Please Stop Spreading Rumors About Me — They Keep Coming True
Chapter 22: Three Women, One Tired Man
- Chapter 59: The Forgetters
- Chapter 58: The Light of a Whole World
- Chapter 57: The Top of the Sky
- Chapter 56: The Spark
- Chapter 55: A World That Remembers
- Chapter 54: Two Who Loved the Lantern
- Chapter 53: The Mercy of Forgetting
- Chapter 52: The Blank Page
- Chapter 51: The Remembering
- Chapter 50: The First Light
- Chapter 49: The Empty Chair
- Chapter 48: The First Author
- Chapter 47: The Lantern
- Chapter 46: The Widening Dark
- Chapter 45: Xue Ningzhi Makes Contact
- Chapter 44: The Morning After
- Chapter 43: The Final (Part Two)
- Chapter 42: The Final (Part One)
- Chapter 41: The Night Before
- Chapter 40: The Chessmaster’s Move
- Chapter 39: The Other Finalist
- Chapter 38: Mutual Respect (Sort Of)
- Chapter 37: Semifinal: Bai Qing vs Lin Bo
- Chapter 36: The Draw
- Chapter 35: Ji Lan’s Offer
- Chapter 34: Round Three: He Cannot Lose Now
- Chapter 33: The Rival’s Sob Story
- Chapter 32: Tao Tao’s Fan Army
- Chapter 31: Round Two: Crowd Favorite
- Chapter 30: The Sponsor With Cold Eyes
- Chapter 29: Bai Qing Advances
- Chapter 28: Ji Lan’s Trap
- Chapter 27: Round One: The Accidental Genius
- Chapter 26: Opening Ceremony Disaster
- Chapter 25: The Tournament of Ten Thousand Reputations
- Chapter 24: To the Capital
- Chapter 23: The Bureau’s Last Stand
- Chapter 22: Three Women, One Tired Man
- Chapter 21: Bai Qing’s Challenge
- Chapter 20: The Pants of the Thunder Court
- Chapter 19: Training Montage (That Goes Wrong)
- Chapter 18: Scroll’s Bad Idea
- Chapter 17: The Method
- Chapter 16: Ji Lan Is Furious
- Chapter 15: The Sect Recruiters
- Chapter 14: Heavenly Records 101
- Chapter 13: The Noodle Shop Dream Deferred
- Chapter 12: Boss Battle: The Bureau Chief
- Chapter 11: The Correction That Backfired
- Chapter 10: A Real Demon King (Oops)
- Chapter 9: Exhibit A
- Chapter 8: The Fact-Checker Cometh
- Chapter 7: Renowned by Tuesday
- Chapter 6: The First Believer
- Chapter 5: Whispered
- Chapter 4: Please Don’t Post That
- Chapter 3: The Scroll That Got Fired
- Chapter 2: Cursed Junk Storage
- Chapter 1: The Man Who Deletes Heroes
Here is the situation I found myself in, eight days before the most important day of my life.
I was a man who had spent twenty-six years perfecting the art of being left completely alone. I had built my whole life — my job, my room, my dream of six quiet tables — around the goal of being a nobody no one ever noticed.
And I was now sharing my tiny courtyard with four women who would not, under any circumstances, leave me alone, and who could not, under any circumstances, stand each other.
Let me introduce the cast, as Scroll keeps insisting on calling them.
Yun Shu was there because it was her job. My assigned Records observer, still hunting the invisible "ghost" that powered me, now also functioning as the only person actually organizing our journey to the capital — which she did with grim efficiency, making lists, arranging passage, and quietly keeping me alive.
Bai Qing was there because she’d lost to a sneeze and it had broken her brain. She’d set up a bedroll in the corner of the yard and announced she was "guarding" me until the tournament. What this mostly meant was glaring at me with unsettling intensity and occasionally, without any warning at all, swinging her sword at my head "to test if it was real." It was always real. The belief always saved me. This drove her further out of her mind each time.
Tao Tao was there because she was my disciple and the happiest girl in the world, surrounded at last by so many important people. She had appointed herself, without being asked, the keeper of group morale, and spent her days trying desperately to make everyone be friends. It was like trying to make a fire be friends with a flood.
And then on the third day, just to complete my suffering, Ji Lan came back. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝕨𝕖𝗯𝚗𝚘𝕧𝕖𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝕞
She swept into the courtyard exactly as glorious as she’d left, except now she was radiating fury. She pointed one perfect finger at me across the yard and said: "You stole the Thunder Court’s trousers."
"It was an accident—"
"Do you have ANY idea," Ji Lan said, advancing, "what that’s done to the rankings? I spent thirty years building toward Legendary stroke by careful stroke, and you’ve just leapt half a rank by removing a man’s pants. I went to the capital to prepare. I lasted four days. Four days, knowing you were out here, climbing, by accident, unsupervised." She stopped in front of me, and there was something almost panicked underneath the anger. "I’m not letting you out of my sight again. If I’m going to understand how you do this — and I AM — I have to watch every single step. So I’m escorting you to the capital. Personally. And don’t you dare steal anyone else’s clothing on the way."
So that was my entourage. The tax inspector, the broken swordswoman, the joyful disciple, and the furious artist. Four formidable women, each one of them brilliant and dangerous in a completely different way, each orbiting me for a completely different reason — to study me, to fight me, to worship me, to expose me — and not one of them willing to be in a room with the other three for more than a few minutes without it turning into a war.
That first dinner is burned into my memory.
