Definition
The professional military forces of Great Liang, trained in battlefield techniques and used to execute extreme measures against supernatural threats.
The professional military forces of Great Liang, trained in battlefield techniques and used to execute extreme measures against supernatural threats.
Definition
The professional military forces of Great Liang, trained in battlefield techniques and used to execute extreme measures against supernatural threats.
Hold onto your jade tokens, fellow Daoists, because this chapter is a masterclass in atmospheric dread. Li Huowang, fresh off his invisible scouting mission, witnesses something deeply wrong: a village cult not just praying *in the dark*, but praying *to* the dark—calling out to a “Yu’er God” he’s never heard of. The horror isn’t a monster jumping out of a tree. It’s the ground starting to shake. It’s a cavalry charge that turns an entire circle of worshippers into a single, steaming smear of red on the ground. It’s the revelation that these aren’t random heretics—they’re a sect that’s already sprung up to *worship the Heavenly Calamity itself*. The chapter pivots hard from visceral scene-setting to a cold, philosophical gut-punch delivered by Zhuge Yuan: some knowledge isn’t just dangerous—it’s a contagion that makes you part of the god you’re asking about. Get ready for a chapter that’s less about fighting and more about the creeping realization that the world’s roof is leaking cosmic horror.
This is the kind of chapter that rewards the patient reader. There’s no grand fight scene, no power-level breakthrough. The horror is the *implication*. The fact that a cult dedicated to a Heavenly Calamity could form within two years of the event itself—that’s the scariest part. It means the world’s immune system is failing. On first read, focus on the shift in Li Huowang’s posture: he goes from curious spy to terrified witness to a man clinging to his loved one as a shield against existential vertigo. The cavalry scene is deliberately shocking in its brutality—30 riders turning a village into paste is meant to feel disproportionate, because for the Great Liang bureaucracy, even the *possibility* of worshipping a Calamity requires that level of overkill.
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