Chapter 208: A Walk, a Conversation
“Having the right resources to train with — there’s nothing like it.”
Half a month had passed. Su Jie’s development during that period had been substantial.
Today’s session was urban close-quarters combat. A team of bodyguards with live-loaded weapons was hunting him through a stretch of streets and alleyways — shooting, pursuing, trying to corner him — while he moved continuously, reading angles, calculating trajectories, taking each one down with thrown weapons as he went.
Real rounds. Not rubber. If he was hit, he would die.
But he moved as though he had an internal warning system — each time, at the last possible instant, he was already clear of the bullet’s path. He could feel the trajectory forming before the trigger was pulled, and he moved in a way that gave the shooter no stable lock.
He had noticed something over the sessions: when the rounds were rubber and carried no genuine lethal threat, his concentration ran at a somewhat lower pitch. When the rounds were live and his life was actually on the line, his mind pressed to the absolute limit. Every faculty sharpened to an edge it couldn’t reach otherwise.
This was pressure — the same principle as weighted training.
In combat preparation, overload is what forces growth. Apply sufficient pressure, and the body strengthens rapidly. Su Jie was now applying that principle to the psychological dimension — using live fire to generate real mental stress, the kind that couldn’t be simulated. Day after day, this was the equivalent of sustained exposure in an active combat zone: the constant, immediate possibility of death.
This was extreme cultivation.
And it wasn’t available to him back in China.
Bang.
The last bodyguard’s round left the barrel and punched a hole in the wall. The steel-jacketed bullet ricocheted back and grazed the air beside Su Jie’s body. Su Jie’s pellet left his hand at the same instant, striking the gun from the man’s grip. A second pellet followed, hitting the bodyguard in the torso. The man convulsed and went down twitching.
It took a while for him to recover. When he looked up at Su Jie, what was on his face was not frustration. It was fear.
Over the past two weeks, Su Jie had used these men as his training implements — running them through drills so punishing they bordered on what elite intelligence training looked like at its most demanding. Every one of them had been worked past comfortable limits repeatedly.
“Fall in,” Su Jie said.
“After this, we go for electrical stimulation — recovery and muscle reinforcement.”
The color drained from several faces simultaneously.
Larry’s facility did have electrical stimulation equipment, and it was substantially more advanced than what Uncle Mang operated — the product of extensive iterative research. Su Jie had requested access early, and Larry had arranged for the highest-tier apparatus available, as the request aligned perfectly with his own interests.
Electrical stimulation itself was not unusual in medicine — used to treat muscular atrophy, joint conditions, various neurological disorders, and reportedly even internet addiction. Its applications were broad.
Looking at the bodyguards’ expressions, Su Jie felt quiet satisfaction. Two weeks, and they had completely submitted. They looked at him the way small birds look at a hawk — no question of defiance even entering their minds.
This was what fear of genuine strength produced.
He suspected his word now carried more weight with them than Larry’s. They followed Larry for money. They followed Su Jie because they couldn’t afford not to. They could choose to forgo payment. They couldn’t choose to forgo their lives.
He didn’t order them into the stimulation session by force — that would have served no purpose. Without the will to endure it, the experience produced nothing useful. The equipment demanded a mind made of something close to iron.
*****
Su Jie entered the stimulation room alone.
The machine inside bore little resemblance to what Uncle Mang used. Mechanical arms, each tipped with needles like acupuncture filaments, arranged around a platform. The device was purpose-built medical equipment at a cost that made Uncle Mang’s setup look like a hobbyist’s project.
He removed his shirt, positioned himself, and let the mechanical arms insert their needles into joints, muscle groups, and nerve junctions across his body.
The current began.
Pulse after pulse through dozens of points simultaneously. Something like being charged — if the charging process involved sustained, significant pain.
He didn’t change expression. He didn’t make a sound.
Modern medicine’s understanding of the nervous system had reached the microscopic level. Su Jie’s background in the life sciences, combined with what he had been absorbing from Larry’s laboratory over the past weeks, had given him a precise picture of how to target stimulation for maximum gains in joint integrity, muscular strength, and cardiopulmonary function.
At the monitoring station, the observers watched their readouts.
“That current intensity would render a top-tier operative unconscious — or produce loss of physical control. He’s sitting through it.”
“His cellular and muscular activation levels are extraordinary.”
“His nervous system is firing across the board, and his musculature is responding — but his brainwave patterns show something almost like relaxation. As though the pain signals aren’t registering at the same level.”
