Chapter 47: To Laugh, To Cry

Humans had emotions: when they experienced something negative, they would be sad or angry. Those with small hearts could hold grudges for long stretches, waiting for time to slowly pass and for there to be enough days to bury everything and say in the end, it was nothing, don’t worry about it.

For events that had already occurred, no matter how we viewed them subjectively, they had already passed. There was no point clinging to them.

Ten years wouldn’t change anything; a whole lifetime wouldn’t change anything. Yet An Jie refused to understand that. 

Mu Lian had asked him to not hurt He Jingming, so he hurt himself instead. He gave up and decided that everything was the result of his own mistakes, because that was the only way he could push down his hatred and follow through with that irrefutable promise. He floated across different lands, becoming a person of good character, yet he had never even thought of becoming part of society, of becoming a normal, happy person with a sense of belonging. 

An Jie was like a muddle-headed child, truanting, fighting, bringing back papers covered in red crosses to get ‘revenge’ on their parents’ inattention – but who was he hurting under this cross of self-abuse? Was it those old friends who hurt him yet could still care for him? Or… Mu Lian who abandoned him, then bound him with her death?

Mo Cong felt that although this fresh-looking old man enjoyed pretending he had seen all that life had to offer, he was in essence, the same as his dead father. They were both psychologically unweaned. They lived pointlessly for so many years, contributing nothing to the world but some worn-away shoes. For An Jie even to be able to say the word ‘responsibility’ must count as some form of plagiarism; the word didn’t exist in his dictionary at all! Someone who didn’t care for themselves, who didn’t treat their own life with respect, deserved to die alone.

But he had just happened to fall in love with this scum-of-the-earth old man, Mo Cong thought in frustration. He had already forgotten what had attracted him at the very beginning; each time they fought their bloodless battles, each time he was rejected with a different reason, he grew to think that An Jie was hopeless and that there was nothing good about him at all. Yet he couldn’t control the fact that every time he saw him, the hormones in his body went haywire. 

Zui She said hoarsely, “I promised to let you listen in. Did you hear everything?”

Mo Cong nodded. 

Zui She turned to look at him. The shock and confusion in his eyes had all but faded away, replaced by a sense of aggression. “You heard, so what will you do now?”

But Mo Cong didn’t fall prey to him and maintained immunity to the supposed ‘kingly dominance’ he was showing. He shrugged, his expression matter-of-fact, but his tone firm. “I’ll continue chasing after him.”

Zui She fell silent for a long while, as if carefully considering those straightforward words. Finally, he forced out, “How?”

Mo Cong looked at him with a smile. He took a pack of cigarettes from his pocket and held one between his fingers. “It won’t be difficult, but it won’t be easy either. We can look at the example of He Jingming, that sneaky rat, already. An Jie shouldn’t be called a fox1, he’s just a toad that jumps really well. Not even mentioning how fast he’ll flee from the slightest movement, he’ll fight to the death if he’s caught unawares. Against someone like him, you need to boil him alive slowly.

Zui She looked at Mo Cong in horror, as if he had suddenly turned into Tuxedo Mask2.

After expressing his once-in-a-lifetime opinions, Mo Cong leisurely lit his cigarette and pulled on the collars of his jacket. “If there’s nothing else, I’ll be taking my leave. I have an appointment at the cemetery today. Even though my father will be staying in the desert, as his son, I’d still like to find him a place here, even if it’s just putting some clothes in a hole. We’ll have something to think of, and if the old man’s soul returns, he’ll get a place to rest.” He shook his head and revealed a bitter smile. “Children wish to support their parents, but time is merciless… I was ungrateful when he was alive. There’s nothing much I can do now, but everything counts.”

Saying that, he nodded at Zui She and walked out.

Zui She recalled how An Jie described this young man, how he felt when he first saw Mo Cong, and all the different tales about the Chancellor… and realized that he had changed.

Sometimes, love and hate could make someone grow up all in one night.

