First, let us begin with the first individual. His name was Hu Chengyan. Due to the passage of time, his name is no longer recorded. Chengyan was born during the late Eastern Han Dynasty. He was the eldest son of Hu Xianyong. He was once cursed by a monster and regained demonic powers. The book explicitly records that he not only massacred large numbers of Wei soldiers on the battlefield but also fed on human blood after the war. Since historical records offer no accounts of him, later generations struggled to uncover the truth. They surmised that Chengyan's deeds were recorded by his son, and his absence from the Records of the Three Kingdoms likely stemmed from insufficient historical significance. 29Please respect copyright.PENANA8WQ4KLTznJ
Tragically, he lost his wife in 211, the very year his infant son was born. Curiously, the text omits his wife's name and cause of death, with even fewer records preceding the Three Kingdoms period. Following the deaths of his comrades and Zhuge Liang, Chengyan perished from a ruptured aorta. His overwhelming negative energy prevented peaceful rest, prompting his son Hu Yuanhua to seal his soul within a purple necklace.
Why wasn't Hu Yuanhua blamed, since he created the first clone? The reason is simple: Chengyan's vengeful spirit couldn't be allowed to roam freely, as it would harm others. His negative energy was so potent that any host body he possessed would collapse under the strain and die. Chengyan's mental state was severely unstable. After Hu Xianyong was beheaded by Sun Quan following the Battle of Maicheng, news of his death reached Chengyan. Chengyan completely lost his mind. During the Battle of Yiling, he unleashed a massacre. Members of the Eastern Wu camp later described Chengyan at that time as no longer human, but a beast. 29Please respect copyright.PENANADqbLTC7mi1
According to his second son, Hu Wanghua, Chengyan underwent a drastic personality shift after his father's death. He grew increasingly bloodthirsty and more volatile than ever before. His state rendered him utterly unfit for work. After his death, wails frequently emanated from the place where Chengyan perished. Some claimed to have seen the phantom of his body pierced by a large hole, its appearance utterly terrifying.
Even more puzzling is why Hu Xianyong was singled out for blame when several other members were equally controversial. Documentation is scarce, partly because members claimed the purple necklace carried a curse that caused numerous offspring to die young. Furthermore, Hu Wanghua's bloodline nearly died out due to the high mortality rate among his children, with the sole surviving heir being adopted by Hu Yuanhua's descendants. The Wei, Jin, and Northern and Southern Dynasties period was an era of fragmentation, forcing the Huyan Hu clan into exile. 29Please respect copyright.PENANALbrOfAV36t
They fled from Luoyang to Nanjing, leading members to attribute their displacement to the purple necklace's curse. One member once attempted to burn it. Tragically, he was tormented by nightly dreams of Hu Xianyong weeping until he died from the nightmares. Because of that member's death, all members came to regard Hu Xianyong as the scourge of the Huyan Hu clan. Lacking sufficient evidence and documentation, the four brothers found it difficult to determine Hu Xianyong's guilt at that time.
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