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BLACK MYTH: AFTERMATH

执笔忘川
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
The wind had died. Over Flower-Fruit Mountain, the clouds and smoke no longer danced with life; they hung in a sickly, frozen leaden gray. On the lonely peak, the stones were no longer mere stones—they were crystallized echoes of some ancient, festering grudge. Tianming sat at the cliff’s edge, the Ruyi Jingu Bang heavy in his hands, as if it carried the weight of all the karmic sins of the westward journey. He could feel the golden hoop. Though it had long since vanished from his forehead, the scar it left burned deep into his soul. With every breath, fragmented whispers clawed at his mind—the cries of countless versions of himself who had died along the way. Some perished in the fiery storms of Black Wind Mountain, others in the swirling sands of Yellow Wind Ridge, and more still had fallen within the illusion of a “perfect ending.” “This is not the end,” a voice rasped in the darkness of his heart, coarse as sandpaper scraping against dry bark. Was it the lingering spirit of the Great Sage, or merely his own madness? He opened his eyes slowly. Far off in the sea of clouds, the broken silhouette of a massive celestial crane circled, hauntingly graceful. A familiar, nauseating aura filled the air—the same lofty “Order” that had stripped Fourth Sister and countless demons of their dignity. Tianming rose. The ground trembled beneath him. This time, he no longer sought enlightenment. He no longer sought to cleanse his sins. He was here to tear a hole in the heavens itself—a wound that could never be repaired.
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Chapter 1 - The Weight of Memory

A putrid scent of rotting sandalwood clung to the mountain mist, pressing heavily against Tianming's chest. He trudged along the old, jagged path, each step cracking withered peach branches beneath his feet. Flower-Fruit Mountain, once a paradise of spirits, now lay in ruins, more tomb than sanctuary. Its energy had long since drained, leaving only cursed shells and endless silence.

He paused, gazing at his hands. Between the fur, golden sparks flickered—residual essence of the Great Sage. Yet with it came scattered fragments of memory: the Monkey King striding proudly before the Water Curtain Cave, the searing pain of the alchemy furnace, five hundred lonely years beneath the Five Elements Mountain. But the clearest memory was the cruelest truth: at the foot of Ling Mountain, the golden hoop removed, his soul had already withered.

Memory was a burden heavier than any stone. When Tianming closed his eyes, he felt the grudges of every demon who had died by his staff: the White Bone Demon's icy sorrow, Red Boy's mischievous defiance, the Bull Demon King's despair. Waves of anguish slammed against his mind. He was no longer a mere warrior—he had become a vessel overflowing with pain. He wondered if "destiny" was nothing but heaven's cruel joke, forcing one monkey to inherit another's tragedy, endlessly repeating.

"What are you still searching for?" a voice sneered through the mist, mocking. It was the old monkey's voice, yet unfamiliar. Tianming whirled—but saw only a dead tree, its trunk twisted into a human-like visage.

He did not answer. Words felt meaningless. Only pain was real. He remembered the woman taken by the Crane Immortal, the Fourth Sister, the only light in the darkness of Pancake Ridge. Her cold, defiant eyes were his anchor. If even that memory was false, his existence would crumble entirely.

He ran, leaping over jagged rocks and thorned underbrush, desperate to silence the whispers in his mind with the thunder of his strikes. The golden staff smashed through boulders, each blow heavier than a mountain, each strike a release of fury at the world's injustice. But when the dust settled, the suffocating silence remained. The Heavenly Palace still loomed above. The gods still watched, amused by this defiant fool.

"Memory is your armor—and your prison," the voice whispered in his ear, cold as ice crawling down his spine. He glanced at the staff. Twisted faces had emerged on its surface, silently screaming. Gods he had slain. Demons he had saved. All now fused into the staff, pressing down upon him.

He collapsed, gasping. The weight was more than physical; it was spiritual. He had inherited the Great Sage's renown—and the rebellion he had failed to finish. He realized that freedom would not come from storming the Heavenly Palace. It would come from mastering the ruins of memory, from forging a heart uniquely his own.

Night fell, and the ruins of Flower-Fruit Mountain grew monstrous under the moon. Tianming sat, diving into the depths of his own mind for the first time. There, a chasm of endless darkness yawned: on one side, divine annihilation; on the other, demonic frenzy. He stood on a tightrope stretched across it, teetering. He closed his eyes and let the memories slice at his spirit like jagged blades. Consciousness bled, forming ghostly crimson flowers of agony.

He did not sleep. He waited in the darkness until the first sickly light of dawn pierced the leaden clouds. He stood, eyes sharpened with cold resolve. The path ahead would be lonely, walking the edge between self-destruction and redemption. But he had no choice. He was Tianming—the fated one, a living dead who refused to bow to fate.