301 War Room
[POV: Nongmin]
It felt like a very, very long dream. A dream without beginning or end, where time folded in on itself until even memory became fluid.
When Nongmin came to himself, he realized he was not standing in the present but wandering through the tapestry of his own memory. He looked down and saw cobblestones glistening under morning light. Around him rose the familiar grandeur of the Imperial Capital. The air was alive with voices, merchants crying wares, and banners fluttering like the heartbeat of an empire that once seemed eternal.
Walking at his side was a beautiful woman whose hand enclosed his own.
âMother,â he whispered, his voice trembling with the innocence of a child. âHow are you here?â
Xin Yune smiled, the same warm, gentle smile that had once meant safety. She did not answer at first, only squeezed his small hand. When her lips finally parted, her voice was serene but distant.
âI am not her.â
The words struck him odd. She let go.
Nongmin stared down at his hands and realized they were small and delicate. It was the hands of a boy, not the scarred and calloused ones he remembered. When he blinked, his mother was gone.
In her place stood an older version of himself.
The Emperor of the Grand Ascension Empire. His hair had grayed, though it was still full, and his frame was cloaked in ornate robes dark as midnight, embroidered with golden dragons that coiled and twisted as if alive. His eyes were not mortal eyes, but divine. It was cold, unfeeling, and piercing through flesh and spirit alike.
The older Nongmin spoke with a voice that was neither accusation nor comfort. âYou are mistaken. I am neither your heart demon, a reflection of yourself, nor a hallucination.â
Nongmin blinked again. This time, the Emperor was gone, and before him stood Da Wei.
The man wore his usual casual grin, but his eyes carried the weight of countless battles. âAlmost,â Da Wei said, shaking his head, âbut Iâd say you got a âpass.â Still, man⊠they screwed you up.â
Nongmin exhaled slowly, the words tumbling out of him like confession. âThey lacerated my soul, keeping my true self buried in a labyrinth of memories. All the while, they puppeted my body in ways that even I wouldnât recognize it wasnât me. It was a mockery of existence, turning me into a marionette dangling on invisible strings. They really had it in me, huh?â His expression softened then, touched by a rare sincerity. âI have to thank you, Da Wei. Your Human Soul protected me from losing all of my will.â
Da Wei tilted his head, thoughtful. âHmmm⊠Makes sense⊠So that was how you were able to warn us. Through Xue Xin. You gave her those cryptic messages.â
Nongmin smiled faintly, a glimmer of mischief cutting through the shadows. âYet you came.â
âOf course I did.â Da Weiâs grin sharpened, his tone shifting into that familiar cadence of power. âLetâs fix you up⊠Divine Word: Life.â
The syllables rang like thunder made holy, vibrating through the marrow of the dream, through the shackles that bound Nongminâs soul. The labyrinth cracked, walls falling inward, corridors collapsing into nothingness. Light poured in where there had only been shadow.
Nongmin gasped as the dream shattered. He opened his eyes. Golden light flared within them, bright and sovereign. He was back to himself. And as his consciousness anchored fully into flesh, his first sight was devastation. The courtyard around him was split, and fissured like a battlefield scoured by titans. Stone cracked in jagged patterns, as though the world itself had convulsed.
Strewn across the ruin, lay limbs.
Nongmin stared at the pink-haired woman. Alice. Her mouth was slick with blood, and the corners of her lips were dark and obscene. Her eyes were not human now; they burned with a simple, clean hunger that made his skin prickle. She inhaled as if tasting the air of the courtyard, and the motion was serene, almost bored, as if she had only paused mid-hunt to admire the scenery.
A shadow slid free from the rim of shattered stone. It was Da Wei stepping out as if from behind a curtain. He looked absurdly unruffled for a man whose presence had just detonated a slaughter. He blinked once, took in the ruin, and commented, âBai Rong and Lu Wang managed to flee. But not so much for these twoâŠâ
Nongminâs gaze tracked where Da Wei pointed. Xun Liâs body lay ragged and betrayed, split clean down the torso. His entrails had spilled like a grotesque exclamation mark across the flagstones; his face was frozen in a last, empty surprise. There was no light in his eyes. Instead, there was only the cold, dull absence of a life ended without ceremony.
Nearer, where the earth had torn and buckled like a living thing, Tian Meng crawled. Her torso dragged along the ground, wrists useless where limbs once had been; she made a sound that was half howl and half prayer. Tears blurred the soot and blood on her cheeks as she swore under her breath. âI will leave,â she rasped, voice shredded to match her body. âI will leave and I will come backââ
Alice drew a breath and turned, slow and composed, confronting Da Wei. âNever,â she said, each syllable a knife. âNever have your Asura Soul near me ever again.â
Da Weiâs smile flickered into something apologetic and amused. âYeah⊠copy that,â he said. âIt wonât happen again.â
Nongmin felt the echoes of what had just transpired as if they were distant strikes against a drum: he remembered tugging on the Diminution Spiral with his techniques while Da Weiâs Human Soul lent the fragile scaffolding of support. He remembered the way the ward had cracked, not all at once, but like ice under repeated stress, and how a combination of cunning and more than a bit of luck had turned the trap against its makers. He saw flashes: Bai Rongâs circle unspooling, Lu Wangâs staff snapping like a tree, Xun Liâs pilgrim blade misfed into a blade of shadow that simply refused to die.
Da Weiâs voice pulled him back to the courtyard. âMan, we sure got lucky sending you, Alice⊠Iâd probably have suffered a lot if theyâd managed to spring that array on me.â
âWe should leave,â Nongmin said. âThis has remains to be hostile territory.â
Da Wei shook his head slowly as he provided. âWe still need to help the prisoners and the refugees mixed in this to find their bearings,â he said. âWe make a plan for our next steps. It wonât hurt to stay a while⊠gather a convoy, scour for resources, patch people up. The others should be done dealing with whatever experts posted here. They have an Ascended Soul with them, but theyâre stretched thin.â
âWe canât leave any survivors, well, I am not that cruel, but we donât want any runners.â The words were quiet but absolute. âSo, I hope you donât mind me asking this of you, but we need to move, and ensure no one leaves the city.â
âItâs a sound plan,â Nongmin said at last. âI understand that you donât want unnecessary casualties, but I suggest against taking prisoners. Itâs better we deal with them swiftly.â
âNah⊠Weâll manageâŠâ
Da Wei shifted his gaze and pointed at the crawling figure of Tian Meng with his chin. âWhat about her? Suggestions?â
âWe keep her as prisoner,â Nongmin answered. âSheâll be more useful, alive than dead.â
A couple of days had passed since they seized the Imperial Capital. The courtyards no longer rang with screams or steel, only with the clatter of wagons and the constant movement of men dismantling what once had been the heart of the empire. Yet the light in Nongminâs eyes had dulled. Even after Da Weiâs spontaneous, miraculous healing, his ruined vision refused to mend. His gaze now carried a haze, as though always staring past the present.
âYour Majesty, is it fine for you to overwork yourself so much?â Zhu Shin asked, voice carrying the weary patience of a man who had repeated this question more than once.
It was only dawn, and already his general was fussing. The office was nothing but a servantâs quarter refurbished into a command chamber, its walls hung with scrolls and maps, a desk drowned in ledgers. Nongmin sat at the center, quill scratching calmly, as if the weight of empire could be settled with ink and patience.
âI am not crippled, General,â Nongmin replied evenly, not looking up. âAnd please do remember⊠I am still a Tenth Realm expert. Paperwork is nothing to me.â
His hands moved without pause, cataloguing supplies, reviewing names of families placed into the convoys, and shifting sigils of arrays yet to be activated to correspond certain functions. Every detail mattered. Retaking the capital had required Da Weiâs hand, but holding it, and then abandoning it, was a quieter war that fell to him alone. Assigning forces, rationing dwindling resources, preparing a grand array beneath the streets that, when triggered, would collapse and bury the Imperial Capital forever.
The evacuation was nearly complete. Soon, nothing would remain here but ashes and stone.
Nongmin set down the quill for a moment, rubbing the bridge of his nose. âAny signs of the rebelsâ movement?â
âNothing, Your Majesty,â Zhu Shin answered crisply. âBut according to the Shadow Clan cultivators, word has already spread of the death of three Clan Heads. The remaining forces are preparing to move on Riverfall. It seems they have no intent to recover the Capital.â
Nongmin grew quiet, letting the words settle. His fingers tapped once against the desk. His eyes, dimmed though they were, carried the weight of thought too heavy for speech.
Zhu Shin hesitated, then said carefully, âYour Majesty, forgive me if this question is intrusive⊠but is it truly the right choice to abandon the Capital?â
The silence stretched.
No, it was not. The city was the heart of the empire, its jewel and its cage. To relinquish it was to admit an ending, and to give up the myth that had held the empire together. But it was his choice. It was time for a new era, one that would welcome a ruler who no longer clung to the ruins of the past. Someone, who could look bravely ahead to the future, regardless of how dark it might become
Before Nongmin could answer, a voice came from the doorway.
