Lu Fei stumbled as a sulfurous screech ripped the night; a child’s small footprints led away from the threshing floor and stopped under the pines—who was taking the villagers?
Night smelled of ash and wet earth. Torches pressed shadows against the palisade; people moved like a single, urgent body, whispering names into the dark. Lu Fei wiped blood from his palm and tightened his hold on the spear; the metal was cold and steady under his fingers.
Fear was not new. A farmer had failed to return from the fields; later, a band of woodcutters did not come back. A young shepherdess and her flock were gone. The disappearances had smoothed themselves into a pattern and left the valley hollow with questions.
Guo Liang, a scholar passing through, had read the temple lines aloud: a nine-headed thing once fell from the sky. The priests listened, and the elders grew quieter still.
The elders came at dusk, hands clasped, voices small with age. They asked Lu Fei to look. He agreed—not for honor, but to stop the quiet spreading through the valley.
The First Battle
Lu Fei and his apprentice Ming held the forest edge with the kind of silence that feels heavy as stone. Wind folded the valley into itself. They smelled smoke before they heard its voice—a metallic, throat-raw cry that scraped the ribs of the night.
The creature broke through the pines like a shadow taking shape. Nine necks lashed, each head snapping and testing. One breath burned the grass; another exhaled a choking, sour cloud. Ming threw a stone to one side to draw a head; Lu Fei advanced, spear low, every move measured.
His strikes glanced from thick scales that rang like hammered bronze. He felt the spear tremble when it caught the air the creature made with its passing. At a moment when dawn grayed the eastern line, the bird reared and retreated into the trees, leaving scorched needles and the smell of singed cloth.
The villagers cheered in relief, but their voices carried a brittle edge. Lu Fei watched the treeline as if it might breathe again.
Lu Fei confronts the fearsome Nine-Headed Bird at the forest's edge, a battle of courage against a mythical foe.
Seeking Knowledge
The capital’s archives smelled of ink and dust. Scholars read aloud broken lines about the bird’s celestial origin: it had been bound to the Sky Spirits and then cast down for a pride that could not be contained. The High Priest said plainly: only a weapon woven with sky-essence could pierce such skin.
Sent to Mount Wutai, Lu Fei and Ming climbed where the air thinned and the world narrowed to wind and rock. Snow granular as ground glass filled their boots and stitched their faces cold. On a narrow ledge they found a snow leopard caught in a hunter’s snare, flanks heaving. Lu Fei cut the rope with his dagger; the animal folded against his ribs for a hard breath, then padded away, pausing on a rock to watch them as if to say, go on.
Lu Fei and Ming ascend Mount Wutai, guided by a majestic snow leopard under the glow of a golden sunrise
At the Oracle’s sanctuary, a low, candle-lit room smelled faintly of herbs. The Oracle spoke in a voice like wind over bamboo: a spear must be made from three parts—the feather of a phoenix, the tear of a dragon, and the heartwood of a thousand-year tree. Each would test a part of the man who would wield it: courage, compassion, and restraint.
The Valley of Eternal Flames was smaller than stories had made it, all heat folded into a hollow. Lu Fei moved with care beneath the embered arch; the phoenix watched from a ledge of living flame and took a moment’s measure before offering a single feather as a pact rather than a gift.
The Abyssal Lake lay under a hung mist that tasted of iron. Lu Fei played the Oracle’s flute; the sound was thin and human against a deep, slow presence. When the dragon rose, it shed a single tear that the mist did not swallow, and Lu Fei caught it in the crystal vial he had brought.
The Forest of Echoes kept its own time. Moss curved like slow hands around roots. The thousand-year tree emitted a pressure that made words feel small. Spirits rose—voices that pressed memory like a palm.
They accused him of taking from a guardian. Lu Fei knelt, placed his spear before the tree, and spoke plainly: he would end the threat that burned children’s clothes and emptied barns. He promised to honor what was given.
The spirits yielded a small shard, not the trunk, and something like a soft approval passed through the leaves.
Lu Fei humbly pleads before the thousand-year-old tree, surrounded by glowing spirits in the enchanted Forest of Echoes.
The Final Confrontation
When the Oracle bound the three parts into the spear, it sang with a high, thin note that raised the hair on Lu Fei’s arms. He took it back to Fenglin, where watch-fires still smoked and mothers set extra doors when the wind came right.
The bird waited where the cliff fell into the valley, nine heads moving like independent questions. Ming kept low, shouting warnings and pulling a drifting woman back from a lashing beak. The fight narrowed into timing: Lu Fei met a head with a parry, stepped, planted, and then found the opening when three necks curled together in a single, dangerous frame.
He drove the spear into that convergence. Light flared like an animal’s dying cry and then emptied into a silence that seemed too large.
When the bird fell, smoke threaded the air and the valley exhaled as if waking from a long hold.
Lu Fei delivers a decisive strike with the celestial spear, battling the Nine-Headed Bird in a fiery, chaotic confrontation.
Harmony Restored
The following weeks had the slow work of making a village again. Roofs were mended, fences reset, and fields walked for hidden embers. Priests wrapped the spear and placed it in the temple where men came to touch its casing with the careful fingers of the wary.
Ming laughed with boys who had been afraid; the snow leopard returned to high ledges that watched the valley like a silent sentinel. Lu Fei walked the paths at night, checking gates and listening for small sounds that meant everything.
He did not put his name on stones or ask for songs. He kept the spear where it would not be used lightly.
Why it matters
Lu Fei chose to step forward when the valley’s quiet went missing, and the cost was concrete: a climb across snow, favors called in the capital, and a shard taken from a tree the village once spoke to. That exchange bound protection to cost; the people gained safety but carried a small, exact loss. In a place that counts by fields and seasons, the spear on the temple shelf is a bright, steady mark: protection has a price, and memory keeps its account.
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