Inside the envelope was a thin sheet of paper inscribed with a few
short lines. A brief look, and the heart that had leapt up into Mo Ran's throat
settled back into his chest. He let out a discreet sigh and realized he'd
nearly sweated through every layer of his clothing.
Xue Meng craned over to look. "What the—" His brow furrowed
deeply. "That's it?"
Mo Ran eyed him. "Well, what were you expecting? Didn't I tell you
I don't know her well?" Relaxed now, Mo Ran smiled and put the letter on
the table. "You made it sound so fishy; I actually fell for it."
During the years Mo Ran had roamed the land, he'd slain plenty of
evil spirits of great renown. One such was a carp spirit that had plagued
Yunmeng Marsh for many years. Because it possessed strong spiritual
powers and its lair was rather remote, more than a few cultivators who'd
stepped forward to challenge it were reduced to bones that the carp spirit
used to decorate its cave.
Yunmeng Marsh was a place heavy with the essence of evil, fertile
ground for monsters to cultivate into spirits. But a carp wasn't that strong a
creature; even when cultivated into a spirit, it had no business being so
formidable. Mo Ran had exchanged over eighty blows with the creature
before finally using Jiangui to strangle it dead. When he'd sliced it open, he
solved the mystery.
"That carp spirit had a lunar crystal9
in its stomach," Mo Ran said
with a smile. "It was formed from the essence of a thousand years of
condensed moonlight, and makes for a really high-quality spiritual stone—
top-notch for forging weapons or to cultivate the spiritual core."
"What does a Butterfly-Boned Beauty Feast like her want it for?"
Chu Wanning asked.
"She says it's for her husband. He's got a fire elemental spiritual core,
and has been training so recklessly these past few years that there's a risk of
qi deviation. She will spare no expense to buy the lunar crystal from me to
add to her dowry in order to help her husband suppress the malignant
spiritual energy."
Xue Meng nodded. "She's willing to spend so much for her husband's
safety? You don't come across a girl like that every day."
Mo Ran laughed. "Isn't it all from Rufeng Sect's coffers in the end?
With those looks of hers, all she has to do is bat her eyelashes. Which
shixiong or shidi would say no to her? Would you?"
Xue Meng shot him an indignant glare. "Don't make me sound like a
freaking pervert."
"Don't get upset, I was just giving an example," Mo Ran said. He
returned the letter to Xue Meng. "File it."
At Sisheng Peak, unanswered letters were kept in a box at the library.
Xue Meng blinked. "File it?"
"No? Then burn it, if you want."
"No, I mean—" Xue Meng was a little flustered now. "It's her
wedding, and all she's requesting is a spiritual stone. It's not like she's
asking you to give it up for free. She seems sincere, and she said she'd pay
any price, so why won't you sell it to her?"
"It's not that I don't want to; I have no use for it myself. But I already
gave it to you."
"To—to me?"
"Yep." Mo Ran grinned and pointed at Longcheng hanging at
Xue Meng's waist. "Didn't I send back a crystal for you a few years ago,
and tell Uncle to refine Longcheng with it? Longcheng is now much
improved, you wield it well, and it's on par with a holy weapon. Guess you
should be thanking that carp spirit, huh?"
Xue Meng's mouth hung open, and he couldn't speak for the longest
time. He'd only known Mo Ran had obtained the crystal while wandering
the world; he'd never cared to learn the details of its origins.
When it came to Mo Ran, Xue Meng had always choked back his
resentment. Whether or not Mo Ran was a bad person, whether he had
changed for the better, Xue Meng would always harbor a sliver of
indignation toward him, a whiff of contempt. When his dad told him the
gem Mo Ran sent could be used to upgrade Longcheng, Xue Meng had been
grateful, but he'd also been aggrieved. He felt like he'd received a favor
from a rival that he'd never asked for. So he'd put it out of his mind and let
his dad take Longcheng to Taxue Palace to be refined. He really hadn't
expected the crystal to be a priceless lunar crystal. He was filled with
sudden, complicated emotions that he couldn't pin down. It was several
seconds before he squeezed out an insipid, "Thanks."
