The Lian Yun Mountain Range sprawled like a scar across the earth, its jagged peaks piercing a bruised, twilight sky. Within its depths, a cavern gaped—an ugly gash in the mountainside, its entrance fringed with moss-slicked stone. Ye Qiu crouched inside, a lone figure dwarfed by the damp, suffocating darkness.
The wind howled outside, a feral shriek that rattled brittle pines and flung icy grit against the rock. Inside, the air hung thick, steeped in the sour stench of rot and the steady drip of water from unseen fissures above. A frail fire sputtered before him, its weak light flickering across the walls, casting shadows that danced like ghosts of his past.
His gaunt face, half-lit by the wavering glow, bore the hollowed look of a man on the edge. Once, Ye Qiu's features had been sharp with promise—eyes bright as polished jade, a jaw set with quiet defiance. Now, hunger and sleepless nights had carved him down, leaving cheekbones stark beneath taut, ashen skin.
Tattered white robes clung to his frame, stained with mud and blood not entirely his own. His fingers, wrapped around a chipped dagger, trembled faintly—not from cold, but from a deeper, unnamed unease.
'Never thought it would end like this,' he mused, a bitter sneer curling his lips as he stared into the dying embers. 'Even after all I've endured since leaving my family's home in Qingcheng... Even after crossing paths with Qin Ting...'
The name slithered through his mind, a venomous whisper conjuring a man more force than flesh—cunning sharp as a blade, ruthlessness veiled in silken poise.
Qin Ting, with his icy gaze and serpentine smile, had effortlessly unraveled a trap Ye Qiu once thought flawless, wielding the precision of a master calligrapher slicing ink across pristine rice paper.
From a wind-scoured ridge earlier that day, Ye Qiu had watched it unfold. Hidden among gnarled roots and jagged outcrops, he'd peered down as Qin Ting faced Jiang Zhongbai in a duel that shook the Blazing Valley. The air had pulsed with their power—qi bursting in jagged arcs of silver light and violet-golden flames, the ground trembling beneath their blows.
Jiang Zhongbai had fought with a cornered tiger's ferocity, his blade a blur of molten fury. For a fleeting moment, Ye Qiu had dared to hope. Jiang Zhongbai was a prodigy, a sun among stars, his name once whispered alongside Qin Ting's in the holy lands.
But Qin Ting was a void—an abyss that swallowed light and spat out ruin. When the fire crows descended upon Jiang Zhongbai, their flames consuming flesh and feathers tearing limbs apart, his end was as violent as it was inevitable. His charred, dismembered remains crumpled into the dirt like a broken marionette, and Ye Qiu felt no surprise—only a cold, gnawing certainty.
"Stupid old man," he muttered under his breath, his sneer sharpening as he kicked a loose stone into the fire. Sparks flared briefly before fading to ash. 'He could've escaped. Found me again. Together, we could have forged a new plan—a better plan.'
'Qin Ting wouldn't have seen it coming. But no—he had to play the True Disciple, chasing pride straight into the grave. What a waste.' The thought stung, though he buried the pang beneath layers of scorn.
Jiang Zhongbai had led their fleeting alliance—radiant, resolute, unbowed by the world's weight. Where Ye Qiu had clawed his way up from the depths, a shadowed enigma forged through grit and guile, Jiang Zhongbai had burned—a beacon of strength, charisma, and unyielding brilliance. Yet even he, unmatched in spirit, had fallen facing Qin Ting head-on, preserving a shred of dignity in defeat.
Ye Qiu had chosen a different path.
Time and again, he'd slipped away—into alleys, forests, this fetid hole—each retreat stripping away another piece of the warrior he'd been. 'Was it cowardice?' he wondered, the question flickering briefly before dissolving into the gloom. 'Or wisdom?'
No answer came. Only a hollow ache in his chest, where zeal once burned, now replaced by a frigid, clawing desperation. He was no longer the underdog prodigy, the mystery who'd set the holy lands ablaze with whispers. He was a fugitive, a specter skulking in the margins, his legend reduced to ash.