An Jie didn’t go straight home after leaving Zui She’s. He strolled along the road, then went down to the subway, got onto Line 2, and stayed there. He watched as different people got on and got off, and sat through the subway route twice. 

Even though he still held a lot back, he had probably revealed a bit too much to Zui She. Enough for him to no longer be controlling his thoughts at least. That self-appointed veteran psychologist was really a quack; he never managed to fix his issues and chased him off with a ‘patient is not cooperating’. An Jie had to slowly comb through his brain in a crowded place like this to throw aside the unnecessary and ponder what needed to be pondered. An environment like this made him feel safe. 

It was only when night began to slowly shroud the sky that he stepped into the corridors of his unit. 

Ever since Mo Cong had stopped blocking him at his door, the desire to step away in An Jie’s mind upon entering the building had lessened significantly. He didn’t expect for there to be, once more, someone waiting for him at his door. This time though, it wasn’t Mo Cong waiting for him, but Mo Jin. 

She looked rather pale, and when An Jie was walking up the stairs, she had her back to him as if pondering the depths of the world in the door of his unit. Hearing him, Mo Jin turned around suddenly as if shocked, widening her already-not-small eyes at An Jie. It took a while before she formed a phrase. “An- An Jie-gege.”

An Jie took out his keys and opened the door as he joked, “What happened? You look like you’ve been steamed. Where’s your brother and Xiao Yu?”

“My brother went off to Babao Mountain and he’s not back yet. Xiao Yu caught a cold and she’s already sleeping.”

“She’s sick? Is it serious? Do you need me to look after her?”

“Nothing serious, no fever, just her nose is blocked and she’s not bothered to study anymore so she’s off to sleep. My brother said he’ll bring medicine back – An Jie-ge, there’s something I want to ask you.”

An Jie was a little shocked. He never expected that this crazy girl could adopt such a serious tone. He waved his hands. “Come, we’ll talk inside.”

Mo Jin followed him into the room. For some reason, An Jie felt that she was stressed by something, and that stressed him out as well. Whatever bullshit that unfortunate four-eyed bastard Sixteen had told her, nothing good could come out of it. He poured Mo Jin a cup of juice, took off his jacket, and sat next to her. “What happened?”

Mo Jin bit down on her lip. After a long, deliberating pause, she asked, “An Jie-ge… did you know my dad?”

An Jie paused. “Your brother told you?”

Mo Jin hesitated, then nodded. The lighting in the stairway was dim. It was only now that An Jie realized her complexion was deathly pale. She continued, “Then… how did you meet my dad?”

“Oh, I got lost when I was travelling in the desert and happened to run into your father’s archeology team.” An Jie kept it simple. He understood that the old professor’s death affected Mo Jin the most. Even though he didn’t know what she wanted, he didn’t want to mention the harrowing experience to her. “What’s wrong?”

Mo Jin stared unmovingly at An Jie. After a while, she seemed to realize something and lowered her eyes. She felt out a crinkled piece of paper from her pocket and passed it to An Jie silently. 

An Jie frowned, took the paper, and read. Immediately, his expression changed. The handwriting on the paper was twisted like a child’s writing, but it was written in a strange, almost dark-red ink, hiding some sort of bizarre and eerie secret. And the contents – it was the blood-scribed words he had seen on that wall in the ancient city!

The final line ‘to come with many, and leave alone’ was written in an especially twisted manner, and the final stroke replicated the writing on that dilapidated wall, dragging down in a long tail like the drool of a monster with its mouth wide open. 

An Jie jerked his head up. “Who gave this to you? Was it that man with black glasses? It was, wasn’t it?”

Mo Jin looked at him in a daze. “An Jie-ge, is this real?”

“Xiao Jin, in the future, you shouldn’t…”

“Then what’s written on this is true? Only one person can leave that place?”

“That old city did have this saying.” An Jie sighed. “But…”

He cut himself off, staring at Mo Jin in shock. His abdomen felt cold, immediately followed by a sharp pain crawling up his nerves. The change happened so quickly and so unbelievably that An Jie almost froze up. After a while, he finally, disbelievingly lowered his gaze and stared at the dagger in his abdomen. 

