Flesh-skin

- **Nüshu (女书):** A unique, syllabic script historically used exclusively by women in Jiangyong County, Hunan. It was a secret language of sisterhood, poetry, and lament, passed down through generations of women. In this novel, its appearance as a medium for a death-pledge or a safe-conduct letter adds an extra layer of cultural peculiarity—a secret code for a secret transaction between a reclusive abbess and a strange traveler. - **The Ao-Jing Sect (袄景教):** This is a fictional, corrupted fusion of two historical religions. The “Ao” (袄) refers to **Zoroastrianism** (Bái Huǒ Jiào, the “White Fire Religion”), which entered China along the Silk Road. The “Jing” (景) refers to **Nestorian Christianity** (Jǐng Jiào), a branch of Christianity that flourished in Tang Dynasty China. The real-world sects were distinct, but here they are blended into a single, shadowy, flesh-ritual-worshipping cult that owns the *Thousand Greats Record*. - **Writing death letters (绝笔):** In Chinese literary and historical tradition, a *jué bǐ* is a final poem or letter written just before death, often by scholars, martyrs, or warriors, to express their last thoughts, regrets, or defiance. Li Huowang performing this act underlines his sincerity and the immense tragedy of his situation. - **Flesh-skin letter (皮书):** The idea of writing on human skin is drawn from extreme, archaic forms of oath-making and grim folk horror. It implies a bond that cannot be broken by mere ink and paper—a transaction sealed with the body. Jingxin using her own skin to write a recommendation shows the gravity of the favor.

- **Nüshu (女书):** A unique, syllabic script historically used exclusively by women in Jiangyong County, Hunan. It was a secret language of sisterhood, poetry, and lament, passed down through generations of women. In this novel, its appearance as a medium for a death-pledge or a safe-conduct letter adds an extra layer of cultural peculiarity—a secret code for a secret transaction between a reclusive abbess and a strange traveler. - **The Ao-Jing Sect (袄景教):** This is a fictional, corrupted fusion of two historical religions. The “Ao” (袄) refers to **Zoroastrianism** (Bái Huǒ Jiào, the “White Fire Religion”), which entered China along the Silk Road. The “Jing” (景) refers to **Nestorian Christianity** (Jǐng Jiào), a branch of Christianity that flourished in Tang Dynasty China. The real-world sects were distinct, but here they are blended into a single, shadowy, flesh-ritual-worshipping cult that owns the *Thousand Greats Record*. - **Writing death letters (绝笔):** In Chinese literary and historical tradition, a *jué bǐ* is a final poem or letter written just before death, often by scholars, martyrs, or warriors, to express their last thoughts, regrets, or defiance. Li Huowang performing this act underlines his sincerity and the immense tragedy of his situation. - **Flesh-skin letter (皮书):** The idea of writing on human skin is drawn from extreme, archaic forms of oath-making and grim folk horror. It implies a bond that cannot be broken by mere ink and paper—a transaction sealed with the body. Jingxin using her own skin to write a recommendation shows the gravity of the favor.

Story context

In a moment of absolute despair, Li Huowang prepares to end his own life, using his death as the final, certain way to destroy Danyangzi. After writing his last letter and entrusting his belongings to the nuns of Anci Nunnery, he follows Jingxin into a grotesque realm of cockroaches and rat-mountains, only to find a last-minute reprieve. The chapter hangs on a razor’s edge between profound grief and the sudden spark of a new, terrifying path.

Why it matters

Get ready, because this chapter is a masterclass in emotional whiplash. You will start the chapter watching our battered protagonist writing his *last words*, thinking you are reading a grim, heroic tragedy. Then, you will follow him into a literal *mountain of living rats* (yes, you read that right) for a suicidal pact. And just when you’ve accepted the end, a grumpy, skin-shedding old nun pulls a lifeline from her own loose flesh. The pacing is relentless, moving from quiet, mournful preparation to gut-wrenching body horror, and then swinging back to a fragile, desperate hope. Notice how perfectly the author leverages the *familiar*—a mother’s love, a child’s face—to give this hopeless world a single unexpected crack of light. The real question for the next arc isn’t just *can* the Ao-Jing Sect help, but *what price* will they demand? Because in the Dao-Twisted World, no help comes without a cost, and the strangest cults always ask for the strangest currency.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
A Final Letter and a Flesh-Skin Oath
Chapter references
2
Type hints
li huowang, danyangzi, jingxin
Guide tags
Body Horror, Emotional Rollercoaster, Suicide Attempt

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian