling, as if alive.
Under a mercury sky, the Imperial City of Leng Ran does not gleam—it breathes . Its spires are crafted from frozen starlight, its streets paved with the sighs of forgotten oaths. Here, the Libra does not weigh gold or jade, but the tilt of a single heart.
The Imperial City shudders. The Illusion ripples like a pond struck by a stone. Towers melt into ribbons of silk; streets fold into origami swans. And from the horizon, a second Leng Ran rises—a mirror version, walking toward him with the same face, the same scars, but eyes like two black Libras, ever balancing, ever empty.
“Welcome home,” the mirror says. “Or have you always been the Illusion?”
He places that vision into the right scale.