Mo Qing frowned at the girl before him. She had a faint dimple when she spoke, and she spoke plainly, without the bored cruelty he had come to expect from the wealthy. He had known noble families who bought men the way they bought horses, and he had braced himself for that look. It never came. What he found instead in her eyes was something quieter: a measured relief, and something close to respect. It unsettled him enough that the words left his mouth before he could stop them. "Have we met somewhere, miss?" Shen Miao's answer was soft. "No." "Then why—" "You carry yourself well," she said. "Good bearing, good martial form. A man with a future, by all appearances. And yet you're selling a sword you've clearly carried for years. That isn't vanity you're parting with — that's last resort." She paused. "You need money now, but money alone won't solve what comes after. I am the legitimate daughter of ...
Vol. 2: Refining the Immortals Yi City sat at the edge of the wild. The Yi Wang Palace carried none of the ethereal grace of ordinary immortal halls. Its stones were massive and blunt, carved with totems of swords splitting axes, spread across every wall. The place felt like a held breath before battle. Bai Shuo had come with a purpose. She needed to find Chongzhao. She followed the maid into the main hall and stopped dead in the doorway. The hall was already packed. Immortal and demon children had arrived early for the Wutong Martial Arts Banquet, filling every seat. At the throne, Beichen and Nanwan's Mujiu Chongzhao sat in prominence. Bai Shuo was only an outer disciple, here only because of Chongzhao's standing. She and Fan Yue had been seated closest to the temple gate, several meters back from the throne. Word of Wuming Mountain had already spread. Groups of immortals and demons stared at Chongzhao in clusters, voices low, expressions riding the line between contempt an...