Episode 1
Wu-Kang was born in Xiāan, Shaanxi.
He had grown up in a happy, harmonious family ā until his life changed three times.
The first turning point was the plague.
The epidemic that swept through Xiāan claimed thousands of lives in a matter of days ā including his own family.
Left an orphan overnight, Mu-gang wandered the streets and begged to survive.
Even now, he often thought,
āItās a miracle I didnāt die back then.ā
The second turning point came when he saved a martial artist.
During the height of the plague, Wu Kang lived beneath a small bridge by the stream.
One day, he returned with a single meat bun he had begged for, only to find a man lying unconscious and covered in wounds in the spot where he slept.
He had thought the man might die if left alone.
At that time, he hadnāt yet known that martial artists ā their bodies trained by internal energy ā had lives that were surprisingly resilient.
To the young boy, the fallen man looked like his parents.
So Wu kang desperately crushed what he thought were medicinal herbs and spread them over the manās wounds.
His stomach growled in protest, but he didnāt touch the precious meat bun.
Hours later, the martial artist stirred awake.
He looked warily between the poultice on his wounds and the bun offered to him⦠and then devoured the bun in silence.
Afterward, he asked Wu Kang a few questions.
Learning that the boy was an orphan, the man offered to take him along to Xinjiang.
āYou saved my life. Iāll help you until you can live on your own.ā
Those warm words broke the boyās restraint. He wept.
Even now, he wondered how he had made it all the way to Xinjiang.
When Wu Kang turned fifteen, he began learning martial arts ā but after three years, he still hadnāt mastered even the basics.
He simply lacked talent in martial arts.
However, he had an excellent memory, so he was sent to train as a physicianās apprentice.
The third turning point was the dream.
Starting from the day he turned twenty, Mu-gang began to dream every single night.
At first, they were vague, indistinct.
He would wake knowing he had dreamed but remember nothing ā a frustration that gnawed at him.
Then, one day, the dreams became vivid.
It was the year he turned twenty-six.
Suddenly, Wu Kang was no longer in bed.
He was standing before a man bound and trembling in terror.
The man tried to scream, but some kind of restraint held his jaw shut; his body was strapped to the chair.
Wu Kangās fingers moved delicately, like playing a piano, as he approached.
The man struggled harder the closer Wu Kang came.
When Wu Kangās glowing hand touched the manās legā
Crackā!
The leg came off cleanly.
The manās eyes bulged so wide that the corners split and bled.
Wu Kang was horrified.
āHow could a healer ā one meant to save lives ā do something like this?ā
Yet his hands continued, dismembering the man limb by limb.
The manās eyes rolled back in unbearable agony until only the whites showed.
Wu kang thought frantically,
āThey call me Mad Doctor, but Iām no villain.
Evil? Perhaps ā but this one is just an E-rank Awakener, the kind that dies at the first sign of a disaster.
If heās to survive, this is the only way.
Iām not killing him ā Iām giving him a chance to live.
The pain he feels now is only phantom pain brought on by fear of my reputation.ā
The Mad Doctor tore off all four limbs ā cleanly, without a drop of blood.
Still, the man wept bloody tears and fainted.
āMaybe I rushed it. I can feel my mind splitting again.ā
He took a deep breath and steadied himself.
Then he attached chimera limbs to the manās stumps, casting a blessing of regeneration.
The blue skin quickly shifted to match the manās own.
One by one, dozens of Awakeners passed through his lab ā each implanted with chimera parts.
And with each one, the Mad Doctor aged.
Wrinkles deepened, his cheeks hollowed ā a price for experimenting first on himself.
Days later, the foretold calamity struck.
Many Awakeners died. Many more were maimed.
Weeks passed, and word came that the disaster had been vanquished.
The Mad Doctor, now a frail old man, smiled faintly, closed his eyes, and thoughtā
ā…Mu-gang! Wu Kang! Wake up!ā
āWho⦠is Wu Kang?ā
The Mad Doctor frowned ā and then felt a hand shaking him.
āStill not waking up? Letās see who wins this time!ā
Smack!
āKeuk! Iāmā Iām awake! Iām awake!ā
With his cheek burning, the Mad Doctor opened his eyes.
A young man stood over him.
āWu Kang, didnāt you say you had to leave early today?
Good thing I came to check ā you almost overslept.ā
āHuh? Oh⦠uh, did I ask you to wake me?ā
āNope. But come on, who am I? Shin Joo-geon, the guy who can read your mind, remember?
