The jade slip hovered—
silent.
Heavy.
—
Even the light around it seemed to dim slightly, as though the technique within wasn't reflecting illumination so much as absorbing attention.
—
The auctioneer didn't rush.
She let the weight of it settle across the hall—sink into instinct, into restraint, into greed.
—
Then she spoke, softly.
—
"Mid-tier Earth-grade…"
—
"A soul tempering method."
—
A pause.
—
Her gaze swept slowly across the tiers.
—
"…compatible with both human cultivators and high-awareness beasts."
—
That final line landed differently.
—
It wasn't decoration.
It was bait.
—
And it worked.
—
The hall shifted.
Not visibly—but in intent.
—
Because this wasn't a technique for the body.
Not speed.
Not weapons.
—
This was the soul.
—
Foundation.
Control.
Potential.
—
The fox leaned back, completely still now.
Watching.
—
This one…
she wouldn't touch.
—
Not yet.
—
Below—
the auctioneer lowered her voice another degree.
—
"Opening bid…"
—
"…one thousand mid-grade spirit stones."
—
Silence followed.
Not empty silence—
measured silence.
—
Because this wasn't a casual purchase.
This was commitment.
—
Then—
—
"Fifteen hundred."
—
Western shadows.
Calm.
Measured.
—
"Eighteen hundred."
—
Eastern tier.
More cautious this time.
—
"Two thousand."
—
A new voice.
Deep.
From higher up in the hall.
—
The bids rose carefully now.
Not quickly.
Not recklessly.
—
Because every increase meant something irreversible.
—
Then—
—
"Two thousand five hundred."
—
Suite Nine.
Meihu.
—
Her voice slipped through the hall again.
Smooth.
Controlled.
—
But now—
there was no softness beneath it.
No performative charm.
—
Only intent.
—
The fox's ears twitched.
—
*There it is.*
—
This was the difference.
—
This was something she actually wanted.
—
Beside her—
Shen Tu looked like he might forget how to breathe.
—
"My Lady…"
—
"…this one—"
—
The fox lifted a paw slightly.
Not dismissive.
Just firm.
—
Quiet.
—
Her eyes never left the curtained suite.
Because now this wasn't about bidding.
It was about reading.
—
Meihu had let the previous lot go.
No hesitation.
No counterpressure.
—
But this one—
she entered immediately.
Decisively.
—
Which meant—
—
value threshold confirmed.
Priority established.
—
The fox's lips curved faintly.
—
Good.
—
Below—
the auctioneer continued smoothly.
—
"Two thousand five hundred from Suite Nine."
—
"Do I hear twenty-six hundred?"
—
A pause.
—
The western shadows shifted.
—
Then—
—
"Two thousand eight hundred."
—
Calm.
Steady.
—
A challenger had stepped in.
—
And the hall tightened again.
—
Now it was no longer positioning.
It was conflict.
—
The fox shifted slightly in her seat, tail resting still behind her.
But she still didn't bid.
Didn't interfere.
—
Because she didn't need to.
—
The fish weren't circling the bait anymore.
They were biting each other for it.
—
Beside her—
Little White's voice drifted lazily through the link.
—
*Not joining?*
—
The fox answered immediately.
—
*No.*
—
A beat.
—
*This one isn't for me.*
—
Her eyes gleamed faintly.
—
*This one is for them.*
—
Below—
the auctioneer's voice cut cleanly through the rising pressure.
—
"Two thousand eight hundred…"
—
"Do I hear three thousand?"
—
Silence stretched.
Tight.
Fragile.
—
Then—
—
"Three thousand."
—
Suite Nine.
Meihu again.
—
No hesitation.
No delay.
—
This time, the message was unmistakable.
—
She wasn't testing anymore.
She was claiming.
—
The fox leaned back slowly.
A faint, satisfied curve formed at the corner of her lips.
—
Because now she knew exactly what kind of opponent she was dealing with.
—
And more importantly—
exactly how to make her spend.
The hall didn't erupt—
but it *tightened*.
Like a breath held too long.
—
Three thousand.
From Suite Nine.
—
No hesitation this time.
No probing.
No social pressure.
