Ultimate Villain's Return as a Doctor in the Cultivation World-Chapter 121- Flat Chested

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Chapter 121: Chapter 121- Flat Chested

"The sword," he said. "The sealing array on it is Sword Gate standard issue—third tier inscription, upper-level variation. They only use it on the demon-path containment series." He glanced at her back, where the long sword rested in its sheath with the particular stillness of something that was sealed and knew it was sealed and had opinions about this. "You chose the demon path voluntarily and they expelled you for it."

The silence lasted five steps of forward motion.

"I chose the demon path," she said. "Yes."

"Why."

"Because the Sword Gate’s conventional path would have taken me thirty years to reach Core Formation. The demon path took three." She looked forward, not at him. "I have things to do."

"Like what."

"Like none of your business."

"Fair." He looked ahead. "What’s your name?"

A pause that was calculated to be exactly as long as required to decide how much truth to issue.

"Chen Yun," she said.

He turned it over. ’Chen Yun.’ The kind of name that existed in the cultivation world the way certain tools existed—functional across categories, carrying no additional information than it needed to.

"Chen Yun," he said.

"Yes."

"That’s a woman’s name."

"It’s also a man’s name," she said.

"True," he agreed.

She looked at him sideways. "Does it matter?"

"Not at all," he said. "I was just noting it."

She returned her attention to the corridor ahead, and something in her shoulders settled by a fraction—the slight release of a person who has issued partial truth and found it received without consequence.

’She thinks I’m half-convinced,’ Cang noted. ’She’s wrong. I know exactly who she is.’

He said nothing about this.

[Eye of Truth Log: Chen Yun — 13th Disciple, Heavenly Sword Gate — Niece of Sword God Chen Wuming — Demon Path: Chosen — Expelled: 11 months ago — Current cultivation: Core Formation Late Stage — Demon Sword: Sealed (Upper Class) — Identity concealed: Active — Favorability toward host: Mild suspicion (pending)]

’Niece,’ he thought. ’Sword God’s niece went demon path. The old man must be delighted.’

The corridor opened.

The thing that came out of the left wall was fast.

It had been a human cultivator, once—the Trial had a history of doing things to the ones who didn’t make it out, and the things it did to them were instructive about what it considered useful. What came out of the wall now had the rough shape of a man and the particular quality of movement of something that had been stripped of its own agenda and given a different one. Stone-grey skin. Both arms ending in formations of fused bone that operated approximately like blades. Eyes that were not eyes but were very bright.

It was fast.

Chen Yun was faster.

The demon sword cleared its sheath in a motion that was not quite visible—one moment sheathed, one moment not—and the blade moved through the corridor air with the clean, decisive trajectory of Core Formation Late Stage sword intent focused through a weapon that had been built for exactly this application.

The thing split at the shoulder-line.

Both halves hit the ground at different times.

The corridor was quiet.

Cang clapped once. Twice. The sound of a man at a modest performance. 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺

Chen Yun turned to look at him over her shoulder.

"You just stood there," she said.

"You handled it," he said.

"I—" She turned fully. "You didn’t even reach for a weapon."

"I don’t carry a weapon."

"You don’t—" She stared at him. "You entered the First Demon Trial without a weapon."

"I have alternatives."

She looked at him for a long, assessing moment. Then she turned back to the corridor, resheathed in the same clean motion, and kept walking.

"Useless," she said.

"Probably," he agreed.

The next three corridors were productive.

Chen Yun killed seven things—five formation-bound spirit beasts that the Trial had been aging in its stone walls since some previous participant left them there, and two more of the corridor-constructs like the first. She killed them with the particular efficiency of a sword cultivator who had been using a demon-path blade long enough that her style and the sword’s appetite had reached an understanding.

She was good.

Not good the way a sect princess is good—polished, formally structured, performing a curriculum. Good the way someone is good when they’ve been doing the same thing in situations where failure was biological. Every movement committed. No wasted motion. The demon sword’s seals pulsed with each kill, the contained energy inside it straining briefly at each application and then settling.

Cang watched her work and revised her upward twice more.

He killed nothing in this interval.

She noticed.

"You’re following me," she said, at the seventh beast. Its remains were in three pieces around her boots.

"I am," he confirmed.

"Why."

"You’re clearing the path efficiently." He looked at the third piece of the beast, which was still making an argument about being alive. "I prefer not to exert myself unnecessarily."

She looked at him. Then at the beast piece. Then back at him.

"You’re genuinely useless," she said.

"You’ve said that."

"It’s still true."

"Probably." He stepped over the largest piece. "You’re very good, though."

This landed with no visible effect. She sheathed the sword and kept walking.

They came out into a wider space—the Trial’s first chamber, where the corridor network fed into an open area large enough to have its own weather. Stone ceiling forty feet up. Formation lights in columns. Somewhere in the middle distance, the sound of other cultivators—the faint clash of combat, the occasional shout.

Chen Yun found a log.

The log was part of something that had once been structural and was now furniture. She sat on it with the specific heaviness of a person whose legs have been making decisions since before dawn and are requesting input on next steps.

She looked at him.

"Sit," she said. "Or keep standing. I don’t care."

He sat. Not on the log—on a raised formation stone beside it, which put him at roughly her eye level.

For a moment neither of them spoke.

"Why are you following me," she said. This time it was a direct question without the accusatory architecture of the previous versions. She wanted an actual answer.

He considered the accurate answer, which was: ’because you’re interesting and the Trial will go faster if I have someone who can read formation arrays quickly and fight while I manage the larger structural problems.’

He issued: "You seem to know where you’re going."

She looked at him. "I don’t."

"You read the corridor inscriptions."

"That doesn’t mean I know where I’m going. It means I know what killed the previous people who went this way."

"That’s useful."

She pressed her lips together. Not agreement. Not denial. The expression of a woman who has been managing alone for eleven months and is encountering the specific social friction of someone being reasonable at her.

"I am carrying you," she said. "You understand that. You have done nothing useful since we entered."

"I carried you through the entry corridor," he said.

"You walked beside me through—" She stopped. "You didn’t do anything."

"I made sure nothing came from the right while you were handling the left."

A pause.

"...Did something come from the right."

"Three times," he said. "You were busy."

She looked at the right wall. Then at him. Her expression moved through several rooms without settling.

"You killed them," she said.

"Quietly."

Another pause. "Why quietly."

"You seemed to be enjoying yourself."

Her jaw moved. She looked forward. The expression of a woman who is recalibrating a conclusion she had already made and is annoyed about needing to.

"By the way," Cang said.

She waited.

He looked at her chest.

The travel robes she wore were practical—layered, dark, the kind that revealed nothing. The binding beneath them did its job. Under normal visual assessment: a flat, modest chest consistent with the young man presentation.

His Eye of Truth, of course, did not perform normal visual assessment.

[Binding: Three-layer compression. Suppression: Approximately 80% visual profile reduction. Actual measurement: Significant.]

He tilted his head.

"How big are they," he said.

The silence that followed was the kind that has a specific shape.

"What," she said.

"Your chest," he said. "I was trying to calculate how much compression you need to maintain the profile. From a medical perspective. The binding is tight enough that prolonged use causes—"

"What you’re doing," she said, very carefully, "is looking at my chest."

"Yes."

"Stop."

"I’m trying to estimate—"

"They’re flat," she said. "There is nothing to estimate. Nothing there. Flat."