Chapter 394: Chapter 394

Ling Li Watches: A Mother’s Storm

From the silverleaf tree’s gentle shade, Ling Li stood with her arms tightly folded, a fortress against the world. Her gaze, sharp and unyielding, followed the chaotic whirl of movements on the training field, tracking every stumble and surge of glowing qi. But her mind drifted like a leaf carried by the wind — far from the present.

In two days, this rigorous training would culminate, leading them onward to Hidden Valley, where the ’Eye’ would open. Yet, Shi Min remained ensconced in his mysterious seclusion, absent from the tumult of it all.

Her eyes wandered skyward, where the blue stretched infinitely, deceptively serene. A chilling recollection swept through her — a tempest glorifying Mushu’s ascension, a bluster of twenty-five bolts of blinding lightning, and the wrath of heaven that had roared in fury.

A tightening gripped her heart. "How many lightnings will Shi Min have?" she whispered, her voice barely a breath against the heavy silence.

She wrapped her arms around herself, the chill she felt nothing to do with the wind that rustled the leaves but with haunting memories of anguish long past. Her fingers clawed into her sleeves, knuckles pale against the soft fabric, as visions of fallen cultivators and unraveling souls flickered through her mind. She had witnessed mothers burying their sons, the grief palpable in the air.

And now, her only son stood alone in the chamber ahead — confronting the tumultuous will of the heavens.

A Moment of Stillness

From behind her, Four Eyes approached, his presence a quiet understanding amid her turmoil. He said nothing, merely standing beside her, providing an anchor of silent solidarity.

Ling Li did not steal a glance in his direction. The weight of her gaze remained fixed on the sky above, where anticipation shimmered like electric tension. Somewhere among the clouds, a storm began to stir, ominous and electric, heralding a reckoning she could not yet fathom.

The Sky Trembles: Shi Min’s Tribulation Begins

It commenced with a faint whisper.

A delicate shift in the air, barely perceptible to the untrained eye — yet to those finely attuned to the intricate dance of qi, it was as clear as a bell tolling in the silence. The atmosphere thickened, laden with an electric tension, as if the heavens themselves were poised in breathless anticipation.

Above Hidden Valley, the sky darkened — not with the brooding menace of storm clouds, but draped in an ethereal, silvery shroud, as if the sun had retreated behind a gossamer veil of spirit mist. Flocks of birds erupted from the treetops, their cries frenzied and disoriented, echoing across the valley like shards of glass. The bamboo leaves stood frozen for a heartbeat, then rustled in a syncopated rhythm that warred with the gentle breeze.

In the heart of the Verdant Bamboo Forest, the protective formations surrounding Shi Min’s chamber pulsed ominously — once, then again — like the steady thrum of a heartbeat entwining with something far grander.

Inside the sealed sanctuary, the air shimmered with an otherworldly glow.

The temperature plummeted, leaving an icy breath on the skin, only to surge upward, igniting a fierce warmth within — the spiritual pressure crescendoed, thickening like the prelude to a storm.

Those Who Felt It First

Li Tianyuan, seated in deep meditation at the chamber’s threshold, opened his eyes, his breath catching in his throat like a startled bird.

"It’s beginning," he whispered, urgency lacing his tone.

Slowly, he rose, his robes swirling around him like ripples in a pond, as the rising qi enveloped him. Beneath his feet, the earth hummed softly — not from physical tremors but from a profound resonance. This kind heralds impending judgment from the cosmos.

Far across the valley, Ling Li halted mid-step, suspended in a moment of anticipation.

She raised her gaze to the heavens, where the clouds above Peonies Castle remained deceptively straightforward, but her heart thundered with foreboding.

She felt it ripple through her bones.

It coursed through her veins like wildfire.

In the charged stillness between heartbeats, she breathed the name of fate. "Shi Min..."

In the Hei Clan’s encampment, a spiritual observer shot upright, sending scrolls fluttering to the ground like fallen leaves.

"Another tribulation?" he gasped, disbelief etched across his features. "Already?"

In the Crimson Feather Pavilion, the bells chimed with an uncanny resonance, ringing without the presence of wind. Elders exchanged wary glances, their faces pale with foreboding.

"It’s not over," one elder intoned gravely. "There’s more on the horizon."

In the Moonshadow Courtyard, a rogue cultivator watched, wide-eyed, as his cup slipped from his grasp and shattered. "That energy isn’t remnants from the previous storm. It’s fresh — ascending, alive."

The valley stirred, a living entity awakening from slumber.

Factions braced themselves, tension crackling in the air like an unspent bolt of lightning.

And the sky, once still, began to roil and churn ominously.

A singular rumble reverberated across the valley — deep, resonant, and distant, yet unmistakably clear.

It was not the growl of thunder.

It was the harbinger of judgment — a sound born from the very fabric of the heavens, preparing to unleash their decree.

And deep within the sealed chamber, Shi Min opened his eyes, radiant luminescence shining forth.

He exhaled, a single breath that flowed like a tidal wave.

And the storm answered.

Preparing for the Worst: Ling Li and Li Tianyuan Await the First Bolt

The sky above Hidden Valley was no longer a serene expanse; it had begun to churn ominously. Not with winds or clouds, but with an oppressive spiritual pressure — thick and electric, an ancient force that stirred a primal fear deep within. Birds scattered from the branches, overcome by instincts honed through eons, and cultivators instinctively held their breath as a heavy silence enveloped the air. It was the unmistakable herald of cosmic scrutiny, a signal that the heavens were preparing to lower their gaze.

Within the confines of the Verdant Bamboo Forest, the protective formations surrounding Shi Min’s secluded chamber pulsated as if alive, throbbing with a fervent energy. Ancestral qi shimmered in the air like a mirage; the very trees seemed to groan under the weight of divine judgment, their leaves trembling in anticipation of the impending storm.

Four Eyes (Chu Yan) says:

"I didn’t say much this Chapter. That doesn’t mean I didn’t notice everything. Especially you, reader. Yes, you. I’m watching. Vote. Comment. Recommend. Power Stones and Golden Tickets are useful. Gifts? I don’t ask — but I don’t refuse. Let it flow!"