âFeng Shoucheng is extremely formidableâa true schemer,â Mom, Xu Ying, said after a pause. As expected, she didnât react emotionally but instead took her time to think it through. âWhen your sister first started her business, I thought it was just a gameâcollege dorm friends pooling money together seemed totally normal. I never imagined theyâd actually make something of it. At the time, I was busy applying for my professorship and didnât pay close attention. In the end, your sisterâs startup was acquired by the Feng family, and she signed a harsh performance-based agreement. Honestly, I saw it clearlyâyour sisterâs product had strong market potential. The Feng family saw it, laid a trap, and she fell for it. But by the time I realized, it was too late.â
âIs there anything we can do now?â Su Jie felt conflicted. He might be skilled in martial arts with an exceptional mindset, but in the grand scheme of society, he was still insignificantâhe couldnât really help his sister out of her predicament.
Not to mention, he couldnât even afford to buy the family a decent house yet.
Li Xiaozhenâs apartment was really nice, but Su Jie had looked it up onlineâworth nearly fifty million now, and thatâs not counting taxes and agent fees. It was an empty unit.
âTo be honest, I didnât want to come back to my parentsâ home,â Xu Ying said. âPart of it was wanting to see your grandfather one last time. The other part was to see if thereâs any way to get your sister out of her bind. With her technical skills, itâs nothing for her to earn a few million a year at a reputable company. Living steadily is better than anything.â
âIf she jumps ship now, breaks free of the Feng family, how much would she have to pay?â Su Jie asked. âIâve asked my sister so many times, but she never gave me an answer.â
âProbably three to five hundred million,â Xu Ying said matter-of-factly, as if she had known all along. âThereâs no way we can come up with that money. Thatâs why Iâm going back to your grandfatherâs house. I donât care about any other inheritanceâI want that money, to help your sister out of this mess.â
âToo bad Iâm not capable enough to make that much,â Su Jie muttered. Heâd once seen a rich guy online say, âSet a small goal firstâmake your first hundred million.â
Su Jie set the same âsmallâ goal for himself, but so far he was only 1% of the way there.
At that, he fell silent.
Before long, the two boarded a plane and arrived in G City three hours later.
G City was true southern territoryâtropical. S City, though also considered southern on paper, was more in the Jiangnan region, where the seasons were still distinct.
G City, part of Lingnan, was practically summer year-round.
It had snowed heavily in S City today, but G City was still a balmy twenty degrees.
Many people started stripping off their heavy down jackets as soon as they got off the plane.
It was Su Jieâs first time in the deep south, and everything felt novel. Palm and coconut trees lined the roads, ever green, the air was humid, and you could smell the salty tang of the sea.
He enjoyed the scenery along the way with great interest.
After all, the furthest heâd ever been before was D City, deep in the Central Plains, with a totally different culture and atmosphere.
Now, in a completely unfamiliar place, experiencing unfamiliar customs and lifestyle, he felt himself come alive againârefreshed and reawakened.
‘Looks like this summer break, I need to travel the world. Now that Iâve gotten into college, lifeâs a lot more relaxed. Read ten thousand books, travel ten thousand miles,’ Su Jie thought. He had indeed hit the books hard these past few monthsâone could say he had read his ten thousand books.
But the travel? That part heâd yet to fulfill.
He thought of Coach Odell, who traveled the world seeking strange phenomena, forgotten myths, tirelessly pursuing supernatural powers.
Maybe that was why Odell had grown so strong.
Su Jie immersed himself in the cityâs atmosphere. He felt that every city had its own unique characterâcountless people combined with local culture to create something wholly its own. Geography and human spirit came together to form style, to shape a soul.
Before, he never truly felt this. Now, he saw it clearlyâevery city in the world seemed alive. This wasnât some artsy sentimentalityâit was a deep, quiet intuition, a sense that ordinary people might never perceive.
Feng Shui.
The phrase surfaced in his mind.
But before he could dwell on it, Mom hailed a car.
At first, Su Jie thought theyâd head to the city centerâbut the car went out toward the countryside, and got more remote as they went.
âMom, are we going the wrong way?â Su Jie asked.
âNo. Your grandfather is back at the old family home. The Xu familyâs companies are all in the city, but now that heâs aged, he wants to return to his roots,â Xu Ying said heavily.
âI see.â Su Jie still didnât quite get this whole âreturn to one’s rootsâ idea. He was young, full of ambition, eager to explore the worldâhow could he relate to a mindset of going back and settling down?
They drove for five hours before reaching a prosperous village.
When Xu Ying saw the village, nostalgia lit up her face. She had clearly grown up here.
