Chapter 210: Old Hatred, New Generation
The coldness Su Jie sensed in Zhang Hongyuan had a particular quality — something like the old court eunuchs he had read about. A physiological absence, faint but unmistakable to someone who knew how to read these things.
If Su Shilin had been responsible for that — if his father had done that to Zhang Hongyuan — then the killing intent made complete sense.
I was hoping to find some way toward reconciliation with the Zhang family, Su Jie thought. Looking at this, it seems unlikely.
For now, all he could do was watch and let Zhang Manman work. If she secured real authority within the Zhang family, it would help defuse things considerably. If she couldn’t, then obstacles would be dealt with as they came. He wasn’t afraid of anyone.
And besides — by Zhang Manman’s own account, the Zhang family had been in the wrong from the start. Treating his mother Xu Ying as a commodity to be transferred between men, as though the betrothal were a contract on goods rather than a commitment to a person. Crippling Zhang Hongyuan in response to that was, arguably, the minimum.
“Mr. Larry, please come with me.” Zhang Hongyuan guided the billionaire toward the place of honor inside the ancestral hall.
The hall was vast. At its center stood the ancestral tablets and a collection of old scrolls and paintings. Beyond that opened a spacious reception area — traditional in atmosphere, rows of seating arranged in a configuration that reminded Su Jie of the great gathering halls of old brotherhood associations, the kind described in the classic novels.
Larry took his seat and looked around with open curiosity.
“This has a different feeling from a Japanese shrine,” he said to Sawai Takeji.
“A shrine is a place for divine spirits,” Sawai Takeji replied. “This is a family ancestral hall — for honoring the ancestors, but also for assemblies, announcements, and banquets. The larger the gathering and the louder the celebration, the more it signals the family’s prosperity. The ancestors are pleased by that.”
“In earlier periods,” Su Jie added, switching to English, “there was a distinction between the jiamiao — the household temple for ancestral veneration, which only officials of rank were permitted to construct, with the Son of Heaven maintaining seven — and the citang, the clan hall, which was for gatherings and feasts. Over time the two merged, and the combined space took on both functions.”
“Asian clan culture is genuinely interesting,” Larry said. “It creates a strong binding force through shared bloodlines. European royal families, historically, took the opposite approach — they restricted marriage within their own circles specifically to preserve the purity of lineage.”
*****
Su Jie was keeping part of his attention on Larry’s perimeter while taking stock of the room.
He noticed that several sets of eyes had been tracking him since they arrived.
Across the hall, in the area where the younger generation was seated, he picked out Zhang Kaitai among them — and felt his presence before he fully identified the face. The qi was dense and substantial, approaching Feng Hengyi’s level. Zhang Kaitai’s features were strikingly similar to Zhang Manman’s. This was the Zhang family’s foremost young figure, and the resemblance made the identification immediate.
No Mao family yet.
Su Jie completed a sweep of the room. Real fighters were present — several of them — but none that could stand alongside him. Zhang Kaitai, for all his depth, had not entered the Realm of the Living Dead. The gap between that state and what fell below it was not one of degree; it was categorical.
Within the entire Zhang family, only the Dragon Head — Zhang Hongqing — was said to have entered the Realm of the Living Dead, placing him at Su Jie’s level or possibly above.
But Zhang Hongqing had not appeared.
Even without knowing his face, Su Jie would have sensed a practitioner of that level the moment they entered the room. At that state, a person’s presence was like a torch in a dark space — nothing could fully conceal it. He was aware of the family history, and aware of the enmity between them, but the awareness carried no fear. At his current level, fear had largely ceased to be a factor in how he related to the world.
Before the Realm of the Living Dead, the body’s physical ceiling was fixed. Even the most formidable fighters — Shen Dao, Song Gua, men whose reputations were built on extraordinary capability — couldn’t break world records in sprinting or lifting. Faced with multiple armed opponents, they remained in genuine danger.
Feng Hengyi was the exception, for reasons of accumulated foundation that ran unusually deep.
But cross the threshold into the Realm of the Living Dead, given enough time for the body to settle and develop into the new state, and certain physical limits simply dissolved. The mechanism wasn’t mystical — it was the same principle by which an elderly woman, in a moment of crisis, lifts a heavy object off a trapped grandchild. For a trained practitioner at physical peak, the effect was proportionally more dramatic.
Zhang Manman had separated from Su Jie and taken her place with the younger generation’s seating.
Su Jie stood behind Larry, continuously alert. Even here, inside the Zhang family’s ancestral hall, the obligation didn’t change. A competent bodyguard permitted no breach.
Sawai Takeji, positioned nearby, felt something coming from Su Jie that was difficult to characterize — a weight, like standing at the base of a mountain range, that left no impulse toward resistance and instead produced an involuntary sense of security, as though proximity to this person made the world’s dangers unreachable.
Half a month, Sawai Takeji thought. He’s grown considerably stronger even in half a month.
His own Taiki-ken emphasized i — intention, will — above everything else, descended through Yiquan, which in turn had evolved from Xingyiquan, which had evolved from Xinyiquan, the root of which was the Hoe Strike of Xin Yi Ba. One agricultural technique, refined by generations of practitioners, branching into lineages that had crossed continents and taken new names. And at the end of that chain stood this twenty-year-old, radiating something that the entire lineage had been reaching toward.
