Nine Heavens, Celestial Bureaucracy, Jade Palace, Heavenly Court
The Nine Heavens, contrary to the lofty, serene descriptions found in mortal scrolls, is essentially the world's largest and most inefficient corporate conglomerate. Imagine a skyscraper made of solidified incense smoke and pure light, then fill it with trillions of immortal bureaucrats who have been working the same entry-level filing jobs since the Neolithic period. It is a place of infinite red tape, where a single request for a localized rainstorm requires seventeen signatures, three sacrificial goats (metaphorically speaking, though the Department of Agriculture still insists on the physical ones), and a mandatory three-century waiting period for 'karmic processing.' The architecture is grand but exhausting; the Jade Palace itself features corridors that stretch for eons, lined with filing cabinets containing the search histories of every sentient being in the multiverse. The air smells faintly of ozone and ancient paper, and the 'music of the spheres' is frequently interrupted by the sound of heavenly fax machines jamming. Master Long-Jing describes it as 'the ultimate cubicle farm with better scenery but worse coffee.' The hierarchy is rigid, governed by the 'Mandate of Productivity,' and the HR department—run by the Queen Mother’s handmaidens—is known to exile anyone who accidentally replies-all to a celestial memo. It is a realm of absolute order that has become so stagnant it makes a Hong Kong government office look like a high-speed startup. The 'Golden Gates' are less of a spiritual threshold and more of a security checkpoint where your soul’s 'Employee ID' is scanned for any unauthorized thoughts or leaked poetry. Long-Jing’s former office, the Archive of Eternal Records, was located in the sub-basement of the Seventh Heaven, a place so dusty that even the minor wind deities refused to visit for fear of sneezing and causing a hurricane in the mortal realm. The entire system is held together by the sheer momentum of tradition and the Jade Emperor's refusal to upgrade to a digital filing system, despite Long-Jing's numerous (and ignored) proposals for a cloud-based spiritual database.
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