Mo Jin’s hand on the dagger shook like a sieve. She suddenly let go and stood up, stumbling and taking a few steps back. Meeting An Jie’s gaze, she spat out a word through trembling lips. “Mur…derer.”

“Xiao Jin, what are you saying?” An Jie didn’t know where this stupid girl had stabbed him but when he felt down, his shirt was soaked in blood already. He thought, he must have jinxed himself this morning by telling Zui She that Shui Shi should’ve stabbed him when he had the chance. Karma was a bitch.

“Murderer!” Mo Jin said and took a step back. “Sixteen said that you’re the reason Dad died and I didn’t believe him… I, Xiao Yu, we liked you so much… We liked you better than our own brother, we trusted you! But you’re the reason that Dad died!”

She pointed at the fallen piece of paper. “It was because of this, wasn’t it? The rules of the city: only one person can make it out alive, you killed my dad because of that! Right? Right? Right?!”

What the fuck was this bullshit… This girl’s desire to vent was so strong that she drowned out An Jie’s attempts to interrupt her with her hysterical screaming. His lips slowly dried out, his eyes darkening. Mo Jin’s voice grew further and further away, but he slowly lost the strength to answer the demands and questions ringing in his ears. 

As long as it was before the Supreme Court, even death row prisoners had the chance to appeal. To not even give him the opportunity to speak… An Jie thought miserably, he always felt that this girl lacked a few brain cells but was the most carefree of the Mo family children. To find out she was saving up a big one and waiting for him… 

His consciousness finally gave up on him. An Jie could never have imagined he could die so miserably.


Author’s Notes: 

Led a volunteer team this afternoon at the hospital. Damn it, those two boys, they were bullying my short legs and ran around like they were being chased by an axe. To make it worse, I was wearing thongs and my feet almost got blisters. Conclusion of the day, I hate tall people!!!


1Reminder to those who have forgotten: the ‘hu’ in Yin Hu means fox!

2A Sailor Moon character.

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Chapter 35: The Night is Long (ii)

03:17.

As the ground shook more and more frequently, Lin Jue finally woke up from his monochrome world. 

His mind remained chaotic and unclear. Even though the world was still the same, it was as if his brain had been soaked in alcohol, dulling and making a joke of all of his senses. Even just the sound of the wind rustling through the dried leaves of the plants on the windowsill aroused his maniacal killing-intent.

In the past half an hour, he had sentimentally latched onto Song Hanzhang’s hand and whispered to him, absorbing every detail on his face, from the lines on his dry lips to his every eyelash. He even wanted to kiss his cooling skin.

The world was colorless. The world was ringing. Eerie black-red blood flowed along the ground like a river past them. The air was filled with a thick scent of blood. The sound of water, quiet laughter, frolicking, the occasional scream, these sounds echoed non-stop through his mind.

More and more, closer and closer, until they were no longer in his mind but rang out next to him. His ears were able to judge where these illusionary sounds came from, but when he searched with his eyes, all his right eye could capture was a deathly quiet world in black and white.

The hallucinations overwhelmed him.

He needed to change places. It was too noisy here.

Lin Jue carefully carried Song Hanzhang on his back and left the collapsing building with difficulty.

The world in front of him became stranger than before, and this mutated building turned more terrifying than ever in Lin Jue’s eyes – even though his perception of terror no longer affected him – dark red liquid flowed down from the rusted walls, flowing into a shallow river of blood.

Lin Jue carried Song Hanzhang and walked through this black-red river. The faces of countless players just before their deaths emerged from the river like drowned ghosts; they howled and wailed but he paid them no attention, trampling each and every hideous phantom underfoot.

Leaving the dormitory building, burning red covered everywhere that the eye could see. The cracks in the ground had almost devoured the entire south dormitory area. This place would soon become a joyhouse of lava.

Lin Jue walked towards the east, through the South Plaza, towards the greenhouse. 

