Castor

A strong laxative; Ji Lin famously poisoned his brother with these at age six to win favor with his father.

A strong laxative; Ji Lin famously poisoned his brother with these at age six to win favor with his father.

Story context

Welcome back, fellow Daoists, to another episode of “Surveying the Wreckage of Imperial Ambition.” This chapter kicks the door down on one of the novel’s most chilling worldbuilding reveals: the *actual*, *physical* nature of the Great Liang dragon vein. Forget mystical ley lines or abstract cosmic favor—here, “dragon qi” is a parasite that keeps a dead emperor puppet-walking, chained by flesh-embedded links inside a golden coffin. It’s less “Mandate of Heaven” and more “Chain-Gang of Heaven.” Li Huowang, our favorite spectator of other people’s dynastic trauma, gets a front-row seat to a grotesque father-son handover that makes any corpo succession drama look like a tea party. The chapter balances atmosphere—cold mausoleum versus warm temple, power versus mortality—with a tight, knife’s-edge conversation between the new emperor Ji Lin and his dead-yet-still-talking father, Ji Song. The lesson: absolute power requires absolute ruthlessness, and also, apparently, having your flesh impaled on hooks for eternity. No big deal.

Why it matters

This chapter is a masterclass in how *Dao Gui* handles political drama—it doesn’t just tell you the dynasty is corrupt; it *shows* you the rotting infrastructure. The dragon vein isn’t some grand, beautiful magic system—it’s a torture rack with a crown on top. Ji Song’s advice to Ji Lin is a perfect distillation of the novel’s theme: power in this world is never clean; it’s always paid for with someone else’s flesh, sanity, or family. Li Huowang’s silent observation throughout keeps the reader in a state of cold analysis—he’s not horrified *into* action, he’s horrified *into* data-gathering. That’s peak Li Huowang right there. And the final scene with the State Preceptor testing his alias? That’s the narrative flexing its worldbuilding muscle: even the Ao-Jing Sect cover story has political weight now. A dense, satisfying, emotionally brutal chapter.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
The Dragon Vein’s True Face
Chapter references
1
Type hints
dao gui daoist, li huowang, zhuge yuan
Guide tags
worldbuilding heavy, imperial politics, body horror

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian