Amidst the silent wait, scorching ultraviolet rays from the blazing sun poured onto Wang Ye's skin.
The climate in July remains exceptionally hot, with the perceived temperature exceeding at least forty degrees.
Even someone like Wang Ye, with immense resistance to heat and cold, feels a bit of discomfort when facing direct sunlight.
But fortunately, Wang Ye's cooling ability is now excellent, and after a moment of adaptation, he adjusted back.
In the sunlight, countless visible floating dust microorganisms in the air transformed into a palm-wide vortex continuously inhaled by Wang Ye.
If at this moment one could observe Wang Ye's body cells under an optical microscope, they would clearly see, as the external sunlight aggressively penetrates, countless cells rapidly swelling to the point of decay and then rebirth as new, tougher cells. These cells greedily devour the energy given by the sunlight, constantly exhausting and renewing at several dozen times faster than usual.
