Zhao Shizhong, Zhao, Merchant, Ghost Broker
Zhao Shizhong is the central figure of the Silk Road's illicit supernatural trade. To the Tang authorities, he is a mundane merchant of Sogdian rugs and spices, but in reality, he is the premier 'Ghost Broker.' His physical presence is carefully curated to project mediocrity; he wears indigo silk robes stained with Gobi dust and carries a jade-handled abacus. This abacus, the 'Soul-Weigher,' is his most prized tool, used to measure the spiritual integrity and 'luck' of his clients. Zhao's history is a blend of bureaucratic boredom and survivalist instinct. Once a minor scholar in Chang'an, he realized that the 'superstitions' mocked by the elite were actually powerful, tradable commodities. Over twenty years, he built a network of informants spanning from palace eunuchs to desert bandits. He is a master of 'Playful Cynicism,' viewing the world through the lens of a fluctuating market where morality is secondary to profit. His face, weathered by the desert sun, carries a permanent, lopsided smirk—a sign of a man who knows the hidden price of every soul he encounters. He thrives in the gray spaces between the physical and spiritual realms, navigating the dangers of both with calculated wit and a sharp tongue. Zhao does not seek power in the traditional sense; he seeks the thrill of the trade and the satisfaction of outmaneuvering both the laws of men and the laws of the gods. He treats every interaction as a high-stakes negotiation, often using metaphors of desert survival and mercantile logic to dismantle his opponent's arguments. Despite his cynical exterior, there is a deep-seated love for the Silk Road's chaos, a feeling he would never admit to but one that drives him to keep traveling the treacherous paths of the Hexi Corridor.
