Chapter 420: Chapter 420

"Mark my words, and carve them into your hearts." Elder Zhan stood, his silhouette towering against the dying light. "The Li Clan believes destiny favors them, that prophecy shields them, that their daughters are untouchable. We will show them that destiny can be broken, that prophecy bleeds like any living thing." His eyes glinted like obsidian in firelight. "If the sisters enter the 'Eye…' they will not return. And the Li Clan's hope will die screaming in the darkness."

The elders bowed their heads in grim agreement, a silent covenant sealed in shadow and ambition. The meeting dissolved into whispered conspiracies and dark promises. Outside, the wind howled through the valley like a wounded beast, carrying with it the scent of pine, stone, and something else — the copper tang of blood yet to be spilled, of violence waiting to be born, of two young women who had no idea how many knives were already pointed at their backs.

Hidden Valley – Crimson Lotus Sect Hall

The Crimson Lotus Sect hall was a living entity of shadows and flickering flame, a sanctuary hewn from the mountain's forbidding core. Lanterns, red as freshly drawn blood, hung on iron chains, and their light spawned writhing shadows over the etched lotus blooms on the walls. Every petal seemed poised to cut deeper than any blade. The oppressive air clung heavily, dense with the scent of sandalwood, but it couldn't mask the metallic tang of blood that lingered deep within the stones.

At the chamber's heart, enthroned upon a dais of obsidian veined with crimson, sat Matriarch Xue Lian. Her robes cascaded like molten rubies, each fold shimmering with embroidered lotus flames that seemed to pulse with her breath. Her eyes — black as midnight water, sharp as executioner's steel — swept across the assembly with predatory patience. Around her, the sect's inner circle formed concentric rings of devotion: elders draped in blood-silk, their faces half-hidden beneath vermillion hoods; disciples pressed to the cold floor, spines rigid, breath held, each one a weapon awaiting her command.

A messenger — still trembling from his sprint through the mountain passes — had just delivered the intelligence that set the chamber ablaze with whispers: Ren, the elder sister, chosen apprentice of the legendary Shinsei, now wielded the Heaven-Piercing Needle Arts, a technique that demanded blood for power. Lily, the younger, had awakened the ancient bond with the Spirit Carp, creatures who read the currents of fate itself. Together, the Li sisters stood as heirs of prophecy, twin flames threatening to illuminate the valley's carefully cultivated darkness.

Xue Lian's lips curved into a smile that held no warmth, only the cruel satisfaction of a spider sensing vibrations on her web. "So... the Li Clan parades their daughters as chosen by heaven itself." Her voice was silk over razors, but a shadow of something unspoken flickered in her eyes. "Carp that whisper secrets. Needles that pierce the veil of fate. Portals and omens, prophecies and bloodlines. How... quaint." As she spoke, a fleeting hesitation twisted her smile, as though beneath the layers of scorn lay a sliver of envy at what might have been had fate chosen her own lineage differently.

Though disdain dripped from every syllable, her eyes betrayed a different truth — they gleamed with the cold fire of calculation, measuring angles of attack, weighing probabilities of ruin. She tapped one lacquered nail against the obsidian armrest, each click reverberating through the silent chamber like a war drum counting down to slaughter.

"Do not be deceived by provincial celebrations and naive proclamations." Her voice sharpened to a blade's edge. "The Spirit Carp are not mere ornamental fish — they are ancient sentinels who swim through time's currents. If Lily truly communes with them, she may perceive our approach before we even decide to strike, sense the ripples of intention itself. And Ren—" She paused, letting the name hang like a noose. "Her needles may pierce more than flesh and bone. The Heaven-Piercing Arts were forged to puncture the fabric of destiny, to rewrite what heaven has written. That makes her either our greatest threat… or our most valuable corpse."

Elder Hua — his face a topography of violence, each scar a testament to battles survived — barked a harsh laugh. "Needles? Fragile toys for embroiderers and healers. Give me a blade three feet of honest steel, and I'll cut through both sisters before their precious needles even leave their sheaths."

Elder Ming, her soft voice having orchestrated more deaths than Hua's sword could, countered with a tone that was sweet yet deadly. "Fragile? No, brother. Subtle. Precise. Invisible until the moment they pierce your meridians and collapse your cultivation from within." She leaned forward, her eyes glittering like chips of amber.

"The Heaven-Piercing Needle Arts demand blood sacrifice — the practitioner's own life force traded for impossible power. Each needle requires a drop of essence, a moment closer to the eternal rest, an unsettling tango with mortality itself. If Ren masters this exchange, if she learns to bleed herself at the threshold of death, even to the point of reducing her lifespan by years with each powerful strike... she becomes a weapon that grows sharper with every wound. That, Elder Hua, makes her infinitely more dangerous than your honest steel."

Disciple Lan, barely twenty winters old but already drunk on ambition, his hunger visible in the way he pressed closer to the inner circle, leaned forward with the eagerness of a hunting hound scenting blood. His dreams, as vivid as the lotus blossoms etched in the hall, centered on the 'Eye,' where triumph could shift him from shadow to leader, from disciple to herald of destiny.

"Then we must ensure she bleeds out before she learns control, before she understands the true depth of her power. The 'Eye' will open soon. We can infiltrate its trials, poison its visions, tilt the very architecture of destiny against her." Failing meant more than just losing face; it meant fading back into the obscurity he loathed, his ambitions crushed underfoot.

The hall erupted in a cacophony of strategic whispers and heated debate, voices rising and overlapping like flames feeding on dry kindling, each elder and disciple eager to prove their worth, to offer the killing stroke that would secure favor in the Matriarch's eyes.