After their passing, their files can certainly be read!
Jun Wu was born in the year 180 AD in China. He was not only an accomplished general trusted by the Emperor, but also very well-liked and well-respected by the soldiers who served under him. There are several accounts that have survived from these soldiers that corroborate to this, talking about how he approved emergency discharge for a man whose wife was terribly sick or turning a blind eye to any women secretly enlisting. He was a true Daoist cultivator with inhuman strength, and people were certain that he was a breakthrough away from becoming an immortal. Jun Wu faithfully served to protect his country with a truly upright and moral spirit. In those days and at that time, there was nothing in his character to reproach.
However, that didn't stop others from conspiring against him in jealousy. There had been a successful slander campaign against him in the court, with enough fabricated and misleading evidence to see him dismissed as a general. They claimed that instead of protecting the people of China from danger, he had lead an unsanctioned attack on a nearby village. Not only was Jun Wu cast out of court, but he was also exiled from that kingdom entirely. This was how he awakened to his memories of his past life. By trying to protect his people, Jun Wu was instead condemned for it in both lifetimes through no fault of his own.
He spent centuries wandering China and protecting his people whenever he could. Whether it was from the shadows or in Imperial Court. When the Silk Road started opening up stable trade routes from East to West, Jun Wu began to gather like-minded people to form what would become known as the Eastern branch of The Black Order. During the Renaissance period, he met with people from the Western countries and began to fuse their two organizations into one. In those days, he had people he seemed to cherish as true friends, but one by one they were killed or went their separate ways. It was notable that he had a close friendship with Edea, and it was out of respect to his friend that he killed the demon that tried to use her face to destroy everything she tried to accomplish. Jun Wu was noted to have done a mourning rite that hasn't been in practice since the Three Kingdoms period in China.
However, it was clear that all this time had left him weary and unable to bend to the changing times like he used to. The good person he'd been at the beginning may have died either with Edea or maybe even earlier. The only other person he seemed to befriend was Tsuchigomori among The Unyielding. Jun Wu commented with some fondness that he was reminded of an old, old friend. The last notation was an observation of favoritism towards someone named Xie Lian, but no further elaboration.
Jun Wu: The Ghost General
Jun Wu was born in the year 180 AD in China. He was not only an accomplished general trusted by the Emperor, but also very well-liked and well-respected by the soldiers who served under him. There are several accounts that have survived from these soldiers that corroborate to this, talking about how he approved emergency discharge for a man whose wife was terribly sick or turning a blind eye to any women secretly enlisting. He was a true Daoist cultivator with inhuman strength, and people were certain that he was a breakthrough away from becoming an immortal. Jun Wu faithfully served to protect his country with a truly upright and moral spirit. In those days and at that time, there was nothing in his character to reproach.
However, that didn't stop others from conspiring against him in jealousy. There had been a successful slander campaign against him in the court, with enough fabricated and misleading evidence to see him dismissed as a general. They claimed that instead of protecting the people of China from danger, he had lead an unsanctioned attack on a nearby village. Not only was Jun Wu cast out of court, but he was also exiled from that kingdom entirely. This was how he awakened to his memories of his past life. By trying to protect his people, Jun Wu was instead condemned for it in both lifetimes through no fault of his own.
He spent centuries wandering China and protecting his people whenever he could. Whether it was from the shadows or in Imperial Court. When the Silk Road started opening up stable trade routes from East to West, Jun Wu began to gather like-minded people to form what would become known as the Eastern branch of The Black Order. During the Renaissance period, he met with people from the Western countries and began to fuse their two organizations into one. In those days, he had people he seemed to cherish as true friends, but one by one they were killed or went their separate ways. It was notable that he had a close friendship with Edea, and it was out of respect to his friend that he killed the demon that tried to use her face to destroy everything she tried to accomplish. Jun Wu was noted to have done a mourning rite that hasn't been in practice since the Three Kingdoms period in China.
However, it was clear that all this time had left him weary and unable to bend to the changing times like he used to. The good person he'd been at the beginning may have died either with Edea or maybe even earlier. The only other person he seemed to befriend was Tsuchigomori among The Unyielding. Jun Wu commented with some fondness that he was reminded of an old, old friend. The last notation was an observation of favoritism towards someone named Xie Lian, but no further elaboration.