Based on the circumstances we learned in this update, I kinda suspect this scar came from resisting his "rescue", and the fact he kept it should have been something of a hint that he wasn't truly convinced to stay.
This is an interesting subject, and I think it hints at something big. A Sovereign who can reconcile this contradiction, who can fully internalize the potential of small actors, is extraordinarily dangerous. Because, viewed from the right perspective, the Sovereign is now not one actor; they're ten, or a hundred, or a hundred thousand actors moving as
not one, but many, and that's what makes them so dangerous. So difficult to predict or counter.
I suspect there's some really juicy overlap
and conflict with the current Empress's way to be had there.
I do think this is something all the roster of suitors has in common, though to different degrees and in different ways.
Xuan Shi and Meng Dan are leading the pack. Xuan Shi's had the longest exposure, has his perspective born from an interest in narrative, and he's had a keen eye on the interpersonal tides Ling Qi creates thanks to his loneliness. Meng Dan has his historical scholarship as context, and a scholar's zeal for digging into the truth behind the known, even as he's a bit disillusioned with how fleeting it can be. He already thinks in the broad scales that our actions have been influencing, and I suspect he grasps the personal influence Ling Qi has had on things like Renxiang and Meizhen's relationship almost as well as Xuan Shi does.
Bao Qian follows them up from a little bit behind. He has an eye for trends and change as a merchant, and first-hand experience with his own course being shifted by Ling Qi's whims, so he definitely sees that the world can turn on her decisions, even as she is now. Through the situation with his cousin and Meizhen, he's also got some insight into the touch of personal Ling Qi's added to things, and how impactful it probably is. I do feel like there's something holding him back from appreciating the scope of her/their impacts on the course of the future, possibly rooted in his own hesitations with Sovereignty. Challenging, shaking the very pillars of the world is something he's
appropriately cautious towards, because he knows better and isn't a crazy person.
Xia Anxi is a fun one because I'm pretty sure he does comprehend the magnitude of the things Ling Qi sees, stemming from her and Renxiang's actions, and he
really wished he didn't because it makes him feel faint. He's a guy who, because of his low-born origin and Bai society being so ruthless, has basically made it his life's existential mission to fit into the status quo. And none of the judgements feeding into that are even wrong. Ling Qi's presence, actions, beliefs, and nature are not friendly to the status quo. And she's doing it along lines which I suspect speak to him in a way that he's very uncomfortable admitting to himself are compelling. The Xia Anxiety is real, and that's cute.
Lastly, but not last, there's Sixiang and it's an interesting one. Sixiang has had the closest seat the whole time and their very constitution is in tune with understanding the kinds of influence our actions have on the world. If the world is a canvas, and Ling Qi a brush, then the picture being painted is something that resonates with Sixiang's most fundamental nature as a Muse. And what's really, scandalously, interesting is that Sixiang very nearly takes all that for granted and focuses on... Ling Qi's wellbeing. Her safety, not her Art. Which speaks to two things. First, a total faith in Ling Qi's creative capacity- there's no worry that Ling Qi's output will be anything other than more than good enough. And second, a genuinely painful degree of love. Of Want. The artist herself has become more beloved than anything she produces. Congratulations everyone, we broke the Muse.