After a long moment, Su Yubing pulled back, caressing Lu Wuqi's cheeks. "We'll miss you every heartbeat," she said, voice thick with emotion.
Mo Yuxin brushed tears from her daughter's lashes. "But wherever you go, you carry our love."
Lu Wuqi swallowed, eyes shimmering. "I know."
And then, as if guided by a shared impulse beyond thought, Su Yubing and Mo Yuxin looked at one another—and lifted their joined hands over Lu Wuqi's bowed head. Fingers intertwined, they summoned a soft radiance between their palms. It blossomed into a globe of pure, dazzling light that pulsed with warmth and power.
The orb floated down and hovered before Lu Wuqi, tendrils of luminescence curling around her like a living promise. With a single, graceful motion, it merged into her chest, vanishing in a spark of brilliance.
Mo Yuxin laid a gentle hand on her shoulder. "This is a gift for you," she said, voice gentle as sunrise. "A gift you will come to understand one day."
Su Yubing's eyes glowed too, tears of pride softening her smile. "May it guide you to your soulmate—and back to us."
Lu Wuqi stood still for a heartbeat, feeling the warmth of that gift unfurl within her. Then her lips curved into a grateful smile—bright as a star.
And in that light-filled hush, they knew nothing could truly part them.
The silence that followed was sacred.
Lu Wuqi stood still in the center of that golden light, her heartbeat echoing like a distant drumbeat in her ears. The warmth from the orb—Su Yubing and Mo Yuxin's love—had settled in her chest like a second sun. It pulsed with gentle power, brushing against every thread of her soul.
Then, slowly, she felt it.
A tug.
Soft at first, like fingers brushing through her hair on a windy day.
Then stronger, like the call of the ocean to the shore, constant and insistent.
Not a voice, not a sound—just a pull, a yearning that curled around her ribs and reached into the deepest part of her.
The soulmate bond.
It had begun to stir.
Her breath caught in her throat. She turned her face upward. The world around her had gone quiet, like the forest before a storm—expectant, breathless. The air shimmered, trembling with unseen energy. Threads of starlight began to gather around her feet, rising in spirals, tiny motes that looked like moonlit snow.
Lu Wuqi's body started to glow from within, outlines softening, edges blurring. Her fingers sparkled like constellations, and when she opened her hands, tiny particles drifted away into the air like silver fireflies. It didn't hurt. It felt… right. Natural. Like coming home.
Su Yubing reached for her instinctively, but her hand passed through a light that was no longer quite solid.
Lu Wuqi looked at her mothers one last time.
Tears traced slow, quiet paths down Mo Yuxin's cheeks, though her smile was steady. Su Yubing's lips trembled, eyes wide and glistening, as if trying to memorize every detail of her daughter's face in these final seconds.
Lu Wuqi's voice came, soft and steady, carried by the wind as her figure grew fainter, luminous.
"Goodbye. I am coming, Qingyue."
And then, with a final shimmer like sunlight on water—
She was gone.
The golden light dispersed into silence. Only the faintest sparkle lingered in the air, like stardust too stubborn to fade.
Su Yubing stood frozen, her hand still reaching out to where Lu Wuqi had been. Her breath shook. Her lashes were soaked.
Then arms wrapped around her—warm, firm, grounding. Mo Yuxin pulled her close, tucking her against her shoulder as if to shield her from the cold of absence.
"She'll be safe," Mo Yuxin whispered, voice steady with quiet conviction. "Our daughter is stronger than any fate. You know that."
Su Yubing buried her face into the crook of her neck, nodding silently.
"She's walking the path she was meant to," Mo Yuxin continued, her hand stroking down Su Yubing's back in slow, calming circles. "We just have to have faith. She'll come back to us, when it's time."
Their bodies leaned into each other like twin trees weathering a storm, still standing tall despite the ache of parting.
But before the silence could truly settle in—
A thunderous hum cracked through the air.
Blinding beams of white light shot into the sky from every direction, converging above Shanglong Peak in a pillar that pierced the heavens. The energy was ancient, potent—older than memory, trembling with the echo of space and time tearing at its seams.
In the next heartbeat, figures flickered into view—one after another, robes fluttering like banners in a storm.
The beam of white light fractured above Shanglong Peak, rippling across the sky like ink dropped into water. In its radiant wake, two figures descended hand in hand, cutting elegant silhouettes against the blazing heavens.
Master Tang Qingxuan and Grandmaster Tong Rouxin.
Their arrival was not heralded by force, but by presence—quiet, overwhelming, reverent. Tang Qingxuan wore long robes of violet and silver, her dark hair swept into a regal crown braid that shimmered with embedded celestial charms. Her sharp, ageless features bore the calm of someone who had seen the rise and fall of empires, whose quietude was honed in the eye of countless storms. But her amethyst eyes, those glittering wells of insight, narrowed as they fell upon the fading sparks still dancing through the air where Lu Wuqi had once stood.
At her side, Grandmaster Tong Rouxin glided just above the ground, barefoot on the wind. Her snowy hair hung loose over robes of white and deep jade, her beauty refined like moonlight through frost. Her gaze, always serene, was now clouded with quiet calculation. Together, they looked like a pair torn from myth—eternal, intertwined, unshaken.
They landed silently just as another rift shimmered open—and this one brought a burst of steely wind.
Xu Xian, eldest sister, descended with the precision of a sword unsheathed. Her long white robes caught the breeze, the silver armor at her shoulders gleaming with runic light. Her expression was tightly controlled, but the intensity in her gaze betrayed the anxiety curling beneath.
