Ch.2 The Blind Prince
Author: SkylarX
last update2025-11-24 17:17:11

"Yun Kai."

Yun Jie's voice came out like a curse and a prayer at once.

The blindfolded figure hopped down from a low branch with the grace of a cat, landing without a sound. His bare feet didn't so much as stir the leaves on the forest floor.

He walked slowly, and oddly enough, despite his condition, there was no cane or guiding tool to aid him. Yet every step was confident and deliberate.

Not even the Wild Ash Rat, now long gone, had sensed him.

Yun Yue's teary eyes flared with sudden fury. "You! You're the reason we're even here!"

She leapt up and stormed toward him, fists balled, tears still streaking down her dust-smeared cheeks. "We nearly died, Kai-ge! Jie-ge almost got eaten! That thing was a ranked demonic beast!"

Yun Kai tilted his head slightly. "Oh?" His voice was calm, infuriatingly serene. "Mortal rank? Tsk. That must've been rough."

Yun Jie groaned from where he sat slumped against a tree. He was clutching his bleeding chest, pale as moonlight, looking like death warmed over. "I swear… if I don't bleed to death tonight, I'm throwing you into the moat when we get back."

Yun Kai stopped a few feet away, arms folded into his loose sleeves. The black blindfold hid his eyes, but somehow, you could feel his gaze settle on you. It was piercing, heavy, and strangely unnerving.

Then he sighed. "I warned you two to stay behind. I said I was just scouting. You followed me."

"We followed you?" Yun Yue shrieked, voice cracking with disbelief. "You invited us!"

"No," Yun Kai corrected, tone flat and matter-of-fact. "I mentioned my plans. You two followed me like ducklings chasing breadcrumbs. Not my fault."

Yun Jie coughed, wincing as pain shot through his chest. "I'm dying. Can we save the family drama until after I'm not actively losing blood?"

Yun Kai stepped forward without hesitation and knelt beside his brother. His movements were smooth and practiced, like he'd done this a hundred times before.

"Hold still."

"Wait, what are you—"

A faint warmth pulsed from Yun Kai's palm, spreading across Yun Jie's chest. The words caught in Yun Jie's throat. His muscles tensed, then slowly loosened. The pain dulled, as though water had been poured on a fire inside him.

Healing energy.

Yun Yue blinked, eyes wide with shock. "You… you've advanced in your practice?"

Yun Kai didn't respond right away. His jaw was set, his brow slightly furrowed. It was a rare emotion for someone usually so carefree and blasé.

The warmth faded after a few moments. Yun Jie gasped as the pain returned in a dull throb, but it was manageable now. The bleeding had stopped, at least.

"There," Yun Kai said, rising to his feet and dusting off his robes. "That'll hold you together. For a while."

Yun Jie pushed himself up with a groan, testing his chest with careful fingers. "Since when do you know healing techniques?"

Yun Kai shrugged, turning away. "Since I realized I'd probably have to babysit my elder siblings through a demon-infested forest."

Yun Yue's fists were still clenched, but now she looked more confused than angry. Her voice came out small, hesitant even. "But you're… you're blind."

Yun Kai smiled faintly, just a ghost of amusement on his lips. He gave her a few pats on her head. "Blind doesn't mean helpless, Yue'er."

That stopped her guilty thoughts as she smiled foolishly.

He turned and walked past them both, heading toward where the Wild Ash Rat had vanished into the trees. He crouched beside the tree it had crashed into, running his fingers along the bark, feeling the deep cracks and splintered wood.

"Hunting patterns," he murmured, more to himself than to them. "Too close to the outer rim. If this thing was wandering this far out, the forest's balance is off."

"Wait," Yun Jie said, trying to follow but stumbling on his first step. "Are you saying this isn't normal?"

"No," Yun Kai replied, standing again and brushing bark fragments from his fingertips. "It's not. That wasn't just a hungry rat. It was running. Something bigger must've scared it this way."