—
A clean declaration of intent.
—
The auctioneer's smile softened, just slightly.
—
"Three thousand from Suite Nine."
—
"Do I hear thirty-one hundred?"
—
Silence followed.
—
This time it wasn't uncertainty.
It was calculation.
—
Because once bids crossed this threshold, they stopped being casual exchanges.
They became statements of identity.
—
Power had a price.
And everyone in the hall was now deciding how much they were willing to pay to be seen paying it.
—
The fox watched without moving.
Still.
Composed.
—
But her attention had narrowed completely now.
Not on the number.
On Meihu.
—
Because something had shifted in that last bid.
—
It wasn't just confidence.
It was *commitment without fatigue*.
No emotional escalation.
No visible strain.
Just continuation.
—
Like she had already decided the outcome and was merely walking toward it.
—
Shen Tu leaned slightly closer, voice low.
—
"My Lady…"
—
"She's not hesitating at all anymore."
—
The fox's ears flicked once.
—
"I noticed."
—
Below—
a voice finally broke the silence.
—
"Thirty-one hundred."
—
Western shadows again.
A different bidder this time.
Testing.
Careful.
—
The auctioneer's eyes glimmered faintly.
—
"Thirty-one hundred…"
—
"Do I hear thirty-two?"
—
A pause.
—
Then—
Suite Nine.
—
"Thirty-five hundred."
—
The hall shifted again.
Subtle.
Uneasy.
—
Because now the gap wasn't incremental anymore.
It was dominance expressed in numbers.
—
The fox exhaled softly through her nose.
—
*She's compressing the field.*
—
Not letting others build momentum.
Not letting a bidding war form.
Just forcing everyone to decide:
Are you in, or are you out?
—
Simple.
Brutal.
Effective.
—
Little White's voice brushed her mind lazily.
—
*Hmm.*
—
The fox's lips curved faintly.
—
*She's good.*
—
A pause.
—
*Which is why she'll be expensive.*
—
Below—
the auctioneer lifted a hand.
—
"Thirty-five hundred from Suite Nine."
—
"Do I hear thirty-six?"
—
Silence stretched again.
Longer now.
Heavier.
—
The eastern tier had gone still entirely.
The western shadows no longer spoke.
Even the higher suites remained watching.
—
Meihu had created a vacuum.
And now everyone was deciding whether to step into it—or avoid it entirely.
—
The fox's gaze drifted briefly to her jade slate.
Her wealth flickered through her mind like a quiet ledger.
—
She could intervene again.
She could spike it.
Force escalation.
—
But she didn't.
—
Instead, she leaned back slightly.
Relaxed.
Almost bored.
—
Because she understood something now.
—
Meihu didn't need to win everything.
She only needed to win enough that others started believing she would never lose what she truly wanted.
—
And once that belief formed—
everything else became leverage.
—
The fox's tail flicked once.
Slow.
Thoughtful.
—
*So that's your game.*
—
Below—
the auctioneer's voice rang out again.
—
"Thirty-five hundred…"
—
"Going once."
—
A pause.
—
"Going twice—"
—
No one spoke.
The hall had already accepted the outcome.
—
Then—
—
"Sold."
—
The jade slip vanished.
A pulse of confirmation echoed faintly through the fox's slate.
—
She didn't even glance at it.
Her attention had already moved on.
—
Because she had seen enough.
—
Meihu wasn't just wealthy.
She was *precise in expenditure.*
Which meant she would respond predictably to pressure—if applied correctly.
—
The fox's smile returned.
Small.
Dangerous.
—
Perfect.
—
Beside her, Shen Tu finally exhaled.
—
"That was…"
He searched for the word.
—
"…insane."
—
The fox glanced at him briefly.
—
"No."
—
A beat.
—
"That was just the beginning."
—
And below—
the auctioneer's voice softened once more.
—
"Lot Nine…"
—
"…a high Earth-grade defensive spirit tool."
—
The fox's eyes narrowed slightly.
—
Now the rhythm would reset again.
Because after a surge like that, every bidder would look for something safe.
Something grounding.
Something controllable.
—
And that—
was exactly what she intended to take away next.
