Chapter 464: Chapter 464; Lin Shuyin
The cell was still—too still—the early darkness settling into something thick and oppressive that pressed against the lungs. His bruised body ached with every breath, every tiny shift of weight on the thin mattress, but sleep remained impossible. Each throb in his skull, each crackling rib, screamed louder than thought.
Then came the faint footsteps. Not the heavy, routine tread of guards on rounds. These were deliberate. Slow. Stalking.
A shadow moved across the slats of the cell door. Lin Feng tried to sit up, but pain froze him halfway, locking his spine in a vise of fire.
"Lin Feng," a voice hissed through the small opening, low and cruel, intimate as a secret. "You think last night was the worst?"
The air thickened. The shadows inside the cell shifted, and the soft scrape of metal on concrete echoed like a promise. He could see nothing, yet he felt it—someone inside with him. Waiting. Watching.
"You are alone," the voice continued, closer now, circling the narrow space. "No one will save you. No one will intervene. Not your wealth. Not your charm. Not even your bravado."
Lin Feng’s chest heaved, panic rising in a hot wave. He tried to plead, voice broken and hoarse. "I—I’ve learned my lesson! Please—just leave me—"
A hand gripped his shoulder from behind. The contact was firm, deliberate, fingers digging into bruised muscle. He screamed, trying to twist away, but his strength had long since deserted him. His body was a map of pain, every nerve a traitor.
"You will learn," the voice whispered against his ear, breath warm and foul. "You will feel fear. True, absolute fear. And it will be long. It will be patient. It will haunt you."
The figure pressed something cold and small into his palm. Lin Feng opened his hand instinctively. A token—unassuming, metallic—lay there, etched with a single word that burned into his mind: POWERLESS.
The shadow receded as silently as it had come, leaving only the echo of its presence and the token clenched in his trembling fist.
The cell block was quiet—too quiet. Lin Feng lay on his thin mattress, staring at the ceiling where flickering fluorescent lights cast uneven shadows across the cracked concrete. Every shift of the air, every distant clang of metal, sounded amplified, meant for him alone. He could feel his bruises throb, but that was almost irrelevant compared to the dread curling like smoke in his chest. He wasn’t alone. He could feel it—a presence in the corner, not entirely human, moving, waiting. He tried to lift his head, but the shadows swallowed everything, making the cell twice its size and his body half its former self.
A whisper came then.
"Lin Feng..."
He snapped upright, heart hammering against his cracked ribs. No one was there. The voice was faint yet unmistakably intimate, mocking. It drew on every insult, every betrayal, every moment of power he had ever wielded, listing them like a ledger of sins.
You destroyed lives. You thought you could control everything. Now you are nothing.
The walls felt closer. His breaths came shallow and rapid, his own pulse a drum in the suffocating silence. He wanted to scream, but fear pinned his throat shut.
Meanwhile, in the women’s section, Madam Chen’s cell had grown darker than usual. Her hands, still wrapped in splints, itched with the deep, gnawing ache of broken bones, but there was more than physical agony gnawing at her now. The shadows seemed alive, stretching toward her bunk, curling around her limbs with malicious intent.
Her cellmate was asleep—or pretending to be. Madam Chen could hear the soft, deliberate rhythm of breathing that only made the silence more unbearable. She closed her eyes, trying to shut out the pain, but a reflection in the cracked mirror across the cell caught her gaze. Her own eyes stared back—but for a heartbeat they were not hers. They were cold, calculating, filled with disdain. She jerked back, slamming her shoulder against the wall.
"Stop..." she whispered, but the voice in her head did not answer. It laughed.
Weak. Pathetic. You begged to be strong, and yet you cannot even move your own hands.
Her chest burned with panic. She tried to reach for the water jug in the corner, but the spiked shadows between her and the jug seemed real, tangible, pressing against her like invisible fingers.
Back in Lin Feng’s cell, a soft scratching sound started near the wall. At first he thought it was the rat—maybe two—but the rhythm was deliberate, too precise, tracing patterns across the concrete. He leaned closer despite the fire in his ribs.
"Do you feel the control slipping?"
His body froze. The whisper came again, closer, intimate. He realized he hadn’t moved a muscle for a long time. The shadows shifted once more, pooling toward the center of the room as though aware of his fear and feeding on it.
He tried to stand. A fresh wave of pain exploded across his torso. He collapsed back onto the mattress, sobbing quietly, hating himself for every memory that gave the voice its power.
Madam Chen’s hallucinations worsened. The mirror now reflected her cellmate—or was it?—with a knife glinting in the faint light. She wanted to warn her, to scream, but the words lodged in her throat. She pounded on the bed frame with her splinted hands. Pain shot up her arms like lightning, but still she pounded.
The reflection shifted again. Now it was her daughter’s face—or Shuyin’s—sharp-eyed, emotionless, satisfied. Madam Chen’s heart skipped. Her throat tightened until breathing felt impossible.
"You cannot escape this. You never could."
The walls seemed to pulse with the words, her own mind echoing them. The cell twisted, the ceiling lowered. Every instinct screamed at her to flee, to cry, to beg—but she had no legs to run, no hands to fight, no voice that could reach beyond the darkness.
Across the prison, time crawled. Clocks ticked audibly, or maybe it was only the frantic beat of their hearts. Lin Feng lay shivering, hearing whispers from every corner, seeing movement in shadows that should not exist. Madam Chen clutched the splints on her hands, rocking, shaking, muttering apologies to herself and the absent Shuyin.
Outside, in the control room bathed in cold blue light, a faint flicker illuminated the monitors. Someone was watching. Recording. Taking notes. Every fear, every flinch, every tear and stifled scream was cataloged, measured, filed away.
Shuyin’s plan had never been mere punishment. It was precise. Surgical. A lesson in despair delivered with the patience of someone who understood that true ruin did not come from broken bones—it came from the slow, methodical unraveling of the mind that once believed itself untouchable.
Tonight, both Lin Feng and Madam Chen learned something new in the depths of Black Water Ridge: power had never truly been theirs.
And fear—patient, relentless, perfect—had only just begun to keep them company.
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TWO DAYS LATER...
Dawn arrived quietly over the mansion, pale morning light slipping through the heavy silk curtains in soft bands of gold that painted the room in gentle warmth.
At six-thirty, Shuyin opened her eyes.
For a moment she lay still, listening to the room breathe—the faint rustle of leaves beyond the tall windows, the quiet rhythm of the man beside her, the lingering warmth trapped beneath the covers. The night’s shadows had long since retreated, but the weight of everything that had unfolded in Black Water Ridge still lingered at the edges of her mind like a satisfied secret. She let it settle, then pushed it aside. Today belonged to the children.
She eased herself up carefully, trying not to disturb Lu Yuze, but the moment she moved, his eyes opened—dark, alert, fully awake within a single heartbeat.
"You’re up early," he said, voice low and rough with sleep.
"It’s registration day," Shuyin replied softly, brushing a stray lock of hair from his forehead. "I need to wake the children."
She leaned down and pressed a light kiss against his brow before slipping into a robe and leaving the room on silent feet.
The corridor was hushed, the polished floors gleaming under the early light. She went to Yuyan first.
Her daughter was already half-awake, silver hair spilling loose across the pillow, one small hand tucked beneath her cheek. At twelve, Yuyan carried a natural poise that made her seem older than her years, yet this morning excitement softened the edges of it.