Instead, talk to Master Xi again.  He lauds your efforts once more, but interrupts his praises to tell you that he had a bigger reason for having you restore Huo to the shrine, and he will now tell you about what’s coming.

Xi now speaks aloud- he tells you that there is another, Shen-zin Su, who is in pain.  This is dangerous- and may cause the land of the area to die, and take the Pandaren with it.  He says that conversation with Shen-zin is needed to find out what must be done to heal the land- and in order to speak with him, four other spirits are needed- of which Huo was one.

He then dispatches Ji and Aysa- Ji to find Wugou of earth and Aysa to find Shu of water.  The two eagerly head off- Ji rambunctiously, and Aysa with a mild serenity.  Master Xi says to you that you shall be guiding everyone and requests that you speak to him before you follow Aysa to the Singing Pools, which lie to the East.

Xi tells you that it is of vital importance that all three remaining spirits are returned safely- and while he is too old to do so himself, Ji and Aysa are both too narrowly focused- perhaps even narrow-minded- to handle these tasks alone.  You, however, show a more balanced approach- and so you are the one on whom all of this relies.

Shu, he says, is in the Singing Pools, to the East.  You need to go there, find Aysa, and work with her to find the spirit so that he may be brought back.

This determined, you need to head to the East door of the temple, and down the path.  If you like, you can stop for a moment to listen to Cai and Deng, a pair of Pandaren cubs that chatter briefly about you brining back Huo, and how strong you must be- and then turn and scatter a few moments later.  It’s not really important, but they are kind of amusing.

The path you are now on leads downhill- and into the midst of the Singing Pools, an area composed mostly of very shallow water.  Before you find Aysa you should speak to Jojo Ironbrow, who you can see standing before a number of gawkers- and perhaps more importantly, Whittler Dewei, who stands in the doorway of the nearby house.