The Bone-eroding Compass: the Mystery Book of the Twelve Palaces

The Bone-eroding Compass: the Mystery Book of the Twelve Palaces

by No Joyjo

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5Kwords
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Updated 1y agoScraped 3d ago
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About This Novel

The night rain in the Qianyuan Realm never extinguishes the fire of the meteorite three hundred years ago. When the compass of Lu Lizhou, the young minister of the Si Tianjian, pierced the fox fairy's painted skin, his right eye reflected a strange and evil mark-- It's not a demon that eats out the heart at all, but a living person eating away at the mind in the incense! The demoted psychic judge meets Beimang's venomous gangster. One can see the last scene in the eyes of the deceased, and the other can embroider testimonies on the corpse using poisonous insects. They work together to track down strange cases such as "Yin soldiers carrying coffins" and "paper figurines getting married", but find that every bone points to the prophecy in "Song of the Huntian Xingdu": the collapse of the Twelve Chen Palace is the gate of hell on earth. The crane cloak of Feng Wujiu, the head of Jiuyou Terrace, passed over the altar. Thousands of human figurines in the ground sealed the bloodline of the warlock who sealed the meteorite back then. The most ironic thing is that the Chaos Gu worm sleeping in Su Jiuniang's silver finger cot is exactly the "crack in heaven" they are looking for. When the psychic compass crushed Lu Lizhou's eighth official uniform for the protector, and when the green pupil Gu stole the evidence osmanthus cake from the autopsy room for the umpteenth time, there was a hilarious truth hidden in this game of mountains and rivers - The brass bell of the blind storyteller is engraved with the secret passage of the Chen Palace. The incense blended by the sinister pharmacist can make people tell the truth and sing the lotus flower. The frog with a crooked mouth embroidered by Leng Yan when sewing up her wounds is actually the cloud seal talisman that breaks the sacrificial array! The red candle illuminates the road to the underworld, who hums an out-of-tune ballad about marrying an apricot in the sea of ​​blood and corpses? This compass points to the world of heaven and earth, and what the judge writes down is not the book of life and death, but the demons and monsters deepest in the human heart.

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