“Remarkable. This warrants its own study.”
The data streamed from the stimulation session — muscle response, cardiac and pulmonary function, brainwave patterns — all flowing to the life sciences laboratory.
In a certain sense, Su Jie was now a research subject. He had read stories of people who developed unusual capabilities and went to extreme lengths to conceal them, terrified of being taken and turned into exactly this. He had no such instinct. Being studied by serious scientists with serious resources was, in his view, a good thing — a more efficient path to understanding. He was someone who pursued scientific truth as a genuine goal, willing to use himself as the experimental subject. Throughout history, the great scientists had done exactly that.
That, he thought, was what actual fearlessness looked like — not the absence of danger, but a willingness to offer yourself in the service of knowing.
*****
After the session: shower, the full application of Natural Essence Ointment, absorption time, nutrition, rest, study. The routine never varied.
Cass came to find him while he was reading.
“Su Jie — Mr. Larry wants to go out today. He doesn’t want a large retinue. He wants something closer to an ordinary person’s experience. You’ll be with him. No incidents — understood? And tomorrow is the Zhang family annual assembly. Mr. Larry will be attending that as well, and you’ll stay close.”
“Understood.” Su Jie read through Larry’s itinerary on his device, then pulled up the satellite street-view for each location. He walked through the route in his mind — mapping the positions that offered the best cover for a potential attacker, the angles that needed watching, the points of vulnerability. He ran the scenarios.
Providing security was its own craft.
The satellite mapping was Larry’s company’s core technology. This organization had its own satellites — no Chinese domestic company came close in this respect. The street imagery Su Jie was looking at updated in real time, showing foot traffic, vehicle density, and time-of-day data for each location. With this kind of intelligence support, his security work became considerably more manageable.
Once he had mentally rehearsed the possible scenarios, he put the device down, stood, and went with Cass to Larry’s office.
“Ready?” Larry asked, looking at them both.
“OK,” Cass confirmed.
“Just you for security today,” Larry said to Su Jie. “Let’s go.”
Su Jie said nothing. He fell in behind Larry at a measured distance.
This was his role: a shadow. He moved as Larry moved, went where Larry went, and remained responsible for stopping — or ending — anyone who tried to reach his employer.
Larry got into the driver’s seat himself. An ordinary-looking commercial vehicle.
He seemed to relax visibly the moment the doors closed — perhaps for the first time in some while. He hummed something to himself as he drove, something almost musical, with an ease that suggested real enjoyment. His speed was high, as though he were releasing pressure through the act of driving.
Su Jie had been reading this man since the first meeting: Larry was not happy. Possibly depressed. Despite being one of the wealthiest men in the world, his daily existence was crowded with concerns that left him less ease than an ordinary person might find. He carried the constant weight of everything that had to be thought about, planned for, and guarded against — including the real possibility of kidnapping or assassination. What was left after the anxiety and the forward projection was not much space for simply being.
A mind like that, even with the best nutrition and the best medical team maintaining the body, would not last as long as it might.
The car reached the outskirts and stopped beside a river. Larry got out and began to walk.
Su Jie followed at ten paces — close enough to respond, far enough to leave Larry his solitude.
“I like this place,” Larry said after a while. “When I was starting out — running into one problem after another — I used to come here and think. Answers came to me here. One obstacle after another, dissolved.”
“Mr. Larry,” Su Jie said, “you’re troubled right now. What is it, exactly? Is it the feeling that life is passing — second by second, day by day — and there’s nothing that can stop it? Or is it that you’re afraid of death? Because when it comes, everything you’ve ever built, everything you’ve ever accumulated, returns to nothing.”
“Yes.” Larry seemed to find it natural to speak to Su Jie about this. With an ordinary bodyguard, the conversation wouldn’t have happened. But after weeks of data and observation, Larry had come to think of Su Jie as something outside the usual categories.
He continued. “Aren’t you afraid? What you’ve achieved is harder than what I have, in its own way. I’ll give you a choice right now. If we could trade — I give you my wealth, my position, everything I have, and you give me what you’ve achieved — would you do it?”
“No,” Su Jie said, without a moment’s pause.
The Realm of the Living Dead was worth more than any amount of money. Not tens of billions. Not hundreds of billions. A figure with twelve zeroes placed in front of him would not have moved him.
“I envy you.” Larry studied him. “I would like to experience that state of mind. Even briefly. But it’s the one thing that can’t be bought.”
