Jade Fire Gold
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Synopsis
Girls of Paper and Fire meets A Song of Wraiths and Ruin in June CL Tan’s stunning debut, where ferocious action, shadowy intrigue, rich magic, and a captivating slow-burn romance collide.
In an empire on the brink of war . . .
Ahn is no one, with no past and no family.
Altan is a lost heir, his future stolen away as a child.
When they meet, Altan sees in Ahn a path to reclaiming the throne. Ahn sees a way to finally unlock her past and understand her lethal magical abilities.
But they may have to pay a far deadlier price than either could have imagined.
A stunning homage to the Xianxia novel with dangerous magic, fast-paced action, and a delightful romance, Jade Fire Gold isn’t one to miss!
“An addictive story that is impossible to put down." —Swati Teerdhala, author of The Tiger at Midnight series
"Adventure at its finest. A beautifully rendered story that honors the great wuxia epics.” —Joan He, author of Descendant of the Crane and The Ones We're Meant to Find
“An epic adventure!” —Elizabeth Lim, New York Times bestselling author of Spin the Dawn and So This Is Love
“Epic in every sense of the word, beautiful as it is sweeping." —Roseanne A. Brown, New York Times bestselling author of A Song of Wraiths and Ruin
Release date: October 12, 2021
Publisher: HarperTeen
Print pages: 464
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Jade Fire Gold
June C. Tan
The boy clung tightly to his sister’s hand when they fled the palace, afraid that if he let go he might lose her forever. Their home was no longer safe—not with their father dead and the stench of betrayal in the air.
Into the night, they followed their mother through the streets of Beishou and toward the western border, hoping to find refuge in the last place anyone would think to look for them.
The desert.
It was no place for a royal family, but Empress Odgerel prayed to her gods that the shifting labyrinth of sand might keep them hidden.
They followed the nomadic trails and slept in a different place each night. Sometimes in tents, sometimes under a blanket of stars. They changed their names, their appearances, the way they spoke.
But eventually, the soldiers came.
And with them, a man clad in a shroud of black smoke and red fury. The man who would not rest until the royal family was dead.
Against all odds, the boy survived.
A passing caravan of nomads found him a few days after a massive sandstorm. Motherless. Sisterless. Dehydrated and feverish, he teetered on the edge of death. Nails torn off completely, dried blood crusted over his fingers.
The nomads asked no questions of this strange boy.
The boy who hated the desert with every fiber of his body yet was forced to remain in its protection. The boy so broken inside that they thought he might never smile again, that his eyes would never see the light. The boy who could not or would not speak. And when he finally did with a voice full of gravel, he uttered only one word. Again and again.
A name he would repeat in his sleep. Sometimes murmuring, often screaming.
Sarangerel.
The name of his beloved twin sister. The sister he had failed to protect.
He scared the nomads in the early days, but they kept him alive. They healed his wounds, fed him, and taught him their language and ways. Despite their kindness, the boy thought it would be his fate to wander the sands forever, lost in nightmares.
But the crafty gods had other plans.
One day, someone came for him. A man loyal to the dead emperor. He shepherded the boy from the desert and across the waters, bringing him to distant lands in the warmer colonies of the south. Slowly, that broken boy began to stitch himself whole again, though the tears would never align perfectly. A cavernous hunger grew in him. Deep and bitter, it would only be sated when wrongs were made right.
It is said that the gods test a man for a purpose; that they would never place on him a burden he could not bear. But the boy held a different view. The gods were cruel, and men were merely puppets in a grand play staged for the amusement of bored immortals.
He vowed to snatch his fate from their hands.
So, he bided his time, waiting for a sign.
One dawn, an unusual call was heard in the misty mountains of Wudin, and some villagers claimed they had seen the elusive fènghuáng circling its rugged peaks. It was a rebirth—the Phoenix had not been seen for over a century.
Something was reawakening, and the boy was ready.
One silver coin.
The difference between life and death.
Between having a grandmother and being alone in the world.
My heart races and my mouth turns desert-dry when the healer barely glances at my stack of coins. Copper, not silver. He doesn’t have to count them. We both know the stack is the wrong height and color. Too short and lacking the most important thing—more precious metal.
Funny how something pulled from the earth can be so deadly. Mined and forged into swords. Fought over in war. The reason some of us can’t fill our bellies.
