Please Stop Spreading Rumors About Me — They Keep Coming True
Chapter 32: Tao Tao’s Fan Army
- 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
I have, by now, watched a lot of impossible things. I’ve seen a sneeze fell a demon and a confession shatter records and a Storm-Marshal lose his trousers to the sky.
But the most impossible thing I ever saw — the thing that genuinely moved me to tears — was a bubbly junior cultivator with a notebook turn ten million strangers into a family in three days.
I don’t fully know how she did it. Tao Tao had always had two gifts I’d underestimated, mostly because they came wrapped in so much cheerful noise: she believed with a purity I’d never seen in anyone, and she could not meet a stranger without befriending them. On the road to the capital she’d recruited travelers one at a time, and I’d thought it was a charming habit. It wasn’t a habit. It was training. She’d been practicing this her whole life without knowing what it was for.
Now she knew.
She started with the noodle-sellers, because she’s Tao Tao and she always knows where the food is. She gathered them, and she told them — not a manufactured legend, not a paid story, just the plain true thing — that the Empire was trying to make people doubt the demon-slayer, the people’s demon-slayer, their demon-slayer, and that the only thing that could stop it was for the people who really believed to believe louder.
And the noodle-sellers told the street-sweepers. The street-sweepers told the dock-workers. The dock-workers told their children, and the children — the children in the paper sneeze-hats, who loved me with the ferocious uncomplicated loyalty that children give to the things that are theirs — the children went absolutely feral about it.
By the second day there were chants. Real ones, starting in the cheap tiers and rolling down toward the rich ones like weather. By the second evening there were banners — handmade, crooked, glorious, painted on old sailcloth and bedsheets: THE PEOPLE’S DEMON-SLAYER. WE BELIEVE. And one, my favorite, held up by a tiny child on her father’s shoulders, that just said, in wobbling letters: HE IS OURS.
Tao Tao organized it all from a noodle stall she’d commandeered as headquarters, her notebook open, dispatching believers like a general moving armies. She’d founded a thing — she called it the Order of the Modest Demon-Slayer, which is the single most Tao Tao name in existence — with a chant, and a hand-sign (a little bow, of course), and a daily recitation of the Deeds, read aloud from her notebook to growing crowds who wept and cheered at the part about the candle. It was ridiculous. A fan club with the earnestness of a religion. The most absurd thing I had ever been at the center of.
It was also, I realized slowly, watching it grow, the most powerful.
Because here is the thing the Empire of a Thousand Verses, for all its ten thousand bards and all its cold genius, had never understood. The thing Xue Ningzhi, who accounted for everything, had not accounted for.
You can manufacture belief. You can buy it, build it, broadcast it. The Empire did it better than anyone alive.
But you cannot manufacture love.
The Empire’s belief was a wall built by paid hands — strong, tall, and only as loyal as the next payment. Tao Tao’s belief was a thing freely given by millions of people who had decided, on their own, with no one paying them, that this tired humble nobody was theirs and they would not let him be taken. And love freely given, it turns out, is the most stubborn force in all the world. You can seed a thousand grains of doubt into belief that was bought. Doubt slides right off belief that was chosen, though, because the people who chose it aren’t holding it for money — they’re holding it because letting go would mean letting go of the part of themselves that finally got to matter.
My armor came back. More than came back. As Tao Tao’s grassroots faith swelled up from the bottom of the Arena, I felt the belief in my chest go from a flickering, Empire-thinned thing to something deeper and warmer and immovable, rooted in ten million hearts that no whisper could reach, because you cannot whisper away a thing a child painted on a bedsheet.
On the third evening I went to find Tao Tao at her noodle-stall headquarters, and I found her exhausted, ink-stained, hoarse from three days of organizing, asleep sitting up against a stack of her own banners, the notebook still open in her lap.
I sat down next to her quietly. I didn’t want to wake her.
I’ll tell you the truth of what I felt, because it’s the truest thing in this whole account.
I felt like a fraud. Because all of this — the banners, the chants, the children, the love freely given by millions — it was for a man who couldn’t fight, who’d done nothing, who was held up entirely by belief. They loved a hero who wasn’t real. The guilt of it sat on me like a stone.
But underneath the guilt was something else. Something I hadn’t felt in twenty-six years of being a nobody, and it took me a while to even recognize it.
I felt loved. Not the legend. Me. Because Tao Tao — Tao Tao knew. She’d been there since the beginning. She knew I couldn’t fight, knew the deeds were accidents, knew there was no master under the legend. She knew exactly what I was — a tired clerk things kept happening to — and she had given three sleepless days and her whole fierce heart to defend me anyway. Not the demon-slayer. Me. The fraud. The nobody. She’d built an army for the man she actually knew, not the one the world believed in.
Maybe, I thought, looking at her asleep against the banners, that’s what love actually is. Not believing someone’s better than they are. Knowing exactly what they are, all the small tired truth of it, and deciding they’re worth an army anyway.
Tao Tao stirred, half-woke, blinked at me blearily.
"Master," she mumbled. "Did it work? Is the belief—"
"It worked," I said, and my voice wasn’t quite steady. "Tao Tao. It worked better than anything. You did something the Empire with all its thousands couldn’t do. You built something real." I had to stop for a second. "Thank you. For believing in me. The actual me. Even though you know."
She smiled, sleepy and certain, already drifting again.
"’Course I know," she murmured, like it was the most obvious thing in the world. "That’s why, Master. Anybody can believe in a hero." Her eyes closed. "I like you."
And she was asleep again. I sat there in the lamplight of a commandeered noodle stall, surrounded by an army of crooked bedsheet banners, being loved by people who’d chosen it freely, and I cried a little, quietly, where no one could see.
Across the Arena, I have no doubt, in some cold elegant room, Xue Ningzhi was looking at the grassroots faith swelling up against her perfect manufactured doubt, and recalculating. She’d planned for belief. She hadn’t planned for love. It was, I think, the first variable that had ever truly surprised her.
She’d find an answer to it. Her kind always does. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
But for one warm evening, in the middle of the most dangerous place in the world, the people had built a wall around me that no empire could whisper down — and I finally understood that my real strength had never been the Scroll, or the sneeze, or the stolen pants.
It was them.
It was always going to come down to them.
I just didn’t yet know what they’d be asked to pay for it.
- 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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