The citizens of Qingshui erupted.

A stout housewife, her apron still dusted with flour from the morning's baking, snatched up her best embroidered tablecloth and hurled it high like a battle flag. She stormed straight toward the nearest Qingcheng disciple, moving with the raw fury of an angry lioness.

“We spent all morning polishing that silver!” she screamed, her voice cracking with pure, unfiltered rage. "Do you have any idea how long it took to make it look tempting enough?"

Fat merchants dropped to their knees in the dusty street, clutching desperately at the disciples' robes. "Please," one begged, voice trembling, "just go away. Don't ruin my business."

“Old man," one disciple replied, struggling to keep his tone steady, "we're here to protect your business from being robbed."

A silk trader wailed in despair. "Heroes, please! We finally had robbers-real ones! Go away! Let them rob us!"

"Last time we got robbed, my wife got a new dress. What do heroes even bring? Moral lectures?"

An old man pushed forward, eyes narrowed. "Heroes... are you going to rob us then?"

The disciple recoiled, shocked. "What?"

"If you're not going to rob us," the old man said, voice flat and desperate, “then please, just leave."

"We're trying to save you," another disciple insisted, frustration sharpening his words. "How can you not understand?"

"We have no need of your help!" the crowd shouted back. "We need to be robbed! How can you not understand something so simple?”

The old widow who sold nothing but pickled vegetables stepped out of the throng, eyes blazing beneath her wrinkled brow. She heaved a heavy jar of brine high and smashed it at the feet of the nearest junior sister. Vinegar and shattered clay sprayed across the young woman's robes, the sharp, sour smell exploding into the air.

"If you don't get out of this place right now," the widow roared, her voice surprisingly strong and fierce for her age, "I will fight every last one of you to the death!"

Then a very old woman-well into her eighties-hobbled forward on a walking stick. In one smooth motion she drew a slender sword from inside the cane. The blade was old, yet its edge still gleamed with deadly promise.

"When I was young," she announced, gaze sharp and proud, "they called me the most beautiful Xiao Mei in three provinces. Back then I could have handled ten of you with one hand. If you want to help us, get out of here. But if you want to rob us... we'll welcome you with open arms."

The entire street took up the chant, voices rising into a thunderous roar. "Go away! Go away! We want to be robbed!"

The bandits stood frozen in the middle of the chaos, weapons still half-raised, mouths hanging open in disbelief. One younger outlaw whispered, voice thick with awe and confusion, "Is this... really heaven for bandits?"

“If heaven serves free banquets and angry grannies welcome us with open arms... I'm converting."

The Qingcheng disciples stared in stunned silence for a heartbeat longer.

"Please," one of them finally managed, voice cracking with shock. "We only want to help you."

"Get out of here!" the citizens roared back. Their fury turned into weapons in an instant.

Housewives snatched up heavy rolling pins. Butchers grabbed cleavers in one hand and entire sides of roasted pork in the other, swinging the meat like gruesome clubs. Merchants scooped up stones from the street and began hurling them with vicious accuracy.

The disciples stood frozen, faces pale with disbelief. In all their years of training and righteous deeds, they had never been treated worse than the very bandits they had come to defeat.

"They're the bandits you should be chasing away-not kind people like us!" a woman disciple screamed.

"Get out!" the crowd thundered. "You're ruining everything!"

The Qingcheng disciples stumbled backward, eyes wide. The senior brother swung his sword in a desperate arc, parrying a flying roasted chicken leg that came hurtling toward his face. A stone whistled past his ear, missing by inches.

"We're trying to protect you!" he shouted, voice breaking with frustration. “These men are thieves! Can't you understand that?"

A merchant lobbed another stone, face twisted in anger. "Then go protect someone else! Go bother the Wudang sect-they've got real cultivators who can actually handle you all!"

Chaos spilled through the streets like a festival gone mad. The disciples ran, white robes flapping wildly behind them as they tried to explain, to reason, to invoke justice and righteousness. Every plea earned them fresh volleys of rotten vegetables, stinging insults, and flying furniture.

