Outside the Fragrance inn of Rainbell Isle stood its willowy
innkeeper, all dressed up with pearl bracelets clinking on her wrists as she
leaned against the door, eating melon seeds fried in snake gall.
Whenever Xuanyuan Pavilion held an auction, most of the visitors
ended up staying at her place, since she was clever on top of being pretty. A
flicker of those beautiful eyes and she could easily guess what her guests
desired.
It was just past noon, and the sun beamed brightly overhead. The
innkeeper spit out some melon seed shells. The auction would be over in
another two hours or so. The inns on Rainbell Isle were all fairly expensive,
and visiting cultivators tended not to stay, so she didn't expect to make much
from rentals today. That was all right. These cultivators, heroes, and whatnot
still had to eat before leaving, and she fully intended to squeeze them for
dinner.
She flicked some bits of fruit peel off her skirt, then turned to yell at
the waiter inside. "Er Fu, wipe the tables and chairs down again, and fetch a
basket of the melon seeds I fried. Put a plate on every table. Gotta get ready
for our guests tonight."
"Alrighty, Boss, right away." The waiter jogged off.
Done with her sunbathing and snacking, the innkeeper grinned
contentedly. She was about to head inside to supervise the work when she
noticed a fast-approaching, black-and-white silhouette at the end of the road.
Once it drew closer, she saw that it was a handsome cultivator dressed in
black who was holding someone in his arms. Nigh instantly, he burst into her
inn at full tilt and in a burning panic.
"A room—room, room, room!"
The waiter gaped. Maybe because the cultivator had appeared so
suddenly and because he was acting so strangely, the waiter could only stare
at him in bewilderment, mouth hanging open.
"I said, I want a room!" Mo Ran roared angrily. "What are you, deaf?
Where's your boss?!"
"Aiyo, Xianjun." The voice of a young woman came from behind him,
a little simpering and a lot apologetic, a voice at which it would be hard to
stay mad. Mo Ran turned around and came face-to-face with the innkeeper's
agreeable smile. "My apologies for the wait. He's new. I am the innkeeper.
Please feel free to come to me if you need anything."
With his dark, handsome eyebrows raised, Mo Ran hurriedly repeated,
"Give me a room!"
The innkeeper looked him over quickly and discreetly. The cultivator
was wearing a cloak, so he was probably an attendee of the Xuanyuan
auction, but the hood had fallen off in his haste, revealing a handsome face
that still had a trace of tender youth. That wasn't important; what was
important was the brocade pouch embroidered with a giant tortoise that was
tied around his wrist.
It was a qiankun pouch from Xuanyuan Pavilion, one they specifically gave
to patrons to allow them to carry purchased goods.
The innkeeper's eyes gleamed. The cultivator had money. Lots of
money.
Next, she glanced at the person in his arms. He was covered in a cloak
and his face was turned away, so she couldn't see what he looked like. But
the innkeeper's eyes were keen as a hawk's, and they swept over those
snow-white robes made of high-quality silk before zeroing in on the hand
peeking out from the wide opening of his sleeve.
Long and slender, porcelain-fine skin, delicate fingertips, shapely
joints. A beauty.
The innkeeper understood immediately. Sure, this was a beautiful man,
but it wasn't like dual cultivation between men was unheard of in the
cultivation world. Nothing to write home about.
"Da Fu, open a room." The innkeeper wasted no time and asked no
questions. Her orders were brisk as she snapped her fingers. "The best one
we have."
Chu Wanning's sickness had come suddenly and without the slightest
warning. It was a good thing they were in Guyueye territory, where good
medicines and physicians were readily available.
The sage doctor's eyes were closed as he took the pulse in Chu
Wanning's wrist with lightly calloused fingertips. For a long time, he didn't
utter a single sound.
Mo Ran could hold it in no longer. "Doctor, how is my shizun?"
"It's not a pressing issue, but…"
Mo Ran seriously couldn't stand people who talked in circles and beat
around the bush. "But what?" he pressed, eyes wide.
