LOGINIn a world where cultivators risk everything to attain immortality, Wen Lihua has spent years chasing power and burying the pain of betrayal. Once a gifted disciple, she was falsely accused, cast out, and left to rebuild her life from nothing. Through sheer determination, she rises to become one of the most formidable cultivators in the realm. Yet no amount of power can erase the memory of Shen Yijun—the man she loved and the man she believes abandoned her. Reserved, powerful, and burdened by secrets, Shen Yijun has never stopped loving Wen Lihua. When fate forces them back together, old wounds reopen and long-buried feelings ignite. As dark forces threaten the cultivation world and ancient conspiracies come to light, they must fight side by side to survive. Between dangerous trials, stolen moments beneath the rain, and a love that refuses to die, Wen Lihua begins to question whether immortality is truly worth the price of a lonely heart. Filled with emotional tension, unforgettable romance, second chances, and a mischievous fox spirit who steals every scene, Beneath the Immortal Sky: A Heart Left Burning is a captivating slow-burn fantasy romance about love, sacrifice, and discovering what truly makes life eternal.
View MoreIn a world where everyone chased immortality like it was the only answer, she learned something quieter—and way more dangerous. Turns out the only thing worth trying to reach… was the heart she’d left burning in her wake.
.............................................................................
On the morning the Wen Clan’s eastern wing burned, Wen Lihua, sixteen, lay trapped under a fallen pine beam. Her mourning robes—bright white, now streaked with ash and blood. She still had her hand out, reaching for her mother’s jade tablet. No one bothered to check if she was breathing.
Flames wrapped the wooden halls, eating up everything. Smoke thickened the air until every breath scraped her throat. Her eyes stung. Her chest ached. Still, she bit her tongue—she wouldn’t scream.
Three days before that, Elder Wen Zhaoqing—her great-uncle, the same man who once taught her to hold a calligraphy brush, called her a curse before the clan. During the annual ceremony, her spiritual root came up empty. Nothing. Like a dried-up well.
Nobody cared. Not about her.
“A rootless cultivator isn’t a cultivator,” he’d said, gentle as if reciting poetry. “She’s a stain.”
Her father didn’t even glance at her. Her brothers looked at her like someone finally lifted a heavy weight from their shoulders.
So when a fire ripped through the estate—probably some rival assassin targeting the scripture vault—nobody looked for the disgraced third daughter. She became part of the casualties, one less problem on their ledgers.
She clawed her way out from under the rubble, nails bloody, left shoulder hanging wrong. Two fingers bent sideways—she nearly gagged at the sight.
She didn’t cry. She dragged herself clear of the wreck, crawled through a hole in the burning wall, and collapsed in the icy mud behind the kitchens.
Dawn crept over the sky in violet and gold. Pretty, if you like that sort of thing. She hated it.
She hated that it never changed, that the beauty meant nothing whether she’d been the clan’s prize or disgrace. Hated the stars for not even pretending to care. Hated her own lungs for gasping, her heart for beating stubbornly on.
Get up, Lihua.
Her mother’s voice, stubbornly alive inside her head.
Wen Qingzhu had died four years ago—her cultivation gone wrong, her meridians shattered. But sometimes, Lihua swore she still heard her. Warm, steady, never really gone.
You didn’t get through all this just to stay down. Get up.
Lihua pressed her forehead into the dirt. Took a breath. Stood.
—..........................................................................
She walked north for two days. Nothing to eat, no money, her shoulder throbbing worse with every mile. She kept going anyway, trying to put as much space as possible between herself and the Wen Clan. The woods around her smelled of pine and damp earth. Every so often, she saw streaks of light in the sky—cultivators soaring high above the villages. They always seemed close. But you could never reach them.
She’d spent her entire sixteen years dreaming about joining them. Now? Nothing.
On her second night, she found a cave on a hillside above a narrow river. It was cramped, damp, smelling of stone and something strange she couldn’t name. She curled up in her torn robes at the back and let herself close her eyes.
Sleep came fast. But something else found her first.
This wasn’t a dream. Dreams fall away when you wake up. This felt like a cold, sharp needle of light straight into her chest.
Null root, it said. Interesting. Haven’t seen one in three hundred years.
She woke up gasping, clutching her chest. The cave was silent. The air buzzed with leftover echoes.
And deep inside, where everyone else had their spiritual roots—something in her had quietly, finally, started to burn.