Su Jie found himself smiling. Money shaped so much of the world. But not everything.
“The methods you use to cultivate this psychological state — this inner work — would you be willing to share them with me? Would you consider being my mental conditioning instructor?”
“Of course,” Su Jie said. “No difficulty there.”
And then something shifted.
A sudden surge of danger rose from somewhere deep in his body. His gaze moved quickly across several points in the surrounding landscape — the positions that offered the cleanest angles for an attack on Larry.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 209: With Me Here, You’re Untouchable
- Chapter 208: A Walk, a Conversation
- Chapter 207: Training That Serves Multiple Ends
- Chapter 206: Prostrate with Admiration
- Chapter 205: The Minimalist
- Chapter 204: Tangled Roots
- Chapter 203: Old Grievances
- Chapter 202: What the Elders Know
- Chapter 201: The Times Have Changed
- Chapter 200: The Zhang and Mao Families
- Chapter 199: A Premonition of Misfortune Prevails
- Chapter 198: My Realm Is Beyond Your Understanding
- Chapter 197: The Guardian Angel’s Tests
- Chapter 196: Three Rounds of Testing
- Chapter 195: Bodyguard of a Super-Rich Man?
- Chapter 194: Special Agent Training
- Chapter 193: Family Competition and External Support
- Chapter 192: Local Giant Snake
- Chapter 191: The Complex Situation
- Chapter 190: The True Aristocratic Path
- Chapter 189: The Siren’s Underground World Revealed
- Chapter 188: Overseas Secrets: A Diligent Search for Clues
- Chapter 187: Reactions from All Sides
- Chapter 186: Assisting Breakthrough
- Chapter 185: The Zhang Family, with Countless Experts
- Chapter 184: A Shocking Encounter
- Chapter 183: The Tip of the Iceberg
- Chapter 182: Liu Long Arrives: Strangers with Deep Hostility
- Chapter 181: Small Show of Success, Big Strategy
- Chapter 180: Martial Arts Club: Small Temple, Big Wind
- Chapter 178: Limit Records: Various Tests to Break Them
- Chapter 177: Can the World Record in Sprinting Be Broken?
- Chapter 176: The Devil Mask
- Chapter 175: To Win the Championship
- Chapter 174: The Unparalleled Power of the Living Dead
- Chapter 173: Finally Breaking Through the Life-and-Death Line
- Chapter 172: Fear Returns, Courage Returns to the Body
- Chapter 171: Sorry, Ill Apologize
- Chapter 170: Thunder in the Palm: A Reputation Well-Deserved
- Chapter 169: Encountering a Formidable Enemy
- Chapter 168: Who Can Rival You in the Arena?
- Chapter 167: Mingluns Seven Words
- Chapter 166: Analysis of Strength: Hope Amidst Despair
- Chapter 165: Unrivaled in the Fight
- Chapter 164: The Competition Begins Dragons or Worms
- Chapter 163: A Gathering of Masters
- Chapter 162: The Battle of Jiu Ding Security
- Chapter 161: The Unending Pressure of the Vajra Body
- Chapter 160: Foundation as Solid as a Tower
- Chapter 159: The Beginning of Military Training
- Chapter 158: Severing the Six Thieves
- Chapter 157: The Dragon Mask
- Chapter 156: Courage and Responsibility
- Chapter 155: The Expert in Mysterious Security Emerges
- Chapter 154: Dinner Party Gone Awry
- Chapter 153: Heartfelt Allegiance and Small Groups
- Chapter 152: Each Has Their Own Skills
- Chapter 151: A Ripple in the Calm of University Life
- Chapter 150: The Drowning Swimmer Turns the Tables
- Chapter 149: Shadows Approaching
- Chapter 148: Mastering the Art of Cooking
- Chapter 147: The True Essence of Martial Arts
- Chapter 146: Awakening a Companion
- Chapter 145: The Talent Drain is a Serious Concern
- Chapter 144: Returning to the Fields
- Chapter 143: Retreating in Disgrace
- Chapter 142: The Intent of Jeet Kune Do
- Chapter 141: A Toothpick Can Take a Life
- Chapter 140: The Best Training
- Chapter 139: The Rare Judgment
