Chapter 434: Chapter 434

Carrying a faint scent of sandalwood, they were a testament to the clan’s resilience, a sensory reminder of the courage instilled in each member from childhood. Every touch to these talismans brought forth a hum of familiar energy, offering a sense of connection to the clan’s values as they navigated the corridors of uncertainty.

"Only those who can see beyond confusion, who can maintain their sense of self and purpose even when reality itself becomes uncertain, will reach the heart where the greatest techniques await. Most turn back long before that point, content with lesser rewards, unable to bear the psychological strain of a world that refuses to follow consistent rules."

Ling Li’s gaze turned specifically toward Four Eyes, her husband, locking onto him with an intensity that made him straighten under the weight of her attention. Her voice grew firm, carrying the unmistakable tone of a command rather than a suggestion.

"The further you enter, the more miasma you will encounter, both black and white. Avoid the black miasma, especially you, Chu Yan. Inside it dwell all dark cultivations. Do not be surprised to see people enter it; they are dark cultivators. But we are not one of them."

Chu Yan’s mind flickered with an uneasy thought, a shadow of curiosity mixed with an ambiguous pull towards the forbidden. This reaction surprised him, stirring something profound within that he could not entirely dismiss.

’What would it be like?’ He wondered for a fleeting moment, ’to step into the black miasma? To grasp at its dark power despite its treacherous nature?’ Shaking his head slightly, he pushed the thought away, reminding himself of the path of righteousness the clan had always stood for.

The hall stirred with nervous energy, disciples whispering in hushed tones, some asking clarifying questions, others sharing rumors about dark cultivators who had entered the black miasma and emerged as monsters wearing human skin.

A few glanced toward Four Eyes with concern, wondering what temptations he might face given his unique constitution, which sometimes attracted unusual cultivation opportunities. The elders remained silent, but their expressions showed approval of Ling Li’s warning — this was a boundary that must never be crossed.

"The deeper you go inside the ’Eye’, the higher the chance you get a higher grade cultivation techniques." Ling Li added.

Ling Li’s eyes swept across the room in a slow, deliberate arc, making eye contact with key disciples, ensuring each understood the gravity of what she was about to say.

"As you have seen outside when we arrived, cultivators from all over the world have converged on this valley to participate in the Eye’s opening. This is not a friendly gathering or a cooperative endeavor." Ling Li’s voice hardened, taking on the edge of a general briefing troops before battle.

"Expect fierce competition for the best techniques, for the deepest chambers, for resources that only appear once every four years. Be wary of anyone with ill intentions toward you, and assume that most factions harbor such intentions, whether openly like the Iron Fang Sect or subtly like the Crimson Lotus."

"Do we know how the Iron Fang Sect marks their territory?" a disciple interrupted, his voice tinged with concern. Ling Li paused, acknowledging the question. "They signal with red flags. Stay vigilant and avoid their proximities," she replied, her voice firm.

"Trust no one outside this hall unless I have explicitly vouched for them. Protect yourselves without hesitation, defend yourselves with lethal force if necessary — the ’Eye’ does not punish self-defense. But do not provoke. Do not strike first. Do not give our enemies the moral high ground or the ’Eye’s judgment against us. Let them bear the weight of aggression while we maintain the righteousness of our cause."

She paused, letting the tactical briefing settle before delivering the information that would change everything. Her voice lowered, forcing everyone to lean forward, to strain to hear, creating an intimacy that made the revelation more impactful.

"There is something else you must know, something that changes the nature of the threat we face. Lily heard the message from the Spirit Carp last night — ancient beings who have witnessed ten thousand years of valley history, who swim through the currents of time itself. They do not speak lightly or often.

Their warning was clear and terrifying: Shadows are waiting in the Dragon’s Eye. Not natural shadows cast by light and form, but deliberate ones, enemies who have infiltrated the trials themselves, corrupting what should be sacred ground.

Traps are explicitly designed for our disciples, illusions crafted to prey on your specific fears and weaknesses, and poisons tailored to our clan’s cultivation methods. Picture this: as you navigate the labyrinth, you may encounter a mirror that reflects not your true self but a twisted image meant to sow doubt and confusion. Or perhaps a mentor figure from your past appears, seemingly offering guidance but subtly leading you down the path that weakens your resolve. These dangers are crafted with such insidious intent that this threat is unprecedented.

The ’Eye’ has always been neutral territory, but our enemies have grown so bold, so desperate to stop our rise, that they have violated ancient protocols and seeded the trials with their agents and their malice."

The hall fell into a silence so complete it felt as if the air itself had been sucked away. Faces paled. Hands moved unconsciously to weapons.

Some disciples looked to their neighbors for reassurance and found only the same fear reflected back at them. Even the elders looked grim, understanding the implications: if the trials themselves had been corrupted, then the rules they had relied on for generations no longer applied. They were walking into enemy territory disguised as sacred ground.

The Sentience of the Eye

Ling Li’s tone grew solemn, almost reverent, as she shifted from warning about external threats to explaining the ’Eye’s fundamental nature — the one constant they could rely on even when everything else had been corrupted.

"You must understand something fundamental about the ’Dragon’s Eye’ — it is not merely a trial ground or a treasure vault, but a sentient force with its own ancient intelligence, perhaps a fragment of that primordial dragon’s consciousness still lingering after millennia." Ling Li’s voice carried genuine reverence now.