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Alternative
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When Pei Jing first transmigrated into the book, he knew exactly what he had to do. According to the tropes, he should take the tragic protagonist as his disciple, reform him with love and tenderness, cling to his powerful future, and prevent him from “blackening” (turning evil).
But the plot took a sudden turn, and the protagonist turned dark anyway. The blackened protagonist personally ripped out Pei Jing’s tendons, destroyed his cultivation, wiped out his sect, and threw him into an endless hell.
To this total mess of a plot, Pei Jing simply said: Heh, interesting. 🙂
And so, in the depths of hell, he blackened, too.
Emerging from the Cave of Ten Thousand Ghosts, the once white-clad Immortal Lord had become a blood-soaked Asura. He severed the protagonist’s limbs and sealed him in the deep sea. He thought that was the end, but it was actually a new beginning.
He was reborn. But the body he woke up in was not his own.
After being reborn, Pei Jing’s first priority was to find the protagonist and take him as a disciple. After searching high and low, he finally found him at a street corner. Overjoyed, Pei Jing leaned down and reached out: “Young friend, would you like to join my sect?”
The protagonist lifted a dirty face, looking completely dazed. But at that moment, another hand reached out to Pei Jing. That man was dressed in black, his features hauntingly beautiful. Smiling, dangerous yet gorgeous, he asked: “Immortal, how about you take a look at me instead?”
Pei Jing: “???”
Just like that, he suddenly had two disciples. He thought it was a good deal—wait, isn’t this development a bit wrong?