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The silence that followed my story was louder than the telling.

I stood there, my back straight but legs trembling beneath the robes they’d offered . Elder Zhu’s hands were folded, but I could see the tightness in his knuckles.

Across from , Sect Leader Shaotian Ye remained still, his face carved in stone.

Then soone laughed. A breathless, bewildered sound. I turned to the source: a gaunt elder with streaks of silver running through his beard. I didn’t recognize him.

“You don’t expect us to believe this, do you?” he asked, voice high with incredulity. “Three Envoys? Dozens of cultists? You’re telling us that a fishing village held off an army?”

I didn’t answer.

I simply stood there.

Because anything I said would only sound worse.

My silence made them uncomfortable. I saw it. In the slight shuffle of feet. The tightening of robes. In the way another elder leaned in to whisper behind his sleeve.

“Kai is not prone to exaggeration,” Elder Zhu interjected, his voice steady. “You may not know him, but I do. If he says this happened, then it did.”

“And I suppose next he’ll tell us the Heavenly Demon knocked on his door for tea,” another scoffed. “Co now, Elder Zhu. He’s a boy. He’s what, sixteen?”

“Nineteen,” I said softly.

That silenced them again.

It shouldn’t have mattered. But sohow, it did.

Shaotian Ye finally spoke, and his voice cleaved through the room like drawn steel.

“How did you survive?”

I froze.

That was the real question, wasn’t it?

Not what happened. But how I walked away.

I had prepared for this, but my throat still tightened. I couldn’t tell them about Ren Zhi.

And I couldn’t explain the Interface either. Not now. Not when I didn’t fully understand what it had beco.

I lowered my gaze and spoke clearly. “I’ve taken a binding oath. I cannot reveal certain details.”

The room bristled.

One of the younger elders; broad-shouldered, with a jade pendant at his neck, opened his mouth to protest. But Shaotian Ye raised a single hand. It was all it took.

The Sect Leader’s gaze pinned .

“So you admit there’s a gap in your story.”

“I do.”

“And you expect us to plan around that?”

I reached into my satchel and held up a single golden pill.

“I don’t expect anything,” I said. “But I offer what I can. This is the Golden Drop. Refined from hybrid Golden Bamboo I cultivated myself. My alchemy empowers others, not just .”

Their expressions shifted.

“I’ve been refining tirelessly. Helping those around . Strengthening my ho. I’m not a sect. I don’t have the sa resources like you do. But we didn’t stand alone because I was strong. We stood because everyone was made strong.”

“A convenient philosophy,” the silver-bearded elder muttered. “One that neatly avoids answering the question.”

But before another word could be said, Shaotian Ye’s voice cut in once more.

“Enough.”

His tone wasn’t raised. But it held weight.

“If what he says is true,” he said slowly, “then worrying about what he isn’t saying is foolish. I’d rather have an honest liar on our side than a cautious fool who waits until it’s too late.”

Shaotian Ye turned toward the gathered elders, the folds of his robe catching the candlelight as he rose to his full height.

“None of you need to like this story,” he said, voice slow and clear, “but you’d be fools not to recognize the threads it weaves into what we’ve already seen.”

He stepped away from the center table and toward the wall, where a map of Tranquil Breeze Province had been laid out in careful ink. Red markers dotted the mountains, coasts, and borders; so new, others faded, peeled at the corners like forgotten warnings.

This tale has been unlawfully obtained from . If you discover it on Amazon, kindly report it.

“Our scouts have reported what we first believed was a retreat,” he said. “Cultist activity along the southwest have died down. Their signatures vanished from the mountains. The last ten villages we sent disciples to have been empty. Close to a dozen sects have disappeared since the cultists have made their move.”

He tapped one of the red markers, dragging it slowly inland with a fingertip.

“At first, we thought we were winning. That our efforts to purge them had finally borne fruit. But now?”

His gaze returned to .

“Now it looks like they’ve simply finished feeding.”

A few elders exchanged uneasy glances. No one interrupted.

“And if what this boy says about the Phoenix Tears is true,” Shaotian Ye continued, “then that silence was preparation.”

He turned his head toward the gaunt, silver-bearded elder who’d scoffed earlier.

“You’ve read the Whispering Wind’s last missive, haven’t you?”