The wind stirred the trees, making the branches creak overhead. The forest that was once loud with birds and insects now felt eerily still. Too still.

A shiver ran through Yun Yue's spine as she trembled. "Something… bigger?"

Yun Kai showed a strange smile that spiked their anxiety and nodded slowly. "And ferociously stronger."

Yun Jie's face turned pale again, all color draining from his cheeks. "You mean ranked higher than Mortal?"

"Possibly." Yun Kai turned toward them, expression unreadable beneath the blindfold. "That's why I came. I can sense something's wrong in the Black Stone Forest. Something huge is… stirring."

"But why not tell the palace?" Yun Yue asked, voice barely above a whisper. "Why come alone?"

Yun Kai didn't answer immediately. His face tilted slightly to the side, as if listening to something the others couldn't hear. The wind carried distant sounds, rustling leaves, the creak of dying wood.

"It's only a mindless ramble from a blind, talentless child." He paused, letting the words hang in the air. "That would be their response."

Then, softer, he added, "Also, because I don't trust the palace anymore. There are too many schemes and plots going on. It's turned sickening."

Silence fell over the clearing.

Yun Jie and Yun Yue exchanged puzzled looks, not quite understanding what he meant. The palace had always been their home, their sanctuary. What schemes? What plots?

"Kai-ge…" Yun Yue said quietly, taking a hesitant step forward. "What did you find?"

Yun Kai lifted a hand and pointed toward the deeper parts of the forest. Toward the area where the Black Stone Forest's forbidden center merged with the massive Kunlun Mountains, where the trees grew too thick for light to pass and legends spoke of ancient, buried things from past eras of ancient battles.

His voice dropped, calm and quiet as ever, but heavy with meaning. "Something's coming. And we're already too late to stop it."

The words hung in the air like frost, cold and suffocating.

Yun Jie stiffened, hand instinctively moving to where his sword should've been. Yun Yue's breath caught in her throat, eyes wide.

Then, without warning, Yun Kai burst out laughing.

"MUAHAHAHAHA!"

This was not a dry chuckle, but a full, bright, belly-deep laugh that echoed across the clearing like a thunderclap.

The tension shattered like glass underfoot.

"What the hell?" Yun Jie muttered, completely stunned.

Yun Kai clutched his sides, trying to catch his breath between fits of laughter. "Ahaha, your faces! Gods, you looked like you'd just seen the King's ghost!"

Yun Yue's eyes widened, confusion mixing with dawning realization. "You… you're joking?"

"Of course I'm joking," Yun Kai said, finally calming down and wiping a tear from the corner of his blindfold. "Something stirring? Please. You think I've got divine insight now? I'm blind, not omniscient."

He waved a hand dismissively, though the smirk lingered on his lips. "I don't have such an ability. Don't take everything I say so seriously."

Yun Jie looked halfway between relieved and absolutely furious. "You, you bastard!"

Yun Yue stamped her foot hard enough to make leaves jump. "That wasn't funny!"

"I thought it was," Yun Kai said lightly, still grinning. "Ten out of ten in dramatic timing, if I do say so myself."

But even as he grinned, there was a flicker of something else behind the blindfold. Something subtle but sharp. A thread of tension that hadn't fully faded. He might've said it was a joke, but his body hadn't relaxed one bit.

And the siblings, though annoyed, didn't notice that he was 'lying'. Just not about everything.

Yun Kai straightened, brushing dirt from his robe with exaggerated casualness. "Alright, fun's over. You two should head back."

Yun Jie blinked. "What? Why?"

"You're injured," Yun Kai said simply, stepping past them again. "And you," he pointed at Yun Yue without looking, "nearly got turned into minced rabbit. You've proven your courage, I'll give you that. But this forest isn't the place to win pride points."

Yun Yue frowned, crossing her arms. "But you—"

"I'll stay," Yun Kai interrupted, voice firm. "I came to confirm a hunch, and I have what I need."

