Definition
A rare, yang-aligned liquid that radiates intense heat; used to fuel the elemental crucible during the Core Formation breakthrough, paired with Snow Spirit Water.
A rare, yang-aligned liquid that radiates intense heat; used to fuel the elemental crucible during the Core Formation breakthrough, paired with Snow Spirit Water.
Definition
A rare, yang-aligned liquid that radiates intense heat; used to fuel the elemental crucible during the Core Formation breakthrough, paired with Snow Spirit Water.
Han Li steps into the beating heart of Heavenly Capital Street’s market economy and immediately confronts a lesson in information asymmetry. Having trailed the two women and their pursuers into a shop, he peels off to explore the street himself, only to realize he has been operating on the wrong assumption about the local commercial landscape. The chapter is a masterclass in *observational reconnaissance*: Han Li doesn’t charge into the first store; he reads the plaza’s layout, studies customer flow, deciphers banner emblems, and chooses his entry point with the cold precision of a tactical insertion. Once inside the White Water Tower, he meets Shopkeeper Cao, a gregarious mid-Foundation Establishment merchant who recognizes Qu Hun’s peak-Base status instantly. The game turns social: Cao probes for background, and Han Li, piloting Qu Hun, feeds him a carefully vague cover story. The payoff arrives when a bristly-bearded powerhouse from the Jade Ring Residence, Fellow Daoist Ouyang, produces exactly the two rare spiritual liquids—Snow Spirit Water and Heavenfire Liquid—that Han Li needs for the punishing breakthrough to Core Formation. This isn’t a battle scene, but every second is combat.
This chapter is a quiet masterclass in Mortal Stream *information warfare*—not a single spell is cast, but the tension is razor-sharp. Watch how Han Li corrects his own mistake: he enters the market assuming all shops are general stores, then *pauses*, *observes*, and *recalculates* based on the banner emblems and customer flow. That moment of silent self-correction is more revealing of his character than any explosive duel. Also note the social choreography: Shopkeeper Cao’s effusive friendliness is *not* kindness—it’s a sales protocol for high-value customers. Ouyang’s “feigned embarrassment” about forgetting the liquids is a classic merchant power-play: he signals that he has the goods, and that *he* controls the timeline. Han Li, through Qu Hun, matches this game perfectly—polite, vague, and never giving away a single data point about his real background. Every line in this chapter is a feint or a probe. Enjoy the quiet thrill of a protagonist who wins conversations the same way he wins fights: by being two moves ahead, holding a calm face, and never revealing his hand until he’s ready to cash in.
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