It started when Tao Tao, beaming, tried to get everyone to share "their favorite Master Lin Bo legend." Yun Shu said her favorite was "none of them, because they’re all false." Ji Lan said that was a philistine thing to say and that the craft of a legend was worth admiring even if the facts weren’t. Yun Shu said admiring a beautiful lie was how the world ended up full of frauds. Bai Qing said they were both missing the point, that the only thing worth respecting was an honest fight — and then she stood up and swung her sword at my head to make a point about something, and the belief deflected it into the soup, which exploded, and Tao Tao wrote down "and the demon-slayer’s mere presence caused the very soup to ascend," and Ji Lan and Yun Shu, for one beautiful moment, stopped fighting each other to unite in glaring at Bai Qing, who glared back, while I sat in the middle wearing soup. Scroll murmured in my ear, delighted beyond words, "This is the best dinner I have ever attended."
I should have been miserable. I want to tell you I was miserable.
But here’s the thing I noticed, sitting there covered in soup with four impossible women arguing across me into the night.
For the first time in my entire life, my room was loud, and full, and warm.
Twenty-six years of wanting to be a nobody so no one would bother me. And the terrible, confusing truth — the one I couldn’t say out loud — was that no one had ever bothered me because no one had ever cared to. I’d been alone so long I’d called it a dream. And now here were four people, for all the wrong reasons, fighting the whole time, none of them even sure they liked me, who had each in their own impossible way decided not to leave.
It wasn’t the quiet I’d wanted. It was the opposite of it.
I looked around that loud, warm, soup-splattered room, and I thought: I would burn the noodle shop to the ground before I’d lose this. And then I got scared, because that wasn’t a thing the old Lin Bo would ever have thought, and I didn’t know yet who the new one was.
"You’re getting attached," Scroll observed quietly, reading my face the way it does. It didn’t sound smug. It sounded careful. Almost worried. "To the cast. That’s good for the story, talent. The audience loves a found family." A pause, and then softer, that old grief stirring underneath it: "Just... hold them lightly. That’s all. The bigger your legend gets, the more the world will want to take things from you. And it always takes the people Dear to you first." The faraway quiet. "Hold them lightly. Not again."
I didn’t hold them lightly. I’m not built that way, you know that by now.
Across the room, Bai Qing swung her sword at my head one more time, the belief knocked it into a wall, and Tao Tao cheered, and Ji Lan told Yun Shu her ledger was "aesthetically depressing," and Yun Shu told Ji Lan she’d "never met a problem she couldn’t make louder," and the lamp guttered warm and golden light over all of us.
Eight days to the capital.
Eight days until I carried every single one of them straight into the brightest, most dangerous light in the world.
I wouldn’t have left a single one behind.
That was going to cost me. I just didn’t know how much yet.
- Chapter 59: The Forgetters
- Chapter 58: The Light of a Whole World
- Chapter 57: The Top of the Sky
- Chapter 56: The Spark
- Chapter 55: A World That Remembers
- Chapter 54: Two Who Loved the Lantern
- Chapter 53: The Mercy of Forgetting
- Chapter 52: The Blank Page
- Chapter 51: The Remembering
- Chapter 50: The First Light
- Chapter 49: The Empty Chair
- Chapter 48: The First Author
- Chapter 47: The Lantern
- Chapter 46: The Widening Dark
- Chapter 45: Xue Ningzhi Makes Contact
- Chapter 44: The Morning After
- Chapter 43: The Final (Part Two)
- Chapter 42: The Final (Part One)
- Chapter 41: The Night Before
- Chapter 40: The Chessmaster’s Move
- Chapter 39: The Other Finalist
- Chapter 38: Mutual Respect (Sort Of)
- Chapter 37: Semifinal: Bai Qing vs Lin Bo
- Chapter 36: The Draw
- Chapter 35: Ji Lan’s Offer
- Chapter 34: Round Three: He Cannot Lose Now
- Chapter 33: The Rival’s Sob Story
- Chapter 32: Tao Tao’s Fan Army
- Chapter 31: Round Two: Crowd Favorite
- Chapter 30: The Sponsor With Cold Eyes
- Chapter 29: Bai Qing Advances
- Chapter 28: Ji Lan’s Trap
- Chapter 27: Round One: The Accidental Genius
- Chapter 26: Opening Ceremony Disaster
- Chapter 25: The Tournament of Ten Thousand Reputations
- Chapter 24: To the Capital
- Chapter 23: The Bureau’s Last Stand
- Chapter 22: Three Women, One Tired Man
- Chapter 21: Bai Qing’s Challenge
- Chapter 20: The Pants of the Thunder Court
- Chapter 19: Training Montage (That Goes Wrong)
- Chapter 18: Scroll’s Bad Idea
- Chapter 17: The Method
- Chapter 16: Ji Lan Is Furious
- Chapter 15: The Sect Recruiters
- Chapter 14: Heavenly Records 101
- Chapter 13: The Noodle Shop Dream Deferred
- Chapter 12: Boss Battle: The Bureau Chief
- Chapter 11: The Correction That Backfired
- Chapter 10: A Real Demon King (Oops)
- Chapter 9: Exhibit A
- Chapter 8: The Fact-Checker Cometh
- Chapter 7: Renowned by Tuesday
- Chapter 6: The First Believer
- Chapter 5: Whispered
- Chapter 4: Please Don’t Post That
- Chapter 3: The Scroll That Got Fired
- Chapter 2: Cursed Junk Storage
- Chapter 1: The Man Who Deletes Heroes
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