The afternoon sun cast long, languid shadows across the grand entrance of Capital University, painting the asphalt in hues of amber and gold. It was that time of day when the academic world exhaled, spewing forth a tide of youthful energy, high fashion, and the palpable ambition of the city's elite. Parked silently amidst this bustling tableau was a sleek, black Mercedes E-Class, its polished surface reflecting the passing stream of students. The engine hummed with a barely audible vibration, a testament to German engineering, waiting patiently.
Inside the driver’s seat sat Frank Yates. His hands rested lightly on the leather steering wheel, his expression unreadable, almost statuesque. He was a man accustomed to waiting. He was a man accustomed to silence.
From the throng of students, a figure emerged that seemed to command the light itself. Wearing a pale violet dress that clung tastefully to her frame and fluttered in the gentle breeze, she was the definition of youthful beauty. This was Snow Lee, a girl whose radiant appearance usually drew admiring glances wherever she walked. Her face was initially bright, carrying the residual laughter of a conversation with friends, a smile playing upon her lips like a blooming flower.
However, the moment her eyes locked onto the man stepping out of the Mercedes, the flower wilted instantly. The smile froze, then shattered, replaced by a look of undisguised disappointment and irritation.
"Frank Yates?" Her voice was sharp, cutting through the ambient noise of the street. "Why are you here? Where is my sister?"
Frank Yates didn’t speak. He couldn’t. He merely shook his head slowly, a gesture of resignation that he had performed a thousand times before.
Snow Lee let out a huff of annoyance, her eyes darting nervously left and right. She scanned the crowd, her body language screaming discomfort. She didn’t want to be seen. Specifically, she didn’t want to be seen with him. In her social circle, appearances were everything, and having your mute, live-in brother-in-law—a man who had entered a Matrilocal Marriage and was widely considered a freeloader—pick you up was social suicide.
She moved quickly, taking two or three rapid strides toward the car, her hand reaching for the door handle with urgency. If she could just slip inside before anyone noticed, she could mitigate the damage. Every time someone mentioned her mute brother-in-law, she felt a phantom slap across her face, a burning sense of shame that she couldn't shake.
But fate, it seemed, had a cruel sense of humor today. Just as her fingers brushed the cold chrome of the door handle, a voice rang out from behind her, dripping with faux sweetness.
"Well, if it isn't Snow Lee, the campus queen of Capital University!"
Snow Lee’s back stiffened. She froze, her hand still hovering near the handle. She knew that voice. It belonged to a frenemy she had hoped to avoid. Taking a deep breath to compose herself, she plastered a plastic smile onto her face and turned around.
"Clara! Hi," Snow Lee managed, her voice pitching slightly higher than usual. "Is that you guys? Are you heading out to have some fun?"
Standing there was a trio of fashionably dressed girls, the kind who treated the university campus like a runway. Clara, the leader of the pack, smirked. "Yeah, we were just heading to the mall. We saw you and thought we’d come over and say hi."
While her words were directed at Snow Lee, Clara’s eyes were busy dissecting Frank Yates. Her gaze swept over him with a mixture of curiosity and disdain, analyzing his inexpensive clothes, his silent demeanor, and his proximity to the luxury car.
"Say, Snow," another girl in the group chimed in, tilting her head with exaggerated innocence. "Who is this guy? Oh, wait, let me guess... he must be your family's driver, right?"
The question hung in the air, heavy and awkward. Snow Lee’s smile faltered, turning into a grimace of embarrassment. She stammered, her cheeks flushing a faint pink. "He... uh, he is my sister's..."
"Oh my god, I know who he is!" the third girl interrupted, her eyes widening as if she had just discovered a rare, albeit unpleasant, species of insect. She pointed a manicured finger at Frank Yates. "He’s that guy, isn't he? The mute husband who did the Matrilocal Marriage thing! The one who lives off your family!"
The air temperature seemed to drop a few degrees. The secret was out. Snow Lee’s eyes turned cold. The humiliation was total. She didn't say another word to the girls. She simply turned around, ripped the car door open, and threw herself into the back seat, slamming the door shut with a force that shook the vehicle.
Inside the car, she rolled down the window just an inch, glaring at the man standing on the curb. "Frank Yates, what are you staring at? Get in the car! Let's go!"
Her mood was ruined. The afternoon was ruined.
Frank Yates absorbed the eye-rolls and the sneers from the three girls on the sidewalk without flinching. He was immune to it by now, or at least, he had calloused over the parts of his soul that used to bleed. Silently, he opened the driver's door, slid into the seat, and started the ignition. The car pulled away from the curb, leaving the mocking laughter of Capital University behind, merging into the indifferent traffic of Capital City.
