Chapter 442: Chapter 442

Shi Min approached, his posture straight and his voice steady despite the tightness in his throat. "Paps," he said, "I will take care of Mom and the twins. I’ll make sure she rests, that she eats properly, that she doesn’t try to do everything herself." He met his stepfather’s eyes directly. "Don’t worry about them. Don’t let concern for us distract you in there. Focus completely on your journey and return safely. We’ll be fine. I’ll make sure of it."

Four Eyes felt warmth bloom in his chest, spreading through him like good wine. He reached out and tapped Shi Min’s shoulder firmly — once, twice — a gesture of acknowledgment between men, of trust given and accepted. No words were needed.

Shi Min then turned to his sisters and to Shun, Fatty, and Chatty, offering his blessing with a deliberately bright, deliberately confident smile, carefully constructed to mask the worry gnawing at him. He was the one staying behind. He had to be their strength, their certainty, even if he felt neither.

The Dragon’s Eye Opens

The ground trembled — not violently, but with the slow, deliberate movement of something massive stirring from sleep. A low hum rose from deep within the valley, climbing in pitch until it resonated through stone and bone alike, making teeth ache, and hearts stutter.

As the runes carved into the ’Dragon’s Eye’s threshold flared with ancient light — not the warm glow of fire but the cold luminescence of things that had been dark for centuries — a collective exhale escaped the assembled clan, every breath synchronized into a single, unified sigh of anticipation. Mist poured upward from the ’Eye’s center in twisting streams, black and white spiraling around each other like competing dragons, rising fifty feet into the air before dissipating into the morning sky.

The Dragon’s Eye opened fully, the stone at its center pulling apart with the sound of continents separating. Its interior shifted like a living puzzle constructed by a mad architect — corridors forming from nothing, dissolving back into mist, rearranging themselves in endless geometric patterns that hurt to look at directly.

Walls rose and fell. Staircases inverted. Doorways opened onto other doorways in impossible recursions. The air grew heavy, thick enough to taste, charged with an ancient intelligence that felt less like observation and more like judgment. The ’Eye’ was awake, aware, and waiting.

One after the other, cultivators, disciples from different families, sects, and clans entered.

The Li Clan disciples stepped forward in tight formation, moving as a single organism. Four Eyes took point with his personal assistant, Jack, at his right shoulder. Ren, Lily, Shun, Fatty, and Chatty formed the inner circle, close enough that their shoulders nearly touched. Nicu and Ailun flanked Shun like guardian statues, their eyes constantly scanning.

The inner disciples formed the next ring, weapons drawn, and the outer disciples anchored the sides and rear, creating a mobile fortress. Their footsteps echoed against the ancient stone in perfect rhythm, each step synchronized, each step pulling them deeper into the dragon’s vision, into the maw of something that had swallowed countless cultivators before them.

The moment they crossed the threshold, reality warped like heated glass. The familiar courtyard behind them dissolved into formless mist, all reference points vanishing as though they’d never existed. The ground beneath their boots shifted from solid stone to fractured tiles that clicked and slid, rearranging themselves like a jigsaw puzzle, constantly solved and unsolved by invisible hands.

Walls rose from nothing with the grinding sound of stone on stone, held for a few breaths, then fell back into the floor. Corridors twisted, their geometry defying natural law — paths that should have been parallel intersected, halls that went left somehow ended up going right. The path ahead was never the same twice.

Looking back, they saw a different architecture from the one they’d just walked through. The ’Eye’ was not a place. It was a living test, and it had just begun examining them.

White miasma brushed against their shoulders and faces like cool silk, and where it touched, effects manifested immediately: colors sharpened until edges seemed to cut the air, distant sounds clarified into distinct layers, stray thoughts quieted as though someone had closed doors in a noisy house. It was enhancement, purification, clarity made manifest.

But black miasma gathered in knotted skeins along the floor and in corners, pulsing faintly with a rhythm that didn’t match any heartbeat. Where the white miasma clarified, the black confused. It created pressure on the mind — not painful, exactly, but insistent, like fingers pressing against a bruise. It tugged at intent, made purposes waver, whispered that maybe turning back wouldn’t be cowardice, perhaps it would be wisdom.

Four Eyes felt a flicker of doubt, a flash of uncertainty. What if the white miasma’s clarity only masked fear? The black mist seemed to amplify his hesitation, pushing him to reconsider every step. This internal conflict mirrored the mist’s contradictions, a struggle he had to overcome not only in his surroundings but also within himself.

The tiles beneath their boots slid with audible clicks, locking into new configurations that formed patterns — dragon scales, celestial maps, warning symbols in dead languages. The walls around them breathed like living things, expanding outward then contracting inward, the stone somehow flexible. Then they split vertically with a sound like tearing fabric, revealing three branching halls, each engraved with overlapping dragon-scale patterns that seemed to shift when viewed from the periphery.

The far-left hall dimmed as thick eddies of black miasma moved with predatory intent. The center hall shimmered with concentrated white miasma, almost too bright to look at directly, promising clarity and advancement. The right hall flickered unstably between both, black and white warring for dominance, creating a strobing effect that induced immediate nausea in anyone who stared too long.

Lily’s lashes fluttered rapidly, her eyes moving beneath the lids as though watching something no one else could see. When she spoke, her voice was distant, channeling information from elsewhere.

’Whispers’ —deliberate, not random. They’re coordinated.

’Traps are set along the mixed paths, the unstable ones. Designed to separate groups, pick off stragglers.’

She lifted two fingers in a prearranged signal. Immediately, the formation compressed, everyone stepping closer, shields moving outward to create a bristling perimeter, eyes up and scanning for threats from above, where the ceiling kept shifting.

Ren’s needles trembled at her side, her qi resonating with the shifting puzzle.