Chapter 153 - Chapter 153: Chapter 153: Reaching an Agreement (Additional 3 for Alliance Leader aspirincl) (1/2)

Chapter 153: Chapter 153: Reaching an Agreement (Additional 3 for Alliance Leader aspirincl)

Translator: 549690339

Twenty-one minutes after Xiang Kun drank rabbit blood and red wine, he still felt like vomiting. But what was strange was that the vomit, apart from the wine, also contained a large amount of blood.

He wiped his mouth and frowned in thought. Could it be that this method required repeated trials until his stomach “imagined” drinking red wine and blood as a necessity, forcing his digestive system to adapt and mutate?

If he wouldn’t accept red wine, he couldn’t drink blood, and perhaps his digestive system would be forced to change its structure to accommodate and absorb red wine as a means of “surviving”?

Perhaps this was how Guo Tianxiang caused his digestive system to mutate and “digest” red wine, expelling the residue through urine, which would explain why he was seen peeing by the roadside.

If so, could the digestive system also adapt to other foods?

Xiang Kun couldn’t help but feel hopeful. If this method worked, it would certainly be better than swallowing stones, and it would be a lot more convenient when dining with others.

He wondered about the intensity of the targeted training – whether only liquids would work, or any food was acceptable?

Xiang Kun felt it a bit strange. Why did Guo Tianxiang try so hard to drink red wine? Why not any other beverage or food? Were beer, spirits, or other foreign wines not okay? Were coke, sprite, Minute Maid, and Oreo not palatable? Why only red wine? Because it seemed more sophisticated?

He poured a bit more red wine, and as he looked at the red liquid, it suddenly struck him. Perhaps Guo Tianxiang’s training method was not just about making his body accept red wine as a prerequisite for drinking blood. He might have also simultaneously hypnotized himself into regarding the wine as fresh blood, thus reducing the gastrointestinal and bodily resistance and rejection.

If that’s the case, the only consumables would be restricted to red liquids.

Apart from red wine, what else is there? Watermelon juice? Carrot juice? Tomato juice?

Anyway, if Xiang Kun had a choice, he would definitely not choose red wine as the beverage for his adaptation training. Watermelon juice seemed like a much better choice.

But the issue was, he had not yet discovered how to use Guo Tianxiang’s method of “Direct Eye Hypnosis”, let alone “self-hypnosis”. Convincing himself that watermelon juice is blood was probably a bit challenging.

However, it was not an impossibility.

As Xiang Kun was ruminating, he noticed that the canary had somehow flown onto the table and was tilting its head, looking at him.

Did it find Xiang Kun’s constant vomiting strange?

Err… judging from the bird’s posture, Xiang Kun understood its meaning. It seemed to be… pitying him?

October 18th, 7 am.

Xiang Kun sat up in bed, first confirming his sleeping time – it was still about 25 hours.

Normally, based on the day he came across Guo Tianxiang as a reference, the time he should have felt hungry according to his regular blood-drinking cycle, would have been after midnight on October 15th.

However, perhaps because Xiang Kun carried out multiple rounds of adaptation training on his digestive system with a mixture of watermelon juice and fresh blood in the past few days, he drank a lot of fresh blood. Although he deliberately let the blood sit for a while to reduce its potency, he must have taken in a considerable amount of active ingredients. This caused his hunger pangs to be delayed until the evening of October 16th.

Xiang Kun also tested Guo Tianxiang’s method of “bleeding to suppress fury”, described to Mijoe for controlling “Kasumi of August”, by deliberately enduring the hunger for four hours before bleeding himself.

After extracting a total of 400 ml of blood with a disposable syringe, Xiang Kun indeed felt a significant alleviation of the frenzied feeling brought on by hunger, but there wasn’t a noticeable reduction in his hunger.

Guo Tianxiang has mentioned that the hunger can be eased with the blood of “other animals” but Xiang Kun’s “main meals” are made of the blood of “other animals,” such as rabbits. Therefore, he didn’t try to alleviate the hunger and continued to observe the feelings after bleeding.

Xiang Kun felt that after the bloodletting, the physical qualities such as his strength, speed, and reaction did not significantly decrease, or in other words, the amount of blood he let out has not yet reached a degree that would affect his physical stamina. His hypothesis was, the blood he let out would probably “regenerate” within his body in no time.

But there was an inexplicable, quite unpleasant, all-over uncomfortable and indescribable feeling, so Xiang Kun didn’t dare to bleed more.

After enduring the hunger from night until dawn, he felt a sudden wave of sleepiness, which never happened before he drank the blood.

However, Xiang Kun didn’t dare to fall asleep directly. He was a little worried that it would turn into a sleep whose length he couldn’t predict. So he started drinking blood soon after sunrise.

Just as he had expected, his blood-drinking requirement increased. He had to drain the blood from four rabbits to relieve his hunger.

After waking up, Xiang Kun first carried out his routine operations, measured and recorded various data, then took out the a bottle of watermelon juice prepared in the refrigerator. Without caring about its taste or freshness, he gulped it down and began to time, standing beside the kitchen sink, prepared to vomit.

However, to his surprise, the juice didn’t come back up after twenty seconds.

You had to know that under normal circumstances, both watermelon and watermelon juice fell under the category of “twenty-second vomit.”

Twenty minutes later, Xiang Kun retched a few times, disgorging a small amount of clear liquid. After a while, he felt the urge to pee and ran to the restroom to relieve himself.

He conjectured that the pee was likely the byproduct of the decomposition and digestion of the watermelon juice.

Xiang Kun still urinated now, but infrequently, only when he drank a large amount of water in a short period of time. Sometimes without drinking water, it was normal not to use the bathroom for two or three consecutive days. The water content absorbed from pure water and fresh blood seemed to be ‘swallowed’ by the body in thin air, basically not excreted in the form of urine and sweat.

Theoretically, the water in the watermelon juice shouldn’t be any different from the water in common mineral water, boiled water, purified water and the water from the fresh blood.