234 Eye of Fate
234 Eye of Fate
"Where's Joan?" asked Alice.
âYou sure are well-informed,â I muttered through a mouthful of dirt, my face firmly pressed against the ground. The weight of Aliceâs boot settled just above my cheek, grinding slowly, not quite painful enough to be unbearable, but certainly humiliating.
Of course, I knew in my heart I deserved thisâŠ
âWhat did Nongmin say?â I added, my voice muffled. "Just so you know, I tried my best..."
Jia Yunâs tone held an odd curiosity as she leaned over slightly. âWhatâs their relationship like?â
Hei Mao rubbed his chin thoughtfully. âI think theyâre from the same hometownâŠâ
âBut why isnât Senior fighting back?â Jia Yun whispered, as if afraid Alice would turn on her next.
âThis might be whatâs called a loverâs quarrel?â Hei Mao replied, sounding entirely too unsure for comfort.
I felt Alice shift her weight. Her boot pressed harder. My head sank slightly into the soil, the mud cold against my scalp. I grimaced. âUuuh⊠time out? Please?â
âMaybeâŠâ Jia Yun began hesitantly, âSenior⊠likes it?â
âI donât knowâŠâ Hei Mao said, clearly disturbed. âI think the boot is getting in the way. Maybe if itâs just the foot?â
The pressure intensified. I groaned.
âJia Yun. Hei Mao. Stay out of this, okay!?â I shouted, or tried to. It came out as more of a desperate plea. My pride was already dead. At least they could spare the eulogy.
Jia Yun asked, âShould we help him?â
Hei Mao answered slowly, âHeâll be fine⊠I think?â
Aliceâs voice, sultry but edged with wrath, curled into my ear. âWhat do you have to say for yourself?â
I twisted just enough to breathe without inhaling sand. âIt wasnât my intention to sunder the Summit or anything, okay?â I said. âIt just⊠sort of... happenedâŠâ
Even I knew how hollow that sounded.
Where would I even begin? With the Supreme Heart? Aixinâs existence? The Empire's suffering from the aftermath, possibly damning its citizens? The Cleansing? Every thread led to another, tangled and blood-soaked.
âYou used it, didnât you?â Aliceâs voice sharpened. She didnât need to say the name. I knew exactly what she meant: Exalted Renewal.
That cursed technique. The one that let me punch above my weight, cross the threshold between mortality and ascension, and tear down things I had no business facing. And the cost? Death. It was like winning the lottery, only to have your house burned down right after. Of course, that wasnât the case now.
âYeah,â I said with a sigh. âI had to. Or I wouldâve lost.â
Alice finally lifted her boot, stepping off me with a faint click of her heel. Her eyes were unreadable as she looked down. âYou lost your PaladinhoodâŠâ
I sat up, rubbing my neck, still wincing. âYeah⊠I might be able to replicate most of my old skills and spells through cultivation, but yeah. I lost it. Iâm no Paladin anymore.â
There was a beat of silence. A flicker of sympathy crossed her expression, only to vanish as quickly as it came.
âI plan on getting it back eventually,â I continued, brushing off the dirt clinging to my sleeve. âBut I donât think itâll be easy.â
Aliceâs lips curled into a half-smirk, half-frown. âItâs virtually impossible. You donât have a Patron anymore. In Losten, you had the Lost Supreme. Even the Lost Gods would have been better than nothing. But here? There are no gods in the Hollowed World. No such thing as a Patron. No prayers answered.â
âThereâs the Greater Universe, though,â Hei Mao interjected.
I raised an eyebrow at him. âYou think Meng Po would be fine having a Paladin like me?â
Hei Mao scratched his ear, thinking. âShe likes you, sure. But I donât think she likes you that much. Enough to sponsor you? Doubtful. Iâve been off-world for a long time, Master. But honestly⊠I know too little of the Greater Universe. There might be someone or something out there, but itâs a long shot.â
I shrugged, not entirely defeated. âMeh. I couldn't care less. Paladin or not, what matters is protecting the people I love. Here, in the Hollowed World. And in the False Earth. The title was just that⊠a title. Powerâs only useful if I can use it to keep them safe. Moreover, gods? They are overrated... The people are my patron...â
"It isn't that simple," remarked Alice. "Without your Oath, your Faith, and your divine relationship with the universe, you would always be at a fraction of your power. If that's the case, you might as well devote yourself to cultivation and forget being an avatar of faith. That means abandoning your virtues, labors, feats, stories, and your skills."