The man shifted uncomfortably. “Of course I have, Sect Leader.”

“Then you know what they found buried in the old salt mines far east. Abandoned cultist bases. Signs of dozens living and training there. But not a single body. With no signs of struggle."

The elders remained silent.

"Now, they’re empty because their purpose is complete.”

He looked to again.

“If this boy’s account is accurate—and I believe it is—then what we’re seeing is the convergence of these fractured limbs.”

He swept his hand across the map, tracing invisible lines from each red marker, like blood vessels all pulsing toward a single heart.

“Destroyed sects, raided towns, the Interface going silent... all of it now points in one direction. The cultists are retreating inward. They’re rallying.”

The murmuring resud, now more subdued. Calculated. A sense of dread replacing indignation.

“Every disappearance is a step closer to sothing; so culmination. A ritual. A revival.”

He faced them fully.

“He’s omitted things. Clearly. But his omissions don’t make his warnings false.” His voice dropped, steely. “And we would do well to rember the difference.”

A breath left my lips. Sect Leader Shaotian Ye had believed . Not blindly, but he believed nonetheless. Enough to act.

His gaze lingered on , sharp yet thoughtful. Then, at last, he spoke again.

“The reason you ca to us... it wasn’t just out of closeness, was it?”

There was no accusation in his tone. Only curiosity. Testing.

I t his eyes. “No, it wasn’t.”

I didn’t bother dressing it up.

“I’m not stupid. I know this is far beyond ,” My voice lowered. “Envoys. Phoenix Tears. The signs of the Heavenly Demon's revival. I couldn’t stop this. But I could warn those who might.”

He nodded once, slow and approving.

I continued.

“I ca here because the Verdant Lotus wouldn’t turn away. Because if I ca to you, if you listened, then others might, too.”

“Legitimacy,” he murmured.

I nodded. “If I stood alone, no one would believe . But with you at my back…”

The corners of his mouth twitched; not quite a smile, but close.

Shaotian Ye turned back toward the rest of the elders.

“We’ll send word,” he announced. “To the other sects and the magistrate. I’ll call for an ergency summit within the week. If we wait longer, we may not get the chance.”

He turned to an elder at his side and began issuing orders. One by one, the gathered council began to move.

I stepped back, ready to make my exit. The weight hadn’t left my chest, but sothing in had loosened. It felt like breathing again after holding my breath too long.

Then I heard my na.

“Kai.”

I turned to see Elder Zhu lingering by the doorway. His silver hair caught the light of the torches.

He stepped closer and placed a hand on my shoulder.

“The journey here must not have been easy,” he said softly. “But know this: the Verdant Lotus does not turn away those who speak truth. Your information is invaluable.”

My throat caught. I managed a small, tired smile.

“I know.” I t his gaze. “That’s why I ca here.”

He nodded. “Rest, Kai. You’ve done more than enough.”

I gave a short bow, the weight of exhaustion finally seeping into my limbs now that the pressure had passed. My body felt like it could collapse at any mont.

Under the cover of moonlight, I made my way back across the quiet courtyard, the night air crisp and still. The stars above were faint, veiled by haze, but they were there.

Waiting.

Watching.

The guest house lood ahead; modest, quiet, a place to rest my thoughts if not my fears. I pushed open the door, slipped off my boots, and lay down on the bedding they’d prepared.

Sleep ca not as a descent, but a surrender.

I woke long before the sun.

The sky outside the guesthouse was still dark. My body protested as I sat up, but sleep refused to return.

I’d only been out for a few hours. Not nearly enough. But rest wasn’t what I needed.

I sat in silence and replayed it all, diving into my Manifold mory Palce. To review that day when the Interface forced my body to the brink, when Shennong’s Decree had beco the will of roots pulling back from death.

I closed my eyes, trying to capture every detail.

The way the vines threaded through like veins. How they clung to my bones when flesh wouldn’t hold.

My first attempts to recreate it since then had been clumsy. The grass stuttered behind my punches. The vines lagged when I tried to move. But the mory was still there, buried like a coal that hadn’t gone out. All I had to do was uncover it.

What worked that day?