With a dismissive snort, the healer’s attention snaps back to the wooden drawers lining a wall of the apothecary. Pulling one open, he extracts a few strands of cordyceps with a thin pair of tweezers. Carefully, he places the brown worm-like fungus on a round metal saucer tied to a slim wooden rod. Beady eyes squinting at the numbers carved onto it, he shifts the counterweight at the other end accordingly to measure the amount. Not once does he look at me.
It’s as if I don’t exist.
“Please,” I implore despite the fire rising in my chest. “I’ll pay you the rest of the money in a week—it’s just one silver coin. My grandmother’s fever hasn’t subsided in days. Let me have the medicine first.”
He pretends not to hear me. Putting his scale down, he moves to a large glass jar of macerated liquid, russet-colored and filled with crooked floating roots.
My nails bite crescents into my palms as I force down the cauldron of curse words bubbling in my throat. Maybe a few tears would soften this man’s shriveled heart.
“Please.” My voice wobbles and I blink rapidly as I heave a few breaths. “My grandmother delivered your son, didn’t she? It was a difficult birth and she saved your wife’s life—”
“And Grandma Jia was paid well for her services! I’m sorry she’s still sick, but I have my own family to feed. You think your life is hard? Shout it out in the streets and see if anyone cares. The desert’s no place for sentiment.”
“But—”
“I’ve shown you enough kindness, Ahn. Don’t forget you owe me for last week’s medicine. Why don’t you ask the innkeeper for an advance? That bastard’s the only one making some money in this wretched town.”
“I did, but it isn’t enough,” I lie, a knot twisting in my stomach.
I lost my job two weeks ago at the only place that would hire me. The innkeeper’s a stickler for punctuality and I was late for work a few times this month. I kept missing my ride from our village into Shahmo after staying up through the night caring for Ama. It’s impossible to sprint the entire distance in the oppressive heat. I’ve tried, but sometimes, trying isn’t enough.
The healer gives me an odd look. “How old are you? Sixteen?”
I nod, self-consciously tugging the two braids that run down to my waist. Girls my age normally keep their hair pinned up and secured by a fāzān—the ceremonial hairpin that shows they are of marriageable age. Ama wanted to get me one; she felt it was an important rite of passage. I don’t see the point. Marriage is the last thing on my mind and money is better spent on food or fixing our run-down hut.
The healer averts his eyes, mumbling, “I hear Madam Liu is looking for new girls for her establishment. The bazaar is finally coming back this weekend, and she expects a crowd. Even with that scar on your cheek, a girl like you wouldn’t have a problem.”
The knot in my stomach tightens. “Are you suggesting that I work at the brothel?”
“There is no shame in what those women do. It’s an honest living,” he says quickly, a hand raised to smooth the tension between us. “My wife’s second cousin works there as a cleaner. She could help arrange a meeting with Madam Liu.”
“I’ll think about it,” I manage.
Something like sympathy crosses the healer’s face before he turns back to his herbs, narrow shoulders hunching. I grab my pathetic stack of coins and stumble out of the apothecary, nausea fermenting in my stomach. I know he’s right. The old silvery scar on my left cheek is faint, hardly noticeable except under harsh light, and I have youth on my side.
An honest living.
For the desperate. And I am desperate.
But I don’t know if I’m desperate enough. I brush those thoughts away. I can think about that later. Right now, I can’t go home empty-handed.
The dreadful sound of Ama’s rib-rattling cough echoes in my mind. She doesn’t know I lost my job. I’ve kept up my act, waking at dawn each day, hitching the same ride into town and back again, spinning tales of my days at the inn during our evening meals. Meals that have gotten increasingly meager as money runs out.
Time to fix this.
I lower the brim of my old straw hat and drape my linen scarf across my chin and nose. Even though most of my time in Shahmo is spent in the inn’s kitchen and not many people would recognize me at first glance, it’s best to be cautious.
It helps that an Imperial decree went up in the town square a week ago: we are to dress in white robes for the next forty-nine days as a sign of respect for our dead emperor. But new robes cost money and white robes are hard to keep clean. Most of us wear the cheaper but well-woven pale linens the desert nomads trade instead. It’s against tradition and an imperfect substitute, but the Imperial troops pay little attention to this far-flung outpost of the Shi Empire and its surrounding villages.
