Leng Ran Libra Imperial City Illusions -
The Keeper’s laugh is soft as shattering crystal. “Ah. You see? Your name weighs more than your dream. That is rare. That is dangerous.”
He places that vision into the right scale.
For a breathless moment, the Libra hangs still. Then it tips —violently, impossibly—toward the left. Toward Leng Ran .
“Welcome home,” the mirror says. “Or have you always been the Illusion?” Leng Ran Libra Imperial City Illusions
Lian whispers it— Leng Ran . The name falls into the left scale. It does not sink. It floats , trembling, as if alive.
Lian touches his chest. His heart is a small brass scale now, tipping side to side. Tick. Tick. Tick.
In the Hall of Balanced Scales, a young man named Lian kneels before the floating brass mechanism. The Libra’s arms are etched with constellations—one side Libra, the other side a wolf devouring its own tail. Above him, the Imperial City shimmers like a fever dream: towers lean into impossible angles, windows open onto rooms that do not exist, and the wind carries the scent of white tea and betrayal. The Keeper’s laugh is soft as shattering crystal
In the Imperial City of Leng Ran, no one dreams. But everyone is a dream—waiting for someone else’s Libra to find them true.
The Imperial City shudders. The Illusion ripples like a pond struck by a stone. Towers melt into ribbons of silk; streets fold into origami swans. And from the horizon, a second Leng Ran rises—a mirror version, walking toward him with the same face, the same scars, but eyes like two black Libras, ever balancing, ever empty.
“You wish to enter the Illusion?” asks the Keeper, a woman whose face changes with every blink. “Then first, surrender your name.” Your name weighs more than your dream
Under a mercury sky, the Imperial City of Leng Ran does not gleam—it breathes . Its spires are crafted from frozen starlight, its streets paved with the sighs of forgotten oaths. Here, the Libra does not weigh gold or jade, but the tilt of a single heart.
Lian hesitates. He sees himself not as he is, but as he dreams—standing on a bridge of bone-white jade, hand-in-hand with a figure whose face is always turned away. Snow falls upward. A clock ticks backward. In that illusion, he is never lonely. In that illusion, the Imperial City is not a cage but a cradle.
The Keeper smiles. “Good. Now the second weight: your deepest illusion.”








