MadFireGod
"The audacity of that bitch! To say I was unfit to be Vice-Sect Master just because I wanted my son to join and maybe take a few disciples as es. you believe the nerve of that woman!?" Sun Mei'er’s voice echoed through the dimly dle-lit courtyard.
She’d dragged Jin Shu here an ho and hadn’t stopped ranting since. Jin Shu, though, erfectly tent to sit there, listening in silence. Whatever she wao say, he was willing to hear.
A maid hurried into the courtyard, bowing briefly. “Master, your disciple, Fan Biyu, is requesting an audience.”
"Oh, let her in."
With a quiet bow, the maid departed as swiftly as she had arrived.
Moments ter, a young woman stepped through the doorway.
Jin Shu’s gaze caught on her, captivated. He could only think of one word to describe her, “jade.” Her long hair, deep as evergreen boughs, was a dark jade, and her eyes—like polished jade pools—reflected his stunned face. She wore robes of varying shades of green, ated by a purple belt around her waist.
Notig Jin Shu’s expression, Sun Mei'er grinned. “Beautiful, isn’t she?”
“Exquisitely,” he replied, unabashed in his praise. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, Miss Fan. I’m Jin Shu. I hear you’re my mother’s disciple. I hope she’s treated you well.” He stood to give a respectful bow, pg his left palm over his right fist.
Fan Biyu gracefully returned his salute, smiling. “The pleasure is mine. Master is like a seother to me. So, please, call me Biyu.”
“You should call her Sister Biyu, since she’s older than you, Shu,” his mother cut in, her grin widening. She turo him, “and stop calling me ‘Mother!’ I’ve told you a thousand times—it’s too distant and makes me sound old!”
“Yes, Mother.”
“Aah! Biyu, you see what I mean? This stubborn boy never listens to his mommy!” Sun Mei'er pouted.
“Yes, Master.” Biyu ughed softly.
“And you too!” Sun Mei’er shot Biyu a mock gre. “You’re just as stubborn as he is!”
Fan Biyu responded with a silent smile, her posure unshaken.
“So, what brings you here, Sis—er… Biyu?” Jin Shu hesitated, his words faltering. He couldn't bring himself to call her “Sister.” The thought of addressing someone who, in his previous life, would have been a decade youhan him felt too awkward.
Fan Biyu stifled a giggle at his stumbling. “Sect Master seo call Master back,” she expined lightly.
“Oh? Mother only returned a few weeks ago. Is she needed back at the Immortal Phoenix Sect so soon?”
“There’s been some uling activity in the southern region,” Fan Biyu said, her tourning serious. “The sect elders are holding a meeting, and as Vice-Sect Master, she must attend.”
“Are the demonic cultivators active again?” Jin Shu asked, a hint of creeping into his voice.
“Yes,” Sun Mei’er answered before Fan Biyu could. “They’ve been making a resurgeely.”
Jin Shu turo his mother, his brows furrowing. “Is it dangerous?”
Sun Mei’er didn’t answer directly. Instead, she pstered on an exaggeratedly touched expression, her eyes growing mogly teary. “Oh, my precious baby is worried about his poor mommy?” she cooed, pulling him into a tight embrace.
This time, Jin Shu repared. He turned his head just in time to avoid being smothered against her chest, though her teasing was no less suffog. He realized she was dodging the question about the danger, but perhaps that was for the best. Deep down, he wasn’t sure he wao know the answer.
For now, he allowed himself to sink into the warmth of her embrace. It felt oddly soothing—like a first. And in a way, it was. For the Jin Shu of Earth, who had grown up an orphan, this was his first time experieng the love of a mother.
The mome blissful until he gnced up and saw Fan Biyu watg him, her warm smile stirring his embarrassment.
His face flushed. Quickly, he wriggled free of Sun Mei’er’s arms, much to her dismay.
“Aww…” she pouted, clearly disappointed.
Jin Shu noticed the faint light of dawn filling the courtyard and seized the opportunity to escape. Feigning a yawn, he gave a respectful nod to both women. “I’ll take my leave now,” he said, his tone polite but brisk, before standing areating from the se.
“Goodbye, my precious son!” Sun Mei'er called out, waving her arm in an exaggerated farewell.
Jin Shu paused, looking back with a bemused expression. “Are you leaving so soon?”
“We're not,” she replied, smirking, “I just miss you every sed I’m not with you!”
He shook his head, suppressing a smile as he walked away, her teasing ughter eg behind him.
***
In the quiet courtyard, Sun Mei’er turo her disciple with a sly grin tugging at her lips. “What did I tell you? Handsome, isn’t he? He takes after me, after all.”
Fan Biyu smiled softly. “He certainly is handsome,” she admitted. “But no.”
Sun Mei’er gasped in mock e, pg a hand over her heart as if wounded. “I haven’t even said anythi!” she excimed, though the mischievous sparkle in her eyes betrayed her true iions.
“I already know what yoing to ask,” Fan Biyu replied evenly. “You’ve asked me tless times now, and my answer hasn’t ged.”
“Really? Even after seeing him up close?” Sun Mei’er pressed, leaning closer. “You know, if you don’t act soon, some irl will snatch him up. Then your master won’t be able to guarantee your spot as the main wife.”
“Don’t ,” Fan Biyu responded bluntly, her tone firm.
Sun Mei’er blinked, momentarily taken aback, but before she could muster a retort, Fan Biyu tinued. “It’s te—or rather, early—and I haven’t slept. I’m retiring for the… m.” With a graceful bow, she turned and walked away, leaving her master to stew over her reje.