Yun Jie narrowed his eyes, studying his brother's face. "You just said it was a joke."

"It was," Yun Kai said smoothly, too smoothly. "But jokes can carry a grain of truth, can't they?"

He stopped beside a stone half-buried in moss and crouched again, pressing a hand to the ground as if feeling for something. The wind ruffled his dark hair, and for a moment, he was completely still. Then he stood.

"I need to look deeper. But alone. You two would only slow me down."

That earned him a solid glare from both siblings, but Yun Kai ignored it completely.

"You can argue with me later. Right now, go back. Yun Jie, your wound's clotted, but it won't hold forever. You need a real physician to check it out."

He turned toward the trail leading back to the palace, gesturing with his chin. "There's a talisman hidden under a tree root about fifty steps east of here. Break it, and it'll signal the outer guards. They'll escort you the rest of the way."

Yun Yue hesitated, biting her lip. "But Kai-ge…"

He turned toward her finally. A smile played on his lips, but it didn't reach his voice. "I'll be fine, Yue'er. This forest and I… we're like tight friends. I won't get hurt."

Yun Jie stared at him, searching for something in that blindfolded face. "You're not telling us something."

"Probably," Yun Kai said with maddening calm. "But you're not emotionally strong enough to know it yet."

The silence that followed wasn't tense this time. Just hollow. Like something had shifted between them, some invisible line crossed.

"Go," Yun Kai said again, softly but firmly. "Trust me."

And somehow, despite everything, they did.

Yun Jie groaned and stood, swaying slightly on his feet. Yun Yue caught him under the arm, steadying him. Together, the two of them limped toward the path, casting worried glances back at their blind brother.

Yun Kai waited, standing perfectly still, until their presence faded behind the trees. Until even their footsteps could no longer be heard. The wind returned, brushing softly through the leaves.

His face hardened.

The smile vanished like it had never existed in the first place. He knelt once more, fingers brushing along the cracked bark of the tree, feeling the texture, the depth of the damage that the beast had caused. The scent of its demon blood still lingered in the air, thick and metallic.

A chill ran up his spine. Not from fear, but from recognition of something in his memories.

"It's really happening," he whispered to no one in particular, voice barely audible. "Just like in the dreams…"

He pulled something from his sleeve. A talisman that looked simple and unmarked, except for a single drop of dried blood at its center. He clenched it in his fist, feeling the paper crinkle under his grip.

"I hope I'm wrong."

But deep down, in the quiet place where instinct lived, he knew he wasn't.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Ch.70 The Wine Rush

    "I'm born to be useful! Wealth scattered will return again! Such brilliant words!""'Don't stop drinking' — what magnificent spirit! The drinker's name lives on through the ages. I wonder who wrote this masterpiece?"Two scholars stood on a street corner in Cloudville City, reciting verses that had become ubiquitous over the past few days. Passersby nodded along, many able to complete the lines from memory."Do you know the poem's name?" one scholar asked his companion."I heard children calling it 'Thousand Army Drunk,'" the other replied.A merchant passing by overheard and interjected. "That's right — 'Thousand Army Drunk' is also the name of a wine. Ten gold per jar, can you believe it? The story goes that a rustic scholar drank this wine and was so inspired that he composed this immortal poem on the spot.""Is that so?" The first scholar's eyes lit with interest. "I must try this Thousand Army Drunk myself. To drink what inspired such verses, then recite them again while tasting

  • Ch.69 Brilliant Poem

    Meanwhile, in Cloudville City, Master Qiao sat in his private study examining a sheet of dark yellow paper. His eyes scanned the elegant calligraphy repeatedly, each reading bringing fresh appreciation.The poem was extraordinary. Genuinely extraordinary. Master Qiao had studied classical literature his entire life. He recognized brilliance when he encountered it.And this poem — "Bring in the Wine" — was brilliant.The imagery was vivid. The emotions were powerful. The technical execution was masterful. Whoever had composed this possessed literary talent of the highest caliber.The fact that it came from Village Chief Yun was shocking. The young man seemed preoccupied with commerce and administration — practical concerns that suggested a mind focused on material success rather than artistic achievement.Yet here was proof of extraordinary cultural refinement. The contrast was fascinating."Don't you see the Yellow River's water come from heaven, rushing to the sea, never to return? D