"Don't mention it." Mo Ran waved his thanks away with a smile. "I
just happened to have it at the time."
Xue Meng's face scrunched up even more as he retorted, "I wasn't
thanking you; I was thanking that dead carp."
"Ha ha ha, then don't eat carp anymore as a gesture of piety to your
benefactor, yeah?"
"Hmph!"
In the middle of their banter, a realization hit Mo Ran. He asked with
a dimpled smile, "Speaking of which—I was so bamboozled earlier I forgot
to ask. Who is Song Qiutong marrying? She's only a little shimei, but
there's all this fanfare and Rufeng Sect is sending out invites? Amazing. Is
she making a marriage alliance with Bitan Manor?"
"Nah."
"No? I thought maybe Rufeng Sect gave Song Qiutong to that
perverted old fart of a sect leader to butter him up," he said, laughing.
"Which clan is it then? To be able to talk marriage with Rufeng Sect and
make such huge deal out of it… Surely not Taxue Palace?"
"What are you thinking!" Xue Meng shot him a glare. "Why do you
think it's a marriage alliance?"
Mo Ran blinked, and his smile froze. "Well, who else would she
marry?"
"Nangong Si, duh! Did you forget? That wild horse gongzi of the
Rufeng Sect has also reached a marriageable age. And Song Qiutong is so
beautiful, it's a pretty good match…"
He was still mumbling when Mo Ran shot to his feet and exclaimed in
astonishment, "Nangong Si?!"
Xue Meng startled at his reaction. "What?"
"Why…why is she marrying Nangong Si? How…" Turbulent waves
of shock surged through Mo Ran's mind, leaving him struggling to rescue
his calm. He muttered under his breath, "Nangong Si…"
His reaction was not unwarranted. After all, by this time in his
previous life, Nangong Si had already died of an illness. Mo Ran had spent
the last five years focused on the chaos of war and the refugees, paying no
attention to the affairs of the prominent sects. And he cared almost nothing
about Rufeng Sect, with which he had little interaction. It wasn't until this
very moment, when Xue Meng announced the imminent marriage of Song
Qiutong and Nangong Si, that Mo Ran realized with a start—
This was wrong.
Everything was wrong. The fate of this world was changing, and
these changes weren't just happening to him but even to the seemingly
irrelevant Rufeng Sect. A person who should have been dead and buried
wasn't; there was a wedding instead of a funeral, with that living man
marrying the empress Mo Ran had taken as his wife in the previous life…
He almost choked on the shock of this news. And! Was Nangong Si blind?!
To set his sights on this woman?
Nevertheless, congratulations were in order, and a gift had to be sent.
Nangong Si had extended an invitation to Sisheng Peak, and they had no
reason to decline. The wedding was set for the fifteenth of the month. Xue
Zhengyong delegated his sect duties and got everything in order. He passed
on all business to the Tanlang and Xuanji Elders, then prepared to set off for
Linyi.
He didn't go alone. As per the etiquette of the cultivation world,
Madam Wang, Xue Meng, and Mo Ran were also required to attend.
Nangong Si had also extended a personal invitation to Chu Wanning,
mentioning him by name and expressing that since he'd received guidance
from the Yuheng Elder in his youth, he hoped the elder would grant him the
honor of his attendance. So he was in the party too.
"Rufeng Sect currently ranks number one among the great sects. It's
their young master's wedding, so every figure of repute in the world will
likely attend to give their well-wishes," Xue Zhengyong said. "Sisheng
Peak usually doesn't bother with formalities, but for an occasion like this,
we have to behave with utmost propriety or we'll become a laughingstock."
"What do you mean, propriety?" Xue Meng asked. "I think I'm plenty
proper."
Xue Zhengyong reached out to wiggle his topknot. "For example, this
crown of yours isn't right. You're wearing a golden crown."
"What's wrong with that?"
Madam Wang smiled gently. "Meng-er, this is your first time
attending a wedding, so there's much you don't know. Mom will explain, so
listen carefully: at a wedding in the upper cultivation realm, only the groom
wears gold hair accessories. If you go wearing a golden crown, it means
you're there to steal the bride. It'll be a huge scandal."
