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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Weight of the Throne (Part 1)

The Black Blood Mountains rose from the earth like shattered blades, their jagged peaks clawing at the heavens. Storm clouds coiled endlessly above them, heavy and bruised, bleeding crimson whenever the sun dipped low enough to wound the sky.

For a thousand years, no righteous army had crossed those passes and returned.

Those who tried left behind only bones—bleached by lightning, scorched by demonic qi, and scattered among the ravines as warnings.

At the heart of the mountain range, carved directly from the living rock of the tallest peak, lay the Heavenly Demon Sect.

It was not built upon the mountain.

It had been forced out of it.

Stone walls of obsidian rose in brutal tiers, each layer etched with scars left behind by ancient techniques and forgotten wars. Veins of cooled demonic qi ran through the rock like petrified blood vessels, glowing faintly in the darkness as if the mountain itself still lived—and remembered.

Bridges of black iron and bone stretched across bottomless chasms where molten streams hissed and spat below, releasing heat and pressure that warped the air. Towers speared upward through the clouds, their summits crowned with banners of black silk that snapped violently in the wind.

Each banner bore a single golden rune.

The mark of the Heavenly Demon.

The air was thick—oppressive—with the scent of blood, iron, incense, and something harder to define. It clung to skin and cloth alike, seeped into lungs, and lingered in the mind long after one left the sect's domain.

It was the smell of survival bought at a cost.

At dawn, the sect awakened.

In the lower courtyards, the sound of training had already begun long before the first light reached the stone.

Five thousand outer disciples stood in rigid formation upon a vast plateau of polished basalt. Their black robes blended seamlessly with the ground beneath them, making them appear less like individuals and more like shadows given shape.

No one spoke.

Only the rhythmic thud of feet striking stone filled the air—precise, relentless, unforgiving.

They practiced the Thousand Step Shadow Form, a foundational technique that tolerated no hesitation. Breath, weight, and intent had to align perfectly. One misplaced thought was enough to invite injury. One error was enough to invite death.

Each step left behind a faint afterimage of black qi, lingering for the span of a heartbeat before dissolving into the air.

Near the edge of the formation, a young disciple faltered.

On the seventh pivot, his foot landed half a breath too late.

The afterimage shattered.

Qi backlash tore through his meridians like broken glass. He dropped to one knee, coughing blood that splattered darkly against the stone.

No one stopped.

No one turned their head.

Pain was not cruelty here.

It was instruction.

Across the plateau, inner disciples sparred in pairs, their presence alone bending the air. Swords forged of condensed demonic qi clashed again and again, sending shockwaves rippling outward. The basalt beneath their feet cracked and splintered under repeated impacts.

One duel drew particular attention.

The taller disciple wielded a nine-ringed saber, its blade wreathed in black flames that devoured light itself. His opponent wielded twin hooks coated in corrosive qi, droplets hissing violently wherever they struck stone.

They circled.

Then collided.

Saber met hook in a storm of sparks. The impact echoed like thunder, rolling across the courtyard. The saber wielder pressed forward relentlessly, forcing his opponent back step by step.

A hook slipped past his guard and grazed his shoulder.

Flesh sizzled.

Blood hissed as corrosive qi ate into muscle.

The pain only sharpened his grin.

He laughed—low, guttural, savage—and surged forward with renewed ferocity. A wide horizontal slash tore through the air, leaving a crescent of black flame in its wake.

The hook wielder leapt back.

Too slow.

The saber caught his left arm at the elbow.

It came away cleanly.

The severed limb struck the stone with a wet, final sound, fingers still locked around the weapon.

The injured disciple stumbled, blood spraying in a harsh arc before he slammed his remaining hand against the stump, forcing qi through ruptured channels to seal the wound.

His breathing was ragged.

His eyes burned.

Not with hatred.

With understanding.

The victor lowered his saber.

Bowed once.

Then turned and walked away.

The severed arm remained where it fell.

No one moved to retrieve it.

A lesson, left in plain sight.

Higher up the mountain, beyond the reach of the outer and inner disciples, the air grew heavier. The pressure alone was enough to crush weaker cultivators flat against the stone.

Here, the core disciples trained.

Alone, or in tightly controlled isolation.

On a sheer cliff overlooking the entire sect, a woman practiced her sword forms beneath the open sky.

Her blade moved slowly—deliberately—as though time itself bent around her movements. Each swing carved faint distortions into the air. Space tore where her sword passed, thin fractures lingering before reluctantly sealing shut.

She was young, no more than twenty-five.

Silver hair was bound tightly in a warrior's braid.

Her eyes were cold, sharp, and utterly unyielding.

Her name was not spoken lightly.

Because she had once ended a righteous sect elder with nothing more than her killing intent.

No blade.

No technique.

Just will.

At the very summit of the mountain lay the Blood Spirit Spring.

A natural pool of condensed demonic qi, dark red and constantly boiling, as though the earth itself exhaled rage into its depths. Steam rose in heavy clouds, carrying the scent of blood and raw power.

At its center sat a solitary figure.

Cross-legged.

Unmoving.

Cheon Ye-mok.

The current Heavenly Demon.

His long black hair floated upon the surface like strands of night, untouched by the violent currents beneath. His eyes were closed as torrents of crimson energy surged into his body, streaming visibly through meridians refined beyond mortal limits.

Each circulation strengthened what was already perfect.

He had reached the peak of the Transcendent Realm decades ago.

The spring no longer granted growth.

It merely preserved precision.

Hours passed without mark.

When his eyes opened, the boiling ceased instantly.

The spring fell still, smooth as a mirror.

He rose.

The liquid slid from his plain black robes without leaving so much as a stain.

He stepped onto the stone edge.

And began his descent through the sect.

Disciples sensed him before they saw him.

Training slowed.

Then stopped.

Bows rippled through courtyards like waves across a dark sea. Heads lowered. Breaths stilled.

No one spoke.

In the alchemy pavilion, an elder demonstrated the refinement of a high-grade Blood Qi Pill. The cauldron glowed with controlled flame, runes pulsing along its rim.

Cheon Ye-mok paused at the doorway.

For the briefest instant, the elder's hands trembled.

Then steadied.

The pill condensed perfectly—a sphere of dark red light hovering above the cauldron.

Cheon Ye-mok inclined his head once.

And moved on.

In the beast taming arena, a third-stage Blood-Winged Lion strained violently against its chains, roaring defiance at its handler.

Until Cheon Ye-mok's gaze found it.

The beast froze.

Then collapsed, belly to the ground, whimpering as though the world itself had passed judgment.

The handler bowed so deeply his forehead struck stone.

Cheon Ye-mok did not look at him.

He continued walking.

This was not arrogance.

This was reality.

He was the reason righteous sects had not dared declare open war in thirty years.

He was the reason demonic beasts knelt.

He was the reason disciples bled, broke, and rose stronger.

He was the Heavenly Demon.

And tomorrow, the sect would celebrate a thousand years of dominance.

The Thousand-Year Blood Wine would be presented.

All eyes would be upon him.

As they always were.

As the blood moon began its slow ascent, Cheon Ye-mok returned to his pavilion.

He ate alone.

Watched the lights of his empire flicker beneath crimson skies.

And felt something stir within him.

Not anticipation.

Not boredom.

Something colder.

Something that whispered of change.

The wind rose.

Carrying the promise of storm.

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