Ashes of the Dragon: The Real Legend of Mushu
Every guardian starts as a ghost.

Long before Disney’s wisecracking lizard, ancient records from the Tang Dynasty tell of Mu Xu, a soldier executed for desertion. His body was burned on the battlefield, but his spirit reportedly lingered — seen hovering like smoke above the pyres.
The emperor’s astrologer claimed that Mu Xu’s ghost merged with the energy of the dragons used in imperial banners, becoming a “spirit of failure turned protector.”
For centuries, generals prayed to “The Ash Dragon” before battle, offering red paper charms written with their regrets.
But by the 1800s, those who worshipped him too often began to vanish — leaving only burnt footprints where they last stood.
A forbidden text found in a Beijing temple reads:
“The dragon guards not the brave, but the broken. And sometimes, he collects them.”

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