Definition
In traditional Chinese folklore, wells are often seen as portals between the mortal world and the underworld; waking at the bottom of one is a powerful symbol of descent and rebirth.
In traditional Chinese folklore, wells are often seen as portals between the mortal world and the underworld; waking at the bottom of one is a powerful symbol of descent and rebirth.
Definition
In traditional Chinese folklore, wells are often seen as portals between the mortal world and the underworld; waking at the bottom of one is a powerful symbol of descent and rebirth.
Alright, buckle up, friends. This chapter isn’t here to make you feel good. It’s here to punch you in the gut and leave you staring at the ceiling at 3 a.m. We pick up with Li Huowang in the modern hospital, scarfing down fast food like a normal person—and for a moment, you almost believe it. The illusion of peace is cruel and brief. When Yi Donglai casually drops the name Zhuge Yuan, the entire chapter detonates into a raw, screaming breakdown. This isn’t a thoughtful debate about reality versus delusion. This is Li Huowang finally breaking, right there in the white-tiled room, and the sound is horrible.
This is one of the purest emotional gut-punches in the novel so far. Read it in one sitting—the power is in the pacing. Notice how the author builds a small, warm bubble at the start (mother, fries, ketchup) just to shatter it with a single sentence. The destruction of the game console is not random; it is the destruction of the last coping mechanism. After that, Li Huowang fights with his bare hands and his forehead.
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