And donāt think Iām doing this because you refused to drink with me last night ā absolutely not revenge.ā
āShin⦠Joo-geon? Thatās your name?ā
āWhatās with your tone? Did you forget who I am? Still half-asleep, huh?ā
The young man tilted his head, muttering to himself as he raised his hand again.
Wu Kang hurriedly waved his arms.
āAlright, alright! Iām awake, donāt hit me again!ā
Shin Joo-geon clicked his tongue in disappointment.
āIf youāre awake, wash up and get to the infirmary.
If the day goes well, donāt forget itās all thanks to me.ā
āGot it, Joo-geon. Thanks for waking me.ā
āWaitā you thanked me? Hah! You really are acting weird today.
You sure you didnāt eat something bad last night?ā
Wu Kang, sensing suspicion, quickly replied,
āJust the dumplings we shared. Thatās all. Do I really sound that strange?ā
āCompared to your usual self? Definitely.
But whatever ā weāre both busy men. Weāll talk later.ā
Joo-geon gave him one last worried look and left.
Wu Kang sat there, pressing the acupoint between his brows.
A throbbing headache pulsed behind his eyes.
Maybe it was the clash between his memories and the Mad Doctorās.
Or maybe it was just the slap.
After about half an hour, the pain faded.
Wu Kang grimaced, washed his face, and headed to the infirmary.
āIf the man in my dreams really was my past life⦠how incredible that would be.ā
The man in his dreams had been a genius ā a half-mad savior who sacrificed himself for the world.
So different from the struggling healer he was now.
Wu Kang chuckled.
āUnless thereās a status window popping up, itās just a dream⦠huh?!ā
Right before his eyes ā a status window appeared.
[Mu-gang ā Mad Doctor LV 1 / Third-rate Martial Artist of the Sun and Moon Sect / Physician]
Inner Power: 10 Years
Mad Doctor Skills: Anesthesia (F), Disinfection (F), Detoxification (F)
Skills cannot be improved through training.Sun and Moon Sect Skills: Soul-Fusion Qi Technique (F)
Physician Skills: Medicine Crafting (C), Qi Acupuncture (C)
Skill Points: 0
Wu Kang stared blankly, then pinched his own cheek hard.
Pain. Tears welled up.
Not a dream. Not a hallucination.
āItās⦠real?ā
He couldnāt deny it anymore ā but curiosity outweighed joy.
The scholar in him wanted to understand how this was possible.
āThree professions at once? How does that evenā Oof!ā
Something bumped into his shoulder.
Turning, he saw a water carrier with a yoke of buckets.
āAh! Iām sorry, Doctor! I didnāt see you there!ā
āItās fine. I stopped suddenly ā my fault.ā
āTh-thank you, sir!ā
Wu Kang waved it off kindly.
Even if the man had been at fault, he wouldnāt have scolded him.
Everyone in this small Sun and Moon Sect village was practically family.
He sighed.
āNo time to stand around.ā
And hurried off.
Later, in the infirmary, Wu Kang finished his morning tasks and retreated to the so-called main chamber ā really just a small rest room.
Lying on the bed, he brought up the status window again.
Some things were different from what he remembered in the dream ā inner power instead of mana, for one.
āTen years of inner power ā matches the strength of my dantian perfectly.ā
The skill list was familiar: Medicine Crafting (C), Qi Acupuncture (C), Soul-Fusion Qi Technique (F).
He examined the new passive skills tied to brewing medicine, channeling energy, and applying acupuncture.
āMakes sense. They fit my work as a physician.ā
The martial technique was one heād learned years ago while training.
He wondered why his footwork and fist techniques hadnāt registered, then dismissed it.
Probably because his skill hadnāt been high enough.
Deciding there was nothing else to check, Mu-gang dismissed the window and lay down.
He planned to nap until a patient arrived.
But an odd discomfort pricked at him.
āWhy do I feel⦠uneasy?ā
He sat up and looked around.
The infirmary, spotless yesterday, now seemed filthy.
Not because of dust or clutter ā but because his past lifeās habits demanded surgical sterility.
āGood grief, how can a clinic be this unhygienic? What was the me of this life even doingā wait.
Is this what Joo-geon meant by my weird speech?ā
Indeed, his tone had changed ā less formal, more casual, even flippant.
Clearly the personalities of both lives had blended.
Still, he didnāt feel like changing it back.
āWell, I canāt clean everything by hand⦠but I do have a Disinfection skill.ā
And with that, Wu Kang cast Disinfection.