Beside her, Bai Xuzhen followed like a shadow of water—soft but implacable. Her cerulean robes flowed like a mountain spring, and her ink-black hair was tied with a silk ribbon etched with protective seals. She placed a calm hand on Xu Xian's arm, grounding her.
They were barely able to take in the scene before another pulse of wind burst from the clouds, two more streaks of light spiraling downward.
Fourth sister arrived in a blur—fiery red robes streaming behind her like comet trails. She landed in a crouch, golden eyes wide with unease and curiosity.
Tianji Yuan, third junior sister, came with her whip still coiled around her wrist and her breath just slightly quick from the rush. Her ever-untamable hair was windswept, lips parted in a half-spoken question. Bai Lingshu arrived a breath later, as steady as a moonbeam. Clad in midnight hues, she stood behind Tianji with a composed air, her presence as gentle as it was unshakeable.
"You felt that too, right?" Tianji asked breathlessly, eyes darting around. "That—pull. It came from here. Is everyone alright?"
They all turned toward the center of the disturbance.
Toward Mo Yuxin and Su Yubing.
Toward the place where Lu Wuqi had vanished. seaʀᴄh thё NovelZone.fun website on Google to access chapters of novels early and in the highest quality.
Tong Rouxin's eyes swept over the gathering of disciples, and then she lifted her hand gently, motioning for silence.
All eyes turned instinctively to Master Tang Qingxuan.
But it was Grandmaster Tong Rouxin who finally spoke.
"She's not here… because she is elsewhere now," Rouxin said softly, her voice carrying like drifting snow. "Her body has vanished, yes. But not to death. She was called."
Tang Qingxuan's eyes glittered as she studied the air, where traces of soul-light still lingered like afterimages. "And she answered."
There was silence for a heartbeat, then Xu Xian stepped forward.
"With all respect, Master, Grandmaster—what kind of technique could do this? There was no rift. No talismanic runes. No teleportation array. She simply... vanished."
"She didn't use a technique," Mo Yuxin said quietly from behind them.
Everyone turned.
Mo Yuxin nodded slowly.
"She answered the call," she said simply.
That was all she gave. All that could be said.
And that, somehow, was enough.
The air still shimmered faintly, like something just barely out of reach. A promise. A question waiting for its answer.
And though no one knew where she had gone—Or what awaited her there—They knew one truth for certain:
Lu Wuqi had stepped into the unknown, chasing a bond older than time.She had chosen love.And wherever she landed, her story was far from over.
The air still pulsed faintly from Lu Wuqi's departure, a trace of magic and longing lingering like a soft breath across the peak. Su Yubing remained nestled in Mo Yuxin's arms, the hush around them full of emotions unspoken—until Mo Yuxin slowly lifted her gaze to the horizon, eyes reflecting both the golden glow and the encroaching weight of reality.
"…It's time for us to go too."
Her voice was gentle, but those words fell like a thunderclap across the summit.
The air stilled again.
Third junior sister Tianji Yuan's brows furrowed as her heart lurched. "Now? You're leaving now?" she asked, almost whispering. Her hand tightened around Bai Lingshu's instinctively, as if holding on could make the moment stop.
Youngest junior sister, Bai Lingshu who never spoke much, looked between them with wide eyes, lips trembling. "But… but you just—Lu Wuqi just—how can you leave us too?"
Eldest sister Xu Xian stepped forward, calm but unmistakably pained. She didn't ask "Why?" because she already knew the answer. They all did. The truth had been given to them long ago, not in words but in whispers—subtle glances exchanged between their Master and Grandmaster, quiet prayers when they thought no one was listening.
"We've known," she said quietly, her wife Bai Xuzhen standing by her side, expression somber. "Master told us. That you two… were not from this world."
"But that never mattered," Bai Xuzhen added, her voice firm, emotion glinting in her eyes. "Family isn't born in the same world. It's born in time spent… in trust, in shared battles, in tea after long days and laughter that refuses to fade."
Mo Yuxin's smile was soft, and her gaze swept across all of them—her precious juniors, her family. "I never imagined we'd grow so close. I thought I'd merely pass through… but this became home, too."
Su Yubing stepped forward, her voice thick with feeling. "You all gave us a place to belong, even when you didn't have to. Even when you knew… we might someday have to leave. You loved us anyway."
Fourth junior sister turned away briefly, wiping her eyes with the back of her hand before pulling Mo Yuxin into a sudden, tight hug. "You're cruel," she muttered. "All this time, making us love you more, knowing you'd go."
"I know," Mo Yuxin murmured into her hair. "I know. But another life is calling us now… the one we left behind. Our other family."
One by one, they embraced. Words weren't enough, but they tried anyway.
Tianji Yuan squeezed Su Yubing's hand tightly. "If you see the stars from your world… remember, we'll be looking up at them too."
Youngest junior sister threw her arms around both of them, barely able to speak through her tears. "Come back if you can. Even if it's just a whisper on the wind."
At last, it was time.
Su Yubing and Mo Yuxin stood side by side, the wind rustling their sleeves, their hands intertwined. Then, with a voice clear as moonlight, Mo Yuxin spoke once more.
"From this day on… Xu Xian and Bai Xuzhen shall jointly act as the future sect leaders of Cangran."
The words stunned them. Xu Xian blinked, clearly shaken. "What? Junior Sister, I—"
Bai Xuzhen shook her head quickly. "We're not ready—surely there are better choices—"
But Master Tang Qingxuan, still holding Grandmaster Tong Rouxin's hand, stepped forward with a warm smile in her eyes. "It will be as Mo Yuxin says."
Her voice carried the gravity of centuries.
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