"But it's quite strange. Your master's cultivation is remarkable; he's at
a level achieved by few in this world. Yet my careful examination has
revealed that his spiritual core is exceedingly fragile, even more so than that
of a fledgling cultivator still in the foundation establishment stage."
If cultivation was water, then the spiritual core was the vessel holding
that water. Where one's cultivation accrued slowly over time, one's spiritual
core was inborn. It was easier for someone with an innately powerful core to
cultivate, but once one's cultivation reached a certain point, it would begin to
bolster that core. Generally speaking, cultivation and core were
interdependent and complementary. An eminent zongshi like Chu Wanning
should naturally have an extremely robust core, so physicians generally
didn't bother to check such a thing when taking his pulse.
Mo Ran was shocked. "How is that possible?!"
"I thought the same. However, I checked over and over, and it was the
same every time."
"My shizun's spiritual core is weaker than a fledgling cultivator's? Hhow could that be? There's no way! Could you please take another look?
Maybe you made a mistake somewhere."
"I have always been most cautious in my practice, and I have never
said anything of which I am not absolutely certain. If the young xianjun
doesn't believe me, then feel free to get a second opinion. The result will be
the same."
Mo Ran was stunned.
"The issue has arisen precisely because your master's spiritual core is
so fragile," the doctor continued. "He appears to have recently suffered some
sort of influence from a powerful weapon, one that has some sort of
resonance with him yet does not belong to him.
He experienced a rebound as a consequence of that resonance, then lost
consciousness because his core couldn't withstand it. I will prescribe some
medicinal decoctions. Have him take them and get plenty of rest; he will be
fine."
Mo Ran saw the doctor off and came back to sit by Chu Wanning's bed
with his cheek propped up in one hand, watching him in a daze. A weak
core? How was that even possible?
However, while the old man couldn't possibly have known what had
happened at Xuanyuan Pavilion, he had correctly surmised that Chu Wanning
had encountered a powerful weapon. He likely wasn't spouting nonsense.
There was also the matter of "Bugui." Mo Ran had only released a tiny
bit of spiritual energy at Xuanyuan Pavilion when Chu Wanning suddenly
collapsed, so he had been unable to get a chance to see if the long blade was
indeed the holy weapon he had possessed in his past life. But if it was, then
why had Bugui resonated with Chu Wanning? And moreover, why had it
caused a rebound?
Mo Ran stared at Chu Wanning, brooding while his thoughts tied
themselves into a big old knot. He didn't know how much time passed before
Chu Wanning's brows scrunched up, his eyelashes quivering like he was
having another nightmare.
Mo Ran reached out and gently smoothed his brow, though he had no
idea what compelled him to do it. "Shizun…"
Chu Wanning did not respond.
"Shizun… Chu Wanning… I've already lived two lifetimes, but could
it be that there are still things about you that I don't know?"
In short order, the innkeeper finished boiling the medicine in the inn's
kitchen and came upstairs to deliver it.
Mo Ran tasted it—ridiculously bitter, as expected. Chu Wanning hated
bitter things. Mo Ran sighed and called back the innkeeper, who was about to
leave.
"Innkeep, do you have anything sweet?"
"Aye… We make fresh sugar candies, but today's batch is all gone. I
can send someone to go buy some if Xianjun would like."
Mo Ran looked at the steaming medicine and shook his head. "Never
mind, then. The medicine will be cold by then, and it has to be taken hot to be
effective. Thanks, though."
"Ah, no problem. Please feel free to call on me if you need anything
else." Having said that, the innkeeper tactfully left, closing the door on her
way out.
Mo Ran carried the medicine over and set it down by the bed, then sat
at the edge with one hand on his knee. He reached out with the other to help
Chu Wanning up. "Shizun, it's time for your medicine."
Mo Ran had plenty of practice feeding Chu Wanning medicine from his
last lifetime. He held Chu Wanning in one arm so that his shizun leaned
against him, then scooped up a spoonful of the medicine with his other hand,
blew to cool it, and slowly fed it to him.
When he thought about it now, this was the second time since his
rebirth that he had taken care of Chu Wanning. He disliked this person, yet he
felt such unease whenever he got sick. He really couldn't understand it.