Xue Meng immediately flushed. "S-steal the bride?" he stammered.
"No, no no no, I'm not stealing any brides."
Mo Ran teased, "What if they toss you into a tiny room with Miss
Song, you gonna freak out?"
"I'll toss you into a tiny room!" Xue Meng was embarrassed and
furious. "I'll just not wear it, all right?!"
"Seems you guys don't know much about dressing for weddings,"
Xue Zhengyong said. "How about this? I'll have something made for each
of you, so all you have to do is put it on when the time comes." He paused,
then made a point to look at Chu Wanning. He asked tentatively, "Yuheng,
is that okay with you?"
Xue Zhengyong wasn't worried about the others; at worst, they'd
make fools of themselves. But Chu Wanning was so accustomed to wearing
white that he really might show up to the wedding dressed in it if Xue
Zhengyong didn't remind him. Perhaps Nangong Liu would spit blood in
outrage and start a feud between Sisheng Peak and Rufeng Sect.
"Sure," Chu Wanning replied.
The clothes Xue Zhengyong ordered arrived the night before their
departure. They were a rush order he'd placed at a tailor in Linyi,
formalwear of high quality and impeccable style. Even a picky peacock like
Xue Meng nodded in satisfaction when he received his outfit.
Holding a neatly folded pile, Mo Ran climbed to the southern summit
of Sisheng Peak and came to the Red Lotus Pavilion. He called out,
"Shizun, Uncle asked me to bring your clothes over."
When he came to the lotus pond, he found Chu Wanning practicing
the sword. He recalled that Chu Wanning's second weapon was a sword, but
that sword bore a thick killing aura and an impulse to destroy the world.
Chu Wanning rarely used it. However, for a blade to stay sharp it must be
whetted; skills had to be practiced to maintain proficiency. So even if his
own blade rarely saw the light of day, Chu Wanning still trained with
ordinary swords every so often.
There under the chilly moonlight, Chu Wanning wore only his white
inner robe; perhaps his exertions had left him too warm, and he'd removed
the outer one. The silken material floated in the night breeze, making for a
nimble, graceful sight. Chu Wanning had discarded his customary high
ponytail and instead coiled his hair into a bun, a stern style that accentuated
the lean lines of his face so that he looked even sharper than usual. The
longsword hummed through the air, its blade cold as snow. Softness hid
beneath the strength in his sword dance; his steps were placed with delicate
precision, stirring the frost on the ground into drifts gentle as the reflection
of the lotus blossoms in the pond. Each strike was lightning quick, like a
dragon tearing through the air. Every movement, each advance and each
retreat, fell with pinpoint precision. Mo Ran watched him from afar and
couldn't find a single flaw in his technique.
Suddenly, Chu Wanning's brow stiffened; with one swift, fierce
movement, he pointed the longsword at the lotus pond, and the waters of
the pond were split in two by the sword's aura. They stood parted in its
wake, as if the very waters had been sliced in twain. He lithely pushed off
the tips of his toes, and his graceful form soared between the sundered
waters, arms wide and white sleeves fluttering behind him as he landed atop
the pavilion on the other side of the pond with all the elegance of an
immortal.
"Shizun!"
Afraid Chu Wanning might take off into the distance in the next leap,
Mo Ran sped over to the pavilion and called out to him. In the cold, bright
moonlight, white petals drifted softly from the massive haitang tree beside
the pavilion like fluttering snowflakes. Chu Wanning stood at a pointed
corner of the pavilion's roof, the lapels of his robe slightly askew, allowing
in a sliver of jade-like moonlight. At Mo Ran's call, he looked down, black
eyes bright. He'd yet to catch his breath, which left his lips
uncharacteristically flushed, creating quite an enticing picture.
He squinted at Mo Ran, the night breeze tugging at the loose strands
of his hair. "What are you doing here?"
"I'm here to deliver your clothes. Try them on to see if they fit."
Chu Wanning let out a soft huff. At that moment, he remembered that
people also hailed Mo Ran as a zongshi now, and that he'd yet to spar with
him since awakening. Gripped by sudden impulse, he elegantly leapt to the
ground and issued a challenge: "First, spar with me!"