  • Ch.68 Strategic Marketing

    Since Yun Kai had rented a large boat months ago, river crossings no longer required negotiating with ferry operators. The vessel sat moored at the Wanhe River dock, ready for use whenever needed.The boat had proven its worth repeatedly. In the three months since Yun Kai's departure, it had transported grain, building materials, and now would carry the first major wine shipment to the Qiao family's distribution network.Several new warehouses had been constructed in Spiritrock Village during his absence. The original storage facilities couldn't handle the expanding grain reserves. That was a good problem to have — surplus meant security.The strategy echoed an old saying from Yun Kai's knowledge: "Accumulate grain widely, build walls high, and slowly claim kingship." Store resources, strengthen defenses, and expand power gradually rather than rashly. It was advice that had served many successful rulers throughout history.Yun Kai intended to follow it precisely.Next year, famine wou

  • Ch.67 An Unexpected Complication

    After leaving the village, Yun Kai headed directly toward Cloudville City. Léi Shén accompanied him — a necessary precaution given the complicated relationship between Yun Kai and the county magistrate.The magistrate wouldn't give up easily. Especially after witnessing Spiritrock Village's current prosperity, his greed would only intensify. He coveted what Yun Kai had built — that much was obvious from his transparent attempts to extract taxes ahead of schedule.But the magistrate didn't know the village's true military strength. If he did, his covetousness would transform into fear. Spiritrock Village hadn't quite reached parity with the county's forces, but the gap was closing at alarming speed. Even an incompetent administrator would sense the crisis in that trajectory.The primary purpose of this trip was meeting with Master Qiao to finalize wine business details. Basic pricing had been established during their last discussion, but implementation specifics remained unresolved. Di

  • Ch.66 Prosperity

    Yun Kai absorbed the information. Fifty Elite-Tier soldiers. Most player villages probably couldn't field a single Elite-Tier fighter. Spiritrock Village had fifty."Reaching Core-Tier?" Yun Kai asked. "Is that possible?""Difficult," Léi Shén admitted. "I'm classified as a cavalry general. I can train cavalry up to the eighth rank, but we lack proper warhorses. The three we captured are excellent mounts, but fifty Elite-Tier soldiers need fifty elite horses. Without them, advancement to Core-Tier cavalry is blocked.""Infantry Core-Tier?""Possible, but slower. Infantry advancement requires a different specialization than I possess. I can get them to Elite-Tier peak, but proper Core-Tier infantry training needs a specialized infantry general." Léi Shén paused. "Though honestly, fifty Elite-Tier soldiers is already exceptional. Most settlements would consider that an unbeatable force."He was right. In comparison to other player villages, most of which were struggling to maintain a hu

  • Ch.65 Three Months of Progress

    Yun Kai hadn't been seen in Spiritrock Village for nearly three months. During that absence, much had occurred — some expected, some not. But Jiang Lao had managed everything with steady competence."I'm back," Yun Kai confirmed, returning the bow. "Tell me everything. How has the village fared?"Over the next hour, Jiang Lao provided a comprehensive report. Yun Kai listened carefully, occasionally asking clarifying questions, mentally cataloging every detail.The young administrator's capability impressed him deeply. Jiang Lao was handling responsibilities that could easily occupy a county-level official. Managing a village of this size — even an exceptionally large one, was honestly beneath his talents. But that overqualification meant everything ran smoothly."No major incidents?" Yun Kai asked. "No conflicts, disasters, or threats?""Nothing serious, my lord. A few civil disputes like property boundaries, water rights, that sort of thing. I adjudicated each according to the legal

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App