As a town that was formerly part of another country, and more important, one that doesn’t fill the Imperial coffers, we aren’t worth the effort.
I blend easily into the milling crowd of beige, with the occasional dot of creamy white, and skim past the open food carts. My light fingers pick up some yóutiáo and a couple of mántou. By the time I get home, the crullers will be a soggy mess and the fluffy steamed buns as hard as rocks. But they’ll have to do. The food disappears into my robes with practiced ease, honed by years of not having enough.
The cart in front of me has some chuàn’r, grilled meat that would be a treat for Ama. But I’m not sure if the sharp points of the skewers would tear my patched-up robes. As I loiter, instinct turns my head.
A hulking man is walking toward me, his forehead scrunched into a deep frown. Did he see me stealing the food? Pulse quickening, I move to the next stall and examine the display of rough-spun cotton handkerchiefs with feigned interest. Dull and poorly embroidered, they are pitiable imitations of the silk handkerchiefs carried by the ladies from the great eastern cities of the Empire.
My shoulders loosen as the man passes me by without incident. Just to be sure, I watch his retreating back. He can’t be from around here. Unlike the men in the Shi Empire who keep their hair long because of tradition, his is razored close to his scalp. His coarse, ruddy skin hints of a southern lineage or too much time in the sun. Showing no regard for the official decree, he’s dressed in a dark gray cotton hànfú with no embroidery or decoration on his tunic or pants. Civilian clothes of a lower class. A trader from the Nandah nation in the south, maybe.
Or a soldier on leave, I remind myself. Best to stay away. Besides, I need to get the food back to Ama.
“I saw what you did.”
I spin around and find a cheeky grin. Li Guo eyes the lumps around my waist.
“What are you doing here? Shouldn’t you be at work?” I say to the strapping boy in front of me. He has a laugh that makes you think his life is easy. But Li Guo has a leanness we all share here. A leanness that tells you how often we go to bed with empty stomachs.
“I’m done with today’s shift and was on my way home when I saw you.”
“How’s everyone?” I ask as we walk side by side. I was working at the inn for almost a year; Li Guo’s been there for two after moving from our village to Shahmo. He’s probably my only friend, but the other workers at the inn were at least civil to me.
“Yingma says she misses you. I spoke up, you know, told Old Pang your grandmother was sick.” Li Guo’s smile vanishes. “But he wouldn’t listen.”
I didn’t expect him to. The innkeeper became the only successful businessman in this shanty town from his shrewd attention to profit, not through concern for his workers.
Li Guo presses something into my hand. Copper coins. I shake my head and hand them back. He opens his mouth but closes it once I give him a look. We’ve been friends long enough for him to understand. I won’t take his money. Not when he and his father need it just as much as I do.
He sighs and drops the coins into his trouser pocket before pulling out a red apple and offering it to me. ThatI snatch immediately. Apples are my favorite and fresh fruit is hard to come by in the desert. Juice dribbles down my chin as I bite into it, the sweetness rich on my tongue. This would have cost him a fortune, but I know he probably stole it from a passing merchant.
Truth is, when you live in a dry husk of a place with nothing to offer but shelter for the night at the sad little inn, you learn other ways of getting by. I’d give anything to run from Shahmo’s endless heat, its flatness, its bland expanse of beige with hardly any green in sight. Only Li Guo knows of my desire. I can’t tell Ama. After all she has done for me, I would never be so ungrateful.
We make our way toward the communal wells at the edge of the town. The streets empty out, and my thoughts go as dismal as the faded shop fronts around me. I think back to when we were children in our tiny village. When we stood shoulder to shoulder reveling with laughter, cloistered in our bubble of naivete, safe in the knowledge that we had nothing to lose.
We were wrong. There was everything to lose.
Two years ago, that bubble burst. Li Guo’s brothers returned from the wars in urns, one after the other. The Empire didn’t even have the decency to send bodies. His mother died of grief, never knowing if the ashes in those burnished ceramic jars belonged to her own children or their fallen comrades, wondering when her last son would be sacrificed for another man’s ambition.
And Li Guo was left alone, struggling to find a way to keep himself and his father alive.
“Do you think the war with Honguodi is truly over?” I say.
Shahmo nestles on the safest route west between the barren desert and the toxic salt lakes. Even though we’re hundreds of miles away from the capital, we get news from travelers cutting through. And recently, all everyone can talk about is the new peace treaty that was brokered between the two nations.
