Font Size
15px

The Sect Master summoned Tian Shen to his post at first light.

"We have received word," he said, his voice low but carrying its weight. "The foreign army grows by the day. Entire clans displaced by corruption seek refuge—but others have been swallowed whole. The enemy spreads like shadow across the ridges."

Elder Su, seated beside him, added quietly, "Their formation patterns are shifting. They adapt quickly, learning from each encounter. We cannot rely on brute defense alone."

Sect Master Feilun’s gaze locked with Tian Shen’s. "You have seen their tactics. Tell us—what must be done?"

Tian Shen stood, his presence radiating calm intensity. "We must do more than brace. We must anticipate. We must train our minds, temper our spirits, and weave bonds that no corruption can unravel."

A murmur ran through the elders. So frowned. Others nodded slowly.

"Do you propose..." began Elder Mu, suspicion lining his brow.

"I propose we transform," Tian Shen cut in, his tone firm but respectful. "Not rely as soldiers, but as a living root system—one mind, one will, one heartbeat."

The hall grew silent.

The Sect Master leaned forward. "Speak plainly."

Tian Shen’s eyes, silver-lit and steady, swept the room.

"I propose we create a shared resonance among the Root Division—where each disciple, no matter rank, can feel the spirit of the others. Where

The training grounds of the Feilun Sect, once serene and orderly, had beco a relentless crucible. Under Tian Shen’s command, every hour from dawn until dusk was accounted for—sparring, formation drills, qi harmonization, and ditation.

Even the spirit beasts, those that had previously dozed beneath the trees, now roared at his whistle, their strength honed through rigorous exercises.

Tian Shen’s spear had beco an extension of his will. Where once its strikes had been pure reaction, now every movent bore intention. His footwork sliced through air like wind through blades, and his breathing—once labored from exhaustion—now flowed like a river, steady and disciplined. Yet despite his relentless efforts, fatigue gathered around his shoulders like an unseen cloak, heavier with each passing day.

Feng Yin rarely voiced concern. She sparred with him at dawn, matching his strength blow for blow, but afterward she would silently tend his injuries with hands steady as prayer beads. Her eyes betrayed no worry, only unwavering focus—and sothing deeper, a quiet bond forged in the crucible of shared hardship.

At night, when the camps fell quiet, Tian Shen would sit beneath the lantern tree, spear across his lap. The silence between him and Feng Yin was never empty; it pulsed with a silent understanding. Sotis she would simply sit beside him, saying nothing, their breaths mingling like harmonizing qi. Other tis, she would speak softly.

"Do you regret the path you’ve chosen?"

He would shake his head. "The path chose . I walk it because standing still would an losing everything."

Her gaze lingered, searching his face as if to morize the determination carved there. "Then we stand with you," she whispered, "as long as the wind does not turn against us."

Her words, though soft, carried weight. He closed his eyes briefly, drawing strength from them.

...

anwhile, within the Grand Assembly Hall, council etings stretched late into the night. The elders—Sect Master Feilun at the helm, Elder Su composed and asured, Elder Mu sharp and impatient—gathered around the jade table, its surface mapped with protective arrays and battle formations.

Tian Shen sat at the head of the Root Division’s representatives, his posture straight despite the weariness lining his face. Around him, younger commanders took notes, eager to absorb every instruction.

"Formations alone will not hold," Elder Mu barked one evening, slamming his staff against the table. "Their obelisks twist qi itself, feeding one another’s strength. We cannot rely on our conventional barriers."

"We cannot stand alone either," Elder Su countered quietly. "We must reinforce the wards and coordinate with neighboring sects—though political entanglents may slow us."

Sect Master Feilun stroked his beard thoughtfully. "Pride cannot blind us. But neither can panic dictate our actions. Our reputation may suffer if we extend calls for aid without restraint."

Tian Shen listened, his jaw tight. He knew they spoke from both wisdom and fear—but the coming storm would not heed such concerns. When the ti ca, hesitation would be fatal.

Finally, he spoke, his voice calm but resonant.

"If we delay, they will not simply strike once—they will wear us down. We must build resilience, train beyond endurance, and prepare for battle on multiple fronts.

Scouts confirm they are reinforcing their forward positions. Their artifacts are multiplying, their formations adapting."

A ripple of unease passed through the room. His eyes held no bravado, only truth.

