Anji felt her arm shake as the recoil pushed back into her shoulder, a familiar jolt of force echoing through her bones. The bullet tore through the air and carved cleanly into the wooden target ahead.
One. Two. Three. Four. She emptied the entire cartridge (that was what they called it) with a calmness she found in her, each shot finding its mark without deviation. Every trigger pull was certain, her breathing steady, body aligned perfectly.
Sheâd been doing this for a week nowâhelping Feiyu and Qing He test the new bullet molds and gun modificationsâbut for her, it was never just help.
Firing bullets was therapy.
There was something satisfying about the thunderous crack, the sense of raw force controlled by her hands. A mortal woman wielding something that could pierce through a bearâs skull⊠it made her feel powerful. Important.
But today? There was no satisfaction. No thrill. No smile. No goosebumps.
Only questions. A weight she couldnât shake. A rising storm in her thoughts that had nothing to do with targets and everything to do with the man behind the design of these weapons.
As the final bullet snapped free and smoke curled from the barrel, she lowered the gun and turned. Feiyu stood at the edge of the range, notebook in hand, scribbling something before giving her a nod.
âThat was good,â he said. âI think we can end it for today. Iâm going to work on more gun diagramsâbased on the notes Sect Leader Chen gave me.â He glanced up again. âWhen we finally start training mortals with these⊠I think youâd make a good instructor.â
Anji blinked. âIâd be willing.â
Feiyu smiled lightly, satisfied. âThen Iâll leave it at that. Good session.â
He turned, heading for the workshopâbut before he could round the corner, Anji felt something tighten in her chest. Her throat moved, the words clawing their way out before she could think twice.
âWait. Can I ask you something?â
Feiyu paused mid-step and looked over his shoulder. âAbout guns? Ask away.â
âNoâŠâ she said, and cleared her throat, unable to fathom what she was about to ask. âAbout Sect Leader Chen.â
He turned fully this time, brows arching faintly. âWhat about him?â
âDo you trust him?â she asked plainly.
There was a pause. Not long, but enough for her to catch the flicker of change in his expression. His posture didnât shift, but his eyes⊠they sharpened.
âHeâs my benefactor,â Feiyu said. âHe severed my bloodline from slaveryâsomething my ancestors suffered through for generations.â
Anji didnât move. âThat⊠doesnât answer my question.â
Feiyu's lips twitchedânot quite a smile. âThen yes. I trust him.â
He stepped closer, speaking slowly now, not for her understanding but for his own recollection.
âIâll admit, when I first met him, a lot of what he said sounded⊠ridiculous. Risky. Honestly? A little insane. He spoke of weapons, systems, markets, and mortals holding power like cultivators. I thought he was deluded.â
His gaze drifted briefly, before locking with hers again.
âBut every promise, every riskâhe held to it. Even when things went bad, and it looked like we'd all die⊠he never wavered. And because he didnât, Iâm here today. So yes. I trust him.â
A quiet fell over the training ground.
âDoes that answer your question?â he asked.
Anji nodded.
Feiyu looked like he wanted to ask whyâbut then, true to his nature, he simply said, âGoodbye,â and turned, already more focused on blueprints and designs than whatever battle was playing out in her head.
Anji remained where she stood.
The gun was still warm in her hand. Her ears still rang faintly from the last shot. And yet her thoughts were somehow louder.
She hadnât expected Feiyu to say so much. He rarely did. He never spoke about himself. In fact, the few things she knew came from overhearing Xiulan in the main courtyard over tea.
But now, just for a moment, she had seen something else in him.
Faith.
She had her answerâor so it seemed.
But the words gnawed at her. Not the ones he said, but the why behind them. She knew Feiyu had once been a slave, saved by Chen Ren. How? She didnât know. But it made her wonderâwas that trust born from gratitude alone? Or from something deeper? Something real?
She needed more than one perspective.
Without wasting a moment, Anji set off through the sect buildings, her eyes sharp and her mind buzzing. There were others who had stories tied to the sect leader, people who had seen different sides of him.
She just had to find them. And It didnât take long.
