Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.

Immortal Paladin 190 I Woke Up

Novel: Immortal Paladin Author: Alfir Updated:
Font Size
18px
Now reading: 190 I Woke Up from Immortal Paladin, a Action novel by Alfir.

190 I Woke Up

I woke up.

“That’s new,” I muttered. “To think I’ll be dreaming of ho…”

The world around felt strange. I blinked into the dimness of the tent, canvas rustling softly in the wind outside. My back ached. My legs throbbed. Every joint protested as if I had slept for a thousand years… or fought death and won.

In my sleep, I had dread of ho. Not the battlefield. Not the blood. Not the Hollowed World I’ve beco attached to. Instead, I dreamt of the quiet mornings in the village.

Da Ji had been teasing again, calling the lazy twin for oversleeping. Dad’s, Da Jin’s voice, firm and gruff, was giving chores. And Lin Wei, my mother, was gently humming so folk tune she used to sing when one of us had a fever. It was warm. Real. I could almost feel her hand on my forehead, brushing my hair aside.

Then it was gone.

I sat up with a groan. The bones beneath my skin creaked like old floorboards. The cot I’d been placed on was rough, military-issue, with no comforts to soften the rigidity. My fingers curled into the blanket instinctively, grasping for so sense of grounding.

I heard footsteps outside. A silhouette appeared through the thin tent fabric. Then the flaps opened.

Yuen Fu stepped in, a mix of relief and exhaustion plastered across his face. His brows shot up the mont he saw sitting upright.

“You’re awake!” he said, as if the very sight of alive short-circuited his discipline. Before I could say anything, he spun around and bolted out, his voice rising in volu. “Da Wei is awake! He’s awake!”

“Ugh… What’s happening?” I murmured, running a hand over my face. My skin was cold, and I could still feel dried blood crusted along my jaw and temple. Soone had tried to wipe it clean, but it lingered in places like rust on steel.

My head felt too full and too empty at once. I rembered the fight. The Heavenly Demon. The screams! The scent of charred flesh and ruptured bodies. And then… death. I had died. No mistake about it. I rembered the darkness. The split.

“This isn’t funny…”

I looked down at my arm, from the blemishes of my skin to my muscles. There was no sign of the destruction I knew I had endured. The body had returned to its younger form, the one that belonged to this world. My body on the battlefield had been older and hardened. I’d shed that like old skin as quickly as I lost strength in my limbs.

“Of course, nothing about this is easy.”

I could hear the murmurs growing louder outside.

“He’s alive.”

“I knew it.”

“A God. He must be.”

I sighed and swung my legs over the cot, bare feet eting the cold floor of the tent. My knees buckled slightly under my weight, but I steadied myself. I needed clothes. I needed air.

More importantly, I needed answers.

“How in the world did that Heavenly Demon guy get so strong when the qi in this world is so thin?” I muttered to myself, rubbing the crust from my eyes as the faint morning light bled in through the tent's seams.

“Jue Bu,” I whispered ntally. “Are you there?”

His voice ca instantly, smooth and sardonic like usual. “It probably had sothing to do with quintessence. That’s the only explanation I can think of as to how he beca so strong even in such a qi-deprived world. Enough understanding and mastery of that power allows even the regressed old monsters to wield strength beyond their atrophied bodies.”

“But how?” I asked plainly. “I need to get stronger than Ru Qiu if I want to escape this world.”

“You are such an insufferable ignoramus,” Jue Bu snapped. “Fine… It’s souls. Or belief. Enough faith can generate quintessence. The purer the faith, the stronger the quintessence extracted from a soul. A single fanatic can empower a warlord beyond reason.”

A presence stirred just outside the tent.

“We’ll talk later,” I muttered to Jue Bu.

The flap of the tent opened, and in stepped Yuen Fu and Ding Shan. Their eyes were hollow with exhaustion, but their bodies had recovered. They dropped to one knee in unison, heads bowed low.

I rubbed my nose, half-embarrassed and half-amused. “What’s up with you two?”

They shared a quick glance. Yuen Fu spoke for both, his voice solemn. “Lord Immortal, we thank you for your grace. Through your might, you repelled the abominable demon that had slaughtered us and even worked to raise our fallen souls. We owe you our lives.”