Li Guo replies, “Seems so. All the trade routes are open again.”
“For now.” This peace won’t last. Seems to me we are always at war with some nation or another. “What do you know of the new crown prince? Is he as blood thirsty as his father?”
“He’s young, barely sixteen, I hear.”
I roll my eyes. “To think our fates are to be decided by some spoiled brat on the Dragon Throne.”
“The empress dowager will probably rule in his stead until he comes of age. Can’t say I’m glad about that. We need an emperor, a firm hand at the helm, not someone soft or a pushover—ow!”
Li Guo rubs the spot on his arm where I punched him.
“What makes you think the empress dowager is a pushover? Besides, maybe that’s exactly what the Empire needs: a woman’s touch. Measured and thoughtful, none of that war mongering nonsense,” I retort.
“Maybe,” he concedes. A wistful look crosses his face. “Remember how we used to talk about going on an adventure? About exploring the world beyond this town?”
I shrug like I don’t care. But try as I might, I can’t stop the images of paintings flitting through my mind. Paintings I’ve seen at the inn and along the streets for sale. Paintings depicting cities of vibrant color, impossibly tall mountains cloaked in mist, snowy caps touching the sky, valleys where meandering rivers run through narrow rainbow-colored canyons. Images that whisper of untold adventures, of wondrous creatures, of new lands to explore and delicious food to eat.
I remember the conversations I’ve eavesdropped on at the inn, how my ears perked up whenever they revealed something about the world outside this pathetic town, how my heart lingered on what-ifs.
“Now that the war has ended, we could leave,” says Li Guo. “I know you want to.”
“Only if war doesn’t return. Besides, where would we go? I can’t do anything,” I mutter. “Can’t even keep a job.”
He drapes an arm around my shoulders, his other hand sweeping the horizon. “We could go anywhere—west, south—try our fortune in the eastern cities or even the capital. I’ve learned some carpentry skills from my father. I could get a job, and you could learn a trade, too. It’ll be fun. An adventure, like we always said.”
The gnawing at my chest changes from worry to longing. But I can’t abandon the woman who saved my life.
It is a blood debt I must pay.
“I can’t leave Ama,” I say in a small voice.
“We can wait until Grandma Jia gets better.” Wild hope shines in Li Guo’s eyes, like it did when he was a child. I want to protect it, to keep it from extinguishing. But I tell myself the sooner he accepts the truth, the easier life will be for him.
“I don’t want to leave anymore. If you do, then you should. Don’t wait—because if you wait, you’ll spend your whole life exactly where you are now.” I hold Li Guo’s gaze, hoping he can’t read my lies as well as he used to. Telling myself that the sooner I accept the truth, the easier my own life will be.
“But—”
“Not now, Guoguo.” It’s been a while since I’ve used his nickname and it brings a grin to his face.
He squeezes my arm lightly. “I’ll convince you one day.”
I find myself smiling back. His hope is infectious, even if it is naive.
We stop by the communal well and I untie my waterskin from my belt, heart heavy as a stone. I drop the bucket. The wait before it hits the water feels longer than usual. How long before the groundwater runs dry? How long before Shahmo turns entirely into a ghost town? And if Shahmo goes, what will happen to my village? The fraying rope burns my palms as I haul the bucket back up. Maybe the only way to survive is to grow thicker skin.
Something grabs my leg.
I lurch back with a scream, spilling precious water.
A woman stares up at me. Her short, dark hair is matted in knots, and she’s lying on the ground, swathed in rags. She lets go of my ankle, her fingers gnarled and shaking. She’s missing a leg, and I smell putrid, decaying flesh. She must have been hiding behind the well. I want to look away, but my eyes latch onto the mark on her forehead.
Despite the dirt smeared on her face, the Shi character branded onto her skin remains an obvious, painful scarlet.
Traitor.
I stagger back into Li Guo. “We should go.”
The woman makes an awful sound. A distorted, hoarse gurgle. I know she can’t speak. None of the traitors can. Not without their tongues.
Instead of leaving, Li Guo crouches down beside her.
“What are you doing?” I whisper, glancing around furtively. There’s nobody and nothing but shuttered shophouses. But the fear of the Diyeh priests is so ingrained in my mind that my heart pounds at the mere thought of them.
Li Guo is unafraid.