***
Ba his room, Jin Shu sat at an opulent wooden desk intricately carved with coiling dragons and croug tigers. His room was filled with luxurious items, eae a gift from his mother. Some, he knew, had been borrowed from his uncle’s royal treasury.
His uncle was Emperor Sun of the Sun dynasty, making Sun Mei'er a princess—and himself the Emperor’s nephew. At his mother's veheme, Jin Shu was ferred the title of Golden Prince, a title that also earned him a position in the royal court at the same rank as the Prince.
Looking around the room, Jin Shu couldn’t help but refle how vastly different his two lives were. In his first life, he had been a poor orphan. Now, he was the eldest son of the esteemed Jin family and o an emperor.
Pushing the distrag thoughts aside, he turned his focus to the pistol in his hand, examining it carefully. What was it about this gun—or rather, the bullet he held—that had awakened memories from his past life?
He lifted the bullet, iing it closely. The base was stamped with a headstamp that read: [9mm | 2042].
This simple engraving—signifying the caliber and year of manufacturing—marked it as a Martiaal bullet. It came from his old world, but the date, 2042, indicated it was made a year after his death.
“2042… how's that possible…?” He couldn't his head around the fact that the bullet had e from the future of his old world. The fact that he'd awoken memories of his st life was already shog enough, now he had to deal with bullets from the future of another world.
“I guess that's not very important. The real question is, where did I find it…?” He recalled a street vendor g it was discovered deep within the forest beh the Bck Mountains. Later, he would seek them out and ask exactly where it had been found.
But first, he needed sleep.
The day had been long, exhausting, and above all else, it was bizarre. Two lives worth of memories were boung around in his head and it all had to do with a bullet from the future, or who knows, maybe it's a bullet from the past, or present? He had no way of knowing what year Earth was on now. Or if Earth was even real in the first pce. He had the memories of it, but who's to say. Maybe he's just gone insane.
***
Daassed and it was te evening before Jin Shu woke up. He promised himself that he'd never let himself be fooled into using all his Qi by his father again. Experieng the headache from overdrawing his Qi was one of the worst things he'd ever felt.
Jin Shu walked the bustling streets of Bck Mountain City, his eyes sing the vendors in search of the one who had sold him the bullet.
The streets were alive with activity. Guardsmen patrolled in pairs, their armleaming faintly in the fading light. Vendors called out to passersby, advertising an array of goods—everything from sizzling street food to essential household items. Wives hurried through the market, gathering ingredients for their evening meals, their voices mingling with the din of bartering. This was but one of the many lively streets that wove through the city, each as vibrant as the st.
The crisp evening air carried a hint of pine, a reminder of the nearby Bck Mountains that loomed over the city. Jin Shu weaved through the throng, trying to remain inspicuous. Though he received respectful bows and nods from those whnized him, he preferred to avoid drawing attention. Formalities would only slow him down, and his mind reoccupied with the bullet. What could it mean?
Still, Jin Shu couldn’t ighose in need. When an elderly apple vendor’s cart was overturned by a pyful mutt, he paused to help her gather the scattered fruit, her a kind word and a reassuring smile. A few steps ter, he came across a young neho had tripped, spilling the ingredients she’d carefully chosen for her husband’s first meal. He bent down without hesitation, helping her pick up the vegetables while murmuring a quick blessing for her marriage.
Though his thoughts were elsewhere, his as spoke volumes of his character—a man who, even with pressing matters on his mind, could not overlook the struggles of others.
After some time, Jin Shu spotted the vendor, a skinny, old man hunched over a stall with an assortment of peculiar tris haphazardly strewn about. The vendor seemed preoccupied with polishing an old pendant, humming to himself, oblivious to the world around him.
Jin Shu cleared his throat as he approached. “Good evening, sir.”
The vendor looked up, eyes brightening with reition. “Ah! The young master returns,” he said, bowing with a toothy grin. “Did you e for another of my treasures?”
“Not today,” Jin Shu replied, holding up the bullet. “I came to ask about this. You said it was found in the forest beh the Bck Mountains. you be more specific?”
The vendor squinted, examining the bullet with a puzzled look before nodding slowly. “Yes, yes… I remember now. An odd little thing, isn’t it? A hunter brought it to me, said he found it he base of the Bck Mountains. Said it was wedged in some roearly broke his knife prying it out.”
Jin Shu’s brow furrowed. “ you show me exactly where?”
The vendor scratched his , looking around thoughtfully before dug beh his stall. He stood back up with a tattered map, unrolling it on the ter with deliberate care. The part was covered in ink marks, some old and faded, others fresher, marking trails and ndmarks Jin Shu reized.
The vendnarled firaced a path along the Bck Mountains, stopping at a small, nearly indistinguishable spot. “Here,” he said, tapping the map. “The base of a cliff, hidden among the trees and boulders. No one goes there—bad luck, they say. But if you really want to see for yourself, I mark the way.”
Jin Shu watched as the vendor outlihe route, noting ndmarks he could use as guides. “Thank you,” he said, pocketing the map carefully. “You’ve been most helpful.”
The vendriurned, his eyes glinting with curiosity. “Anything for the Golden Prince! Just, uh… be careful. Strahings are known to happen around those mountains.”
Jin Shu offered a brief nod of aowledgment. “I’ll be careful.”
As he left the stall, Jin Shu felt the weight of the bullet in his pocket—a reminder of both his past life and the enigma it represented. He had a destination noerhaps, a clue to unraveling the mysteries of his awoken memories.
With the vendor’s map guiding him, he knew his journey was only beginning.