The junior sisters shrieked as rotten tomatoes cracked dangerously close to their ankles. The senior brother glanced back once, face streaked with sweat and burning humiliation. The entire city had turned against them, herding the disciples toward the eastern gates like unwanted stray dogs.

Just because they want to help them

They blocked every side street and alley, refusing to let them escape anywhere but out to Wudang Moutnains.

"If you want to play hero so badly," an old man bellowed, waving a butcher knife, “go train on Wudang Mountain! Don't come back until you learn not to ruin honest people's livelihoods!"

The disciples had no choice. They fled up the winding mountain road.

Behind them, the citizens waved and cheered with savage delight.

"Safe travels!" someone yelled.

"Don't hurry back!"

"Never come back, please!"

The moment the disciples vanished

over the ridge, the people of Qingshui turned back toward the bandits with warm, welcoming. smiles as if the violent chase had never happened Housewives calmaty brushed the dust from their aprons. Merchants straightened their overturned tables.

The old widow sheathed her gleaming sword and patted the bandit leaders thick arm with grandmotherly affection. "True

robbers," she said kindly, her net

soft now please continue We've chased away those stupid disciples. The night is still young."

Some of the bandits let out deep, relieved belly laughs. Others-the

glances. Something felt deeply. wrong here, but the tables still groaned under mountains of food the women kept smiling warmly, and the raw urge to take what was so freely offered drowned out the quiet voice of suspicion.

sharper ones-exchangeely net

Night fell completely.

Exhausted from hours of feasting and robbing, the bandits collapsed where they stood-sprawled across silk-covered beds, tavern benches, and open courtyards. High on a rooftop overlooking the chaotic scene, Alex watched in silence as matte- black drones descended like silent judgment from the dark sky.

"Send the swarm," he ordered calmly.

The bandits never even stirred. Their bodies slumped without a sound as the drones delivered their payload.

By morning they would wake inside Wudang's training halls, Gaia Band-Aids already sealed to their skin, their minds gently bending toward obedience.

One by one the bandits began to stir in the dim, unfamiliar cells far away. A blood- red interface flared to life behind their eyes.

"You have stolen five hundred gold coins worth,” a calm, mechanical voice informed them. “Punishment: one hundred years of labor until full repayment. You will train in the Wudang arts. You will repay every victim. You will become better men."

A burly bandit snarled, trying to rise. "I don't want—”

White-hot pain exploded through his nervous system, electric and absolute. His knees buckled as he crashed back to the floor.

The voice continued, completely unhurried. "You cannot protest. You can only work until your debt is paid. Or until death."

Real tears—something these men had not shed in years—cut tracks down their hardened, weathered faces.

They had laughed in the face of death on the open road many times. But this... this was something far worse. A lifetime of invisible chains disguised as training. Moral correction wrapped in the language of justice.

Back in Qingshui, the citizens worked through the final hours of darkness without complaint. They reset every table, re-polished every piece of silver until it gleamed, and carefully positioned the prettiest girls back on the front steps with practiced

smiles.

By sunrise the streets once again glittered with fresh bait—rich, tempting, and utterly

irresistible.

A merchant clapped his hands together, grinning from ear to ear. “Fourth wave should be here soon! Everyone look pitiful and rich!"

Zhuge Liang stood beside Alex, wiping sweat from his brow. His voice was quiet, almost awed. "My lord... what you have done. The honest people of Qingshui... have become scarier than any bandit."

Alex's smile finally reached his eyes-just the faintest flicker of satisfaction. Far below, the city sparkled under the rising sun, perfectly reset and waiting.

The trap had dressed itself in silk once more, poured fresh wine, and opened its arms wide.

And the mountain was still hungry.

Meanwhile at the Wudang Sect, Lu Piao and the others were already watching the Qincheng Sect people approaching. They quickly yelled, "Be prepared! Our first customer is here. We must not lose to the Qinshui citizens!"