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Hui Ya | Chap 40: Dark Mountain

Wei Lingsheng set down his brush. A few drops of ink fell onto the paper below, spreading in silence. His mind was elsewhere. Song Huiya's words from that morning still turned in his ears, cold and deliberate. He sifted through his memories the way a man searches a ransacked room, looking for proof of what was real and what was performance. Which moments had she manufactured? Which kindnesses had been calculated? Life before Bu Liu Mountain felt like someone else's story. It surfaced only in fragments, most of it worn down by time. His family had broken apart early. He had finally found shelter, and then his teacher died, and the world pushed him back onto the road. His past was not something he could look at directly. But when he forced himself to sort through what remained, most of it had Song Huiya in it. For the first six weeks after arriving at Bu Liu Mountain, he was waking from nightmares regularly. He slept only when exhaustion overtook him in the afternoons. At nig...

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    Hui Ya | Chap 39: The Letter That Was Never Evidence

    Ji Pingxuan's world was coming apart at the seams. He stood before the door for a moment, then stepped inside. Two bowls sat on the cracked wooden table. Two sets of clothing soaked in a bucket in the corner. Windows shut. Everything exactly as it had been three years ago. He sat down, lifted a bowl, and let his mind drift back. He had been adopted at six. By nine, the whispers of strangers had begun to teach him his own history. He learned the shape of the disaster that had taken his family before he was old enough to understand what disaster meant. His faith shattered. From that day, a slow and methodical self-destruction began. Late at night, thinking of his parents buried in a mass grave wrapped in straw mats, he felt something murderous move through him. But daylight always came. He stepped outside, looked across the street at the man who had taken him in, and understood that deep hatred collapses under the weight of incompetence. The feeling had nowhere to go. So it beca...

    Hui Ya | Chap 38: Panping City

    The boy's eyes fixed on the water as Liang Xi turned toward him. A faint spark of awareness had returned to his otherwise hollow gaze. He tried to push himself up on his elbows, failed halfway, and sank back down, eyes shut, catching his breath. Liang Xi grabbed him by the collar with one hand and hauled him upright. The boy shifted, settled himself on the ground, accepted the grilled fish, and ate without argument. He hadn't eaten in days. His muscles had begun to give out, and he knew better than to rush, so he picked through the flesh carefully, pulling bones free with each small bite. The carriage had supplies. Yan Heyi dug out some wound medicine, uncertain whether it was the right kind, and handed it over along with hot water. Liang Xi returned to the fire and went back to grilling his own fish. A short while later, whether from the medicine or from finally having food in him, the boy got to his feet. Unsteady, but upright. He didn't run. He walked to the riverba...

    Xian Tai You Shu | Chap 5: The Heart Speaks True

    Xue Ranran had not expected the strange-faced man to silence her with a compliment she didn't know how to answer. She stood there, caught between politeness and confusion, when a sharp knock rattled the door. "Ranran, open up! Quick!" Qiaolian's voice came through strained and urgent. Ranran's first thought was relief. Her parents were back. She crossed the room and pulled the door open. What she saw stopped her cold. Qiaolian was half-carrying Xue Liangui, one arm hooked under his shoulder, her face streaked with tears. His face was dark with blood. It had started badly and grown worse. When Qiaolian brought her husband to the village chief to arbitrate the wage dispute with the Ding family, the chief had initially spoken with some fairness. Then Madam Ding, the patriarch's mother-in-law, had leaned in close and murmured something about her second son's connections at the county academy, and how the chief's own boy was hoping to enroll that ver...

    Xian Tai You Shu | Chap 4: Prolonging Life

    By the time Xue Liangui came back to himself, there was nothing left to argue about. The table was gone. Every piece of furniture the Ding family owned was fine mahogany, but the table they had set out for a craftsman's wages looked like it had been pulled from a pigsty. And now they were calling this an even trade. Could a servant's missing table hold up a rich man's son's wedding? Of course not. The Ding family had planned this all along. They never meant to pay. Liangui cursed himself. Even his daughter Ranran had warned him not to take the job. But the wages sounded generous, and generous wages had a way of making a man deaf to good sense. He took the work. Now he sat with nothing to show for it. Ranran watched her father's face cycle through shame and fury. She kept her voice low. "Dad. Don't waste breath on people like the Dings. Save your energy. Their second son is sitting the provincial exams soon enough. What goes around comes around." He...

    Xian Tai You Shu | Chap 3: Vicious Interests

    After Qiaolian settled on the plan, the family began quietly preparing to leave. At dusk, a lone figure stood at the summit of Jueshan Mountain, watching smoke curl from the village far below. He was tall and loosely built, draped in a faded blue robe that had seen better years. Long, unkempt hair fell across his face and concealed most of it, but what it did not hide was strange enough: his features lay beneath a layer of pale, false-looking skin that gave him a ghostly, unsettling cast. Jueshan carried a spiritual ward, yet for reasons no one could easily explain, this man and his two attendants had passed through it without resistance and reached the great tree at the mountain's peak without incident. The man standing at his back, thick-waisted and sharp-eyed as a leopard, was named Yu Chen. Yu Chen had been standing in the biting wind for half an hour. He endured it once, then again, then finally leaned forward and spoke with careful deference: "Master, should we repor...
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