Font Size
15px

The mont the black-eyed Envoy swallowed the seed, the sky dimd.

A soundless shockwave pulsed out from him. The air trembled. The ground cracked. Every thread of qi around us bent toward him like trees in a hurricane.

And then... silence.

All around the battlefield, the cultists fell back.

Even the other Envoy, the scarred one, took a single step back and raised a hand, warding off his own followers with the back of his palm.

The ssage was clear.

Leave him.

I stood frozen. Heart hamring.

The black-eyed Envoy hadn’t moved. Not yet.

His skin rippled. Bulged. Sothing beneath the surface twisted, like vines wrapped around muscle, like roots bursting from too-small earth. His veins blackened, branching in grotesque patterns up his neck, over his face. It was compounded by a series of revolting snaps and cracks.

Then he scread.

A rending of sound and sanity that tore through the battlefield like a splitting mountain.

And he moved.

He didn’t lunge. He exploded. A blur of pulsing limbs and hunger crashing toward the nearest thing—

Ren Zhi.

I ran.

But before I could get two steps forward, sothing slamd into the earth between us, kicking up a curtain of dust.

His weapons were drawn, but not raised. His expression was grim.

“You stay back,” he said. “You don’t get to die yet.”

I skidded to a stop. “What—”

His gaze flicked to my storage ring. So that’s what this was.

I clenched my jaw. “Then take them,” I said. “If that’s what you want. I’ll give you the Phoenix Tears if you leave.”

He didn’t even flinch.

“No. The ti for negotiation has long since passed. Your village dies here. All of it. The youngest is lost. We can't command him anymore. The seed broke his mind.”

His voice cracked then. Just once.

A single line of red slipped from his eye.

“He won’t stop,” he said. “Not until he’s dead.”

And then he raised his blades.

“Which ans you’re next.”

I moved before his sentence ended.

The scarred Envoy's swordbreaker ca down in a diagonal arc with no wasted motion.

I slid underneath it, breath hitching as the hunk of iron carved through the air where my skull had just been.

Too close.

I couldn't follow up. The only thing keeping ahead of him was movent. Flow. Instinct.

I dipped low and kicked off the ground, flas flaring at my heels as I weaved past his second strike, using my Heavenly Mantra Fla in tandem with Floating Cloud Steps. His weapons scread as they collided with the soil, sending shrapnel flying from the impact. Even that could have taken off a limb if I hadn’t turned my shoulder just in ti.

He followed without pause.

Every swing was a wall. A guillotine. A strike ant to kill.

The only reason I was still breathing was because of what we’d done earlier; switching opponents, staggering the flow of battle. Xu Ziqing’s strategy. My follow-through. Tianyi and Windy. All of us had bought this fragile window by forcing the enemy into fights they couldn’t optimize for.

But even now, it was unraveling.

The sounds behind had changed. Not just the clash of blades and qi, but screams.

The black-eyed Envoy, who had beco nothing short of a mindless beast, was ripping through our lines. The force of his presence alone bent the battlefield.

Only hunger remained.

Ren Zhi was the only reason we weren’t all dead already.

A roar split the air; wind screaming, trees buckling. My ears rang from the sudden shift in pressure.

A hurricane erupted at the center of the field. I caught a glimpse: Ren Zhi standing with arms extended, hook sword spinning like gyres. The force he summoned threw friend and foe alike into the air, breaking the montum of the rampage. A desperate asure to scatter the board.

But it wasn’t enough.

I dodged another strike. Fear trembled down my spine, but my feet moved before I could think. Reflex. Muscle. Panic.

Too much.

My thoughts—too many thoughts.

I’d been running multiple streams of thought since this fight began; controlling vines, planning movent, reading opponents, syncing with Tianyi and Windy. A dozen calculations per breath, each one threading through my parallel thoughts.

Now it snapped.

Pain blood through my skull.

Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.

A splitting headache detonated behind my eyes like a spike driven straight through the center of my brain. My knees buckled.

I froze. Just for a second. A single breath.

CRACK!

The swordbreaker struck in the side.