Yanran's first session happened the next morning and it was not quiet.Lihua had asked Yijun to be available nearby without being in the room, because the dual-element empathic root, which they had not worked with before, was theoretically capable of producing output patterns that could interact unexpectedly with the cultivation chamber's formation lining.She had not told Yanran this. She did not want to put the idea in her head before she started.She sat across from Yanran in the cultivation chamber and said, 'I want you to do something simple first. Not cultivation. Just sit and feel the room. Tell me what you notice.'Yanran looked at her. 'That is it?''That is it.'A pause. Then Yanran closed her eyes.She was quiet for two minutes. Three. Then she said, without opening her eyes, 'There are six people on this peak right now not including us. Two of them are working and their focus has a particular quality — concentrated, going inward. One of them is in conversation and the emot
Zhu Yanran arrived two weeks after Elder Ren's visit and she was exactly as angry as he had warned.She was nineteen, tall, with short-cropped hair and the kind of face that had stopped trying to be pleasant and had settled into honest instead. She walked across the bridge like someone who had made a decision to come here and was not entirely sure they were glad about it but was committed anyway.Lihua met her at the door.Yanran looked at her for a moment. 'You are younger than I expected,' she said.'So are you,' Lihua said. 'Come in.'They sat in the study. Yanran did not do the looking-around thing that most people did when they arrived. She looked directly at Lihua and said, 'Elder Ren told me he apologized to you.''He said the sect owed me an apology. He could not give it on their behalf.''That is a careful distinction,' Yanran said.'Yes,' Lihua agreed. 'He is a careful man.''He spent four years telling me to push harder,' Yanran said. 'Every time I plateaued he said push ha
Elder Ren Boshi from the Wuming Sect arrived without announcement on a morning in the fourth month and Lihua felt the particular quality of his presence the moment he set foot on the bridge.Not threatening. Not hostile. Something more complicated — the emotional signature of a man carrying something heavy that he had been carrying for a long time and was not entirely sure he should put down.She met him at the bridge entrance.He was perhaps sixty-five, lean, with the unhurried movements of a senior cultivator who no longer needed to prove anything to anyone. He wore plain robes without sect insignia, which she noted. He had not come officially.'Senior Fellow Wen,' he said. 'I apologize for the lack of notice. I was not sure you would agree to see me if I wrote ahead.''You might be right about that,' she said. 'Come in anyway.'She brought him to the study. She did not call for Yijun. She wanted to hear what this man had come to say before she decided who else needed to hear it.Sh
Shen Liying had been at the Reservoir for three months when Ruoxuan came to Lihua and said, 'I think Liying is in contact with someone at the Wuming subsidiary ground.'Lihua put down what she was holding. 'Tell me.''She receives letters. Not unusual — everyone receives letters. But she reads them in the cultivation chamber alone, not in the common areas, and yesterday I walked past and the door was not fully closed and I heard her crying.' Ruoxuan's expression was careful. 'I did not intend to hear. But I heard.''Did you hear what she was saying?''She was not saying anything. She was just crying. But the letter was in her hand and I saw the seal.'Lihua was quiet for a moment. 'You are not sure if this is something I need to know or something that is her private business.''Yes,' Ruoxuan said. 'That is exactly what I am not sure of.''You were right to tell me,' Lihua said. 'Let me think about it.'She thought about it for a day. Not because the decision was complicated but becaus
The research peak they were given was small and slightly crooked and smelled like old botanical specimens and someone's abandoned weather experiments.Lihua loved it immediately.She said so the first morning, standing in the main study with the window open and the mountain air coming in and Nothin
What institutions do with extraordinary things is form committees about them.The Elder Council's official response came three days later. Eleven pages. Forty-seven recommendations. One real offer: reinstate Yijun as Senior Research Elder, give him his own research peak, full archive access, admini
She tried not to hover while he prepared over those three days—really, she did. But she still hovered, just quietly. She’d watched him work day in and day out on the mountain for over a year, but this was a whole different thing. Now he was working toward something that mattered. There were stakes.
The Wen Clan didn’t announce themselves, they just showed up. Middle of summer, right when everything felt steady for once.Lihua was in the lower clearing that morning, eyes closed, lost in her cultivation—light spinning around her, silver-gold and quiet. She felt them before she saw them: three c






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.