Please Stop Spreading Rumors About Me — They Keep Coming True
Chapter 39: The Other Finalist
- 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
While I was crowning Bai Qing in one ring, the other semifinal was playing out across the way — and it produced the opponent I’d face in the final, and the most frightening person I’d encountered at the whole tournament. Not because of how hard he could hit.
His title was the Verse-Blade. I’d glimpsed him at the opening — the young man in white, barely older than Tao Tao, already Storied, the Empire of a Thousand Verses’ own gleaming prodigy. I’d thought, then, that he looked like someone for whom the whole tournament was a chore he’d already finished. I hadn’t understood why.
I understood after I watched his semifinal.
His opponent was the Iron Sovereign — eight feet of Legendary-tier conqueror, a man who’d broken three provinces, who made cobblestones crack when he walked. By every honest measure of skill, the Iron Sovereign should have crushed a boy a third his age. It wasn’t close to a fair fight.
And the Verse-Blade destroyed him.
Not with skill, though he had plenty. He destroyed him the way Cao Jun had tried to destroy me — with belief, manufactured belief, the full crushing weight of the Empire of a Thousand Verses poured into one person. But where Cao Jun had been a champion built in a week, the Verse-Blade had been built over a lifetime. Every bard in the Empire had spent years singing his legend. The whole continent had been told, since before the boy could walk, that the Verse-Blade was the future, the perfect weapon, unbeatable — and so, in a world where belief is power, he simply was. The Iron Sovereign’s Legendary strength meant nothing against a boy the entire Empire had spent fifteen years making the world believe in. He didn’t out-fight the Sovereign. He out-existed him. The Legendary conqueror’s blows landed and did nothing, and the Verse-Blade cut him down almost gently, almost bored, and advanced to the final without a drop of sweat.
He was, I realized with a cold lurch, exactly what I was.
A man made of belief. A vessel. Strong not because of anything he could do, but because of what people believed about him.
Except backwards. My belief was grassroots and accidental and freely given — ten million people who’d chosen to love a nobody. His was manufactured, deliberate, top-down, built. I was loved. He was constructed.
I went to find him after, because I had to see the man I’d be facing. And because something about that bored, finished look had snagged in me.
He was alone. That was the first thing. The people’s champion couldn’t walk ten feet without a crowd; the Empire’s champion stood in an empty courtyard, gleaming and untouched, and no one came near him. Not out of fear, exactly. Out of distance. As if he existed behind glass.
"Come to study your opponent, demon-slayer?" he said, without turning. His voice was beautiful and precise and completely flat, like a perfect instrument no one had ever played with feeling. "There’s nothing to study. You’ll lose. The Empire has decided. It decided years ago." He turned, finally, and his face was young and handsome and empty, and that emptiness was the most frightening thing I’d seen at the whole tournament. "I’m sorry. I don’t mean it as a threat. It’s simply true. I’m the most believed-in being in the world. I always have been. There’s no contest."
"What’s your name?" I asked.
It was not what he expected. Something flickered behind the glass — confusion, like a question in a language he’d half-forgotten.
"The Verse-Blade," he said.
"No." I kept my voice gentle. "Your name. The one your mother gave you. Before the Empire made you a title."
And I watched something terrible happen in that beautiful empty face. I watched him reach for it — reach back, into the place where a person’s name lives, the small private true thing underneath all the legend — and I watched him not find it. Fifteen years of being a manufactured legend, sung by ten thousand bards, believed in by a continent, and somewhere in all of it the boy he’d been had been worn away, dissolved into the title, until there was nothing left underneath but the legend wearing a young man’s shape.
"I..." he said, and for a moment the flat beautiful voice cracked, and what came through the crack was so lost it broke my heart. "I don’t— it’s been a long time since anyone—" He stopped. The glass came back down, hard. "The Verse-Blade," he repeated, firmer. "That’s my name. That’s all the name I need."
But I’d seen it. The thing under the glass. The lost child, dissolved.
Standing in that empty courtyard, I understood that I was looking at my own nightmare made real and willing. Everything I feared — the costume with no one inside, the legend that eats the man until even he can’t find himself under it — the Verse-Blade was all of it, completed. The Empire had done to him on purpose, over a lifetime, what the Scroll’s gift was slowly threatening to do to me by accident: hollow out the person until only the famous shape remained.
"I’m sorry," I said quietly, and I meant it with my whole heart, and it clearly confused him more than anything else I could have said. "Whatever happens in that ring. I’m sorry they did that to you. You were a person once. There was a name. They had no right to wear it away."
The Verse-Blade stared at me — the perfect weapon faced with something it had no training for. Pity. Real pity, for him. And for just a second the lost boy surged up behind the glass, desperate, drowning, reaching—
—and then the Empire’s conditioning slammed it back down, and his face went smooth and cold and certain.
"Save your sorrow for yourself, demon-slayer," he said. "In two days the whole world watches you lose. The people’s love is a sweet story. But the Empire has never lost a champion it built, and it does not intend to start with a clerk in stolen pants." He turned away, back into his glass solitude. "Enjoy your last day being believed in."
I walked away with a cold weight in my chest, and it wasn’t fear of losing.
It was the certainty that the boy in the courtyard was what the world wanted to make of me — and what someone, somewhere, had already made of the brightest name that used to hang at the top of the sky.
- 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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