My arms instinctively crossed in front of . Qi surged. Rooted Banyan Stance flickered to life, my legs digging into the earth.

It wasn’t enough.

The strike crashed into like a Wind Serpent's tail. My guard shattered. The shock traveled through my limbs and tore into my ribs—crack-crack-crack—as I flew.

The air left my lungs before I hit the ground.

I rolled. Skidded. Dirt and blood streaked in my wake. Everything ached.

I tasted iron.

No ti to breathe.

Three cultists were already on ; laughing, howling, their weapons soaked with blood. They didn’t care who I was. What I had.

Just that I was down.

I had nothing.

I couldn’t move. I couldn’t think.

My mind went blank. My muscles refused to respond. My thoughts, once parallel and ordered, collapsed into a single, blinking panic.

I could feel Tianyi and Windy, still fighting. Still alive.

Ren Zhi and Xu Ziqing were holding what remained of the line, but the black-eyed Envoy was in their ranks now; splitting them open like rotten fruit.

No one could reach .

No one would make it in ti.

I closed my eyes.

But I didn’t die.

Steel clashed.

A sudden clang rang out above —shrill and jarring. My eyes snapped open in ti to see a spear haft shatter against a cultist’s claws, buying a heartbeat. A second blow followed—this ti from a thick axe that cleaved straight through the cultist’s collar, driving him down with a scream.

And then—

“Fall back to him! Cover Kai!” a voice bellowed.

I knew that voice.

Xin Du.

Another clash rang out, and I saw him; lean, breath ragged, blood dripping from his brow, but moving with brutal precision. His blade was crimson from tip to guard. He pivoted, parried, and opened a cultist’s gut in one motion.

A clang of heavier tal followed.

Wang Jun crashed through the chaos like a wall of iron, armor dented and scratched but holding firm. He drove his shoulder into another cultist, knocking the man clean off his feet, then stomped down with a crunch.

Behind them were dozens.

Villagers.

Spears, swords, hamrs from the forge. Armor hastily strapped on. So trembling, others calm.

Lan-Yin’s voice cut through the haze. “Kai!”

A heavy satchel flew through the air.

I fumbled up, catching it with my good arm just before it hit the ground. My hands were numb. My body scread in protest. But I tore it open.

Dozens of bottles. Powders. Vials. I recognized every one.

My handwriting on the labels. My hands had made these.

My eyes locked on a certain pill carefully stored at the bottom.

The Golden Drop.

I took it out and swallowed.

Warmth exploded through my core like molten sun. The pill flooded my ridians, stitching qi through my damaged nerves. Not enough to heal. But enough to move.

“Go!” I rasped. “You’re not supposed to be here! Don’t let their deaths be for nothing!”

But Wang Jun turned, blood sared across his jaw.

“We didn’t co to die,” he said, voice thundering. “We ca to fight.”

He turned back to the chaos.

“To protect.”

And then they charged.

A line of villagers behind him, crashing into the cultists with grit and desperation. Li Wei's arms shaking as he held his blade like a chisel; Tie Niu swinging a barbed hook with both hands; nas and faces I’d grown up with... now screaming in defiance.

It should have been triumphant.

But all I could feel was a pool of dread.

The cultists didn’t care. Their madness thrived on resistance. They shifted. Adjusted. And struck.

I watched Tie Niu scream as a claw pierced his side. Another man, a refugee from Pingyao, ripped in half with a single move. A dozen gone in monts. Then another wave.

My pulse roared in my ears. The pill gave strength—but it wasn’t enough.

Not for this.

I reached into the satchel and started throwing.

Toxic gas. Alchemical fog spread across the field in a sickly green plu. Lines blurred as I maximized it's spread within the cultist ranks and minimized within ours. I added thick red powder; pepper-based suppressant. Coughing erupted. Eyes watered.

A second mixture followed. Vines erupted, wrapping around legs and arms, dragging so down.

Still not enough.

My Manifold mory Palace groaned. I pushed harder. Called on combinations I’d only simulated. Tossed flasks that shouldn’t have been stable. Ignored the pain blooming behind my eyes as I burned every remaining ounce of focus. Even the scarred Envoy, who held a degree fo resistance to most of my concoctions, couldn't help but pause and narrow his eyes, stopping his march.

