When the little whirlwind, Huo Feng, noticed Wu Xin walking toward her, she did not resist. With every step he took forward, she drifted closer, spinning right between his eyes.
Wu Xin smiled, now certain he had been mistaken to swat her earlier: "Forgive me, little wind," he said gently. "Was the slap painful?"
She spun faster, lashing around his face like a tiny storm, as though attacking him for daring to mention it.
â And let me assure you, dear reader⦠that slap? Fate will return it to him one dayâbut not with the same mercy.
Huo Feng pulled back, scolding him without words. Yet Wu Xin understood, and he accepted the blame without protest.
He asked softly: "Do you live in Jin Hai's palace?"
The moment she heard her father's name, she remembered his warnings and immediately darted awayârushing back to the palace garden to hide among the flowers.
Days passed⦠and that tiny whirlwind began visiting Wu Xin whenever her father was awayâwhenever she felt lonely and needed someone to amuse her.
He grew accustomed to her presence, and whenever she disappeared, he found himself unexpectedly missing her. She scattered his solitude the way she scattered leaves and petals every time she fluttered by.
She spun and spun among his garden flowers as he sipped tea, and she refused to let him enjoy peace even in his study. Each time she neared his desk, she blew away all his scrolls, throwing his room into delightful chaos.
Sometimes he scolded her, sometimes he forgave herâbut never, not once, did he truly get angry.
When a guard approached his door, he would order her to hide behind his back, for he had come to regard her as his secret. Sometimes he even shoved her into his wardrobe, only for her to whirl through his clothes in playful destruction.
One day, she waited for him in his garden after a mission. That was when she spotted a strange maid entering his chamber with a tray of pastries.
Drawn by the sweet aroma, Huo Feng followed at a distanceâand noticed the maid's suspicious behavior. She watched as the woman planted a seed in Wu Xin's enchanted flower vase, sprinkled it with Water from the Spring of Life, and walked away as though no one had seen her.
Intrigued and alarmed, Huo Feng hovered over the vase, watching closely. But before she could do moreâWu Xin caught her between his hands with a playful grin.
"Got you at last," he teased. "I won't let you go until you tell me who you are."
She squirmed between his palms, ignoring him, desperate to return to the vase. When he let her free, she immediately hovered above it again, spinning franticallyâas though trying to warn him.
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Wu Xin misunderstood completely. He thought she was claiming ownership over the plant that, by the next day, had already started to grow.
On the third day, the flower bloomed.
That was when Huo Feng realizedâthe maid had betrayed him.
She knew this flower. Once it bloomed, it released a deadly toxin upon the airâa scent of death.
She had to warn him. She had to keep him away.
When he entered his chamber, he did not notice the bloom. He was too busy searching through scrolls. Huo Feng rushed toward him and blew all his papers into the air.
He merely sighed and bent down to gather them, still not understanding.
Words weren't enough. She needed more.
She dipped the tip of her swirling tail into the ink and dragged herself across a sheet of paper, drawing an ugly, twisted flower. He still didn't notice.
So she plunged herself into the inkwell and stirred wildly until ink splattered all over his robe. Only then did he lookâand spot the drawing.
He laughed: "What a mighty talent in the arts you have."
He turned to collect the rest of his documentsâthen paused, noticing the unfamiliar flower in his vase. He smiled warmly.
"So that's what you wanted to show me. Your flower has bloomed."
He leaned in, speaking fondly: "I bet its fragrance is as lovely as it looks. Thank you for the gift."
He reached forward, fingers brushing its petal, preparing to breathe in death.
Huo Feng darted between him and the flower, blocking his way. He blinked. "You want me to step back? Fine, I'll change clothes firstâthis ink is ruining my focus."
While he changed his robe, she made her decision.
For the first time, she would write a word.
She searched her memoriesâher father's voice reading to her, pages turning, brush strokes across parchmentâ¦
And thenâshe remembered.
She dipped herself in ink and traced a single word beside the drawing:
"Poison."
But when Wu Xin turned, he misread it.
Because in her frantic spinning, ink had splattered onto the pageâchanging one dot and twisting her meaning.
"Ah⦠smell, is it?" he said with a smile. "You want me to sniff it now?"
She froze in horror.
âThe power of a single drop of ink⦠it could have ended everything.
He stepped toward the vase again, laughing lightly: "Very well, little buzz, I'll grant your wish."
Just as his foot crossed into death's reachâshe hurled the vase to the floor, shattering it into a thousand pieces.
Rage flashed across his faceâthe vase⦠belonged to his mother. It was the last thing she had crafted for him before her passing.
To make matters worseâMei burst through the door, sword drawn, thinking Wu Shen had been attacked.
She saw the shattered vase, Wu Xin kneeling in confusion and griefâand shouted:
"Step away! Don't touch itâthat flower is poison!"
Wu Xin froze.
Slowly⦠he turned toward the little whirlwind. His eyes, clouded with suspicion and betrayal, met hers.
"And youâ¦" he said quietly, trembling. "Did you know it was death? Yet you insisted I⦠smell it?"
Huo Feng spun desperately toward him.
But Mei's sword slashed the airâstriking her, splitting her whirlwind form in two.
She felt pain. Real pain. Not in the bodyâbut in something deeper. Because worse than the blade⦠was the look in Wu Xin's eyes.
Accusation. Disappointment.
âBetrayal.
Mei struck again, calling guards to seize "the culprit."Huo Feng spiraled in panic, crashing against every corner of the room like a blind creature trapped in a jar of darkness.
Thenâcame the final blow.
Wu Xin's staff descendedâa sharp strikeâand he flung her away from his sight.
She fled. Broken. Bleeding stormlight.
When she reached her palace, Jin Hai saw her trembling, fading form. He said nothing.
But his eyes spoke of war.
That night, he sealed her away inside the crystal of his ring.