He didn’t feel tired, nor did he feel that the road was long. He carried another person’s weight and walked alone through the collapsing world until he reached the far shore. 

Inside the greenhouse, Lin Jue laid Song Hanzhang down. 

It was quiet here, and safe, and quite far from the encroaching lava. He couldn’t always carry Song Hanzhang, so he chose to stow him away here, just for now.

Moonlight flooded through the glass dome; this place of lush vegetation had been transformed into a paradise of decaying grass. Amidst the withered greenery, Song Hanzhang lay quietly sleeping.

Lin Jue stood beside him for a long, long time, and thought for a long, long time.

He knew he didn’t have much time left to delay. Dan Liang, Gu Fengyi, and Liu Qingqing’s corpses were all past the five minute deadline. He had to find the remaining three people of 2022 and use their corpses as sacrifices. He was no longer afraid of fighting. The need to revive Song Hanzhang gave him endless courage and perseverance; even if he had to go kill Lu Ren, he wouldn’t be afraid.

But saying goodbye was such a difficult thing; he couldn’t make himself turn and leave.

He still couldn’t understand so many things.

Who killed Song Hanzhang? If it was someone from 2022, why were no markings transferred? But if it wasn’t someone from 2022, was it a monster? The wound must have been caused by a sharp weapon, and it was an accurate one-hit KO. 

Using a clean attack for a painless death; it was as if everything was planned. The thought flashed through Lin Jue’s blank mind but it was so quick it was like lightning in a storm, hurriedly disappearing between the clouds.

The box was also no longer on Song Hanzhang, that witch box bound to Lin Jue. He could only assume that someone from 2022 had used a monster to kill Song Hanzhang, then taken his witch box and Song Hanzhang’s weapon – the dagger Lin Jue took out from the fountain and gifted Song Hanzhang.

Why? It was just a normal dagger, why did they take it?

Countless questions rolled around his mind but they were stirred into chaos by the approaching hallucinations.

Lin Jue’s head felt as if it was about to split open. These hallucinations tormented him to the edge of breaking down. He even started hearing Song Hanzhang’s voice, repeating everything he had said from memory.

03:33, it really was time to leave.

Lin Jue once again gazed at Song Hanzhang’s lifeless face.

The moon was quiet and gentle, illuminating this world sinking into hell, and this person falling into a demon.

Lin Jue leant down, and finally left a kiss on Song Hanzhang’s cold forehead.

“It’s late, sleep for a while first, I’ll be back soon.”

He said calmly, as if the broken wailing from before was all just a dream. They would only shortly be separated, and they would soon be reunited. 

But as he turned to leave, the surrounding world became heavy and dark; that almost solid sense of stickiness appeared again. Lin Jue looked up. The distant moon was devoured by the thick darkness, the black gel more solid than any previous illusions.

It was almost like that time Song Hanzhang deliberated hypnotized himself and triggered his negative emotions.

That incident was truly too dangerous, digging at one’s own trauma too terrifying… that illusion didn’t form from simple memories, but rather a highly twisted world of reality and illusion. Even their surroundings were out of touch with reality. Even though they were standing in a classroom painted with blood and gore, countless misformed monsters sitting behind their desks, the scene changed into a library covered in corpses and blood once all those monsters were killed, countless zombies rushing to them after.

Those monsters weren’t strong, and there were no markings from killing them, but there was a despairing number of them. 

Back then, the two of them killed until the last of their strength ran out before they finally found the real monster of the illusion. After an arduous fight, it was Song Hanzhang who finally found its weak point and let them escape from that terrible illusion. 

After that experiment which almost ended in catastrophe, Song Hanzhang never tried to hypnotize himself again. 

But even then, the viscous blackness had never been this strong. 

Lin Jue carried the quiver, Gu Fengyi’s crossbow in one hand, his spear in the other, and allowed the darkness to devour him.

The dried vegetation vanished, along with the moonlight, but the flowing scent of blood remained under his nose. Sudden music sounded next to his ears, cheerful and lighthearted like that ball at midnight where the three teams had met. 