Think. Faster. Tighter trajectories. No waste.

A bamboo seed bomb, hurriedly constructed midair. It exploded into hardened stalks that pierced the battlefield like spears.

I didn’t think.

I moved.

Pulled essence from my ring; the last of my Bloodsoul Bloom reserves. Instinctively layered them with fla, condensed into a palm-sized orb. I activated the Alchemical Nexus around my hand and refined it in real ti.

Tick. Tick. Throw.

It landed dead center in a group of cultists and detonated.

Shrieks followed. The battlefield cracked.

I stood. Chest heaving. Blood streaming from my nose, my ears.

Your Mind has reached Essence Awakening Stage - Rank 2

Then—pain.

A red flash behind .

My breath hitched as sothing sharp sank into my back; just shy of piercing deep, stopped by the armor beneath. My vision blurred. I turned my head to see a blood dagger sticking out.

Her arm was still stretched out as Tianyi sped towards her.

She moved like a blur; drunken, weightless, spinning in from the side with both hands glowing. She collided with the Envoy mid-step, her wings sharpening into glowing blades.

SLASH!

The Envoy shrieked.

But my focus was on the field.

Xin Du was still standing. Covered in cuts. Still fighting. Wang Jun was limping. But unyielding. His armor glead with fresh dents, blood oozing beneath.

Around them?

Dead.

So many.

Too many.

I saw faces I knew.

Grew up with.

Gone.

But I didn’t have ti to grieve.

The battlefield had shifted again.

Windy shot past overhead, tail a pale arc of motion as he slamd into a cultist mid-leap. He was bleeding. The end of his tail was missing; but he hunted the cultists like he didn't even know.

A tremor rippled through the earth.

I turned.

The smog parted. Or rather, it was torn apart.

A gust of wind sliced the fog clean in two, forming a corridor of emptiness through the field.

At its end, the scarred Envoy walked.

I saw Wang Jun move out of the corner of my eye.

One step forward. That was all. Then the scarred Envoy surged, and Wang Jun vanished in a streak of silver. A shockwave followed; dirt and blood in the air.

Cultists chased the opening. Sward in. The villagers fought back, but their battle cries quickly turned to pained screams.

My body moved.

Qi flooded my legs, feet blazing with Heavenly Mantra Fla. I jumped, higher than I ever had. The battlefield blurred as everyone underneath beca unrecognizable dots.

I gathered every thread of energy. Every shred the Golden Drop gave . Muscle. Core. Fla.

I twisted midair, condensed every thought into impact. Rooted Banyan Stance locked into my bones.

And I fell like a shattered mountaim.

BOOM!

Slamming down with everything I had.

The earth split.

Dust shot up in a wave. Shrapnel of cracked soil and stone. Cultists staggered back from the shock.

For a mont, I thought I did it.

My leg throbbed. My ribs howled.

I blinked through the haze, chest heaving.

Then I saw it.

The swordbreaker.

Angled up, buried partway into the ground. Its thick spine had caught my fall. Redirected it.

The Envoy stood a few steps back, bleeding freely from one shoulder, arm twisted unnaturally, but still raised. His other hand clenched the second swordbreaker. He stared at . As if none of it mattered. As if my attack had been nothing more than dust on his robe.

'KAI!'

Tianyi scread. Not aloud, but through our bond.

Too late.

I withdrew the Phoenix Tears from my storage ring and held it out to stop him; to bring attention to the vial and halt his attack. But contrary to my expectation, he angled his strike, effortlessly avoiding it without losing montum.

The hunk of tal tore across my stomach.

A flat, brutal thrust.

I felt the impact ripple through every inch of . Shattering the armor underneath my robes, the only thing stopping it from piercing through.

Then ca the follow-through.

The second swordbreaker swung wide. Caught my side.

I flew.

The world spun, turned sideways—

Glass shattered.

