Mr. Chen returned to the Flowing Cloud Temple. After going back, he began closed-door cultivation.
Chenghuang and Moyuan saw this state and dared not disturb him much. But at dusk one day, when the sun set, Moyuan came to the backyard again and found Mr. Chen gone.
Chenghuang glanced at Moyuan.
Moyuan sighed: âMr. Chen is missing againâŠâ
Chenghuang blinked: âThen⊠should we look for him?â
Moyuan shrugged: âIf you can find him, you get to be the boss.â
He patted Chenghuangâs shoulder: âJust go do whatever. I doubt Mr. Chen will be back anytime soon.â
Chen Changsheng had died once more. Luckily, this time he left no unresolved matters.
That External Incarnation could just be crafted after his next awakening.
Time slipped by like Huai Xu vanishing. A bleak autumn wind swirled into the courtyard.
The Taoist Temple was as peaceful as always.
Ever since Chenghuang joined, Moyuan often went wandering in the mortal world. Each time he returned, heâd bring back treasures for Chenghuang â sometimes little mortal trinkets, sometimes Merit, other times Magical Artifacts.
Chenghuang always suspected Moyuan earned these through rascal deeds, like a bandit.
Still, with Moyuanâs help, Chenghuangâs cultivation gradually improved. At least his lifespan running out was no longer a fear.
Days became years, yet heâd stand perched on the templeâs Drooping Ridge, guarding this place⊠and himself.
These quiet years passed without disturbance, yet remained unforgettable. He cherished this place deeply. For a beast whoâd wandered a thousand years, here was rest. If possible, Chenghuang would stay forever. As just a beast on the drooping ridge.
âŠ
Meanwhile, elsewhere in Jianghu, a young man and woman settled down in a District-Town.
This place bordered Great Jingâs old Frontier Pass. Years ago, Emperor Jing had drafted all strong young men from this district. Later, the frontier fell in war; townsfolk were robbed. Trapped, they hid children in cellars to survive. Thus lived thirty-one orphans. After a night of weeping, they rebuilt their broken village to face a barren winter.
A horse drawn by a pair carried a medicine chest. Seated atop it, a man wearing a cone hat surveyed the orphan village.
âLetâs help them,â said Tong Zhihuan.
Miss Taoâer nodded: âBut our travel funds run thin.â
âHelp doesnât mean money.â
Tong Zhihuan smiled warmly: âWeâve traveled nonstop. Why not stay? Teach some medicine? Learning gives them better survival.â
Miss Taoâer considered this, then beamed: âThat works.â
They put down roots. At first, the orphans distrusted these outsiders â hardship stole their faith in strangers. Yet their hearts stayed pure. Gradually, connections formed.
Since losing parents, these orphans leaned on each other. Theyâd given themselves numbers replacing names: Eldest Brother, Seventeenth Brother, Eighteenth SisterâŠ
Once familiar, Tong Zhihuan asked:
âWant to learn medicine?â
âWhat can medicine do?â
âHeal sickness.â
âLearning means we could heal brothers and sisters?â asked one girl. âSo no one sick-dies again?â
Struck by her words, Tong Zhihuan patted her head: âYes. Want to learn?â
âWant!â
âMe too! Me too!â
Watching them, Miss Taoâerâs face glowed.
âBooks call children innocent,â she murmured. ââPureâ is truthful indeed.â
Tong Zhihuan taught basic remedies and herb knowledge. His time was short, so he shared all he could. Though it couldnât cure severe illnesses, small sicknesses were manageable.
As Miss Taoâer swept fallen leaves at their makeshift School she heard shouts:
âShiniang!â
âShiniang! Shiniang!â (term for masterâs wife)
âWho taught you that name?â
âSeventeenth Brother did. Shifu is Shifu so youâre Shiniang!â
âYou rascalsâŠâ
Miss Taoâerâs face flushed. She hurried away.
âWhy Shiniang went red?â
âDonât knowâŠâ
Children exchanged blank stares. What could kids fathom?
Glancing outside, Miss Taoâer saw them. The blush faded from her cheeks. Her gaze drifted distantly, growing unfocused. A soft smile touched her lips when awareness returned.
They stayed two months. Leaving, Tong Zhihuan gifted children his medical journal.
âShifu⊠ShiniangâŠâ
The orphansâ eyes brimmed reluctance. But all Tong Zhihuan could offer was this.
âGo back now,â he told them. âWeâll meet again.â
That day, thirty-one orphans knelt silently at the District-Townâs entrance.
Tong Zhihuan only peered once before turning away. If he looked longer, he feared staying.
The thirty-one just kept kneeling until the silhouettes vanished down the roadâs far end.
âGet up,â said Eldest Brother softly. âSucceed in life, and weâll see Shifu and Shiniang once more.â
He clutched the journal â Tong Zhihuanâs life-work notes â tucking it protectively inside his clothes.
Fate forever changed the day Tong Zhihuan arrived. Whether they soared or sank? That prowess lay in these orphansâ hands.
Miss Taoâer gazed back along the road. âIâll miss them,â she whispered.
âDestiny belongs to each soul. Thatâs Lesson One from Mr. Chen,â said Tong Zhihuan.
He added, softly determined: âThe journey ahead is very, very long.â
Miss Taoâer raised her eyes: âWhere next?â
âHow about Western Xiao?â
She smiled: âAnywhere. Where you go, I go.â
Beneath fading sunset rays, the horse plodded west. Man and woman faded from view near Green Mountainâs foot.