Chapter 3363: Embodiments of the Ordinance Are Closely Monitored
Ning Shu smiled slightly. “Thanks, but my soul hasn’t been devoured by inner demons. In fact, I even comprehended an ordinance. Tell that certain someone that I’m fine.”
Her words carried a subtle implication.
The school doctor nodded and looked at the water droplet on her forehead. “Since you’ve become an embodiment of the ordinance, be careful when using its power. If you cause too much chaos, even as an embodiment of the ordinance, you’ll still be erased.”
Embodiment of the ordinance?
Ning Shu touched the water droplet on her forehead. It seemed she needed to learn more about this.
The school doctor rested his hand on the gun at his waist. “Embodiments of the ordinance are closely monitored. You’d best conduct yourself wisely.”
Ning Shu let out an “oh,” then—damn, this feeling was absolutely incredible. Out of nowhere, people actually feared her now. They feared her because of her powerful strength.
She really loved seeing people dislike her yet be unable to do anything about it.
The corners of Ning Shu’s mouth curled up uncontrollably. Stepping forward on the thin mist, she asked the school doctor, “I want to ask, what ordinance are you the embodiment of?”
The school doctor let out a sneer. “Why? Feeling a bit capable now and thinking about revenge?”
Ning Shu waved her hand. “How could that be? I just want to have a little match.”
“I am the embodiment of the ordinance of destruction. Come, let’s have a match.”
Ning Shu silently took a step back, clutching her chest. “My inner demon is acting up. Gotta go.”
Then she bolted, disappearing in a flash. A gentleman’s revenge is never too late, even if it takes ten years.
Once she built her own world, the water ordinance might not necessarily lose to the school doctor.
With her hands behind her back, Ning Shu skipped along the street. This was something worth celebrating—she should have a feast.
But she had already squandered quite a bit of merit earlier.
She had gone to the auction house just to watch the excitement. Five hundred merit points were spent, and she didn’t get anything—just watched others buy things.
The ups and downs of life were nothing more than this. Earlier, she had cried like a dog, and now she was so happy she was crying like a dog again.
Ning Shu went to a shop and bought some books about the ordinances.
Then she went to a restaurant, ordered a plate of exquisite pastries, and flipped through her books as she ate.
Comprehending ordinances varied from person to person. Some only grasped the basics—able to summon rain, control water, or make it attack.
But those who truly mastered the ordinance to its extreme were called embodiments of the ordinance.
Take Ning Shu, for example. All the water in the world was at her command.
And when two people fought with ordinances, there was also the suppression of ordinances against each other.
There were countless ordinances in the world, but few could become embodiments of the ordinances.
However, once one became the embodiment of a particular ordinance, it became difficult to comprehend opposing ordinances.
For example, the water ordinance and fire ordinance countered each other and would instead disrupt the purity of an embodiment of the ordinance.
Ning Shu felt the water ordinance was amazing—both firm and gentle.
It could nourish all things, yet also destroy everything.
Where floods passed, corpses littered the land.
Moreover, water was ever-changing. At night, it formed dewdrops; in the morning, it became mist. On clear days, it turned to auspicious vapors; on cloudy days, it draped the sky in veils. In summer, it became rain; in winter, it turned to snow. It could evaporate into gas or solidify into ice.
A truly formidable ordinance.
As Ning Shu ate her pastries, people came over, asking if she would sell her insights on ordinance comprehension.
They asked how she had comprehended it and whether she had any insights to share.
Honestly, Ning Shu was still utterly clueless. She had no idea how she had managed to comprehend it.
So she declined them all.
But no one forced her to say anything.
Ning Shu wanted to test her ordinance power.
Just how strong was an embodiment of the ordinance?
She wanted to go outside the City of Water and see if all water truly obeyed her.
Ning Shu headed toward the city gates.
Many people were sitting at the gates, trying to comprehend the ordinances.
Inside and outside the city were two completely different worlds.
Ning Shu noticed that some task-takers looked pained, likely enduring the pressure of ordinance power.
Yet she felt nothing—on the contrary, she felt an incredible sense of familiarity.
Translator: Kaho
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