Chapter 456: The Ancestor Who Opened Heaven and Earth! (Requesting Monthly Tickets!)
Thunder roared.
The Wolf Lord spat out a mouthful of blood.
His once-straight frame now swayed precariously.
Too strong.
Even a single bolt of this thunder was more than he could withstand.
The first tribulation had nine bolts, the second eighteen, culminating in eighty-one bolts total.
The Wolf Lord knew he could not survive the second bolt.
Holding out against the first was pure luck.
As state police arrived, the area around Xiong Mountain Road was sealed off; the appearance of deformed creatures shocked the officers, and FBI agents and Agent Coulson rushed to the scene.
In South Korea, many people spat out their drinks upon seeing this scene. Needless to say, the music video was oddly entertaining—at least hilarious—and the director clearly put thought into it.
She was indeed clever; he had merely mentioned a few things in passing, yet she guessed exactly what he was thinking.
The cervix had dilated to three fingers; though only a short time had passed, the dilation progressed smoothly—so long as the fetal position was correct and the baby’s weight was not excessive, delivery would be unproblematic.
If it were her, and she accidentally killed a comrade, she would not flee or try to cover up the truth—she would face it squarely and make amends.
“If the Feng Mansion counts as a humble abode, then every house in the world must be called a thatched hut. Madam is being too modest,” Gu Qiuqiao replied without expression.
After waiting several seconds, no one answered or moved; they all stood there, gazing at her with deep meaning.
Luo Xia strode out of Jessica’s residence. Could Kent Moody be the one who kidnapped Jessica? If he was behind it, then what was this so-called game?
Jiang Ziming sighed in frustration: “I can’t possibly reveal what happened between me and her.” If everyone knew the full story, they’d understand why You Yanru framed Uncle Xia—instead of blindly believing her side alone.
Jiang Miaomiao slunk away, but less than half a day later, he came back again, grinning like an idiot.
Though he cultivated the Demon-Buddha Golden Body and could draw power from darkness, the rate at which this single technique absorbed energy could not sustain the simultaneous operation of the Five Buddhist Supernatural Powers.
The Ancestral Dragon’s tiger-like eyes glistened with a hint of moisture, but it vanished instantly—yet all present were highly accomplished cultivators; how could they not see? The Ancestral Dragon had truly been moved.
As Lin Zhiquiu stepped out of the Criminal Investigation Unit, her phone rang. She glanced at the screen—it was the shared number of Ye Xinghui and Jiang Yu. Her heart jolted, and she answered immediately.
Alas, the Land of Thunder was distant and hard to reach; from Xin Great Ming to Xin Great Ming Prefecture, he knew no one, so he could only vent his anger through letters—deeply frustrating—so the Daimyo of the Land of Wind turned his ire toward the Sand Village.
The crowd repaired the temple, while Li Xuanxin walked step by step into the deep mountains.
Cheng Jiming, hearing the emperor’s words directly mock him as a stale Confucian and order him to train soldiers, felt it a grave insult; his face flushed red, and he was about to retort.
Now that he heard Yuan Chonghuan had been condemned and executed by the Celestial Court, his spirits plunged to the lowest point.
When Chen Lan later told Dou Tianying this, Dou Dou felt he wasn’t congratulating his junior—rather, he seemed to be expressing some deep reflection.
“Officer, everything I’ve said is true,” the frail man spoke slowly, even somewhat listlessly.
As long as the court remains stable, taxation and conscription are still bound by regulations and overseen by censors at every level—even village scholars can monitor them.
Back and forth, this turmoil disturbed Jing Wuchen’s Buddhist heart even more, making his eventual tribulation unavoidable.
With no choice, Tang Yue had to be taken away; after thinking it over, she still left ten thousand taels in the hands of the Tang Army, for emergencies.
End of Chapter
