This chapter opens with the entrance of a young man named chen-qin, the grandson of the great lord ding-wu. The young man is lying down in the middle of the night, and he asks why he is there. . He tells the young man that he is a genius, and that he has done incredible things in the name of the Great Master. He explains that the wind is strong enough to crush a person to pieces if they fall. He then shows the young boy how to keep his body stable by making a layer of "true qi" around it. The wind does not force him to fall, but instead it presses him down. The boy is amazed at the genius of this young man. He says that he thought feng-zein was the one who was calm and composed, but .chen-qiin is so smart that he did not expect him to be so smart. He thinks that if he falls down, he will be able to kill chen
This chapter opens with the entrance of a young man named chen-qin, the grandson of the great lord ding-wu. The young man is lying down in the middle of the night, and he asks why he is there. . He tells the young man that he is a genius, and that he has done incredible things in the name of the Great Master. He explains that the wind is strong enough to crush a person to pieces if they fall. He then shows the young boy how to keep his body stable by making a layer of "true qi" around it. The wind does not force him to fall, but instead it presses him down. The boy is amazed at the genius of this young man. He says that he thought feng-zein was the one who was calm and composed, but .chen-qiin is so smart that he did not expect him to be so smart. He thinks that if he falls down, he will be able to kill chen