I slapped my forehead. “Not this again…” I was reminded by a certain forr bandit and a few people who addressed as Lord Immortal.

It was the Hollowed World all over. People I’d known were treating like so divine figure just because I did what was necessary. But I wasn’t anyone special. Just a piece in a much larger, crueler ga. A powerful piece, sure… but still a piece.

“Who told you I was so ‘Lord Immortal’? I’m just your average kid.”

Ding Shan raised a brow. “Average kid, huh?”

I sighed. “Stand up. Both of you. Don’t kneel. No need for this... pageantry.”

They obeyed, albeit reluctantly. I could see they still weren’t convinced.

“I admit I have secrets… many I’m not ready to share. But I swear this to you: I harbor no ill will toward you or the 112th Bronze Squadron. If anything, I owe you for giving a place to belong, even for a little while.”

As I stood fully upright, I examined the flow of energy within . Oddly enough, my cultivation hadn’t dropped a single star. In fact, I’d advanced to Mind Enlightennt, First Star. That shouldn’t have been possible. Unless…

“Jue Bu took the hit,” I muttered aloud, piecing it together. He must’ve shouldered the cost of Exalted Renewal. Maybe out of fear. Maybe out of instinct. Either way, I was alive. Stronger, even.

“It’s ti I leave,” I said, more to myself than them. “I won’t take much of your ti. I will only need a headstart before soone starts hunting down, maybe a few ration…”

Ding Shan looked up. “Where are you going?”

“To leave.”

The words felt cold, even in my own mouth. But they were true.

“You’ve seen the kind of power I wield. You saw what I fought. I’m not a ‘Lord Immortal,’ but I co from a world… no, from a level of existence you were never ant to witness. Staying here would only draw attention to you all. Dangerous attention. I’ll leave quietly. I’ll even change my na if I have to. But I’m asking, don’t mark as a deserter. My family… my parents and sister… they’d be executed for it.”

I brushed past them and reached for the tent’s flap.

“Wait!” Yuen Fu’s voice rose behind . “We wish to follow you!”

I turned, stunned. “What?”

His face bore no hesitation. “You may not be a god or an immortal, but you gave us sothing no god ever did… life. A second chance. I don’t care what your origin is. You’re soone worth following.”

Ding Shan stood silent, clearly torn. Then slowly, a solemn look crept into his expression. “We wish to follow you,” he echoed.

The tent was still for a heartbeat. My breath caught in my throat.

"Explain," I demanded, standing just before the tent's exit. My fingers gripped the flap, but my feet didn’t move. My voice was colder than I expected, but it had to be. "This isn’t the first ti soone asked to follow . And every ti, I allowed it. Not because I saw sothing special in them, not because I had so noble cause, but because I was a fool who didn’t want to be alone. Every ti, I let them co along.”

I let out a breath I didn’t realize I was holding.

“And every ti, I watched them perish… crushed, mangled, torn apart by powers they never had a right to witness. Their blood on my hands, their screams echoing in my skull. I lost my head over it. Nearly lost myself.”

My voice trembled, not with fear, but with frustration, anger, and guilt.

“Even if I have the power to resurrect the dead… that power was never mine to begin with. It doesn’t belong to . And it sure as hell doesn’t guarantee anything. It might work once. Maybe twice. But one day, it won’t. One day, you’ll all die, and I’ll have nothing left to give.”

I turned around slowly, locking eyes with them. “I hate death. I hate pain. I hate causing either of them. But no matter how much I say that, in the end, I still inflict them. It’s the only way to survive in this broken world. A world that gives you no choice.”

I stepped forward, my voice quieting, like a whisper ant to be heard clearly.

“So, this is what I’m going to do. I’ll give you one chance… seven words. Explain, in exactly seven words, why I should let you follow .”

Ding Shan blinked. “Seven words? And here you say you are just an average kid?”

I deadpanned, “That’s twelve words.”

He stamred. “A-are you kidding? This isn’t even funny, no kid would talk like this… Why even seven?”

“Because seven is a lucky number,” I gave a small, crooked smile. “I’m whimsical and mischievous like that. Only proving the fact that following would be as foolish as accepting your requests.”