In the training yard near the outer hall, she spotted Zi Wen, his hands moving, fingers twitching as he guided his bonded wolfâthrough drills. The wolf pounced, rolled, and retreated on command, eyes always on its master.
âZi Wen,â Anji called out.
He glanced at her, brushing a strand of hair out of his eyes. âSomething wrong?â
âI wanted to ask you something. About Sect Leader Chen.â
He tilted his head.
âDo you trust him?â
Zi Wenâs eyes narrowed thoughtfully. The wolf padded to his side, tail still wagging as it sat obediently.
âTrust?â he repeated, then nodded. âYeah. I do.â
He said it so casually, like it wasnât even a question worth doubting.
âIâve always been wary of cultivators,â he admitted, wiping sweat off his brow and walking closer. âBut what Iâve seen of him⊠he has a good head on his shoulders. More than that, heâs not arrogant. Doesnât act like the world owes him something just because heâs powerful.â He gave a faint smile. âHe helped me find my path. I was just some middle aged man with a pet wolf, barely hanging on and having given up on cultivation. Now, Iâve got a bond, Iâve got a directionâand thatâs thanks to him. So yeah. Iâd trust him with my life.â
With that, he turned back to his training, the wolf immediately springing back into action.
Anji lingered for a moment, her brows furrowed.
Is it still just gratitude?
Was that what tied everyone to him?
She needed more.
Leaving the training yard, she made her way toward the farmlands. The scent of tilled soil and spiritual herbs filled the air, and the sun beat down steadily on the plots of land where crops glimmered with faint qi.
Luo Feng was crouched over one of the rows, mud up to his knees, sleeves rolled, his hands gently adjusting a set of spirit roots that glowed faint green. When he noticed her, he smiled, a streak of dirt across his cheek.
âNeed something?â he asked.
âI have a question,â she said, getting right to it. âDo you trust Sect Leader Chen?â
Luo Feng didnât even blink.
âI trust him,â he said simply.
âWhy?â
He returned to adjusting the roots before answering. âBecause he seems like someone worth trusting.â
She blinked. âThatâs it?â
âYeah.â He gave her a wry smile. âIâve been lost before. My parents died when I was still figuring out who I was. I drifted for a while⊠felt like a seed with no soil.â
He straightened slowly, looking across the rows of shimmering crops.
âBut now, Iâve got a purpose. I want to make the best spirit farm this world has ever seen. That goal⊠that anchor? It came from Sect Leader Chen. If not for him, I wouldnât be here. I wouldnât be a cultivator. At least not the kind that could ascend to immortality one day.â
Anji gave Luo Feng a short nod, ignoring his attempt at humor. She thanked him politely and walked off, her mind already drifting elsewhere.
Luo Feng, for his part, was more than happy to be left alone. His trust in Sect Leader Chen Ren came from instinct and gratitude, not deep shared experiences. Their interactions had been few, but Chen Ren had given him a field and a future, and for a man who once had neither, that was more than enough.
But Anji needed
more
.
She needed something firmer than kind gestures and vague admiration. Her next steps led her to the outskirts of the main building, to the slightly scorched, metal-laden workshop where Hong Yi lived among blueprints and half-built wooden nightmares. Today, he was hunched over a new creation, a tall puppet with eight mechanical arms, each ending in a different wicked tool. Its wooden face was twisted in a manic grin, and its limbs clicked and whirred as he adjusted joints with movements.
âWhy so many arms?â she asked, more to break the tension than out of curiosity.
âFor fear factor,â he answered immediately, not even looking up. âImagine this thing crawling out in the middle of a battle, painted pale like a ghost, eyes glowing, that smile staring you down. Fear alone will slow a man's blade.â
Anji said nothing. Just waited.
Hong Yi tinkered for a moment longer, then finally glanced her way. âYou're not here to critique my puppet aesthetics, are you?â
She shook her head. âDo you trust Sect Leader Chen?â
That made him pause.
The puppetâs head gave a final click as it settled into place. âTrust?â he echoed, then gave a dry chuckle. âYeah⊠I guess I do.â
He leaned back and tapped one of the puppetâs arms absently.