The pain had forced into alignnt. My body was broken, and the plants had filled the voids I couldn’t. Every strike had been desperation, but that desperation made efficient. No wasted movents. No hesitation.

If I wanted to replicate it now, whole and unbroken, I couldn’t rely on pain to carry . I needed discipline. Control. I had to choose the harmony that once ca out of necessity.

I opened my eyes, and stepped out into the courtyard barefoot, letting the chill bite at my skin.

I moved to the clearing beyond the stone path, where dry leaves had gathered in patches. The grass here was sparse, crushed by foot traffic and ti. I rolled my shoulders, shaking off the last of my stiffness.

Then I began.

Floating Cloud Steps. Light, breath-guided motions, letting my qi drift toward my feet. I took one step, then another, my body leaning into the rhythm. Soft footfalls. Balanced pivots.

Then I added fire.

Heavenly Fla Mantra. I inhaled through my core, igniting the internal wellspring of heat I’d co to recognize. It flared to life behind my sternum, coiling like a dragon’s breath, and on the exhale, I expelled it in sharp pulses through my limbs.

The ground scorched beneath my feet. Each pivot left a faint black circle smoldering into the dirt. Steam hissed up around .

Then I reached deeper.

Shennong’s Decree.

The roots beneath the courtyard stirred. Thin tendrils of grass and vine crept upward, coiling around my limbs. They slithered across my shoulders, wound about my waist, and cinched tight around my legs. At first, they slowed , forcing each step into a dragging, weighted motion. But this was what I wanted.

I exhaled, lowering my stance, closing my fist and drawing it tight to my hip. My shoulders rotated, hips turning, spine coiling as if I were winding myself into a bowstring.

The plants responded.

They pulled taut, beyond what my body alone could endure. Every tendon in scread at the strain, but the vines stretched further until my body was wound to breaking.

Feng Wu’s words flickered through my mind.

A punch thrown with the arm alone is weak. With technique, strong. With qi, stronger still.

But what about all three—and more?

What about when I layered roots and vines upon myself like muscles and tendons?

My breath hitched. I drew the air in sharp, gathering qi through every channel, aligning it not just with my flesh, but with the plants.

And then I let go.

The vines snapped with , releasing like bowstrings. My arm shot forward, my entire body twisting in perfect unison with the plants that had beco my sinew.

The air cracked.

A powerful gust tore across the clearing, scattering leaves in a violent spiral. Dust kicked up in a wave. The sound echoed off the walls like thunder, fading slowly into silence.

I stared at my fist, knuckles trembling.

The vines unraveled and slumped to the ground, limp and spent. They’d done their part, nothing more.

I stood there, breathing hard, dumbfounded.

That hadn’t been raw strength. It hadn’t been pure technique, either. A harmony I hadn’t known was possible.

And for the first ti since the Interface went silent… I felt like I wasn’t chasing its shadow.

I was walking a path of my own.

The gust faded. Dust settled. My heartbeat slowed.

I staggered back a step and dropped to the ground. My knees hit first, then the rest of folded, breath tearing through my chest in ragged bursts. Pain lanced up my arm, hot and sharp, like the vines had left splinters inside my tendons. My shoulders ached as though wrenched from their sockets, every joint swollen, every muscle trembling from strain they were never ant to bear. Attempting another strike would likely land in failure and even more damage.

So this was the truth of it: strength paid in pain.

I gritted my teeth, letting the ache etch itself into mory. I didn’t need a fluke. I didn’t need one desperate punch to cling to. I needed sothing sustainable. Replicable.

So I closed my eyes and breathed.

I let the sensation linger in my mind.

I chased it, catalogued it, broke it apart within my Manifold mory Palace. Again and again until the details etched themselves deep into .

And then, with the mory firm, I sank into stillness.

The Vermillion Lotus Refinent thod unfurled on instinct, each cycle of breath drawing the impurities out, refining what remained into pure, steady qi.

By the ti I opened my eyes again, the eastern horizon was only beginning to pale. The stars had not yet faded, but the dark no longer pressed on with the sa weight.

I rose to my feet, brushing the dirt from my palms.

The world hadn’t slowed its march. The cultists were still moving. The danger still lood. But for the first ti since Gentle Wind burned, I felt steady enough to take a step forward.

And that was enough to begin my day.

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