I turned again, this ti determined to walk out. The first step forward felt like the final punctuation on the conversation.

Then Yuen Fu’s voice rang out behind , sharp, trembling, but clear.

“The Empire has fallen, please save us.”

I froze.

What…? What!? What the fuck!?

I turned my head slightly, just enough to see him from the corner of my eye. Yuen Fu stood there, chin high, shoulders squared, conviction written all over his face.

I didn’t respond. Not right away.

“The Empire has fallen, please save us.”

Seven words. Simple. Devastating.

A million thoughts flooded my head, but one reigned supre:

What the fuuuuuck…

A few seconds later, I found myself seated back on the cot.

My butt hit the bedding like the weight of the world had suddenly returned to my shoulders. I didn’t rember sitting. One mont, I was halfway through leaving; the next, the tent had swallowed again. My hands rested on my knees. My spine slouched. My luck… was truly rotten.

Yuen Fu and Ding Shan stood before , eyes somber, backs straight, as if the tent had beco a royal court and I the monarch they never asked for. The whole thing felt absurd.

Was this the work of misfortune I inherited from Gu Jie? The chaos magnet? The curse in human form? I honestly had no idea. Maybe so remnants of that luck, or lack thereof, still clung to like a stench I couldn’t wash away.

I ran a hand through my hair and asked, already fearing the answer, “How long was I out?”

Ding Shan answered grimly, “Nine days.”

My heart skipped. “Nine days?”

“We made a runner deliver a letter to Commander Jin Chenglei,” Ding Shan continued. “The ssenger pigeons escaped during the confusion when the demon attacked, so we had to rely on a runner. Fully rested. Fast. He just returned this early dawn.”

Ding Shan reached into his coat and pulled out a worn, dust-sared scroll. He didn’t hand it to . He didn’t need to.

“The capital…” he said, “has fallen.”

I blinked. “What?”

“Overtaken by Jiangshi…”

Jiangshi? As in undead?

My stomach turned.

“Not just any undead,” he pressed on, voice now edged with disbelief and horror. “These ones possess incredible martial discipline. Soone is raising powerful warriors from the dead. Commander Jin said the royal family was slaughtered… every last one of them. The Empire no longer has an Emperor.”

I sat in stunned silence.

“It doesn’t help,” he added bitterly, “that the feudal states refused to cease their wars. Even now, they continue fighting. And now? Opportunists are surfacing everywhere. Bandits styling themselves as kings. Generals declaring independence. Foreign clans moving in like vultures to a fresh corpse.”

He looked at then. “In the nine days you’ve slept, the world has gone mad.”

My mouth opened, but no words ca out. What could I possibly say?

So that was the world I was ready to walk out into, thinking I was doing them a favor. All that crap about being a burden, about causing too much trouble, about leaving before anyone got hurt again… it just sounded like arrogant whining now. It was childish and petty.

I clenched my hands into fists and stared at the floor. My cheeks flushed hot with sha.

Ugh… Fuuuuck…

The timing couldn’t have been worse. No, I couldn’t have been worse. While I was brooding in my mind about responsibilities, about not wanting to be followed, the entire stage had already shifted. My ego thought I was protecting them. The world didn’t care. It moved ahead anyway. I exhaled slowly, willing myself to be calm. Being distracted now wouldn't help anyone. There was no use in panicking. No use in wallowing.

“Uuuh… on second thoughts, can I go back to my coma?”

You are reading Immortal Paladin 190 I Woke Up on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Trash of the Count's Family cover
Same genre

Trash of the Count's Family

Elegant ·Action

WhenIopenedmyeyes,Iwasinsideanovel.[TheBirthofaHero].[TheBirthofaHero]wasanovelfocusedontheadventuresofthemaincharacter,ChoiHan,ahighschoolboywhowa...

Walker Of The Worlds cover
Trending now

Walker Of The Worlds

Grandvoiddaoist ·Action

LinMuwasacommonboylivinginasmalltown,ostracizedbythetownsmenbecauseofamistakehemadeduringtheharvest,hishouseseizedtocompensateforit.Forcedtofendfor...

The Innkeeper cover
Trending now

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.