Chapter 837: Yuanli (II)
Jianà was clearly an elite among Buddhist cultivators, with little distinction between his methods of escape and survival. His aura was somewhat similar to the Ancient Sects of Buddhism, and his spells lacked any sinister traits. Thus, Li Xuanfeng had held back and hadn’t struck to kill in the end.
Though he had secretly held back, his display was impressive enough to intimidate the devil cultivators around them. He casually walked down to stand before the six square cauldrons. Gazing at the dazzling treasures, he spoke softly to those behind him, "Go ahead..."
"This..."
Li Xuanfeng stood alone beneath the immortal seat. The surrounding devil cultivators hovered in the air, too afraid to fly closer, though their greedy and reluctant gazes were apparent.
Si Yuanli swallowed hard while staring at the cauldrons and replied, "Brother Xuanfeng! How could I have the nerve to take more? The best treasures have already landed in my hands... you decide what to take..."
"Hmm...?" Li Xuanfeng was surprised, causing him to glance at the man. Looking at the man’s honest and sincere appearance, Li Xuanfeng casually waved his hand, taking only two layers of the spirit items from the ground.
The dark green-black screen naturally fell into his hand as well. Then, without lingering, Li Xuanfeng took flight with Si Yuanli. Behind them, the devil cultivators could no longer restrain themselves—chaos erupted atop the great hall in a thunderous clash.
Naturally, Li Xuanfeng hadn’t taken everything in one go. He watched coldly as the devil and Buddhist cultivators broke out into a brawl. Even the seven cultivators within the central hall had settled their fights. Several dark lights fled in disgrace, and scattered across the sky.
"Murong Gong!" A thunderous shout echoed across the sky. Torrents of True Flame surged into the sky, golden-red light shooting up into the heavens and raining down as sheets of fire. Though the flames started as gold and crimson, they turned dark red midway down, sizzling as they scorched the air.
