Telepathy

One of the Six Supernatural Powers in Buddhism; the ability to read or communicate with the mind of another. Here, it allows the mute monk to issue commands directly into Li Huowang's thoughts.

One of the Six Supernatural Powers in Buddhism; the ability to read or communicate with the mind of another. Here, it allows the mute monk to issue commands directly into Li Huowang's thoughts.

Story context

Get ready, folks—Li Huowang and company are diving headfirst into a Zuowandao-infested nightmare, and the tension is cranked to eleven. The Bone Buddha Temple isn't just a holy site; it's a trap waiting to spring, and the only ally our boy can truly trust is a mute monk who speaks *inside his brain*. The chapter masterfully sets the stage for a high-stakes operation while reminding us that Facai, one of Zuowandao's infamous Three Elements, is a foe whose every word is a poisoned needle. The finale? Chan Master Xinchi reads a situation wrong, and Li Huowang is once again the instrument of a messy, bloody resolution. It's a lean, taut setup chapter that proves even a misstep can kill.

Why it matters

This chapter is a masterclass in "soft horror" setup. There's no monster under the bed—just the crushing dread of walking into a crowded temple where *anyone* could be a shapeshifting liar. Li Huowang is essentially a loaded gun here, forced to wait for a trigger that might be a false positive. The pure coldness of Xinchi's apology—"A sin, a sin"—is the real punchline. The world doesn't care if the kill was justified; it was still messy. It's also a great check-in on Li Huowang's mindset: he's not horrified by the gratuitous violence anymore. He's just kneeling over a corpse, asking for a debriefing.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
The Bone Buddha Temple
Chapter references
1
Type hints
daoguixian, dao-twisted world, li huowang
Guide tags
body horror, folk horror, mind games

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian