Chapter 21: Enforcer
The vermilion gate of Liu Shiyuâs residence was slowly opened from within.
Yunyang stepped out first, his demeanor tinged with arrogance: âThe evidence is here. Iâll send it to the capital by eight-hundred-li express for the Emperor to judge!â
Liu Mingxian, astride his warhorse, his expression under the filial hat flickering in the torchlight.
He stared at the stack of evidence in Yunyangâs hands, veins pulsing on his forehead. He hadnât expected Yunyang and Jiaotu to actually find evidence. To seek vengeance for Old Master Liu now lacked any justifiable ground.
But something felt off⊠He looked behind Yunyang, where a masked figure stood, head lowered.
Who was this?
Why masked?
As Liu Mingxian tried to look closer, Yunyang shifted slightly, fully blocking the figure, giving a half-smile: âLord Liu, not retreating?â
Liu Mingxian remained silent, showing no intent to withdraw.
The tension was palpable, both sides waiting for his wordâwar or retreat hung on his decision.
Liu Mingxian asked calmly: âWhereâs Liang Gouâer?â
A young man holding the reins panicked: âSecond Uncle, Liang Maoâer sent word that Liang Gouâer already struck at the eunuch faction and is now sleeping in Red Cloth Lane.â
Liu Mingxianâs face darkened. He eyed the Chief Punishment Divisionâs Fish-Dragon Guards, swords drawn, and gritted his teeth: âTell Liang Gouâer to take his broken sword and get out of the Liu family. Thereâs no place for him!â
Yet he still didnât relent, urging his horse forward, leading hundreds of Liu family members to press closer.
Lin Chaoqing spoke: âLord Liu, donât doom your entire family. Wait for Chancellor Liu to return to Luocheng and consult him before acting.â
Liu Mingxian stared at Lin Chaoqing, then bowed from a distance: âIâll await judgment at home. Back to the mansion! Prepare Old Master Liuâs funeral!â
As he left, he couldnât resist glancing back, seeing Lin Chaoqing whispering to the masked figure.
âInvestigate that masked man!â Liu Mingxianâs tone was ferocious. âYunyang and Jiaotu are deadly killers, but Iâve never heard theyâre skilled at finding evidence. That masked man mustâve been key. Find him!â
âUnderstood, Second Uncle.â
In a fleeting moment, Liu Mingxian felt: without that masked man tonight, things mightâve been different.
After the Liu family left, Lin Chaoqing mounted his horse, adjusting his raincoat and looking down at me, Chen Ji: âYoung man, my offer stands for two months. Maybe sooner, youâll see what kind of people the Secret Spy Division holds.â
Yunyangâs face darkened: âWhoâre you mocking? What does your Chief Punishment Division do besides attacking colleagues?â
Lin Chaoqing silently led his division east, his dark raincoat like folded black wings, coming and going in dust.
As they rode off, a Fish-Dragon Guard smiled at me from under his hatâthey respected skill.
But I was destined not to join the Chief Punishment Division. I didnât want a title or to serve imperial power.
I wanted to cultivate, and cultivation needed moneyâsomething the Chief Punishment Division couldnât provide.
As hoofbeats faded, Yunyang glanced at me: âJoin the Chief Punishment Division, and youâre every court officialâs enemy, a lone minister forever. How many lone ministers end well?â
I replied calmly: âThank you for the reminder, Lord Yunyang.â
Yunyang asked: âCould other Liu family members be involved?â
I shook my head: âDonât know.â
Yunyang pressed: âDoes the Jing Dynasty have other intelligence methods?â
I shook my head: âDonât know.â
âDid you hold back again, like at the Zhou residence?â
I said firmly: âNo.â
Yunyang laughed, exasperated. This kid wasnât as honest as he seemed, but he had no leverage. Smiling, he said: âTomorrow night, someone will deliver fifty taels of silver to Taiping Clinic. Weâre done.â
âWait! Can you advance eight wen?â I asked.
Yunyang, bemused, pulled eight copper coins from his sleeve: âGone mad for eight wen? Take it as a gift.â
I smiled sincerely: âThank you. Iâll take my leave.â
Jiaotu felt this was my most genuine smile.
Yunyang said: âHold on.â
Before I could react, a dagger from his sleeve grazed my ear, a strand of hair falling into his hand: âNow you can go.â
I paused, then left without a word.
