The imperial road south from Qingyang cut like a scar across the dry hills.
Ten thousand soldiers marched in two tight columns, banners snapping in the wind, armor glinting under the hard morning sun. Dust rose in a long brown haze behind them.
At the head of the left column rode General Han Feng, sixty years old and built like a fortress wall. Iron-gray hair, scarred jaw, eyes that had seen every kind of death.
Behind him rode five thousand men—most of them Mount Tai sect disciples in plain black armor, their qi coiled tight and ready. They moved like one beast. Undefeated in living memory.
Half a mile to the right, on the narrower ridge road, General Ling Xue led her own five thousand. She sat straight in the saddle, raven hair braided tight beneath her helmet, dark armor hugging a body that turned heads even in war.
The Puyang Blade Clan crest gleamed on her shoulder. Her soldiers were sharper, richer, their blades oiled and deadly. They had grown up in the noble houses of the capital and carried that pride like a second sword.
Neither general looked at the other. They hadn’t spoken since leaving the ruined city. They didn’t need to. The rivalry between Mount Tai and the Blade Clan was older than both of them, and Liu Dai had made sure the fire stayed lit.
First one to reach Qingshui and burn it would claim the glory—and the governor’s favor.
In Qingshui, Alex stood alone in the office.
His eyes were distant, the satellite feed pouring straight into his mind through Mother Ai’s link—crystal-clear, real-time, merciless.
He watched the two columns fork onto separate roads.
“Got you,” he murmured.
Thirty seconds later Zhuge Liang strode in without knocking. The advisor stopped in front of the desk.
With a thought Alex snapped high-resolution images of both commanders and sent them to Zhuge Liang’s mind.
He studied the faces for three full seconds, then spoke in the flat, precise tone of a man who had already run the numbers.
“The older man is General Han Feng,” he said. “Mount Tai Great Sect. The sect sits squarely inside Yan Province, so they’ve been feeding Liu Dai soldiers and cultivators for years. His troops aren’t conscripts. They’re sect disciples. Disciplined. Fanatical. Never lost a major engagement. And they almost certainly brought elders—Core Formation realm at minimum. The kind who can sense drones before the first needle hits.”
Zhuge Liang swiped to the second image. Ling Xue’s sharp, beautiful face filled the screen.
“The woman is General Ling Xue. Puyang Blade Clan. Old money, older bloodlines. They practically own the provincial capital. She’s their best field commander—ruthless, brilliant with a blade, and the soldiers behind her are all clan-trained. Same story: elite fighters, possible Core Formation support. These aren’t Zhao Liang’s amateurs. This force is professional. Dangerous.”
Alex leaned back in his chair. He drummed one finger once on the polished oak, a soft click that sounded louder than it should have.
Ten thousand soldiers.
Destroying that many people isn’t easy. There are simply too many of them.
He stared at the live feed again. The two columns had already pulled farther apart, taking separate roads at different speeds, each racing the other.
Alex’s eyes narrowed. “Why the hell are they splitting up?”
Zhuge Liang answered without hesitation. “Because they’re not on good terms.”
“How can two people from the same province not be on good terms?” Alex asked, incredulous.
“Because Liu Dai wanted them to. He’s been pitting the great sects against the noble clans for years—keeps both sides hungry, keeps them loyal. Han Feng and Ling Xue have hated each other. They’ll cut each other’s throats for the chance to deliver your head first. Right now they’re in a dead sprint. Each one trying to beat the other to Qingshui.”
A slow, cold smile touched Alex’s mouth. It didn’t reach his eyes.
Ten thousand together would have been a nightmare—too many eyes, too many cultivators, too much risk of something slipping through the net.
But five thousand?
Five thousand was manageable.
The plan sharpening in his mind like a blade. Then he spoke without turning.
“Gaia. All routes to Qingshui. Now.”
The AI’s voice was calm, immediate, inside his head. “Transmitting.”



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The readers' comments on the novel: The Almighty Dominance (by Sunshine)
This chapter is too funny.🤣...
Dear colleagues, where else can I find find this book,...
this extended delay in posting new chapters could mean it is time for us to move on to the next novel......
Hello hello, book please!!...
correction: it's been 3 days since chapter 632......
it's been 3 days since chapter 612...please let's have chapters 633 to 635...thanks...
Please upload next chapter...
please hurry up with the new chapters...thanks...
story is nearing the time when he will depart back to Estoria or back to Prussia? please get those new chapters faster...please...thanks...
Crazyyyy, Alex taking over everywhere he goes.....