Was he hallucinating again? Lin Jue frowned. But as he opened his eyes, it really was that ballroom!

No, not entirely. 

Those corpses that had once chased after them relentlessly were fallen like puppets with their strings cut, collapsed in a pool of endless red. And that sky which had been covered in an eerie mist now revealed a giant phantom, like the shadow of an extraordinarily large fish as it slowly swimmed through the universe. It was unaccountably huge and terrifying. 

The wishing fountain in the middle of the ballroom had long since been turned into a puddle of blood, the red liquid gurgling out of it along with creatures soaked in it. They fell heavily onto the ground that was already pooling with bloody water and crawled on all fours, over the obstructing corpses, straight towards him. 

Too slow. Lin Jue frowned impatiently and was just about to face them head on when he heard Song Hanzhang’s voice behind him. “Don’t go.”

Lin Jue turned around immediately. Song Hanzhang’s body was right behind him; he had followed him into this illusion!

The blood from the fountain continued to spread. It would eventually go beyond him and take the sleeping Song Hanzhang with him. 

Lin Jue finally felt a sense of urgency. He had to quickly get rid of these monsters so the blood wouldn’t dirty Song Hanzhang’s clothes. 

The monsters from the fountain crawled closer and closer. Lin Jue raised his crossbow awkwardly and aimed – they were so slow in his mind that targeting them was almost effortless. But as he pressed down on the trigger, the arrow didn’t hit the monster like he had expected. The recoil made him lose control of the bow and the bolt went completely off track. 

It was no good without practice; he would try it again after leaving here. Lin Jue decidedly threw down the crossbow and faced the enemy with his familiar spear. 

The monsters crawled through the blood, closer and closer. When the fastest one was within three meters of Lin Jue, it changed. It no longer crawled with haste; it stopped, as if storing up energy before an attack. 

Left? Right? Height? Speed?

Lin Jue’s good eye didn’t skip over a single detail. 

Lowered back limbs, storing up strength, leaning forwards, its body tilted sideways – to the left!

Just as that bloodied monster leaped up for its killing move, in that split-second, the world became so slow that the monster’s fierce lunge turned into an old cassette tape, flashing before his eyes one frame at a time. 

The monster screamed as it leapt, lunging towards Lin Jue’s blind spot, but Lin Jue’s spear was faster. The cold head lay in waiting as if already prepared, and with one stab, it hit the target! The sharp force stabbed through the monster instantly. Lin Jue flung the spear forward with both hands to throw the monster’s body, hitting another creature that was crawling towards him head on. The two collided and slid through the pool of blood, splashing forth a wave half the size of a man.

A second, third, fourth… More monsters rushed him, eager to rip open his skin, suck dry his blood, and feast on every inch of his flesh and bones. 

The chaos continued for a while. The fountain which spewed out countless monsters grew tired, but Lin Jue was unable to register his body’s protests. He kept fighting tirelessly like a machine, until he was completely broken. 

The ground was covered in corpses and sticky blood. Lin Jue leaned against his spear and fell into a long silence at the sight of the dominating red in front of him. 

It was still noisy, and there were still shadowy phantoms swimming through his vision. His eyes alone could no longer separate illusion from reality. Maybe it was the side effect of that painkiller, or maybe something really had happened to his mind, but the world in Lin Jue’s eyes was twisted strangely. Just then as he was fighting, he heard Song Hanzhang’s voice several times and saw many players who had already died. He was completely relying on his instincts to differentiate his hallucinations from the real world, but this instinct was only sharp during fights and he was returned to being troubled by countless voices and phantoms once the fight ended. 

Lin Jue turned around to Song Hanzhang’s body, his good eye stinging. 

Right next to that corpse, another Lin Jue caressed Song Hanzhang’s face and whispered to him. 

The spreading pool of blood stopped by them as if there was an invisible barrier that separated them from the bloody illusion. 

Good, it didn’t dirty Song Hanzhang’s clothes. But the person next to him was too much of an eyesore. 