As I walked away, Jiaotu said: âWhy not recruit him to the Secret Spy Division? Assign him to usâweâd use him freely without paying fifty taels. Thatâs enough for years of fine clothes!â
âNo,â Yunyang refused. âThis kidâs ruthless to others and himself, and smartâthe Inner Ministerâs favorite type. If he joins, he might outrank us soon.â
âBut the Twelve Zodiacs have no openings,â Jiaotu said.
Yunyang whispered: âI heard Sick Tigerâs retiring⊠I was foolish to think he could replace him.â
Jiaotu added: âWe need to confirm heâs not a Jing Dynasty spy before we can trust him.â
Yunyang said calmly: âIâve planned for that. Last night, I sent a pigeon to Dream Rooster in Kaifeng. Heâll arrive in Luocheng soonâhis interrogation ensures certainty.â
âWhatâs the cost for Dream Rooster?â
âA steep one⊠Letâs go, itâs late.â
In a blink, the bustling gate was left with only leaves swaying in the autumn breeze.
Like everyoneâs fated destiny, after clamor and feasts, only desolation and emptiness remain.
âŠ
âŠ
I walked through a dark alley. As I went, a small, fluffy black cat appeared on the wall, holding a book and a ginseng root in its mouth.
I walked below, it followed above, our shadows under the moonlight moving in sync, as if sharing an unspoken rhythm.
Dark Cloud released its grip, the book and ginseng falling.
I silently caught them midair. The icy current surged, turning half the ginseng into four transparent beads.
I tucked the book and remaining ginseng into my robe, tossing the beads to the eaves. Dark Cloud caught each precisely in its mouth as it walked.
Our movements flowed like a rehearsed dance. A warm current from Dark Cloud ignited the fourth furnace by my dantian!
Instantly, faint flames from the four furnaces linked like a chain, forming a complete cage, sealing my dantian entirely.
The furnaces seemed bound by fate. As they connected, a massive warm current washed through my flesh and bones, erasing the nightâs fatigue.
I looked up, silently pointing Dark Cloud in a direction.
At a T-junction, we splitâone forward, one left.
The next moment, I sprinted!
Soon, rapid footsteps echoed from the mist dozens of paces behindâa blurry figure closing in.
I weaved through the dark, trying to lose them in Luochengâs maze-like streets.
But the pursuer always chose the right path at forks. I could hear their breathing behind me.
No goodâI couldnât outrun them.
Their steps grew closer. I judged their speed surpassed mine, at least Secret Spy level.
I knew someone would track or kill me, so Iâd used the ginseng meant to cover the clinicâs loss to convert the icy current without hesitation.
You have to live for anything to matter.
Since arriving, it was like a hell-mode start. Even hiding in the clinic, dangers came knocking.
If life was meant to be this way, I chose not to run.
The footsteps were close now, my gaze calm.
When only three paces separated us, I spun, charging at them.
The narrow alley barely fit two side by side, flanked by high walls and uneven stone paths.
The pursuer didnât expect the prey to fight back. He reached for his sword, but before he drew it, I pinned his wrist.
The assassinâs strength shouldâve outmatched mine, but our collisionâs momentum gave my grip the edge.
Clangâthe sword, half-drawn, was forced back!
In the dim moonlight, the middle-aged assassinâs pupils shrank. He looked at me, finding me staring back.
This wasnât a preyâs gaze.
He pulled back, kicking my chest, sending me tumbling.
He drew again, but halfway, I rolled and lunged low without pause.
Clangâthe sword was forced back again.
Twice, he couldnât draw his blade!
He sneered, abandoning the sword, pummeling my chest with fists.
To him, I was wide open, full of flaws, with no fighting experience.
But looking at me, he saw no fear or painâonly excitement, my eyes like fire.
I realized cultivators in this world were rare, hidden in the shadows, rarely appearing.
Otherwise, whoever wanted me dead wouldnât send this âordinaryâ man.
Compared to Lin Chaoqing or Yunyang, this assassin was indeed ordinary!
Taking fist after fist, I lunged again, crashing into him, clamping his arms under my armpits.
Now!
A black shadow shot from the eaves. The assassin turned, expecting an ambush, but saw only a small black cat.
Before he could relax, the cat passed him.
As they crossed, Dark Cloudâs sharp claws slashed his neck.
Hiss.
Blood sprayed the wall.
I released him, panting, sitting on the ground, coldly watching him clutch his neck in disbelief, sliding down the wall.
The assassin saw the cat leap into my arms and rasped: âEnforcer?â
I frowned. Enforcer? Was that this worldâs term for cultivators?