Chapter 1473 - 1420-1421 Pang Hong’s Dissatisfaction_2
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But when he truly held great power in his hands, he started to suspect nobility with a petty mind, worrying that the existence of his master would affect his authority, and began to guard against and fear him.
Such petty behavior, the actions of an ingrate, were beneath Pang Hong’s contempt.
Indeed, Pang Hong’s attitude was directed precisely at Jade Emperor Zhu Houji and it was just short of calling him out by name as an ungrateful wretch who burns bridges after crossing the river.
Pang Hong’s perception of Jade Emperor Zhu Houji was a particularly tortuous and changing process, from indifference to acceptance, to approval, and then to aversion and disgust.
If we speak of the days when he lived in the era of the Great Ming Empire as a child left behind by the death of a father, dependent on the charity of others, Pang Hong didn’t pay much attention to who exactly ruled over the imperial lands, as it held no significance for him.
At that time, what mattered more to Pang Hong was survival, while any feelings of dislike or fondness for certain people were non-existent for him, less real than a full meal or a piece of decent clothing.
However, since becoming a nominal disciple of Pei Xuanjing, Pang Hong’s life had taken a radical turn. Pei Xuanjing’s arrival was like a beam of light in his dark life, pulling him completely out of the shadows and transforming his life.
From then on, his life’s goal became Pei Xuanjing; his existence meant everything to him. The enemies of his master were his enemies, and the friends of his master were those he needed to respect and treat well.
Especially as the only disciple of Pei Xuanjing and the second-generation patriarch of the Shenxiao Sect, everything Pang Hong did was to protect everything of his master’s. However, in doing so, he naturally incurred the displeasure of Jade Emperor Zhu Houji.
