"I saw it, what happened?" Ding Ling said, slightly stunned.
"Do you know what that is?" I said, turning to look at her. When the other party heard this, she shook her head in confusion and said softly: "Aren't you good at this kind of thing? You don't even know.
How can I find out... But judging from its appearance, it has claws and horns, so it must be a dragon, right?"
After Ding Ling finished speaking, he looked at me expectantly. I thought about it for a moment, shook my head and said, "I'm not sure about this yet. In fact, I rather suspect that the thing below is a human being."
"What do you mean..." Ding Ling froze there for a moment, and was really shocked. Seeing her like this, I smiled and told her the story I had just read.
This stone tablet says that the person in the jade coffin will be "surrounded by dragon energy" in a specific Feng Shui position. In a short period of time, this environment can bless his descendants, but over time, his body will be destroyed.
produce mutations.
The description here is quite detailed, but from the beginning to the end, it has not been directly stated what happened inside, and to what extent the corpse was mutated when it was taken out of the tomb. It only said that the person who gave Murong Hui some guidance back then was not mentioned.
The "Zhenzhen Zhenren" gave him three copper coins and a white stone to use for the old man's jade coffin.
I think the current display in this place is somewhat consistent with this statement. Looking at the bottom of the jade coffin, indeed, there is a strip of stone carved with cloud patterns placed under the jade coffin. Overall, it looks like
Base.
As for where the copper coin is, it's hard to say. The key to my thinking lies in the word "dragon energy" on the tombstone.
Because I really can’t think of anyone else, other than the old man’s body that mutated and turned into that giant beast, who could find such a powerful creature in the vast land and then put it here.
at.
Judging from the way the giant beast climbed up just now, this big pit sunk deep into the ground is most likely used to trap the things underneath. As for the real treasure, it is countless.
The gold sand comes second. If the legendary treasure refers to the gold sand, it would make more sense that there were only a few jewels in the package of the mummy we encountered on the way out.
Before, I was wondering why he went all the way into the underground palace and found the treasure. Why did he take just a few pieces out? Now it seems that it is not easy to find such a few pieces of jewelry in this poor place.
After listening to my explanation, Ding Ling nodded. After being shocked, she pursed her lips and snickered. I asked her why she was giggling. She said that I was so clever that I was misled by my cleverness. What's the use of thinking so much?
If you are really suspicious, wouldn't you know if you push the jade coffin open and see if there is a corpse inside?
When I heard this, I quickly shook my head and said to myself, this silly girl really doesn't know the heights of the world. Although more than 90% of the corpses in the ancient tomb are a piece of moldy rotten meat, this does not mean that
, the contents in the jade coffin are just like the others. I always feel that since an expert enlightened this place back then, he must have his reasons. It is better not to touch such a tricky thing.
Thinking of this, I shook my head and said to Ding Ling: "Forget it, forget it, let's go, it's none of our business."
"Are you scared?" Just as he reached out to pull her, Ding Ling pushed the lid of the jade coffin and said with a smile.
"There are zombies. Didn't you see that the dead senior brother had so many corpse-killing charms on him? Stop making trouble, let's go." I said, half coaxed and half frightened.
"Don't come here, I'm not afraid. If there are zombies, wouldn't you be there? Anyway, sooner or later, you will be pushed away. Let's take a look first." Ding Ling said, sticking out his tongue and making a pose.
He looked very playful, regardless of my objections, and really pushed the lid of the jade coffin...
The jade coffin is different from the wooden coffin. There are no coffin nails on it. Generally speaking, it is just two perfectly fitting grooves put together. Push it diagonally from bottom to top, and the coffin lid will be pushed.
Opening a small crack, the moment he pushed it open, Ding Ling said "Huh" and turned around to see that this girl... was looking at the contents of the coffin with a suspicious look on her face.
"What did you see?" I turned around and asked her while studying several nodes on the stone tablet with a flashlight.
"See for yourself." Ding Ling said with a puzzled look on her face. Seeing that she didn't seem to be joking, I stood up with a slight frown, walked around the stone monument, and took a look. At that time, I couldn't help but say "Eh".
Inside the coffin, there were no grotesque corpses. Instead, there was a pool of clear water and a few slender, loach-like fish...
The water was really clear. It looked even clearer in the slightly green jade coffin. When I flashed it with a flashlight, there was water in it, but there was no impurity or ripples at all. I counted carefully and found seven black streaks.
Fish swim around inside, with square heads, snake bodies, fins, and tails. If you look carefully, you can still see some extremely small scales and markings on their bodies.
However, they do have no claws. They turned a blind eye to me and ours. Each one of them was like an eel in an aquarium, swimming around leisurely...
Without food, without sufficient oxygen, and sealed in coffins for thousands of years, how did these things survive?
Just as I was thinking about it, I shined a flashlight on one of them, Ding Ling, who was watching carefully and asked me: "Smelly fox, is this a little dragon?"
"Probably not." I said, shaking my head.
"Then is this the old man's body?" Ding Ling said, even more confused.
"Probably not." I said, reaching out my hand to stir it up. When my hand reached the water's edge, I didn't dare. I turned around and looked around. On the wall, I saw a shiny copper pot. I took it out.
A white sweater needle-like thing over a foot long.
I don’t know what this thing is used for, but judging from the material, it is probably made of ivory, which is somewhat similar to the kind of sticks used in the Tibetan Golden Urn Drawing Ceremony in history textbooks.
, but the stick there is flat, but this one is round.
"What do you want to do?" Ding Ling said as if she didn't quite understand what I meant.
"I want to try to see if these things are real." I said, bending down and leaning through the gap in the jade coffin, using the stick, stirred about half of the water. This thing,
Colorless and odorless, it is indeed no different from ordinary clear water. However, the fish there are so fast that they cannot be touched at all.