Yeah, she was right, but I didn't think I'd give up that soon⊠There was something special in the âLegaciesâ that couldnât compare to cultivation after allâŠ
Just then, the air thrummed with energy. The Megatron began its descent with a muted roar. Light shimmered off its hull as it slowed, drifting with the precision of a falling feather. Runes pulsed across its frame, glowing faintly as it stabilized above the fractured island ruins. The ship exhaled a wave of spiritual wind, rustling the grasses and casting long shadows.
From the highest deck, a figure leapt.
She landed with an effortless grace that made even Jia Yunâs eyes widen slightly.
It was Gu Jie.
Her dark robes billowed, laced with crimson serpents that coiled like blood through midnight silk. Her hair was shorter now, wild, uneven, and messy in a way that screamed practicality over elegance. Her eyes, however, were the same as ever: sharp, unblinking, and burdened by things she would never say aloud.
âIf it isnât my sweet daughter,â I said with a grin, rising to meet her. âI dig the new look⊠it suits you.â
"MasterâŠ" Gu Jieâs voice was soft, hesitant, and filled with emotions she tried to flatten behind her usual deadpan cool. She stood there like a wraith dressed in battle robes with sharp edges softened only by the faintest curve of a smile that didnât reach her eyes.
I grinned widely and stretched my arms open. âDonât be shy now,â I said with a warm chuckle. âGive olâ daddy a hug.â
A scream pierced the air before her answer could reach me.
âI HATE YOU!â shrieked a high-pitched voice, the declaration paired with a golden blur soaring through the sky.
A small body streaked toward me in a flying kick, legs tucked, teeth bared like a feral beast.
I calmly stepped aside.
The girl crashed into the dirt face-first with a muffled grunt and a cloud of dust. She coughed, rolled over, and glared up at me with betrayed fury and grass stuck in her hair.
âWhy did you dodge!?â she barked, her tiny fists pounding the ground in frustration.
âBecause,â I said, trying not to laugh, âif that landed, you mightâve exploded into gore. I mean, I can control my Reflect... but Iâd rather not take chances with pint-sized Sacred Beasts.â
Hei Mao walked over, as casual as a spring breeze, and lifted the squirming girl by the scruff of her embroidered robes like a misbehaving kitten. âIf Iâm not mistaken,â he muttered, squinting at her, âitâs been like twenty years already, right? Why are you still so small?â
Ren Jingyiâs legs swung wildly as she tried to run midair. âUnhand me, knave! I am a Sacred Beast! I grow slow! Wait⊠Hei Mao?â She blinked rapidly. âWhy are you so tall? Why are you alive?â
Hei Mao tilted his head, unimpressed. âAnd why are you still stupid?â
âYou jerk!â Ren Jingyi began wailing on his chest with tiny punches. It was like a hamster trying to beat up a mountain. âBig sister Jie! Heâs bullying me!â
Gu Jie muffled a laugh behind her sleeve, lips curling up in amusement. She didnât even pretend to be surprised by Hei Maoâs sudden reappearance, almost like sheâd expected this all along. Perhaps she had. She was always sharp.
Then another figure jumped down from the Megatron, his descent light, controlled, and precise. Messy hair framed his face, though it was now cleaner, tied in places, and there was muscle where there used to be skin and bone. His presence had matured, still graceful and balanced, but no longer boyish. He moved like a man whoâd faced wars and walked away standing.
âLu Gao,â I said, recognizing him before he even touched the ground. âItâs been a long time.â
His eyes locked with mine. A smile slowly bloomed across his face, genuine and slightly sad. âYou really came back,â he said, voice thick with something between awe and relief. âMasterâŠâ
"Come here," I said as I gave him a manly hug.
Lu Gao began sniffling, "M-master..."
Then his gaze slid past me and landed on Hei Mao. His eyes widened. âLittle Mao, youâre alive!â
Lu Gao lunged forward and wrapped his arms around Hei Mao, pulling him into a tight, bone-cracking hug. Unfortunately, Ren Jingyi was still dangling in Hei Maoâs grip and got squashed between them like a dumpling in a bamboo steamer.
âGah! Iâm too young to die!â she squealed.
Hei Mao groaned. âWhy is this happening to me?â
I just stood there, watching the reunion unfold with the kind of smile that only comes when everything goes to hell in the most heartwarming way possible. Old comrades. Lost friends. Threads reweaving.
Then a familiar voice, smooth as silk and cool as shaded spring water, interrupted the moment.
âThis is quite a reunion,â said Nongmin.
I turned toward the ramp of the Megatron.
He descended not in a flourish, but with the serene elegance of someone who understood presence and had no need to flaunt it. He was flanked by a woman in high military dress. It was the Captain of the Phoenix Guard's Left Wing, Xue Xin.
"Greetings, Lord Wei," said Xue Xin. "The Empire is blessed to know of your well-being."