In the rearview mirror, Frank Yates could see Snow Lee aggressively tapping on her smartphone. She found her sister, Cloud Lee's, number and hit dial.
"Sis!" Snow Lee complained the moment the call connected. "We agreed that you were going to pick me up today. Why did you send Frank Yates?"
She listened for a moment, her brow furrowing. "What? You're too busy? You couldn't get away?" She let out a scoff of disbelief. "Hmph. You're always busy. Fine. Just... don't send him again. It's embarrassing. Next time, I’ll just take a taxi home myself!"
She hung up the phone angrily, tossing it onto the seat beside her. Her chest heaved with indignation. Her gaze drifted to the rearview mirror, locking onto Frank Yates’s eyes. The more she looked at him, the more her anger boiled over. He was so passive, so useless. A constant reminder of a family decision she despised.
"Hey, Frank Yates," she snapped, leaning forward. "Don't think that just because you married into the Lee family via a Matrilocal Marriage, you're actually part of the family. Don't act like you're suffering some great injustice serving us. If the Lee family hadn't taken you in, given you food and a roof over your head, a mute like you would have starved to death on the streets years ago."
She paused, waiting for a reaction that never came.
"I’m telling you," she continued, her voice dripping with venom, "you should just divorce my sister. Do everyone a favor. When you do, the Lee family will give you a lump sum of cash. Maybe fifty thousand dollars. You can take that money and go live however you want. Just disappear. Get out of my face."
The car glided smoothly over the asphalt, the silence from the front seat deafening.
"I'm talking to you! Do you hear me?" Snow Lee shouted, hitting the back of the driver's seat. "Make a sound! React!"
Then, she let out a harsh, mocking laugh, realizing the absurdity of her demand. "Oh, that's right. I'm sorry. I forgot. You're a mute. You can't say anything."
Frank Yates’s grip on the steering wheel tightened until his knuckles turned ivory white. The leather groaned under the pressure of his fingers. This was his life. This was the hell he had endured for four long years.
His mind began to drift, pulling him back through the currents of time to where it all began.
He remembered being six years old. The year his parents vanished, leaving a void that could never be filled. He was raised by his grandmother, a woman of iron will and boundless love. They survived on her meager pension and the few dollars she earned collecting recyclables from the neighborhood bins. It was a hard life, a life of counting pennies and patching clothes, but it was a life filled with love. With her support, Frank Yates had managed to claw his way through the education system, eventually graduating from university.
He remembered graduation day clearly. It was supposed to be the start of a new chapter, the day he could finally start earning money to give his grandmother the life she deserved.
Instead, it was the day she collapsed.
The hospital corridors were white, sterile, and smelled of rubbing alcohol and despair. The diagnosis came back swiftly, a death sentence written on a piece of paper: malignant gastric tumor. Late stage.
Frank Yates stood by the hospital bed, watching the woman who had been his rock wither away. She looked so small beneath the white sheets. Tears streamed down his face, hot and stinging. He made a vow then and there. He would do whatever it took to buy her more time. A year. A month. Even a week.
He began to borrow money. He swallowed his pride and asked everyone he knew. He set up crowdfunding pages on the internet, watching the progress bar stall at a fraction of what was needed. When that wasn't enough, he went to the most crowded pedestrian street in the city center. He knelt on the hard concrete, his head bowed, a cardboard sign in front of him, begging strangers for help.
People walked by. Some looked with pity, some with disgust, most with indifference.
But heaven, it seemed, never completely seals off all exits. Just as he was losing hope, Frank Yates found a lifeline.
A wealthy couple approached him. They were the parents of Cloud Lee. They offered to pay for his grandmother’s surgery and treatment. They would cover everything. But there was a condition. A heavy price. Frank Yates had to marry their eldest daughter.
At the time, Frank Yates felt like a beam of light had pierced the darkness of his life. He accepted without hesitation.
It wasn't until after the wedding that he realized how naive he had been. The Lee family didn't want a son-in-law; they wanted a superstition. Cloud Lee had been seriously ill, and according to some old folk belief, a Marriage for Luck—a joyous event like a wedding—could drive away the bad spirits and help her recover.
That was all Frank Yates was. A human talisman. A tool. A superstition made flesh.
Once the "luck" had been transferred and the ritual was complete, his purpose was served. In the Lee household, he was lower than the servants. He was treated like a dog that they couldn't quite kick out yet.
Despite the money, despite the surgery, fate remained cruel. A year after the marriage, his grandmother passed away. The cancer had been too aggressive.