Lin Jue lifted his spear, stepped through the pool of blood which had risen to his ankles, and walked towards them. 

The other him raised his head. His face was intact, clean, without any blood and without that wound which slashed across more than half of his face. 

Lin Jue watched him, and he watched back. They were separated by an invisible barrier, blocking the pool of blood. 

Like a magic mirror: one side showing an innocent and pure past, the other reflecting the bloody present. 

A provocative smile appeared on the other him’s face as he said soundlessly: He’s mine.

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Chapter 14: The Mo Family

Even though he was here for the Mo children and even rented the unit opposite them in preparation to covertly keep an eye on them, An Jie was used to being alone and had no plans to interfere with their lives. He couldn’t promise much, but as a mature adult, he could at least make sure that nothing major would happen to these three children.

It was the only thing he could do for Mo Yannan. 

The eldest son of the Mo family, Mo Cong, was a student of a distinguished university. He didn’t look like his father; tall with slightly wide shoulders, even though he was more on the thin side; and if one looked closely though, they could in fact find smooth muscle outlines under his thin clothing. His face was handsome to say the least and when he smiled, it even showed his two canines, an aura of youthful sunshine pouring out of his face. The only lacking part was his chin which looked exactly like his mother’s, possibly a little too sharp for a boy; this along with a pair of thin lips that appeared to be somewhat heartless. Fortunately, the friendly and enthusiastic smile which was always on his face more or less covered it up.

This child was very thoughtful. When he returned that night and saw that a new neighbor had moved in, he immediately came over and asked if there was anything he could help with. An Jie chatted with him as he observed the boy.

Mo Cong: at first glance, he was the typical good child of a parent’s eye, and a typical good youth of the country.

Bright, enthusiastic, always knowing what to say, thoughtful, knowing how to treat people well… The day after An Jie moved over, just in time for the weekends, it was Mo Cong who had opened his doors for him and pointed directions at the movers as they brought his new bookshelf upstairs.

But for some reason, An Jie felt that there was something wrong with this child. It wasn’t something he could explain, but rather, a hunch. After all his years of observing people, he wouldn’t say he could immediately see through someone, but some experiences had helped him to develop an almost subconscious instinct.

There was a hidden sense of dissonance in this young man, Mo Cong.

After an entire day of busy work, An Jie’s room was finally somewhat presentable, the furniture and common appliances all assembled. He let out a long breath, his back soaked in sweat.

“That wasn’t easy,” An Jie smiled ruefully as he patted Mo Cong’s shoulder. “I finally understand why they called moving houses ‘big work’ in the olden days. I have to thank you for today, I wouldn’t know how long it would have taken me otherwise.”

Mo Cong waved his hand in a familiar manner. “We’re neighbors, no need to be so polite. Who knows how many things I’ll have to trouble you for in the future? I didn’t have anything to do this weekend anyways; my sister just entered high school, so if I stay at home and play games, I’ll only disturb her. I might as well help you out, as exercise.” He accepted the cup An Jie passed him and drank it all in one go. It had been a long day of hard work and there were still beads of sweat on the corners of his forehead. “It tastes good. You moved the fridge over yesterday, right? Genius.”

An Jie took his mug and poured him another cup. “Drink as much as you want. Get your sister and I’ll treat you two for dinner, as thanks.”

“Don’t.” Mo Cong smiled strangely and pointed at his door. “My Xiao Yu: if it were the olden days, she’d most definitely be a virtuous young lady. She spends every day at home; I worry she’ll grow mold sometimes. Once, we asked her to buy some soy sauce when we were young, heh, and she spent two hours being stubborn and refusing to move. I see you’re living by yourself as well, so your parents are in another city? Don’t spend your money on us then, think of it as a favor.”

“If I’ve eaten well, my whole house has as well1,” An Jie smiled. There had been so much noise from his move, and yet that little girl Mo Yu hadn’t even bothered taking a look. Perhaps it had something to do with her father going missing. Suddenly, he remembered those uninvited guests from last night, and realized that there was something wrong. It was only logical that Mo Cong should have already known that Professor Mo was missing and had little chance of being alive, but he was acting as if nothing had happened, normal to the point of abnormality. So An Jie asked tentatively, “You two siblings live here for school right? Rented as well?”