I nodded to her words in gratitude and turned to the Final Emperor.
âNongmin,â I began. âYou look⊠terribleâŠâ
I stared.
He wore a blindfold. A thin black strip of cloth, seamless and tight, across his face.
Something inside me twisted.
Why?
âWhat happened to your eyes?â I asked. "Just so you know, I don't dig the new look..."
My voice came out quieter than I intended, barely above a whisper, but it carried. The question landed like a rock dropped into still water.
Nongmin stood still for a moment, the blindfold hiding whatever thoughts passed behind it. He tilted his head toward me, and then said in that calm, effortless tone of his, âGave it away.â
Gu Jie, standing beside him, added softly, âTo me.â
I blinked. âBut your eyes are fine?â
Of course, it wasnât that simple. It never was.
I stepped forward, reached out with a hand, and cast Cure.
Spiritual light flared briefly around Nongminâs face. Then it faded, doing nothing.
I frowned, concentrating harder. Great Cure.
Still nothing.
Gu Jie watched silently, her arms crossed beneath her dark sleeves. âI tried,â she said. âI ran through hundreds of timelines, tested dozens of possible treatments. Golden-grade, black-grade, divine blood remedies. No result. Nothing reversed it.â
Nongmin simply nodded. âI used an eye transmutation technique,â he explained. âNot something reversible. I transferred my eyes directly to her.â
I stepped back, my chest tightening. âYou mean⊠your Heavenly Eye.â
He didnât need to nod. The answer was written in the way his aura shifted, less luminous and less forward-reaching than before, like a beacon turned inward.
My heart lurched. The Heavenly Eye wasnât just any spiritual gift. It was a divine lens and a relic of origin seeded into some bloodlines as part of the Supreme Beingsâ contingency plans. Whether by fate or by their meddling, it was designed to foresee existential threats, especially ones involving anomalies like me.
This wasnât a coincidence. I couldnât afford to believe in coincidence anymore.
I turned to Gu Jie, eyeing her carefully. âHowâs your Sixth Sense Misfortune?â
She tilted her head. âThey no longer interfere with my daily life.â
âThatâs because,â I said grimly, âyou no longer have them.â
Their expressions shifted, ever so slightly.
I continued, âThe Heavenly Eye and the Sixth Sense Misfortune mustâve merged. That fusion would produce something older and something more ancient than either ability. Youâve inherited the Destiny-Seeking Eyes, Jie.â
They both froze. Even Nongminâs calm demeanor rippled with surprise.
âThatâs a predecessor of both powers,â I explained. âA true sight born from a paradox, the desire to find your fate and the inability to escape it. Iâll explain more later, but for now, timeâs short.â
I shifted my stance, facing Nongmin fully. âThe reason I sought you out,â I said, âwas because I wanted to use your Heavenly Eye to find a way around the Supreme Beingsâ attention. Iâve learned that the Eye was originally built into an early warning system, a failsafe the gods left behind. I thought maybe if I could consult you⊠or even take your eyes if neededâŠâ
Gu Jieâs expression darkened. Nongmin said nothing. But I held up my hands. âIf. I said if. That no longer matters now. The Eye is gone from you, and it lives in her. Who knows? Maybe with the Eye of Fate changed, the peeping idiots can no longer see us⊠Ah, thatâs not the pointâŠâ
In fact, I planned on destroying the Heavenly Eye, but I didn't think it would be wise right now. As someone who had personally experienced what Destiny Seeking Eyes was like, I knew it would be too much of a waste to give up on them now.
I turned to Gu Jie again, leveling my gaze. âThere are people I wish to save in the False Earth.â
There was no flourish to my story. No need for embellishments. I spoke plainly.
âI spent twenty years there as a mortal,â I said. âNo cultivation. No titles. Just a man named Da Wei, trying to survive. I fought for my family. I buried friends. I built a home on poisoned land and fought off outcasts who should have been legends. Eventually⊠I stole a body.â
They both tensed.
âI had to,â I added. âI was dying. My soul had nowhere to anchor. So I found someone close enough in spirit and took her vessel. I persisted. I lived. I stole their lifespan and spiritual root.â
My voice cracked near the end, not with weakness, but with the weight of truth.
For a long moment, there was silence. Even Ren Jingyi stopped fidgeting. Hei Mao leaned back slightly, looking up at the sky as if it could explain any of this. Then Gu Jie stepped forward, her dark robes brushing against the cracked stone beneath us.
âYou want to divine a method forward, donât you?â she said.
I nodded.
âThen,â she said, lifting her chin, âuse Divine Possession on me. Letâs find the answer togetherâŠâ