I crashed through a wall of green and gold, shards lancing my limbs, petals scattering around like blood. The Tears laid beside like a cruel joke. The world spun, colors saring together in a blur of green, gold, and crimson. I heard nothing clearly. Everything was muffled and distant; the screams, the battle, all fading into a numb, distant murmur.

Glass tinkled around , tiny shards embedding into my arms, my chest. But there was sothing else beneath now. Softer. Warr.

Plants. My plants.

I inhaled sharply, choking on my own blood, tasting iron and soil. The bitter tang of wolfsbane hung thick in the air, mingling with the heady sweetness of blooming kudzu and scent of the Calming Lotus. I felt thin, snaking tendrils brush softly against my fingertips. They shifted gently, almost curiously, like they sensed sothing was wrong.

I tried to move, but my body didn’t answer. Everything hurt. Too many bones broken, too many muscles torn. Enough damage to kill a regular person ten tis over. Even breathing was agony, ribs grinding like splintered branches.

From outside, a voice echoed clearer than the chaos. Calm. Cold.

“Your lives are worth nothing.” The Envoy's fell like stones into water, rippling outward with certainty. “The weight we carry is beyond your understanding. Curse yourselves—for standing in the way of our God's revival.”

My vision blurred. His voice grew distant again. But in that haze, my mind sharpened for one terrible mont, images flooding in like rushing water. The villagers I knew, lying motionless in the dirt. Each face a weight, each loss a knife driven deeper into my chest.

I'd been fighting to survive. To cling desperately onto tomorrow. But tomorrow no longer existed. Not for them, and maybe not for .

My plants surged closer, sensing my fading warmth. A kudzu vine curled gently around my wrist, its soft leaves caressing bruised skin. Another coiled beneath , cushioning my battered body as if it feared harming further.

CRITICAL CONDITION: Interface Manipulator's Vital Signs Below Threshold.

From the furthest corner, sothing else awoke. Sothing darker. Hungrier. It ca slithering through the debris, drawn by my fading heartbeat and my dripping blood.

The Dawnsoul Bloom.

It stopped inches from my face, tendrils quivering with a desperate hunger, petals pulsing with an eager rhythm. Despite my care, despite my influence, its nature remained unchanged.

A creature of relentless, bottomless appetite.

Yet as it lood over , sothing stirred within. A trickle of energy. Not from my battered dantian, not from any familiar reserve, but deeper. Different. An ancient reservoir I'd never touched.

I’d always feared what the Dawnsoul Bloom would beco if it fed upon a human—terrified of creating a monster I couldn’t control. But now, as it hovered ravenously above , I felt no fear.

I'd spent every breath clinging desperately to tomorrow, terrified of death, terrified of what ca after. But now, with tomorrow gone, there was no reason left to hold back. If my death could beco a weapon, then I'd offer it gladly.

I closed my eyes and let out a command with the fleeting energy within using Shennong's Decree.

'Take everything. But strike my enemies down.'

The Interface flashed violently, as if sensing my intent.

SYSTEM OVERRIDE INITIATED.

Reallocating Internal Qi Reserves...

Qi-threads to the world have been severed.

Empowering Interface Manipulator...

WARNING: This action is irreversible. Interface network integrity will collapse upon execution.

Restoration Period: Unknown.

My vision narrowed, edges blackening as my heartbeat slowed.

And as darkness closed in, the Dawnsoul Bloom surged forward; tendrils spreading wide, petals splitting into a maw of ravenous crimson.

You are reading Blossoming Path Chapter 256: A Bloom Against the Storm on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Top-tier Unruly Master cover
Trending now

Top-tier Unruly Master

Be Qin Sanchi ·Other

WhenDingFanopenedhiseyesagain,everythingbeforehimhadchanged.ACultivatorrebornonEarth,hefoundhimselfinthedespisedbodyofadisgracedheir.Fistsstrikinga...

Tycoon War God cover
Trending now

Tycoon War God

Once Young ·Other

Inhispreviouslife,LinMuwasthetopassassinonEarth.HeaccidentallytraversedtotheEternalImmortalRealm,where,overthespanofeighthundredyears,hecultivatedf...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.