âSo much has changed,â she said with a sigh. âWhen I was little, this place was poor. The houses were all run-down. Now, every household has big mansions and cars. The roads are wideâI almost didnât recognize it.â
âYouâre from this village?â the driver asked. âThis place is something else. Produced some serious tycoons. Look thereâthatâs the Xu familyâs ancestral home. Renovated, of course. Theyâve got so much money, not even trucks can haul it all. I hear they own towers overseas, land everywhere. The ancestral house is paved with gold bricks, hundreds of servants. All because their ancestors are buried in some Feng Shui treasure spot. Some people are just born lucky.â
âNot necessarily,â Su Jie replied. âThe Xu family likely caught a good era for development and knew how to run their businesses. Feng Shui mightâve helped, but thatâs just icing on the cake. If national conditions were bad, no amount of personal Feng Shui would make a difference.â
âYoung people shouldnât talk nonsenseâwatch your mouth or the spirits will come for you,â the driver scolded. âWe drivers canât afford to say the wrong thing.â
Su Jie just smiled and said nothing. Heâd heard people around here were deeply superstitiousâFeng Shui, fortune-telling, all that. Even the richest families would consult some âmasterâ before making big decisions.
It was part of the culture, customs passed down over centuries.
After spending a month with Master Ma, Su Jie understood that while Feng Shui, astrology, and face-reading had their logic, in the end, what shaped oneâs destiny was still the heart. Everything elseâexternal objects and ritualsâwere just ways to comfort oneself.
âHere we are,â Xu Ying told the driver.
They got off at the village entrance. Su Jie looked out toward the foothills and saw a massive estate, a cluster of buildings linked into one huge manor. At the center was a house in the classic âFour-Point Goldâ layout.
This style, known as âFour-Point Gold,â was a traditional architectural layout used by wealthy Chaoshan families. Similar to a courtyard-style compound.
Such mansions were considered highly auspicious in Feng Shuiâsaid to gather wealth, nurture health, and bless descendants.
Of course, there was some architectural merit to that. Good houses, properly designed, could improve oneâs mood and mental clarity. Over time, that mental clarity led to wisdom. If built in a good locationâbeautiful mountains and clear watersâit was only natural for such places to produce talented people.
âWeâre here,â Xu Ying said. Seeing Su Jie looking around and occasionally zoning out, she thought he was just curious about the new environment. âLetâs see your grandfather first.â
Standing at the edge of the village, staring at the estate, Xu Ying didnât go in. Instead, she made a phone call.
A short while later, an elderly woman hurried over from the manor. Xu Ying rushed to greet her.
âMiss, youâve finally come back.â The old woman wiped away tears.
âAunt Wu, what era are we in now? Donât call me âMissââjust call me Ying,â Xu Yingâs eyes were misty too. âSu Jie, come say hi to Grandma Wu.â
âHello, Grandma Wu,â Su Jie said politely.
âThis is your son? Heâs grown so tall!â Wu Ma beamed. âSo tall! But skinnyâlooks like he needs more meat. Poor child.â
âAunt Wu, donât let his looks fool youâheâs actually very strong,â Xu Ying said. She didnât know the full extent of Su Jieâs martial prowess, but sheâd seen him single-handedly move a huge cabinet that normally took three people. âBy the way, howâs my dad? Why did he come back to the ancestral house instead of staying abroad for treatment?â
âHe went abroad, but the foreign doctors couldnât do anythingâcouldnât find anything major. After coming back, he saw all kinds of specialists here, but none of them could diagnose him either. Eventually, an old Chinese medicine doctor said his vital force is fading, and his time has come.â Wu Ma chattered on. âSo the old master insisted on returning home. Now all the young masters are in the house, yelling and arguing. You two havenât eaten, have you? Iâll take you to the side house and make something.â
Just as she was about to turn, Wu Ma added, âMiss, I heard them talking about you the other dayâgritting their teeth, not saying nice things. When you go in, try to keep your distance. Also, the old master invited some powerful Feng Shui master to help with his funeral arrangements. Women canât be present. Wait until the master leaves, then go see him.â
âI understand,â Xu Ying said. She knew all too wellâif the will had any inheritance for her, the rest of the family would be seething with jealousy.
Wu Ma led them in through a side entrance of the estate. High walls surrounded the place. Corridors, courtyards, open skylightsâeverything exuded an old-world charm.
It made Su Jie feel like heâd stepped into the past. Especially hearing the way people still called each other âyoung masterâ and âmiss,â he felt like this place was a century behind the rest of the world. And that whole âno women allowedâ nonsense? Completely mind-boggling.
Wu Ma went to the kitchen.
Xu Ying sat in the small room, lost in thought.
Su Jie, too restless to sit still, got up and wandered.
Suddenly, clanging sounds came from a nearby courtyard.
He passed through a few corridors and archways, and saw a few young men practicing martial arts. They wore heavy iron rings on their arms, pushing forward in circular motions. They were training in a Southern style known as Iron Wire Fist.