“No, there’s three of us; the two girls are twins and the other one is called Xiao Jin. She’s a bit wild and rarely comes home, I have no control over her. We didn’t rent this unit. My parents divorced when we were young; my mom went overseas with a big-nose2, and my dad… Who knows where he is.” Mo Cong shrugged. “Yesterday, Xiao Yu told me two people came over to tell us that the old man had gone missing, so who knows if he’s still alive.”

As he said that, Mo Cong looked away, staring nonchalantly at the floor, his expression cold and aloof as if indifferent.

An Jie was stunned. “Your father… I’m really sorry.”

His apology was sincere, but Mo Cong didn’t understand. “What does it matter? You’ll know eventually since you live opposite us, but it makes no real difference if my old man’s home or not. Who knows what he’s doing, but he rarely comes home, and even if he does, it’s not much to note. Xiao Jin doesn’t get along with him and runs away from home constantly.”

“Then financially…”

“I say, brother, don’t look at me like you’re a volunteer seeing a refugee camp,” Mo Cong laughed carelessly. “Don’t worry, the old woman may have ran off with that big-nose, but she still remembers to send us money. The old man has saved some money over the years as well. Besides, a few part-time jobs on my end is enough to cover the costs of these two girls. It’s no big deal.”

An Jie frowned. Even though he knew that Lao Mo’s wooden personality and his tendency to focus only on his studies meant that his relationships with his children might not be so harmonious, he didn’t expect it to be this distant. No wonder why every time he brought up his son, the old professor’s expression was always so dull.

As if fearing that An Jie would dwell on this problem, Mo Cong hurriedly changed the topic. “You’re still in school right? High school? University?”

“A senior; that X High across the road. I just transferred,” An Jie said smoothly.

Mo Cong widened his eyes. “Really? My sisters, both of them, are first years in your school. This must be fate! Ahem, but senior year must be really stressful. Even though I, your brother3, managed to get into university…” He scratched his head and made a face. “After not studying those topics for a year, I’ve probably returned all my knowledge back to my teachers. If you don’t mind though, you can still come ask me if you have any questions; I won’t be able to do much, but I can still give you some tips…”

“Ge! Mo Cong, Mo Yu! Open the door!”

The door to his unit was still open since An Jie had only just finished his work. A howl sounded in the corridor and the door opposite them was slammed on loudly, interrupting Mo Cong’s attempt to advertise himself. 

Mo Cong frowned. “Those who know know that she’s coming home, and those who don’t will think she’s here for vengeance- our little sister Xiao Jin is back. I’ll go take a look.”

As he spoke, Mo Yu had already opened the door for her twin sister. The two girls whispered to each other. Mo Yu pointed to the opposite door and Mo Jin turned around. When she saw An Jie behind her older brother, her eyes lit up.

The moment An Jie saw this girl, he understood why the old professor hadn’t gotten along with her. The girl’s physique was quite similar to Mo Yu, and if one looked carefully, she did look exactly the same as Mo Yu… but it had to be carefully. This girl has a head of chicken hair dyed into countless colours, a long tuft there, a short strand here. Two globs were smudged onto her eyes: smoky makeup if he was being kind, but really just two panda eyes. Her ears were even more lively: piercings lined her entire left ear as if rushing for the morning market, and a giant metal ring hung off her right ear, almost reaching her shoulder. An Jie had a suspicion that if she wore it for long enough, her neck would become crooked from that earring. Her clothes were even more impressive, showing everywhere that could be shown and so colorful like a turkey that it was a headache to look at.

If this girl was his sister, he would have killed her already to save her the embarrassment of going out… An Jie felt his heart shake, thinking that if he put her in a haunted house in an amusement park, she would be able to scare quite a few tourists to death without any additional makeup.

