
Chivalrous Fairy Shadow
by Leletian
About This Novel
In the last battle at the end of the Song Dynasty, the "Battle of Yashan", the Song army was completely destroyed. Lu Xiufu carried the young emperor Zhao Bing on his back and went to sea to escape. He was besieged in Chiwan. Lu Xiufu sacrificed his life to protect the main force against the powerful enemy. At the critical moment, Yan Jie, the Jiangnan protector of the black-clothed sect, came to the rescue. From then on, Zhao Bing changed his name to Wang Yuanshan. Wang Yuanshan obtained the true teachings of Taoist Master Shixian and practiced Yin and Yang magic. At that time, there were murders in Jianghu, and undercurrents were surging within the Black Sect. Yan Jie paid the price with his life, and finally found out that the culprit was the mysterious leader of the sect. Wang Yuanshan inherited his legacy and killed the leader and the devil Cold-faced Man in the world. The world was finally at peace...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 20h ago
Under the sky of history
It is rare to see a book like this nowadays. It starts with loyalty and tells stories of responsibility and responsibility. The streets are full of pretending to be a slap in the face and just for fun. The author has the courage and pursuit.
look over
The fairy shadow is here, can the excitement be far behind? Asking for collections, asking for book reviews, asking for fans
The story is wonderful, well conceived and written, and it's very interesting.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 20h ago
Under the sky of history
It is rare to see a book like this nowadays. It starts with loyalty and tells stories of responsibility and responsibility. The streets are full of pretending to be a slap in the face and just for fun. The author has the courage and pursuit.
look over
The fairy shadow is here, can the excitement be far behind? Asking for collections, asking for book reviews, asking for fans
The story is wonderful, well conceived and written, and it's very interesting.









