Cary’s face was pale.
Asking him to enter the urn, how could he not know?
A torturer who is best at torturing people invented the torture that burned a mouthful of the urn and then hurried away, but he did not expect to be invited into the urn in the end.
To put it bluntly, it is to treat the person’s body with his own ways.
He was extremely frightened, for fear that Charlie would also open a big hole on the top of his head.
The only thing that is gratifying is that Charlie does not understand the art of raising Gu, nor does he have a natal Gu-worm.
Otherwise, if the Gu-worm is allowed to bite his skull cap and eat his brain, then he will suffer a comparable pain before death.
In front of which the torture of eight hells is nothing…
So, he cried and pleaded: “I know I am guilty, so I only ask the master to give me a happy ending…”
“Give you a good time?” Charlie smiled slightly and said: “You can’t ask me about this, you should ask your silkworm baby!”
With that, Charlie stepped on the dying Gu-worm with his toes.
Cary felt a panic in his heart, but soon felt that Charlie must be frightening him, that his natal Gu-worm would be loyal to him and be completely controlled by him till death, and it is absolutely impossible to turn its head back to bite him.
However, just when he thought so in his heart, Charlie suddenly punched a spirit energy into the Gu-worm.
FAQ Novel
Q: What is the ‘asking you to enter the urn’ allusion, and how does it relate to the chapter?
A: The allusion refers to a torturer who invented a brutal method and was then subjected to it himself. In this chapter, it implies a character might face a similar fate, being harmed by their own methods or tools.
Q: What happens to Cary’s Gu-worm, and how does it affect him?
A: Charlie manipulates the Gu-worm, turning it against Cary. This leads to a horrifying and unexpected turn of events for Cary, as his own creature becomes a source of his suffering.
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