âWar room.â
Da Wei leaned against the frame.
âChop, chop,â playfully said Da Wei. âWe have stuff to doâŠ
Nongmin rose without hesitation, Zhu Shin following suit.
They followed just behind Da Wei, his emerald robes catching faint light from the shattered lanterns. His voice, casual but sharp, broke the silence.
âNongmin, you sure got a shitshow going on. Almost every noble under you rebelled. Honestly, itâs truly stupid of you to make a big spectacle of Ren Xunâs and Lin Limâs wedding.â
The streets they passed were empty, haunted by silence. Shattered banners clung to walls, and the smell of burned wood still lingered in the air. Rubble blocked alleys where skirmishes had spilled over. The wounds of civil war remained fresh, not only on stone but in the air itself.
âThatâs âYour Majestyâ to you, Da Wei!â Zhu Shin barked, offended on his lordâs behalf.
Nongmin did not slow his stride. His expression, though half-veiled by his dulled eyes, remained calm as he answered, âIt had to happen. I might no longer wield the Heavenly Eye, but the things I saw had been real. Ren Xun will prove useful to you in the wars ahead. The boy needed to grow up, David.â
Da Wei tilted his head back and gave a short laugh. âIs that what youâre going to tell him? We both know that isnât the entire story. I learned firsthand how fickle and unstoppable destiny isâŠâ His gaze flicked toward Nongmin, sharp as glass. âI imagine the wedding caused a whole string of butterfly effects that wouldâve otherwise birthed more troublesome things youâd rather not happen. I lived your life, remember? I saw your visions the same way you did.â
He wrinkled his nose slightly, as if catching a bitter taste. âAlso, if you donât mind, can you not call me David? Gives me shiversâŠâ
Nongminâs mouth twitched faintly. âI am more comfortable calling you Da Wei, anyway.â His tone softened a fraction, touched with private amusement. âAlice still giving you the cold shoulder?â
Da Weiâs expression soured, his lips pulling to the side. âYeah⊠It seems she hates my Asura Soul to the bone.â
At last, the three of them reached the war room.
The war room smelled of ink, sweat, and the faint copper of old blood. Maps lay splayed like the entrails of some great beast, pins and threads marking lines of retreat and advance. At the long table sat strangers, barring Alice. Hei Ximei represented the Shadow Clan. Alice occupied a battered chair, her posture unreadable beneath the sheen of blood and conquest. Da Ji, Da Weiâs sister, sat with a listless, watchful patience that belonged to someone used to observing.
Zhu Shin announced their arrival with the ritual the world still demanded. âSalutations to His Majestyââ
âPlease,â Nongmin cut him off gently, âtake your seat. You too, General.â
Da Wei moved toward the corner seat as if habit and mischief both guided him. Nongminâs hand closed on his sleeve. âThatâs not your seat,â he said. âAnd you know what I mean.â
Da Wei flashed a grin. âYou are the Emperor, so of course you will take the big seatââ
Nongmin did not smile. âNo. We donât have time to argue.â His words were small and fatal. âWe must finish quickly. Jia Sen is on his way here, and you know that.â
Da Wei sighed, and Nongmin continued.
âHow long did it take him to travel from here to Ashpeak?â Nongmin asked, more of a prompt than a question. âAt least a week, I assume. I would prefer we held this on a flying vessel, more secure, more room for contingency, but we are stretched thin. Most of our vessels are busy evacuating refugees to lords still loyal to me. We cannot risk a protracted meeting here.â
He paused, letting the practical images thread through their shared mind: wagons carving through ruined streets, refugees covered in cloaks, wind carrying rumors faster than any messenger. âDa Ji kept the prisoners in our custody behaving, but that wouldnât be enough. Theyâve been held with discipline and threats; they will snap sooner than later. If they break while Jia Senâs forces are en route, we will face panic, uprisings, and a collapse that even we will struggle to contain. We are small in numbers, and our only redeeming quality is our individual might, but it doesnât mean we canât be organized. Thus, I propose to put someone at the head, and that is not going to be me.â
Da Wei opened his mouth to protest and then closed it as Alice glared at him.
Nongmin continued. âThe earlier we leave the city, the more advantage we gain. Time gives the enemy opportunity. We cannot gift them that.â He looked at Da Wei directly. âSo I suggest you cooperate, Da Wei. Take the big seat.â
âOh, come on,â cried Da Wei.
âGrow a pair, sissy,â said Alice. âLetâs get on with the show, please.â