
Desire to Become an Immortal
by A Piece Of Paper Bursts Into Thunder
About This Novel
The Ling Mine collapsed, and the mine slave Liang Jin took out an unnamed account book from the dead man's arms. The account book does not grant magical powers or opportunities, but only writes one line of cold words - "Liang Jin: I owe you ten years of life." From then on, he was able to "borrow" his life: borrowing his life to exchange for an explosion, borrowing his luck to exchange for a way out, borrowing his roots to exchange for his qualifications, and borrowing his enlightenment to exchange for a breakthrough. But every time you borrow, there is another life debt on the account: there is a debt period, there is interest, and there is liquidation. If you can't afford it, misfortune will come back; if you break the promise, you will have guests come to your door. Within the high walls of the sect, resources are knives, rules are nets, and people's hearts are accounts. Liang Jin started out as a "disposable" consumable with the red seal of a handyman, and climbed up the ladder step by step by relying on calculations, contracts, fighting skills and transactions - he didn't want to be a saint, nor was he willing to be an animal. But as he climbed higher and higher, he realized that the "way of heaven" in the world of immortality was just a larger accounting system. The strong are creditors, the weak are debtors, and mortals don't even have the price of their lives. So he decided to write down the third way: You can decide your own destiny, but debts must be voluntary. What he cultivates is not immortality. What he repaired was a change of accounts.
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