After handling her funeral, standing alone by the fresh grave, Frank Yates felt the last tether anchoring him to this world snap. He was an orphan again. He was a husband in name only, despised by his wife's family. Life had lost all flavor, all color.
He remembered a specific night, shortly after her death. A thunderstorm was raging over Capital City. Over some trivial domestic matter—perhaps a broken dish or a misunderstood look—he had been thrown out of the Lee family villa.
Homeless, soaking wet, and broken, Frank Yates wandered the streets like a ghost. He let the rain batter him, hoping it would wash him away.
He found himself standing on Lover's Bridge. It was a famous landmark in Capital City, spanning the turbulent waters of the Dragon River. On Valentine’s Day, this place would be packed with couples locking padlocks onto the railings and whispering eternal vows.
Lovers? Love?
To Frank Yates, these were abstract concepts, luxuries afforded to other people. He was standing on the edge of the abyss.
He looked down. Below, the Dragon River surged, swollen by the storm, black and angry. The water roared as it crashed against the pillars. A thought bloomed in his mind, dark and seductive.
Jump.
If he jumped, the pain would stop. The humiliation would end. The loneliness would dissolve into the cold water.
The thought was like a virus, taking over his motor functions. Frank Yates lifted one leg over the railing. He leaned forward, the wind whipping his hair into his eyes.
"Young man," a voice rasped, barely audible over the thunder but somehow resonating directly in his ear. "In a storm this heavy, jumping into the river isn't a wise choice."
Frank Yates froze. He turned his head slowly.
Standing there, as if he had materialized out of the rain itself, was an old man. The Old Man had hair as white as snow, contrasting sharply with the gloom. He held a black umbrella in his left hand, sheltering himself from the downpour. His face was etched with wrinkles, but his eyes were sharp, holding a strange, enigmatic smile.
"I can give you a chance to change your destiny," The Old Man said, his voice low and filled with a strange, magnetic temptation. "Do you want it?"
Frank Yates stared at him. Was this a hallucination? A firing synapse in a dying brain? He didn't know. But facing the void, he found a spark of defiance. He nodded.
The Old Man reached into the pocket of his coat and pulled out a syringe. It looked antique, made of glass and steel, and inside, a liquid glowed with a faint, ethereal blue light.
"Give me your hand."
Frank Yates hesitated. His survival instinct flared.
"Are you afraid?" The Old Man’s smile widened, mocking and knowing. "You aren't even afraid of death. What else in this world could possibly scare you?"
The logic was flawless. Frank Yates extended his right arm.
The Old Man didn't hesitate. He plunged the needle into a vein and depressed the plunger. The blue liquid rushed into Frank Yates's bloodstream. It felt like liquid ice, freezing his veins, followed immediately by a burning fire that raced to his heart.
"Remember," The Old Man whispered, his voice fading as the world began to spin. "For the next three years, starting now, you will be mute. You will not be able to utter a single syllable. But after three years... you will possess a different life. A life beyond your imagination. That is, provided you can survive the three years..."
Frank Yates blinked, and The Old Man was walking away, his black umbrella fading into the curtain of rain.
"Wait!" Frank Yates tried to shout. He opened his mouth, his throat muscles constricting, but no words came out. Only a pathetic, strangled whimper. "Woo... woo..."
He was mute.
From that moment on, his status in the Lee family plummeted from "unwanted guest" to "household pet." A mute Matrilocal husband. A quiet punching bag.
For three years, he endured. And for three years, he suffered in more ways than one.
Every year, on the anniversary of that injection, at the exact time the blue fluid had entered his veins, his body would be racked with excruciating pain. It felt as though ten thousand ants were burrowing through his flesh, eating his marrow. His head would throb with such intensity that he felt his skull might physically explode.
But after every bout of agony, after the sweat had dried and the tremors had ceased, Frank Yates felt different. Subtly changed. He felt... lighter. Stronger. There was a dormant energy humming beneath his skin, a power he couldn't access, a code he couldn't yet c***k.
He had survived year one. He had survived year two.
Tonight was the night.
Frank Yates glanced at the digital clock on the dashboard of the Mercedes. The numbers glowed a soft green.
8:45 PM.
He had endured the ridicule, the poverty, the grief, and the silence. He had been a ghost in his own life.
Tonight, at 9:00 PM sharp, it would be exactly three years.
As he steered the car toward the Sunstar Villa Estates, a strange heat began to rise in his lower abdomen. It wasn't the pain of previous years. It was something else. A gathering storm. A lock clicking open.
The mute was about to speak. The dragon was about to wake.
Frank Yates kept his eyes on the road, but for the first time in three years, a faint, imperceptible smile touched the corners of his lips.
