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My Wife Is A Sword Immortal

Upon opening his eyes, there before him was a bridal chamber adorned with red candles and windows. A bride dressed in a phoenix coronet and robes of rank sat upright on the nuptial bed, her face covered by a red bridal veil. Zhao Rong rubbed his sleepy eyes, "Have I become a groom? Oh, and a junior one at that." Understood. His facial expression brewed for a moment before he twisted his mouth into a smile, "Wait a second..." Huh, something's amiss. The bride is my childhood sweetheart who also harbored a crush on me? Oh, then that's alright. This is very fitting. Zhao Rong stepped forward, happily lifting the red bridal veil, "Hey hey, my lady, where are you running off to?" ------------- In the great era of contention, the tide of the times surged forth, and Confucian Scholar Zhao Rong bravely faced it head-on. Not only did he seek to catch up to the footsteps of his childhood sweetheart turned Sword Immortal Lady, but he also wished to witness firsthand the dispute that engulfed more than half of the Cultivation World, the strife among the various schools of thought... ————— [Slow-burn], [Non-cliché], [Non-level-up], [Romance plot], [Sweet without the angst] This book is also known as "I Have a Fox Fairy Wife", "Rebirth: I Deliver Parcels in the Otherworld", "Zhao Ziyu, The Smirking Scholar" "I Really Don't Want to Be a Kept Man"...

Yang Xiaorong · Huyền huyễn
Không đủ số lượng người đọc
186 Chs

Chapter 37 What Happens on the Mountain

Zhao Rong and his companions slightly deviated from their planned route and after two days of travel, they arrived at the nearest mountain market called Baiyun Ferry.

From the map, Zhao Rong learned that the current dynasty, named Great Chen, honored Legalists and governed the state with the principle of "strict punishment and harsh law enforcement."

When Zhao Rong passed through several cities before, he noticed that people on the streets were very cautious with their words and rarely whispered to each other, afraid of being accused of a crime because of their speech. As for Confucian and "alternative" books, they were completely banned nationwide. He had heard about instances of national book burning campaigns before. The Legalists in this nation were indeed highly exclusionary.