The turkey sister straight up ignored her brother as if he was a stranger on the road and blinked her large eyes at An Jie. They had a strange sense of heaviness from the mascara and eyeshadow. Her original door-slamming attitude disappeared immediately as she spoke in a bad Cantonese accent, her voice sickly sweet, “Wow, you’re that pretty senior gége4 who just transferred over! I’m your junior from the same school, hehe! What a coincidence, you’ve actually moved directly across from me; don’t you think this is fate? Let’s get to know each other, yeah?”

An Jie felt goosebumps leap up his skin. Before he had time to answer, the turkey sister continued, “Actually, you don’t need to introduce yourself. Such a good looking gége transferred; even someone as behind on the news as me would know, hehe. Gége, you’re called An Jie right? I’m Mo Jin, gége, but you can call me Xiao Jin, it’s okay…”

Mo Cong finally had enough and dragged Mo Jin to his unit by her arm, nodding to An Jie with difficulty. “An Jie, you’ve had a long day, I won’t disturb you anymore, rest soon. Get over here! If you keep embarrassing yourself, I’ll throw you over to Chechen! They might think that you’re a terrorist and get rid of you.”

Mo Jin acted as if she had just seen her brother. “Jeez, gége, you’re also here… You’re so mean! Gége, you’re so sneaky, you came here to meet An Jie-gége and you didn’t even tell me! Aww… An Jie-gége, don’t forget to come play with us, okay…”

With a bang, Mo Cong slammed the door opposite him shut. The world was quiet once more. An Jie suddenly lost all hope in his future ‘youthful years’’ school life.

He shook his head, not even able to force out a smile. No wonder the old bookworm said that he was a failure of a father. There was a sudden vibration in his pocket. He closed the door and pressed the answer button. “Zui She?”

The number was new, and as of now, the only one in his contact list.

“How are you? Settled down?”

“Yeah, basically.” An Jie flung himself down onto the sofa and let out a breath. “I feel like my bones are breaking. This is good enough, I’ll make do for now.”

A light laugh seemed to come from the other side. “You saw your savior’s kids?”

An Jie paused. “I saw them.”

“How was it?”

“…Terrifying.”

Zui She laughed out loud. “A generational gap! Do you know what a generational gap is, An Yin Hu? Even if you coat yourself in a layer of fresh paint, it won’t hide the fact that your insides are all musty.”

“…Why did you call? Just to laugh at me?”

Zui She’s laughter suddenly lowered. After a long while, a hesitant sentence emerged from the other side. “Yin Hu, Shui Shi5 is in Beijing…”

An Jie’s fingers tightened as he gave a light ‘hmm’. “I heard. What about it? Should I give him an offering?”

“That’s not what I meant…” Zui She hesitated. “You didn’t tell Shui Shi when you left. He was the most desperate when looking for you; his eyes even turned red. I know he wronged you back then, but…”

“You know and you’re still here dancing on my sore spots? Are you asking to be beaten?” An Jie interrupted.

“You…”

“I know what to do.” An Jie’s expression darkened. “Zui She, if we’re true brothers, don’t betray me. Let me say it again. These people: I, don’t, want, to, see, any, of, them.”

“Yin Hu…”

“Alright, stop contributing to China mobile. See you next time.” An Jie hung up the phone without waiting for a reply. The young man’s slim body sank into the sofa, hair falling in front of his forehead, casting a pool of shadow around his eyes.

An Yin Hu had now completely become An Jie. So for those things of the past… let them all screw off.


Author’s Notes: The male lead is finally here, but his personality has yet to be determined. 


1Basically saying that he lives by himself.

2A westerner. Because caucasian people ‘have tall noses’ maybe?

3Friendly, not familial. A quirk of the Chinese language: referring to close friends as family.

4Gege, meaning big brother, but even cutesier from being under a Cantonese accent. ‘UwU Speak’ if you will, according to Luci. The é is there to differentiate- it has a slightly different intonation, but the exact same spelling as the normal gege.

5Sleeping Lion, similar to the other code names.

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