A sudden dizziness seized him, sharp and unbidden. He lurched forward, one hand slamming against the jagged wall to steady himself. The stone bit into his palm, drawing a thin trickle of blood, but he barely noticed.
His vision swam, the cave tilting as if the earth had turned against him. Then came the pain—a vise around his chest, a searing heat coiling through his veins. His eyes widened, flashing with an unnatural, sinister glint.
Rage erupted within him, raw and primal, a hunger to tear and destroy clawing at his skull. His gaze blazed crimson, bathing the cave in a ghastly hue, and for a moment, the shadows seemed to writhe—grinning, mocking, alive.
"What… is this?" he rasped, his voice a guttural snarl as he clawed at his forehead. His nails raked skin, leaving red welts, but the fury only grew. Each breath came harsh and ragged, tinged with a growl not his own.
The walls pulsed, or perhaps it was his heartbeat, thundering in his ears like war drums. 'I won't let it take me!' he roared inwardly, fists clenching until his knuckles whitened.
But a dark, guttural laugh echoed in his mind—low, cruel, and utterly foreign. It jeered at his defiance, sinking hooks deeper into his soul.
Outside, the wind rose to a scream, carrying faint, anguished wails—human or otherwise—swallowed by the endless night.
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Far below the Lian Yun peaks, Backridge City thrummed with restless energy. Lanterns swayed in the streets, casting golden pools across cobblestones worn smooth by centuries of boots.
The Xuantian Sect palace loomed at the city's heart—a glittering sprawl of white jade and gold-tipped spires, its arches adorned with carvings of celestial dragons coiled around stars.
Crowds surged toward it, a tide of silk robes and calloused hands, all eager to kneel before their new conqueror. Qin Ting's triumph had set the city ablaze like a spark on dry tinder. The underground palace in Blazing Valley—once a labyrinth brimming with relics of forgotten dynasties—now lay in smoldering ruin.
Its treasures had been claimed—wrested away by Qin Ting's iron grasp, while scraps fell to lesser cultivators. Stripped of riches, the valley and the Lian Yun Range sank into an uneasy stillness. The scavengers—lone wanderers and minor factions—had retreated, leaving behind whispers of an emerging terror.
Jiang Zhongbai's fall had cemented Qin Ting's reign within the Xuantian Sect. His name was a hymn on every tongue, his power a blade at every throat. Disciples parted before him, their eyes wide with trembling awe, while elders murmured of his inevitable rise to Holy Son—a title that felt more like a coronation.
Yet Qin Ting moved through the adulation like a shadow across ice—each step deliberate, each glance a poised dagger. His purple robes flowed like spilled ink, his handsome face a mask of serene cruelty, framed by hair black as a raven's wing.
In the city's underbelly, a rumor spread like rot through alleys and tea houses. Whispers spoke of an ancient fiend stalking the wilds—a sadistic wraith that drained vitality, leaving only husks behind.
Scattered cultivators had vanished overnight, their shriveled corpses found sprawled in the brush, faces frozen in silent screams. The markets buzzed with dread, doors bolted shut, protective wards fluttering like frail prayers in the wind.
The great sects—Xuantian, Qianyuan, Ancient Sanctum—had forged a brittle alliance, their banners snapping as teams of holy warriors swept the mountains. Swords gleamed under the moon, divine arts flared in brilliant arcs, yet the fiend remained a phantom, slipping through their grasp, claiming even some of their own.
When their bodies were found—tucked in gullies or tangled in vines—they too were desiccated shells, their qi drained. The rage among the sects was palpable. To slaughter their disciples was to defile their honor—a provocation demanding blood.
In the Qianyuan Sect's opulent compound within the city, draped in silk and lit by jade lanterns, Mu Qingyi sat in a high-backed chair, her delicate fingers gripping its arms. Incense curled through the air, its sandalwood scent cloying rather than calming. Her lovely face, usually soft with quiet strength, was shadowed with trepidation.
Several disciples had vanished, including Lan Xiu—her junior sister, whose laughter had once brightened their halls like spring sunlight.
'Lan Xiu… are you still out there?' she thought, her chest tightening. 'Or have you already slipped beyond my reach?'
