When a Fashion Queen Fell Back in Time
Rainy night. The blue-stone alley is blanched white by lightning.
Three children huddle in a corner, their school uniforms soaked in mud and rain, their faces pale as paper.
“Mom—!”
They cry out and lunge toward the woman who has just dropped from the sky—black clothes drenched, long hair plastered to her neck, umbrella ribs flung with lethal precision into a thug’s wrist. She kicks down the knife-wielding brute in one fluid motion—so fast only afterimages remain. Raindrops shatter off her jawline like shards of ice.
But when the children reach for her, she steps aside.
Her eyes are cold—frost-forged blades.
“I’m not your mother.” Her voice is raw, hollow, barely human.
No one believes her.
Not until three hours later, in the police station’s interrogation room.
Surveillance footage shows her pinning the suspect’s neck to the floor with one knee, interrogating him fluently—in Russian, Arabic, then Spanish—as if breathing. The head translator hands her an official offer on the spot: “Report to the Foreign Affairs Division tomorrow.”
She doesn’t take it.
Instead, she stares at an encrypted file just received on her phone:
A yellowed birth certificate—her name violently crossed out in red ink;
A thumbnail of a twenty-year-old child trafficking case file;
And a photograph—a barred iron door, behind which another girl, identical in every line of face and brow, sits gagged with tape. On her wrist: the same birthmark.
11:07 p.m. that night.
She returns to the old house adorned with a faded red “Fu” character, clutching a kitchen cleaver.
The door is unlocked.
The stove is cold. Half a bowl of congealed egg-drop soup sits on the counter.
She lifts the cellar hatch and drops down—the cleaver’s tip scraping brick, spitting sparks.
Deep in the cellar, her sister is bound to a rusted iron chair. Her lashes flutter—but she smiles.
Outside, the three brothers stand guard at every exit, gripping iron rods.
The eldest grits his teeth: “You knew she wasn’t real—*all along*?”
The second brother shouts, eyes bloodshot: “Then what about all those years? What was *that*—some kind of act?!”
The youngest suddenly raises his phone. The screen glows—a secretly recorded video:
Last Winter Solstice. She’s crouched in the kitchen, peeling tangerines for her sister, feeding her the sweetest segment, whispering: “Don’t be afraid. This time… I *will* bring you home.”
In the final three seconds, she lifts her gaze—straight into the lens. No guilt. No explanation. Only ash—cold, absolute, all-consuming.
Now, slowly, she raises the blood-smeared cleaver. Its tip points—not at them—but at the family portrait enshrined above the ancestral altar.
“Whoever touches my sister,” she says, voice quiet as falling snow, “I’ll cut off their hand. Then burn this house down—beam by beam.”
“And leave you *nothing*. Not even ash.”