- Chapter 138: The Martial Arts Academys Turmoil
- Chapter 137: Deaf, Mute, and Dull-Witted
- Chapter 136: A Year of Change, Reaching the Pinnacle
- Chapter 135: Unity of Heaven and Man Has Its Mysteries
- Chapter 134: Martial Arts Gradually Takes Shape
- Chapter 133: Moments of Anger
- Chapter 132: Masters Challenge
- Chapter 131: The Art of Air Throwing and Deception
- Chapter 130: Family Traditions Differ
- Chapter 129: Random Matchmaking
- Chapter 128: Confidence Shattered, Doubt Begins
- Chapter 127: Hardship in the Bustling City
- Chapter 126: Fortune and Disaster Hang by a Thread
- Chapter 125: A Sudden Premonition
- Chapter 124: Encounter with God-Maker Odell
- Chapter 123: The Mastermind Begins to Emerge
- Chapter 122: A Narrow Escape: Bullets and Blades
- Chapter 121: A Mastermind’s Brilliance Stirs Envy
- Chapter 120: Evil Forces Loom Large
- Chapter 119: Hard-Fought Battle That Refines the Man
- Chapter 118: The Irreconcilable Gap of Weight
- Chapter 117: A Well-Laid Plan
- Chapter 116: Using the Past for the Present
- Chapter 115: Schemes and Intrigues
- Chapter 114: The Enemy Camp: Poor Psychological Endurance
- Chapter 113: Reaping What You Sow
- Chapter 112: Spirit Linked to Heaven and Earth
- Chapter 111: Relentless Pursuit, Mercy Without Equal
- Chapter 110: Ambushed: Real Danger and a Trial of the Heart
- Chapter 109: A Close-Combat Defeat
- Chapter 108: Strategizing a Countermeasure
- Chapter 107: A Moment of Weakness in the Heart
- Chapter 106: Scenery Beyond the Borders
- Chapter 105: Exceptional Talent, Difficult to Befriend
- Chapter 104: Holding All the Cards
- Chapter 103: Young Prodigies Not the Only Genius
- Chapter 102: The Xu Family Crisis
- Chapter 101: Golden Bell Training Study, Study, and Study Again
- Chapter 100: The Innate State: Dragon-Tiger Vajra Hard Qi Gong
- Chapter 99: Switching Between Two Modes of Cultivation
- Chapter 98: Decisive Action – Infant State in the Womb
- Chapter 97: Unity of Heaven and Man, Refining the True Spirit
- Chapter 96: Doomed Beyond Redemption, Blinded by Greed
- Chapter 95: Even the Four Seas Struggle to Contain Him
- Chapter 94: Above Heroic Talent Lies Great Talent
- Chapter 93: Unthinkable and Unstoppable K!lling Techniques
- Chapter 92: Gathering of Northern Luo and Central Ma
- Chapter 91: A Casual Slap Teaches Respect
- Chapter 90: Bullying Beyond Reason: A Shiny Exterior, Rotten Within
- Chapter 89: Sinister Intentions Revealed
- Chapter 88: An Encounter with a Master
- Chapter 87: The Things Remain, but the People Have Changed
- Chapter 86: The Southern Aristocrat Fulfilling One’s Duty
- Chapter 85: Sudden Visitors as the New Year Approaches
- Chapter 84: Inheriting the Legacy The Xu Family’s Relatives
- Chapter 83: Under the Shield of True Courage and True Spirit
- Chapter 82: Rich, Sloppy, Filthy, but Not Short on Cash
- Chapter 81: Saving Beauty in Passing Life is Like Chess, Full of Uncertainty
- Chapter 80: A World-Shaking Ambition to Devour Heaven and Earth
- Chapter 79: Struggling to Stay Afloat, A Seed Planted in the Soil
- Chapter 78: All Five Organs Present Setting Up Shop in a Snail Shell
- Chapter 77: Remove Strength, and Calamity Follows
- Chapter 76: Heaven and Earth in Unison Fate Turns, Heroes Bound
- Chapter 75: Extreme Softness Begets Strength, Forging Unyielding Power
- Chapter 74: The Mountain Eroded by Wind Breeds Venomous Insects
- Chapter 73: The Fire Marsh Transforms; Daily Renewal, Constant Change
- Chapter 72: Mental Suggestion The Dao Is Hard to Attain but Easy to Lose
- Chapter 71: Performance in the Crystal Orb
- Chapter 70: Think Carefully for the Big Picture
- Chapter 69: The Tai Chi Master Doesn’t Believe in Geniuses
- Chapter 68: High-Speed Drift