A notification appeared on Su Jie’s device. Zhang Manman.
The Mao family has arrived.
At the entrance, Zhang Hongyuan was greeting a new delegation. A middle-aged man at the front, followed by four or five younger figures.
Another message from Zhang Manman: The one leading them is Mao Wenxiong, current head of the Mao family. Behind him is his son Mao Xin, and then several capable juniors — Mao Ling, Mao Heng, Mao Chuxiu… Mao Xin and my brother and Zhang Taiyu are all in discussion about something. Be careful.
Su Jie gave no reply. He studied Mao Wenxiong.
The man moved with the unhurried momentum of a large animal — not tall, but built with the kind of uprightness that came from something deeper than posture. His presence wasn’t imposing in volume, but it was wide. His eyes had a quality that physiognomists noted carefully: neither fully round nor fully square, holding both shapes simultaneously. In the classical readings, this signified someone who could reach the highest levels in any field he committed to — court official, merchant, or martial artist.
And yet, Su Jie observed, not the face of a sovereign. Imperial physiognomy, by the classical theory, is always imperfect — there’s always a flaw, a break in the pattern. The unbroken, unblemished face doesn’t produce emperors. Zhu Yuanzhang had a face full of irregularities. So did the Kangxi Emperor, and Liu Bang. Perfection doesn’t become sovereign. Mao Wenxiong’s features are flawless. That’s exactly why he’ll stop short of the highest place.
Another message from Zhang Manman: My father is here.
Su Jie looked toward the entrance.
The man who entered was very tall — well over six feet. His nose was strong and full, his eyes calm and level, his lips thick, his ears fleshed and rounded, his jaw solid as jade pendant. The overall impression was of something deep and unhurried — a gentleman in the classical sense, the kind that Chinese aesthetics described as warm as jade. The one point of asymmetry was the eyebrows, slightly upswept at the outer ends, a trace of restless flight in them, a deviation from perfect centeredness — a minor dissonance in an otherwise harmonious face.
To Su Jie’s eye, this was precisely the imperfection that the theory of imperial physiognomy required. Everything nearly complete, interrupted by that single flaw. Not despite the flaw, but because of it: the dragon ascending.
This was Zhang Hongqing. Dragon Head of the Zhang family. Zhang Manman’s father.
And unquestionably, a genuine master.
The moment he stepped through the entrance, Su Jie’s perception registered something like a sudden darkening — not of the light, but of the field of awareness itself. A vast shadow moving across the sky, dense with compressed energy, coiled lightning inside it, the feeling that the entire atmosphere might break at any moment into a storm that would flood the space completely.
For Su Jie to receive this sensation meant Zhang Hongqing’s martial attainment was both immense and dominating in its nature — a personality built around absolute control, a will that did not bend.
As Zhang Hongqing entered, every person in the Zhang family rose. The Shi-generation elders were not excluded. Zhang Shiyi, whom Su Jie had dealt with at the fortune-telling stall, rose with the rest — and in the instant of Zhang Hongqing’s arrival, a genuine fear moved across his face. Not performed deference. Not habit. Fear from somewhere real.
This told Su Jie everything he needed to know about Zhang Hongqing’s position in the family. Absolute. A word that carried actual meaning here.
That authority came from capability, and from everything that accompanied it.
Formidable, Su Jie thought, the word arriving and settling without drama. Genuinely formidable. Formidable in a way that leaves nothing standing.
And with it came a recognition he hadn’t fully confronted until now: if Zhang Hongqing decided to move against Larry, Su Jie wasn’t certain he could stop it.
In every other scenario he had modeled since taking this position, his confidence had been complete. Whatever danger arose, he had an answer. Zhang Hongqing’s arrival removed that certainty.
He knew Zhang Hongqing would not actually harm Larry — there was no logic in it. But as the Dragon Head walked toward them to offer his greeting, Su Jie gathered every thread of his awareness and turned it toward the approaching figure.
Zhang Hongqing stopped.
Five paces away.
A genuine practitioner’s sensitivity — he had walked to the boundary of Su Jie’s effective attack range and felt it, and paused. It was a pause of one-tenth of a second, invisible to anyone not operating at a comparable level. To the room, Zhang Hongqing had simply walked toward Larry in a continuous motion.
To Su Jie, it was a probe. A large predator arriving at the edge of another predator’s claimed ground, testing the boundary before deciding whether to press through.
Crack!
After that fraction of a second, Zhang Hongqing stepped in.
He crossed the boundary without acknowledgment, without looking at Su Jie — the way a lion walks into a leopard’s territory because it has decided the leopard’s feelings are not the relevant consideration. In the natural world, this kind of territorial transgression carried a specific meaning. It was not neutral.
Zhang Hongqing extended his hand to Larry and smiled — a genuine smile, warm rather than calculated.
“Mr. Larry, welcome to our family assembly. Your presence honors us considerably.” His English was fluent and easy. “Regarding your interest in investing in Honey Badger Security — I think it’s an excellent idea. We could go further: data sharing and collaborative research. I understand your laboratories have a strong appetite for human performance data. As it happens, the Honey Badger Training Camp holds an extensive archive of exactly that kind of material.”
Read Novel Full