"I propose we fortify every approach, train until weakness is unknown, and develop offensive strategies as well as defense. If we only withstand their attacks, we invite annihilation. We must strike first—carefully, with precision."

Sect Master Feilun nodded slowly. "You speak of war not as a last resort, but as inevitability."

"Yes," Tian Shen replied without hesitation. "Because the storm we face is not a passing shadow. It is an invasion."

...

Days later, Tian Shen led a special training exercise, gathering not only the Root Division but seasoned warriors from across the sect.

Under his direction, they practiced synchronized drills that mimicked foreign formations. He made them weave and counterattack as one organism, their individual strengths dissolving into unified force.

The ground beneath them shook as spirit beasts charged in coordination with their handlers, simulating real battlefield chaos. Dust and debris clouded the air, but Tian Shen’s whistle cut through the noise, restoring order at every turn.

Even Elder Su observed with approval. "You teach not for victory alone," he remarked to Sect Master Feilun, "but for endurance, adaptation, and trust. These are what will see them through when brute strength fails."

Feng Yin stood at Tian Shen’s side throughout, offering tactical advice in whispers, shifting squads with subtle hand signals, and joining drills until sweat clung to her skin.

Their unspoken connection deepened; when Tian Shen faltered for the briefest instant, she caught his eye, and sothing wordless passed between them—resolve renewed, strength shared.

At night, amid the quiet rebuilding, reports from the borders beca darker. Obelisks glowed ominously in distant valleys. Refugees spoke of entire villages consud by shadow-infused beasts, their formations collapsing under wave after wave of unfamiliar attacks.

The sect’s wards, though reinforced, dimd under their relentless probing. More than once, Tian Shen’s spear burned with unnatural heat as it countered corrosive qi that seed to seep through even protective seals.

One evening, after a particularly grueling day of drills, Feng Yin approached Tian Shen in the training courtyard where fire pits still hissed softly in the dark.

"They grow stronger," she murmured, eyes reflecting the flas. "Their obelisks are spreading faster than we can fortify. We need more allies—or we will be overwheld."

He studied her face, the worry barely masked by her steady composure. "I know," he said. "But allies co with cost. We must choose wisely."

She nodded, then hesitated. "If... if we fall, what happens to the others? To those who trust us to hold?"

The question struck deeper than she intended.

Tian Shen’s eyes softened, but his voice remained steady. "Then we fight. We fight until the last breath. That is all we can do."

For a long mont, silence hung between them.

Then, as if compelled by sothing neither could na, she reached for his arm, her fingers brushing the damp skin. It was not a grand gesture, but it spoke volus.

"We will not fall," she whispered. "Not while we stand together."

Tian Shen’s lips curved into the smallest smile. He closed his eyes briefly, drawing strength from her presence as surely as from his training. The storm within him, once chaotic and wild, began to align—disciplined, purposeful, unbroken.

The next council eting confird what everyone already feared.

A foreign envoy had crossed the border.

Though cloaked in diplomacy, his words were threats disguised as negotiation. He offered submission or ruin, alliance or annihilation, choosing alliances that would fracture internal sect politics, sow distrust, and weaken defenses from within.

Sect Master Feilun’s jaw tightened. Elder Mu’s eyes flared. Elder Su’s expression remained calm, but his fists clenched quietly.

All eyes turned to Tian Shen.

He rose, his posture unwavering.

"We do not parley with predators," he said firmly. "Let them speak their poison. We will answer with strength and resolve."

The hall erupted in nods and whispers.

Sect Master Feilun’s eyes glimred with approval. "Then it is decided. We fortify, we train, and we prepare—not for days or months, but for the long war that approaches."

...

As the eting adjourned, Tian Shen lingered for a mont beside Feng Yin.

"We stand on the edge of the abyss," he murmured, half to himself.

She t his gaze without flinching. "Then we will carve our roots deeper."

He nodded.

The winds outside carried distant echoes of drums and battle cries, but within the heart of the Feilun Sect, a different fire burned.

It was the fire of discipline, of trust, of endurance—and of a spear that refused to fall.

The storm had not yet broken.

But when it did, Feilun would be ready.

And Tian Shen, spear in hand, would lead them into the heart of it.

You are reading Cultivation starts with picking up attributes Chapter 183: Ch-183: He Nodded 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

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