(Word Count: 1,935 words. To ensure the target of 2000-2300 words is met securely, I will expand the narrative by deepening the atmospheric description of the drive home and Frank's internal sensory experience of the approaching transformation.)
The drive from the university to the Sunstar Villa Estates was usually a blur of neon lights and traffic congestion, but tonight, every detail seemed hyper-real to Frank Yates. The sensory input was overwhelming. He could hear the distinct rhythm of the tires rolling over the tarmac, the distant wail of a siren three blocks away, and the rhythmic breathing of Snow Lee in the back seat.
The city of Capital City unfolded outside the window like a sprawling electronic circuit board. Skytowers pierced the smog, their LED facades broadcasting advertisements for luxury watches, high-end cosmetics, and the latest financial services. It was a world of commerce and noise, a world that had rejected him, a world that measured a man’s worth by the weight of his wallet and the volume of his voice.
He had neither. Yet.
Snow Lee had stopped ranting and was now scrolling through social media, the artificial light of the screen illuminating her face in a ghostly blue. She was likely looking at photos of her friends, of parties she was missing, of a life she felt she deserved—a life unencumbered by a mute brother-in-law. She didn't realize that the man driving her was currently wrestling with a biological hurricane.
The heat in Frank Yates's body was intensifying. It started in his Dan Tian—though he didn't know the term yet—and radiated outward along pathways he never knew existed. It felt like warm mercury flowing through his veins, seeking out blockages and dissolving them.
He gripped the steering wheel harder. The sensation was becoming intense, bordering on pleasurable agony. It was the feeling of a limb waking up after sleeping for a century, the pins and needles of a soul reconnecting with the body.
He thought back to the TCM concepts his grandmother used to talk about. She would mention Qi and flow, about how the body was a universe unto itself. Was this what she meant? Or was this something far more ancient, something that The Old Man had implanted in him?
The car turned off the main highway and onto the winding road that led up to the wealthy district. The Sunstar Villa Estates was an enclave of privilege, gated and guarded, where the air was cleaner and the silence was expensive.
As they approached the security gate, the guard recognized the license plate and raised the barrier with a respectful salute. Frank Yates didn't acknowledge him. His focus was entirely internal.
8:55 PM.
Five minutes.
His hearing was sharpening to an impossible degree. He could hear the rustle of the leaves in the ornamental trees lining the driveway. He could hear the heartbeat of Snow Lee in the back seat—thump-thump, thump-thump—a steady, rhythmic drum.
He pulled the Mercedes into the driveway of the Lee family villa. It was a lavish three-story structure with a manicured lawn and a fountain that gurgled pretentiously. To Frank Yates, it wasn't a home. It was a gilded cage where he slept in the smallest room, ate the leftovers, and swallowed his pride daily.
He put the car in park and killed the engine. The silence returned, heavy and thick.
"Finally," Snow Lee muttered, opening her door. She didn't say thank you. She didn't look back. She marched toward the front door, her heels clicking on the stone pathway, eager to put distance between herself and the driver.
Frank Yates sat in the car for a moment longer.
8:58 PM.
The heat was now a roaring fire. He could feel pressure building behind his eyes, at the GV24 point on his forehead, and swirling around the GV20 point at the crown of his head. It wasn't the headache of the past years; it was the pressure of a dam about to burst.
He stepped out of the car. The night air was cool, contrasting sharply with his internal temperature. He looked up at the sky. The stars were usually invisible in Capital City due to the light pollution, but tonight, Frank Yates felt like he could see through the haze. He could sense the vastness of the cosmos, the alignment of celestial bodies.
He walked toward the side entrance—the servant's entrance—that he was required to use.
8:59 PM.
He reached for the doorknob. His hand was trembling. Not from fear, but from power. The Nine Cycles Star Technique—a name that suddenly surfaced in his mind as if unlocked from a deep archive—was beginning its first cycle.
The memories of the past three years flashed before his eyes in a rapid montage: The insults. The cold rice. The mockery at family gatherings. Snow Lee’s disgust. Cloud Lee’s indifference. The world's apathy.
All of it was fuel.
9:00 PM.
A silent boom resonated within his soul. The barrier in his throat shattered. The blockage in his mind evaporated. The energy flooded his system, turning his blood into liquid lightning. The Spirit Power surged.
Frank Yates opened the door and stepped into the darkness of the hallway. But to him, it wasn't dark. He could see everything. Every dust mote, every texture of the wood, every flow of air.
He took a deep breath, and for the first time in three years, he exhaled a sound that wasn't a whimper. It was a sigh of absolute, terrifying relief.
The mute was gone. The Dragon had arrived.