- Chapter 67: A Million-Yuan Bet
- Chapter 66: Flawless and Smooth: The Villain Returns
- Chapter 65: The Dead Are Gone, But the Divine Lives On
- Chapter 64: Head-to-Head: Within Five Steps
- Chapter 63: The Tip of the Iceberg
- Chapter 62: The Master in Linen Robes
- Chapter 61: First Battle Victory, Fierce as a Tiger
- Chapter 60: The Gray Wolf Reappears
- Chapter 59: The Crisis Begins to Emerge
- Chapter 58: Tempering and Honing, Sharpen the Edge
- Chapter 57: Mastering the Art of Cue Ball Positioning
- Chapter 56: The Midline Strike
- Chapter 55: Starshine Combat Fitness Club
- Chapter 54: Choosing and Tempering the Heart
- Chapter 53: Entrance Exam All-Around First
- Chapter 52: Morning Blooms, Evening Memories
- Chapter 51: The Bearing of a Grandmaster
- Chapter 50: When the Rooster Crowed, the World Turned White
- Chapter 49: Practicing with Wholehearted Devotion
- Chapter 48: Unintentionally Exploding the Basketball
- Chapter 47: A Gentleman’s Kitchen: Simplicity is the Key
- Chapter 46: Artificial Intelligence, Mastering Every Detail
- Chapter 45: Ruthless to the Point of No Return
- Chapter 44: A Still Mind
- Chapter 43: The Lonely Despair
- Chapter 42: Three Parts Training, Seven Parts Eating
- Chapter 41: The Eight Methods of Eye Techniques
- Chapter 40: The Story Behind Heart-Cleansing Manor and Gu Yang
- Chapter 39: Shooting Practice A Glimpse of Mastery
- Chapter 38: There’s Always Someone Stronger
- Chapter 37: Observing Chicken Fights Feels More Natural
- Chapter 36: Secret Ointment, Strengthening Bones and Body for Complete Shaping
- Chapter 35: A Firm Refusal No Idol Worship
- Chapter 34: Staying Calm, A Failed Scheme Backfires
- Chapter 33: Encountering a Trap, Calm and Prepared
- Chapter 32: A Millennium of Innovation Who Reigns Supreme, Technology or Manpower?
- Chapter 31: A Single Core, All Moves as No Move
- Chapter 30: The Long-Armed Apes Grappling Techniques
- Chapter 29: Understanding Intent, The Nature of a Genius
- Chapter 28: Muscle Activation and the Union of Inner and Outer Techniques
- Chapter 27: Electric Stimulation Training and Endurance Training
- Chapter 26: Martial Arts Girl, Full of Hidden Dragons and Crouching Tigers
- Chapter 25: Defeating Josh, The Genius Turns Out to Be You
- Chapter 24: The Ancient and Modern Acupuncture Techniques
- Chapter 23: Martial Arts Have No Limits
- Chapter 22: Patience in the Octagon is True Skill
- Chapter 21: The Ultimate Realm of Relaxation Zen
- Chapter 20: The Philosophy of Martial Arts in Relaxation
- Chapter 19: Hope Amid Struggles
- Chapter 18: Subtle Perception The Blind Man Sees with His Heart
- Chapter 17: Traditional Medicine and Inner Strength Enduring the Pain of Childbirth
- Chapter 16: Confidence Boosted A Mysterious Blind Master of Massage
- Chapter 15: True Combat The Ever-Changing Hoe Technique
- Chapter 14: Tradition Meets Modernity in Martial Arts
- Chapter 13: The Final Day The Dao Aligns with the Path of Heaven
- Chapter 12: The Spirit of Martial Arts Mastery of Blade and Spear
- Chapter 11: Mastery of Martial Arts More Than Just Combat
- Chapter 10: Supercompensation True Science of Martial Arts
- Chapter 9: Time Flies, Rapid Progress Achieved
- Chapter 8: The Movement of Shouldering Like a Dragon’s Coil
- Chapter 7: Three Training Methods Internal Training, Combat Training, and Endurance Training
- Chapter 6: Subtle Perception Eating and Sleeping as Meditation
- Chapter 5: Resent the Sky Without a Handle, Resent the Earth Without a Loop
- Chapter 4: Building a Foundation in Seven Days
- Chapter 3: Block and Strike Real Lessons in Combat
- Chapter 2: Martial Arts Flourishing Locally, Adored Abroad
- Chapter 1: The Art of Farming – Every Hoe and Turn Requires Skill