"Bitter…" Despite being unconscious, the man in his arms could taste
the medicine. Chu Wanning's eyebrows pulled together, and he turned away,
refusing to drink any more.
Mo Ran was used to this behavior. Holding another spoonful, he
tugged Chu Wanning back around and coaxed him patiently. "One more.
You'll feel better after, here." And fed him another spoonful.
Chu Wanning coughed up half of it, brow furrowing even more. "So
bitter…"
"It's sweet. The next one will be sweet, come, come."
"Nngh…"
"The next one! Promise! It's unbelievably sweet! This venerable one
sent people to find the sweetest syrup in all the land!" Mo Ran was so
distracted cajoling Chu Wanning into drinking the medicine that he forgot
himself for a moment and absentmindedly let words from his past life fall
from his mouth. "It's delicious—you'll regret it if you don't open up. Come
on."
Just like that, he managed to sweet talk Chu Wanning into drinking the
whole bowl. After the last spoonful, Mo Ran let out a breath and was about
to get up and tidy things when there was a sudden flash of white. Before he
could react, a slap landed soundly on his cheek.
"You liar, get the hell out!" Chu Wanning snapped.
Then his head drooped, and he went right back to sleep, leaving Mo
Ran with his mouth hanging half-open, pitifully holding his cheek. He was
about to get mad when the man in his arms groaned softly, like he was
dreaming about something distressing, his face pale.
When Mo Ran saw him like this, he just couldn't be angry. He didn't
have any candy, but his gaze landed on the qiankun pouch sitting at the head
of the bed. Struck by a sudden idea, he took out a bottle of Tapir Fragrance
Dew. Then he tapped Chu Wanning's cheek with his hand, not too gentle but
not too hard, and let that count as revenge.
"Wait here a bit. I'll go make you some sweet dew water to drink."
Chu Wanning didn't respond, so Mo Ran moved to lay him back down.
But when he leaned closer in the process, he heard a low exhale and a
slurred mumble, "It…wronged you…"
Mo Ran froze. "What?"
Chu Wanning's eyes were tightly closed, and his eyelashes shivered
unceasingly, as if he was enduring something excruciating. Blood drained
from his face bit by bit. He seemed to have fallen into another dream, one
that was even more frightening than the last. He shook his head minutely, an
uncharacteristically sorrowful expression appearing on his habitually
impassive face.
"I…it was I…"
For a split second, Mo Ran's heart stuttered erratically. A strange
feeling flooded his chest, as if there was a secret right in front of him, from
which he was separated by only one last layer of haze—a secret he was on
the verge of unveiling. Staring fixedly at Chu Wanning, he asked quietly, "You
what?"
"It was I…who wronged…you…"
Mo Ran felt suddenly disoriented. He didn't know if the dim light of
the candle was making him see things, but he thought he perceived a glimmer
of wetness amidst Chu Wanning's thick eyelashes.
It was I who wronged you.
The words left Chu Wanning's lips as light as mist, but they hit Mo Ran
with all the force of crashing thunder.
Mo Ran abruptly shot up from the bed and went stiff. His pupils
contracted into pinpoints as he stared in disbelief at the man on the bed.
Instantly his expression changed, his heart pounding like a stampede of
horses and hands clenching tightly into fists. In one moment, he felt the blood
in his body catch fire, and in the next, it froze over.
"What did you say? Wh…" After a moment of being paralyzed in
shock, Mo Ran seized Chu Wanning by the throat, his eyes flashing with
danger. The guise of guileless naivety that he had worn since rebirth vanished
into thin air. "Chu Wanning, what did you just say? Say it again! Say it
again!"
It was I who wronged you. I won't blame you, in life or in death.
It was a curse that Mo Ran could never forget, a nightmare that had
haunted him for two lifetimes. How many times had he closed his eyes only
to hear these words sighed by his ear, though the speaker was long gone from
the world?
These were words that Chu Wanning had spoken in their past life only
as he lay dying. So why now would he—
Why would he—
Unless Chu Wanning had also been reborn?!