Please Stop Spreading Rumors About Me — They Keep Coming True
Chapter 49: The Empty Chair
- 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
The first problem with bringing back someone the whole world has forgotten is finding them. You can’t look up a person who isn’t in any record. You can’t ask after a name no one remembers. The whole horror of erasure is that it leaves nothing to grab.
Nothing, that is, except a gap.
"I can feel them," the Scroll admitted, the morning we set out, and its voice was strange and heavy. "I’ve always been able to. I just never let myself look, because looking hurts." It paused. "Talent, you have to understand something, and it’s going to be hard to hear. Su Yue’s gap, the one at the top of the sky — that’s the big one, the bright one, the one everyone can half-see. But it’s not the only one." Another pause, longer. "If you know how to look — and I do, gods help me, I do — the sky is full of them. Thousands. Tens of thousands. Little dark gaps where small names used to be. Every forgotten nobody the Empire ever decided was inconvenient. A thousand years of quiet erasing. The whole sky is a graveyard, Lin Bo, and almost no one alive even knows the graves are there."
That sat on all of us like a stone. A sky full of erased people. Thousands of small dark holes where someone used to shine, mourned by no one, because the only thing that could mourn them was the mourning itself, gone.
"Then we start with one," I said, when I could speak. "A small one. Recent enough that the traces aren’t all gone. Somewhere the residue still lingers." I looked at the Scroll. "Find me the freshest, smallest, safest gap you can. Someone the world won’t notice us putting back. And let’s go prove this can be done."
The Scroll found us one three days’ travel east — a small gap, faint and low in the sky, over a fishing village called Reed Hollow on the grey northern coast. And we went.
Reed Hollow didn’t know it was haunted. That’s the thing about erasure — you can’t grieve what you can’t remember. But a place that’s lost someone keeps the shape of the loss, the way a riverbed keeps the shape of water long after the river’s gone. And Reed Hollow’s shape was an empty chair.
We found it the first evening, at the village’s autumn feast. They set out long tables on the shore, and they laid every place — and at the head of the central table, they set one place more. A full setting. A bowl, chopsticks, a cup of rice wine. And no one sat there. No one was allowed to. When I asked the old fisherwoman beside me who the seat was for, she looked confused, then troubled, the way you look when someone asks a question you’ve never thought to ask.
"For... the one who isn’t here," she said slowly. "We always set it. My grandmother set it. Her grandmother set it." She frowned, and something old and sad moved behind her eyes. "I don’t know who it’s for. No one does. We just— we know we have to. It would be wrong not to. It would be like... forgetting someone." She shivered. "Strange. I’ve set that place sixty years and never once wondered. Why did you make me wonder?"
A whole village, grieving someone for generations, leaving them a seat at every feast, and not one soul able to say who. The residue of an erased person — not a memory, memory was gone — but a grief that outlived the memory, a love so deep the erasing couldn’t quite scrub the shape of it out.
It was the saddest and most hopeful thing I’d ever seen. Sad, because of the forgetting. Hopeful, because it meant erasure wasn’t perfect. Something always remained. A chair. A grief. A shape.
Yun Shu went to work, and this is where I learned that my dry, precise debunker was the most important person on the whole quest — because reconstructing a forgotten person from residue is exactly the inverse of her life’s work, and she was a master. She’d spent eleven years pulling false legends apart to find the truth underneath. Now she pulled a gap apart to find the truth that had been removed. She interviewed the elders, mapped the inconsistencies, found the places where the village’s own stories didn’t add up. A flood, two generations back — the worst in the village’s history. The children, trapped on the rising sandbar. And then... a hole in the story. The children survived. All of them. But no one could say how. The official tale credited a passing cultivator, a sponsored hero of the Empire of a Thousand Verses, who’d "happened by" and saved them — but the dates didn’t match, and the cultivator had never set foot within fifty miles, and the village’s gratitude for him was strangely hollow, a credit given to a name that meant nothing to their hearts.
"The Empire took the rescue," Yun Shu said quietly, laying it out by lamplight, her face grim. "I’ve seen this pattern. A real thing happened — something genuinely heroic — and it belonged to a nobody. So the Empire erased the nobody and gave the deed to a marketable hero. A better story. They didn’t just kill someone, Lin Bo. They stole their death. The most selfless thing a person ever did, and the Empire wiped the person away and handed the glory to a stranger who wasn’t there."
"Who were they?" I asked softly. "The one who really saved the children. The empty chair."
Yun Shu looked down at her notes, and at the gap, and something in her face was very gentle.
"A girl," she said. "Barely more than a child herself. A fisherman’s daughter — poor, plain, nobody, exactly the kind no one writes songs about. When the flood came and the children were trapped on the sandbar, she went out alone, into water that should have killed her, and she carried them back one by one — all of them — and on the last trip the water took her instead." Yun Shu’s voice was very steady, which is how I knew. "She drowned saving every child in this village. And the Empire decided a poor drowned girl was a worse story than a passing hero. So they erased her. And her own village has mourned her for two generations without knowing her face, or her name, setting her a place at every feast because their hearts remember what their minds were forced to forget."
The fire crackled. The grey sea hushed against the shore. My whole family sat silent in the lamplight, and Mu Chen — who knew better than any of us what it was to have your truth stolen — had tears running down his face.
"What was her name?" I asked. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Yun Shu had found it, of course. In the residue. In the shape. The one thing the Empire couldn’t quite scrub from a grief that deep.
"Xiao Yu," she said softly. "Her name was Xiao Yu."
And far above us, low in the grey sky, a small dark gap seemed to flicker — the way a thing does when, after two generations, someone finally says its name.
- 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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