“Give her your food,” he says.
“No! What’s wrong with you? We can’t help her. What if someone sees us?” I cringe at how heartless I sound.
Best to be cautious, even if you must be callous, I remind myself. It’s a saying the people of Shahmo have.
Li Guo shoots me a look of disdain. “Don’t be a coward. She’s hungry and she’s going to die if we don’t help.”
But she’s going to die anyway, I want to say.
“What if the priests catch us?” My words ring hollow in my ears as the woman makes that frightful sound again and gestures at the bucket. A dim light pleads from those empty eyes.
“If you don’t want to help, get out of my way.”
Li Guo pushes me aside as he drops the bucket back into the well. He drags it up and stoops, ladling water into his palms. Greedily, noisily, the woman drinks, half choking with eager relief. I see now that she’s young, barely older than me.
Traitor.
That red character on her forehead seems to yell at me. I wonder who the girl tried to protect. A mother? A brother? Or maybe a friend. Either way, her crime was painfully simple: she harbored the Tiensai, people who are cursed with magic. The priests raid the towns and villages for them, burning them at the stake in a public display while their family members are forced to watch.
Anyone who helps the Tiensai suffers a different fate.
Like this girl, their tongues are cut out, their hair shaved off. They are marked. Branded. A physical punishment you can’t hide. Shunned for life because no one dares to help them. Because everyone knows what the repercussions of helping are.
She must’ve gotten injured and lost her leg because no one was brave or kind enough to aid her. Again and again, Li Guo offers her palmfuls of water. She drinks gratefully.
You think your life is hard? Shout it out in the streets and see if anyone cares.
The mántou is tucked inside my robes, still warm and fresh. My hands fumble. I pull out a bun and press it into the girl’s hands. I can’t tell if she’s smiling at me—her lips are too ruined.
But I know she’s crying.
Li Guo looks up at me, eyes flashing with indignation. “Do you know why the priests cut off their tongues instead of killing them?”
I have no answer.
“They do it to take away hope, to create despair. They know the rest of us will ignore these so-called traitors to save our own skins.” His fists clench. “And they are right.”
I blink away an image seared into my brain. A memory I haven’t been able to forget even after ten years. It scares me to this day, and it reminds me to watch myself. I shouldn’t have helped the girl; I can’t afford to get into trouble.
“She helped the Tiensai,” I say. “She should know that magic is banned in the Empire and for good reason. The priests say the Tiensai’s magic created this desert and it’s causing the drought in the southeastern village where rice can’t grow, and—”
“Are you saying she deserves this?” Li Guo cuts in coldly.
“No! I’m saying that we shouldn’t help her anymore. The priests—”
Li Guo raises an angry hand to silence me. “We’ve had this conversation before, and I don’t want to have it now. Leave. I’ll find another way to help her.”
I see the naked hope in the girl’s eyes as she looks at Li Guo. She thinks he’s her savior. I know better. I wish I could tell him the truth about myself. But he will be safer if he doesn’t know. I turn away from them, willing one foot ahead of the other. Willing myself not to think of that night, ten years ago, when I was wandering the dusty streets of Shahmo, scared and alone.
Willing myself to forget that image of myself: an abandoned child with nothing but the clothes on her back and the shoes on her feet. A jade ring in one hand and a snowflake in the other.
A snowflake that would not melt, even in the summer heat.
After an hour’s walk, I arrive at my village. The sorry sight in front of me brings a familiar pang: sunbaked houses made of hard clay and rough-hewn stone, each sitting in an enclosure of short stone walls demarcating the limits of property. East of the diminishing oasis, the land here is so parched my feet kick up steady clouds of dust as I walk.
I have little memory of arriving here ten years ago, but I know it wasn’t the desert village then that it is now. It was a thriving place full of life. There was green in the landscape and crops grew on patches of arable land. I loved to listen to the rush of water streaming down the ancient irrigation channels, to feel its cool bliss at the end of the day when we would wash.
But the years went by, and the desert crept closer and closer. The land turned to dust and the topsoil never returned. I can count on one hand the number of neighbors I have now. Most have moved in search of healthier land.
If I could, I’d have left, too.
I walk through the gap in the old stone wall of the farthest and smallest property, hands taming my hair and tidying my clothes. Plastering a smile on my face, I push the wooden planks back.