Elder Wei stood beside her, his robes immaculate, untouched by the room's tension. His face was carved in stone, every line a testament to age and authority. "Niece Mu," he said, his voice low and razor-sharp. "Two days without word... It's time we faced the likelihood—they're gone."
Her lips thinned, a flicker of defiance warring with the truth she couldn't face. "Elder Wei," she murmured, "we can't abandon hope yet. There's something we're missing—some pattern, some clue."
Footsteps echoed, measured and commanding, cutting through the silence. Qin Ting entered, his presence a chill that seeped into every corner. His blue eyes glinted with cold, piercing light, and a faint smile played at his lips—too perfect, too controlled.
Elder Wei offered a practiced smile and a respectful bow. "Young Master Qin, your timing is impeccable," he said, then slipped away with a curt, "I'll leave you to it."
"Junior Sister Mu," Qin Ting purred, his voice a velvet blade as he closed the distance, "still no trace of your lost lambs?"
Her gaze dropped, a faint nod her only reply. "None," she breathed, her voice barely above a whisper. "Lan Xiu was among them. I should've been there—I should've led those hunting parties myself."
"Don't let those harmful thoughts consume you," he said, placing a hand gently on her shoulder. The gesture carried a warmth, a tenderness that felt unspoken yet profound. As he spoke, Mu Qingyi's hand hesitated before resting atop his, seeking comfort in his quiet strength—a fleeting moment that did not escape Qin Ting's notice.
His lips curled into the faintest smile, satisfied that his plan to win her over was unfolding perfectly. Beneath the surface, though, his comfort rang hollow, a calculated play from a man who thrived on others' pain. "We'll hunt this demon down and avenge them. You have my word."
'Avenge them? Hardly,' he sneered inwardly, a cruel smirk curling in his mind. Ye Qiu was his reluctant pawn, bound by the Dreamwraith Amulet—a sinister relic Qin Ting had buried in his rival's soul days ago before his escape, its chains now twisting tighter around him.
Every step Ye Qiu took, every descent into madness, danced to Qin Ting's silent command. It was he who had stoked the bloodrage, whispering through the amulet's dark magic, turning Ye Qiu's thoughts into a furnace of hate. The control wouldn't last forever—the amulet's power waned with time—but it would be enough.
'Soon, Mu Qingyi will see her precious Ye Qiu as the monster I've sculpted. Her despair will be exquisite, her tears a banquet for my amusement.'
At that instant, Elder Wei's shout shattered the quiet, urgent and shrill: "Young Master Qin, Niece Mu! One of the scouting teams has found the demon's trail—fresh blood and traces of demonic energy near the eastern ravine!"
Mu Qingyi rose to her feet, her movements as elegant as a lotus unfolding in moonlight. Her eyes, brimming with quiet desperation, sought Qin Ting's. "Senior Brother Qin," she began, her voice soft yet earnest, "you are the only one who can guide us through this plight... I beg you—lend us your strength. It would be an honor, and a debt I would cherish repaying."
"Certainly, Junior Sister. The full might of the Xuantian Sect lies at your disposal," he replied, his smile serene, a masterfully crafted facade that concealed the sinister flicker in his gaze.
'Now, let Ye Qiu's downfall begin,' he thought, his heart thrumming with dark anticipation. 'And let us drink deep from the chaos.'
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High in the Lian Yun Mountain Range, the wind howled through a narrow pass, thick with the metallic stench of blood. Ye Qiu emerged from the cave, no longer himself—his body a vessel for something dark and insatiable, his eyes glowing a savage crimson that pierced the shadows.
A demonic force coiled within him, twisting his once-noble spirit into a bloodthirsty killer, its hunger pulsing like a second heartbeat. He wielded forbidden arts now, consuming the spiritual energy of others to feed the savage entity that had claimed his mind.
In the distance, a lone cultivator stumbled into view, hands shaking, his qi flaring like a beacon to the possessed predator. Ye Qiu's lips twisted into a snarl, a feral grin splitting his face as the demonic laughter in his mind roared with ravenous delight.
The night closed in, swallowing them both, and the mountains shuddered with the echo of a scream—cut short by the wet sound of organs being torn from flesh.