Chapter 148: News
The moon hung low that night, veiled by drifting clouds that resembled slow-moving smoke. The eastern territory was silent, eerily so. Even the cicadas and nocturnal beasts seemed unwilling to make a sound under that kind of stillness. The wind that brushed through the towers carried a faint metallic scent, the aftertaste of blood and steel that never quite left this land.
On the highest balcony of the Eastern Command Pavilion, Ji Xiulan stood alone.
The faint silver light of the moon touched his figure, painting his dark robes with streaks of cold light. His long hair, black as obsidian, flowed down his back, brushing against the engraved metal railing where his fingers rested. The night breeze stirred the loose strands, yet he didn’t seem to feel it. His expression was tranquil, detached, yet there was a strange pressure around him, as though the air itself feared to draw too close.
He was a man built for silence, his presence alone enough to command submission. But tonight, there was something different in the air, something subtle. His sharp eyes, glowing faintly with a shadowed luminescence, were fixed on the night sky above, as though he were trying to read the fate written among the stars.
The moonlight glimmered in his eyes for a moment, but it wasn’t just light that danced there; he was in deep thought, and his expression unreadable. Something flickered across that gaze, a shadow of emotion that vanished as quickly as it appeared. Perhaps curiosity, ot perhaps... something older.
A soft whoosh cut through the silence behind him.
Without turning his head, Ji Xiulan spoke, his voice low but clear, like a blade sliding against glass.
"Speak."
The subordinate who appeared behind him instantly dropped to one knee. He was dressed in the same dark combat uniform as the others under Ji Xiulan’s command, his body half-merged with the shadows that seemed to curl around the edges of the balcony. Even the moonlight hesitated to touch him.
"My Lord," the subordinate said in a measured tone, "news came from the western front."
At that, Ji Xiulan’s fingers stilled on the railing. His eyes lowered, just slightly, to the horizon where the sky was darkest.
"Go on," he murmured.
The subordinate took a breath. "The fortress to the west, Fort Karon, has been stabilized. The divine anchor there was successfully purged and dismantled."
A long silence stretched between them.
Ji Xiulan didn’t react immediately. His profile, carved with precision and calm, gave nothing away. Only the faint hum of the wind against his cloak could be heard.
The subordinate continued cautiously, "It was not the doing of the western lords as expected. Reports say... it was handled single-handedly by Lady Ling, the Streamer who has currently been popular in the Star Stream, among the Divine Beings. She destroyed the anchor core before it could spread further."
At that name, something flickered through Ji Xiulan’s eyes again that was barely human.
A ripple beneath still water.
He did not ask for clarification or demand more details. His stillness was enough to make the subordinate swallow hard, unsure if his master was pleased, or if he’d just committed the crime of speaking unnecessarily for too long.
Finally, Ji Xiulan spoke, his tone perfectly even. "I see."
Just two words, but they carried the weight of command.
The subordinate lowered his head even further. "There is more, my Lord. According to the Divine Stream monitors, the west anchor was classified as Special Rank: Deity-Origin. Meaning... someone from the upper domain directly authorized it."
Ji Xiulan’s gaze sharpened. The cold air around him shifted, pressing against the subordinate’s shoulders like the invisible edge of a blade.
"And she took it?" he said, not quite a question.
"Yes, my Lord. She completed the task, though reports indicate she suffered severe spiritual circuit damage during the fight. She has since retreated to recovery."
The silence that followed was heavier than before.
Ji Xiulan’s hand slowly lifted from the railing, gloved fingers curling slightly, as though he were holding onto something unseen. The faint light reflecting from his wrist armor revealed intricate runic patterns, symbols that pulsed faintly, reacting to the mention of divine interference.
After a long, unreadable pause, Ji Xiulan asked quietly, "Who else knows of this?"
"Only the regional commanders, my Lord. The information was contained within inter-faction communications."
"Erase it," he said flatly.
The subordinate froze. "My Lord—?"
Ji Xiulan turned his head just enough for his cold gaze to meet the man’s. The faint glow in his irises deepened, like two dark comets burning in the night.
"Erase all Western surveillance logs from the last seventy-two hours. Remove her name from any external report. If the Divine Stream seeks a follow-up, tell them the west was lost in chaos."
The subordinate’s breath caught in his throat. He immediately bowed his head lower, his voice trembling slightly under the pressure that seemed to grow heavier the longer Ji Xiulan spoke. "Understood."
"Good," Ji Xiulan murmured. "You may go."
"Yes, my Lord." The man’s voice cracked slightly with the effort to remain steady. Then, with a sharp motion, he leaped off the balcony, vanishing into the darkness below like a shadow consumed by another.
Silence returned.
But it wasn’t the peaceful kind.
For a long moment, Ji Xiulan stood unmoving. The faint light of the moon fell upon his face again, tracing his sharp jawline and the cold curve of his lips. His eyes, still fixed toward the west, were unreadable, but deep in their reflection, faint fragments of his memory seemed to ripple.
Ling Yu.
He hadn’t seen her in person for months. Not since the operation in the southern ruins, the one that ended with half their team missing and the Divine Stream abruptly closing the record.
She had always been different then others. Unpredictable and bold. She had looked at him as though she could see through every carefully built wall of his mind. And she had walked away with a smile that haunted him far longer than it should have.
He exhaled slowly, though his breath didn’t ease the weight in his chest.
"Ling Yu," he said softly, the name slipping past his lips like a whisper meant only for the night.
The air responded to his voice, literally. The darkness around the balcony rippled faintly, reacting to the call of the man who commanded the very essence of shadows. The entire eastern pavilion seemed to bow in silence as its ruler stirred.
Ji Xiulan closed his eyes briefly.
In the darkness behind his lids, he saw the faint image of a girl standing amidst a sea of silver light and blood, a figure surrounded by monsters and divine corruption, unyielding to the end.
A faint smirk touched his lips, though it held no humor.
"So you really did it."
He tilted his head slightly, the edge of his gaze softening. "Foolish woman."
But even as he said it, the corners of his mouth curved with something dangerously close to amusement.
***
He turned and walked slowly toward the center of the open-air platform. As he moved, the floor beneath him lit up faintly with a pattern of sigils, ancient markings etched directly into the stone. The runes pulsed to life with each step, resonating with the dark aura that surrounded him.
A circle of light expanded outward from where he stood, faintly violet at first, then darkening to deep blue. Energy stirred around him like wind before a storm.
From a far distance, the eastern watchtowers began to dim. The guards stationed across the rooftops looked toward the pavilion instinctively, though none dared to approach. They all knew, when their commander stood at the center of that circle, no one was permitted to disturb him.
Ji Xiulan lifted his hand, fingers brushing against the pendant that hung from his neck. It was simple, a black fragment of crystal shaped like a broken teardrop. Inside it, faint light flickered, sometimes red, sometimes gold. It pulsed softly now, like the heartbeat of something alive.
He murmured, "The west..."
The pendant pulsed brighter, responding to his will. Through it, he could feel the call, a faint echo of corrupted energy still lingering where the divine anchor had been destroyed. It was unstable, fading quickly, but it was enough to form a trail.
And something else.
Something is watching from above.
The Deity who had assigned Ling Yu that task.
A slow, knowing look crossed his face. "So that’s what you’re after."
He clasped the pendant in his hand, letting it burn against his skin. "But you won’t get her."
He turned abruptly. The air behind him rippled again, opening into a swirling tear of shadow. From it emerged several figures, masked operatives dressed in black, their presence silent but heavy with killing intent.