Now that we have sold most of what we own, the house is sparsely furnished with a table, two old beds, and a few flimsy chairs. Spare, but it’s the only home I’ve ever known. And in this home is a welcoming and familiar face. Ama lies in bed, surrounded by a heap of threadbare blankets.
“Ahn, you’re back early,” she says, lifting her head up gingerly.
I drop what remains of my stolen food on the table and go to her. “Old Pang was kind enough to let me come home early. He knows you’re not feeling well, Ama.”
It hurts to lie to her, but it would hurt her more to know the truth. Her wavy white hair falls across her face as she struggles to sit, and I fluff up the pillows for her to lean back on. Even in the desert warmth, the fever radiating from her skin is noticeable.
“How are you feeling, Ama?”
“I’ve been better,” she says wryly. She brushes loose strands of black hair off my face. “I’m more worried about you, waking so early every day and working so hard.”
“I’m fine. I don’t need much sleep.” I force a smile back to reassure her. “I’ll get dinner ready.”
I wash the last of our rice and coax out a thin gruel over the fire, adding more water so that it will last more than a meal. I share tales from my day as we eat—all lies, but I’ve grown so good at telling stories I almost believe them myself.
We go to bed, and after waiting for an hour or so, I get up and tiptoe back into the kitchen. There, I pry open a floorboard as quietly as possible and grab the small leather pouch hidden underneath.
“Ahn?”
I freeze on the spot. “I thought you were asleep, Ama.”
“What are you doing?” she asks, shuffling closer.
It’s too late to hide what’s in my hands. I open my palm and the jade ring gleams in the light of the lamp. My thumb runs over the silver etching of a fènghuáng—the mysterious Phoenix that is said to dwell on the peaks of the Wudin Mountains in the north. The metal is tarnished; the long train of plumage splitting into several curling tendrils has turned dark. And there’s a notch on the ring near the bird’s feet with a faint mother-of-pearl sheen. A missing piece must have broken off. Still, it’s the most beautiful thing that belongs to me.
Ama settles onto the floor, wrapping her blanket around her. “Are you thinking about selling your ring?”
I nod.
“No,” she says firmly. “It is an heirloom, the only thing you have from your parents.”
“Parents I don’t remember,” I remind her. Parents who might have abandoned me. Parents who are probably dead. All I have is a hazy memory of them: a voice and a blurred face. My father and my mother.
“My dear child.”
Ama’s milky gray eyes meet mine. Her smile is so kind and so warm, like a beacon guiding me through the murky depths of an ocean. She pulls me into an embrace, and even though she has become weak and thin, I feel safe. Hers is a love that shields me endlessly.
“Why did you save me? Why didn’t you give me up to the Diyeh priests?” I ask, nestling into her arms. “Why weren’t you scared when you found out that I have magic?”
“Because every life is precious—”
“And every child deserves a fighting chance,” I finish.
Ama strokes my hair. “You were only a child, not a demon or a monster, no matter what the priests say.”
“But sometimes, I feel it inside me. I don’t want magic, it scares me. It . . .” I trail off, shuddering. I’ve tried to suppress my magic all these years, for fear of getting captured by the priests or getting Ama into trouble for harboring me. It was easier when I was younger. All I had to do was not think about it. To forget it exists. But lately, something feels different and I’m not sure why.
Just the other day, when I was still working at the inn, I accidentally froze the tea in a cup because Old Pang was yelling at me again. I was so angry that I forgot myself. Thank Heavens he didn’t notice.
“I don’t know anything about magic, but I know the granddaughter I raised. You won’t harm anyone.” Ama straightens her back with purpose, a look on her face that can only be gained from the pain of experience. “I have lived long enough to remember a time when our world was green—greener than what you may remember. There was life, not this vast nothingness you see around us now. Why would the desert still spread if those false priests keep killing the ones they call the Tiensai?”
Calling the Diyeh false priests is an invitation for trouble. But Ama soldiers on without a care. There’s a spark in her eyes as she speaks, as if she has wanted to say all of this to me for a long time.
“There was a time when things were different. We don’t speak of him now because it is forbidden. But the emperor before Gao Long didn’t believe that the Tiensai were monsters or demons. He was a good man. May the Heavens bless his soul.”
I’ve heard of the peacefulness of Ren Long’s reign, even though I remember little of it. He died when I was six years old, ...
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