âHeâs my benefactor. Helped solve a⊠problem of mine. One most wouldâve stayed far away from. I still think he was insane for doing it, but he did it anyway. And more importantlyâheâs never once asked me for my knowledge.â
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Anji tilted her head. âYou mean the puppet techniques?â
Hong Yi nodded. âMost sect leaders would've tried to make me hand it over, or at least demand I teach it. But he hasnât. Not even once. He said heâd give me a workshop, and he did. He said I could work on my craft, and I can. So yeah. I trust him. But Iâd call it a professional trust. He lets me do what Iâm good at, and I help the sect grow.â
That was enough for her. Before he could spiral into another tangent about why the puppet needed blood-red eyes, she slipped away.
They trusted him because he had done what he promised. Because he treated them like people, not tools. Because he didnât just talk about ideals. He acted on them. And she couldnât deny it. Even for her, their first meeting hadnât been one of orders or expectations. He had found her half-starved and offered food without asking anything in return. It had been a small gesture, but one that stuck.
Still⊠This question wasnât about kindness or leadership. This was about duty. The secret she carried. The truth of who she was and what might come of it. And she wasnât sure if Chen Ren was someone she could entrust that to.
Not yet.
Her feet, lost in thought, brought her to the sect kitchen. The scent of fresh noodles wafted out like an invisible hand tugging her back to reality.
Inside, Tang Xiulan stood surrounded by children, sleeves rolled up, hair tied in a loose bun as she deftly sliced vegetables. She was clearly trying to teach the kids how to make noodlesâbut judging by the way the kids looked at the food around them, the lesson was leaning heavily toward âeat everything when Miss Xiulan turns her back.â
Anji stepped into the room, ignoring the chaos and heading straight to the counter.
âDo you trust Sect Leader Chen?â
Xiulan turned around, knife in hand, a brow raised.
âObviously,â she said without hesitation. âWhy are you asking?â
Anji blinked.
The tone in her voice was different from the others. Not soft or uncertain. Not professional or grateful. It was final. Like sheâd already placed a stake in the ground and dared the world to move her.
There was conviction.
âWhy?â
Xiulan returned to slicing vegetables, her movements fluid and steady, voice calm.
âI hated him at first.â
That made Anji pause.
âThought he was a lecherous, arrogant hedonist who thought way too much of himself. Always scheming, always smiling like he knew something no one else did.â
She chuckled, just a little.
âBut one loss⊠one real defeat was all it took for him to change. Completely. Like heâd been broken down and built back up into someone new.â
Her hands didnât stop moving, but her voice softened.
âAnd thatâs when I saw the truth. If he wants to⊠he puts in effort. He takes care of people. He holds to his word, no matter what. And deep down, he has a good heart. Even if sometimes, he doesnât show it that well.â
Tang Xiulan stirred the pot with practiced grace, her hands moving almost without thought as she added the chopped vegetables to the simmering soup. The scent of broth thickened in the air, wrapping around them like a comforting blanket.
âBefore,â she said slowly, âI felt like the good in him was shrouded. Covered up by all the worst thingsâarrogance, indulgence, carelessness.â
Her voice didnât hold bitterness, just memory.
âBut once the good side took over⊠he felt like the kind of man Iâd want to support.â
She gave the soup a stir and smiled faintly.
âAnd also, letâs be realâitâs good for me. I mean, come on. From a maid to the manager of a sect? Thatâs a promotion even cultivators would envy. Heâs generous, and I have a feeling heâs just getting started. If there are more steps up, I will be climbing them.â
Anji watched her in silence, absorbing every word. There was something deeper under Xiulanâs practical tone, something not fully voiced⊠but this was enough.
It always was, wasnât it? Just enough.
Still, it was the first part of her answer that clung to Anji's thoughts.
She leaned against the doorframe, eyes fixed on the boiling soup. âHis bad side,â she said quietly. âDo you think itâs still there?â
Xiulan stopped stirring.
She didnât look up at first. Just stood, spoon in hand, the steam curling past her face.
Then she said, âIt should be. We all have bad sides. Yin and yang go together. Thatâs just how it is. Greed, anger, lustâtheyâre all part of us. What matters is what we choose when those parts whisper to us.â
Anji hadnât expected something so philosophical, but it made her⊠oddly comforted. She nodded slowly, then asked the real question that had been clawing at her from the inside.
âBut what if the opportunity comes? Something big. Something he could only get through deceit. Do you think⊠that would bring it out?â
This time, Xiulanâs gaze met hers. No smile. No evasiveness. Just clear, sharp attention.
Anji braced herself for a question in return, but it never came.
âI donât think so,â Xiulan said. âNot anymore.â
She turned down the fire beneath the pot and crossed her arms, watching Anji like she could see more than just the question.
âIf something like that was going to bring the old him back, it wouldâve already happened. Like with Hong Yi. The man had puppet knowledgeâsomething sects would kill for. And young master Chen Ren? He never even asked how it worked. Never tried to claim it. Just gave him a workshop and let him be.â
She paused, then added more gently, âThatâs not the choice someone makes if theyâre still driven by greed or lust for power.â
Then, for the first time, she asked the question.
âWhy are you asking this, Anji?â
The air shifted.
The kids were laughing in the background, arguing over whose bowl of noodles looked
the best, oblivious to the quiet weight pressing between the two women. And Anji⊠Anji didnât answer.
Because she still didnât know what the answer
was
.
âI had questions.â It was the only explanation.
Xiulan didnât press. She didnât tilt her head or narrow her eyes the way others did when they sensed a secret. She simply watched her for a beat longer before nodding and returning to her soup.
âI think,â she said, âyouâre trying to figure out if you trust him. But my trust wonât give you any reason to. Thatâs not how it works. Trust is a bridge built between two peopleânot borrowed, not passed around.
âWhatever made you ask, I donât want to know. Iâve got enough of my own secrets to keep me busy. You need to think about it yourself.â
With that, Tang Xiulan returned to her task, her hands already reaching for the ladle, her attention shifting back to the children and their noisy, flour-covered excitement.
Anji didnât stay. There was nothing more she could learn here. The questions had ended. Now came the answer.
Did she trust him?
If she was being honest with herself, she didnât know. Trust wasnât a switch to flipâit was something fragile. Something once shattered that never quite returned to its original shape. And Anji had seen it break before. Felt it. Lived it.
But the truth was undeniableâshe needed him now. And not in some vague, âsect leader helps peopleâ way.
And if she was going to go through with what was in her mindâif she was going to hand over the truth of who she was and what she carriedâthen she would have to trust him with it.
Not with her tasks. Not with her job. With her
secrets
.
That was a much heavier ask.
Her mind kept turning, looping back through everything she'd seen, everything she'd heard. The words of Feiyu, Zi Wen, Luo Feng, Hong Yi, and finally Xiulanâeach like a thread wrapping around the core of her doubt.
And in the center of it all, something her father had once said came to the surface.
The old man had a habit of talking too much, borrowing lines from ancient texts just to sound wiser than he actually was. But every so often, a line slipped through the noiseâsharp and lasting.
âSometimes, you must force yourself to trust someone when youâre desperate. Not because theyâve earned it, but because the alternative is worse. And it doesnât mean youâll be betrayed. Human civilization is built on risk. And the greatest of those is the willingness to be vulnerable.â
Anji could still see him, puffing on his pipe, waving his hand like he was narrating the fall of an empireâonly to end the lecture by asking her to brew his tea.
But she remembered that line. And now it felt heavier than when she first heard it. Was the risk worth it? She didnât know. And yet her feet were already moving, thoughts tangled in uncertainty, her heart hammering despite the calm of the sect grounds.
She didnât even realize where she was heading until her boots tapped against the stone threshold of the alchemical workshop. Chen Ren was inside. She hadnât asked anyone. Someone had mentioned it, maybe in passingâbut the face didnât matter. The knowledge stuck, and her legs had obeyed.
Now, here she was.
All it would take was one step forward. One decision.
Because if she went in⊠If she spoke⊠Then she wasnât just testing trust. She was offering it.
The question didnât wait anymore.
Did she take the risk?
***
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