Four months after the catastrophic end of the Stellar Youth Tournant, the na “Lian Yu” had beco a legend that transcended sectors, academies, and even species.
What began as shocked whispers in the Grand Arena had snowballed into a galactic phenonon. Holo-feeds replayed the footage endlessly: the sudden blur across the ring, the invisible pressure that froze hundreds of thousands in place, the clean severance of Nex-7’s head, and the cold, thodical slaughter that followed. So called it murder. Others called it justice. Many simply called it power.
And power, in this galaxy, had fans.
The “Ghost” fanbase grew faster than anyone could have predicted.
It started on Nova Pri—students at the Stellar Martial Academy who had witnessed his early spars began sharing stories. Then it spread to the underlevels, where street fighters and black-market cultivators hailed him as the ultimate underdog. Within weeks, the phenonon crossed planetary borders. Aliens from distant systems—Veyari rchants, Dravok rcenaries, Sylphari aerial fighters, even reclusive Aetheri—began speaking his na with reverence.
Fan clubs ford on multiple planets. Holo-posters of his scarred face (taken from blurry tournant footage) adorned walls in training halls from the core worlds to the outer rim. So fans wore simple miner’s jackets in imitation of his old Khar-9 clothes. Others got tattoos of a faint blue Qi edge on their forearms. “Power is the only truth” beca a rallying phrase among young cultivators who felt overlooked by traditional academies.
The reach extended all the way to the Milky Way and beyond. In human-dominated sectors, he was seen as the ultimate self-made warrior—zero talent on the orb, yet capable of suppressing an entire arena. Among alien species, he represented sothing rarer: a being who broke the rules of talent and realm entirely. Threnn scouts admired his silent movent. Korrak laborers respected his root strength. Even Shadekin, usually secretive, whispered that his domain-like pressure reminded them of ancient void techniques.
Back on Khar-9, the reaction was deeply personal.
The dusty mining colony had changed little since Lian left, but news traveled even to its remote hab-blocks. When the first clear footage of “the Scarred Ghost” reached the colony—showing a slim young man with electric-blue eyes and ssy black hair dismantling higher-realm fighters—the reaction was electric.
Old Jax was the first to recognize him.
The one-ard miner sat in his usual spot near Hab-Block 17, cheap black-market arm whirring as he watched the holo-feed on a cracked screen. When Lian’s face appeared, Jax’s tal hand froze mid-motion.
“That’s... sparkle-boy,” he muttered, voice thick.
Tears welled in the old man’s eyes.
He wasn’t the only one.
Miners who once called Lian “the kid with the bright eyes” gathered in the communal halls, sharing stories of how he knew everyone’s na, how he traded extra rations for herbs, how he made bad days survivable. So laughed through tears. Others simply nodded with quiet pride.
“He made it,” one twin brother with matching scars said. “The boy who smiled through dust is out there shaking the galaxy.”
Jax, however, took it a step further.
Every evening, after his shift, he walked to the east dune where they had buried what remained of Harlan Voss. The grave was simple—a modest marker of welded scrap tal with Harlan’s na etched by hand.
Jax would sit beside it, tal arm resting on his knee, and pull out the latest bounty poster he had printed from the colony’s ancient network terminal.
“Dead or Alive. The Ghost – Lian Yu.”
He would unfold the paper carefully and hold it up so the grave could “see” it.
“You boy is alive, old man,” Jax would say, voice rough but warm. “And he’s making the whole damn galaxy notice. He didn’t forget you. Look at him now—scarred, stronger, still fighting. You’d be proud.”
He left the poster there sotis, weighted down with a stone, so Harlan could “keep watching” too.
The news brought hope to Khar-9. In a place where most dreams died in the mines, Lian had beco living proof that a boy from the dust could shake the stars.
Far away, on a dangerous and deadly planet shrouded in perpetual twilight and toxic storms, the sa bounty reached very different ears.
In a dimly lit backroom of a nondescript shop dealing in rare artifacts and black-market Qi relics, the old man with white machine eyes sat alone.
The room was sparse—cold tal walls, a single table, and a holographic display floating above it. The bounty poster for “The Ghost – Lian Yu” rotated slowly in the air, red text flashing “Dead or Alive” alongside a blurry but unmistakable image of Lian’s scarred face.
The old man stared at it for a long ti.
Then he smiled.
It was a small, cold smile that didn’t reach the pure white chanical orbs that served as his eyes.
He leaned back in his chair, long white hair falling straight over his black coat.
“Rember that day like it was yesterday,” he murmured, voice dry as dead leaves. “The boy who watched his uncle die... finally growing up.”
He reached out with one pale hand and enlarged the image until Lian’s void eyes filled the display.
“So much potential. So much rage. So much root.”
The smile widened slightly.
“We will see each other again very soon.”
Behind him, in the shadows of the room, sothing stirred.
A massive, twisted shape unfolded—long clawed arms, burning red eyes, spider-like silhouette that seed to drink in the light. The shadow breathed once, slow and rasping, then settled behind the old man like a loyal hound.
The old man stood.
He adjusted his long black coat, then opened the door and stepped out into the toxic twilight of the planet.
The shadow followed silently, claws clicking faintly on the floor before it lted into the darkness at his heels.
Back on Nova Pri, the academy continued its quiet recovery.
New students kept arriving in waves, drawn by the legend of the Ghost. So ca seeking power. Others ca seeking the sa unyielding will that had allowed a “zero-talent” boy to humiliate higher realms.
The statue in the plaza saw more visitors than ever.
And sowhere in the galaxy, two figures moved through the shadows—Lian and Elara—carrying the weight of their choices, their partnership, and the growing storm that followed the Ghost’s na.
The legend was no longer just a story.
It was alive.
And it was still growing.
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