The bodies had not yet cooled when the moans began.
Rin stood amidst the field of the dying, a monunt to contradiction. Crimson mist curled around his ankles like eager specters, a thick iron-sweet fog of death that cloaked the bloodied rocks. The deathless silence that followed battle should have been sacred. But here—where desperate cultivators clung to breath not for survival but out of denial—it beca a desecration.
They crawled through the corpses like worms through rot. Hands missing fingers. Ribs exposed. Cores cracked open like shattered fruit. Even so, so still moved. Still begged.
One woman, barely past her second tribulation, dragged herself with broken elbows through the gore, her tongue lolling from a torn mouth. Her eyes—glassy with terror—locked onto Rin. Not because he offered salvation, but because he alone remained unbroken.
"We surrendered," soone gurgled behind him, voice wet with blood. "Spared... have rcy—please..."
rcy. The word cracked like dry bone in Rin's ears.
He turned slowly, blackened robes whispering across the dead. His gaze swept the survivors—not many. Less than two dozen remained conscious, and only five were whole enough to form words. The rest squird like insects, pinned between life and death.
He said nothing. Words would cheapen the mont.
Instead, he saw them.
In the woman with a shattered knee, he saw the village girl he'd once been forced to kill when he fled his own clan. She had clutched a prayer talisman, sobbing, never realizing it was fake.
In the boy with torn robes who crawled with a shattered core, he saw himself—fresh from the grave, with a fire in his lungs and no understanding of the world's cruelty.
So this was what remained when hope clung to breath too long.
Rin closed his eyes.
For a mont, the battlefield vanished. In its place, a deeper mory stirred: a cave drenched in fog, a broken child coughing up blood, asking why the heavens were silent. The answer had co not from gods, but from silence itself. Now, Rin was that silence.
He knelt beside one of them—a gaunt man with hollow cheeks and haunted eyes. "Tell ," Rin murmured, voice quiet as wind through a tomb, "what is it you seek?"
The man trembled, lips quivering. "To live," he whispered. "To live, even if it hurts."
And there it was. The final illusion. The sacred lie that life held aning simply because it continued. To live, not to endure, not to change, not to rise. Just to live.
Rin's fingers brushed the man's forehead, and from his fingertip, a black filant unfurled—thin as hair, darker than night, carrying the stench of decayed ti. It curled through the man's skull, embedding into his soul—a Death Seed.
Not a curse. Not quite a boon. A tether. A way to observe. To study.
To understand.
The man gasped, then stilled. His eyes rolled back. His body convulsed once, then went limp. But he lived. Not because Rin spared him—but because Rin had use for him.
Around him, the other survivors wailed louder.
He turned away.
The Valley of Severed Pacts had been a sacred dueling ground long before it fell to ruin. Ancient swords still jutted from the earth like rusted teeth, each one buried during an oath duel, each oath long since broken. The battlefield whispered with lingering Qi, threads of betrayal and vengeance curling into the soil like worms in bone.
Now, the corpses littered among them were just more forgotten promises.
Rin walked alone, his shadow long beneath a moon that did not exist. Here, in this realm where death's law warped reality, ti bent to his Death Core's hunger. He hadn't rely killed the cultivators who challenged him—he had devoured their deaths, refined them, and engraved new inscriptions upon his Dao Soul.
He had learned sothing new.
The human spirit does not rot cleanly. It festers.
The man he had spared—Zha An—was proof.
The Death Seed allowed Rin to peer through the veil, to witness the unraveling from within. At first, Zha An had rely followed—limping, eyes wide, speaking little. Then he began to change. His breath grew shallow, his gaze fixed. He no longer flinched at the sll of corpses. He stopped praying to the heavens.
Instead, he whispered Rin's na.
At night, the man tore strips from his robe to wrap around dead birds, mimicking burial rites he'd seen Rin perform. When he found a dying beast, he fed it death Qi to 'bless' it. Once, Rin saw him bite off his own fingertip and sar blood on a stone to mark Rin's passing.
He no longer sought life.
He sought significance.
It was in the Hollow Shrine of Sealed Wounds that Zha An finally spoke again.
Rin stood beneath the shrine's roof, ford from stitched flesh of ancient creatures, watching ash fall from a broken sky. It was said the shrine once housed a Saint of Bone, a cultivator who sealed his wounds with oaths rather than Qi. Now only decay remained.
Zha An knelt behind him, trembling.
"You let live," he said, and his voice had changed—quiet and stretched thin, like sinew drawn taut. "Does that an I am worthy?"
Rin didn't answer imdiately. Instead, he traced the death glyphs carved into the walls: prayers to gods who had long since been devoured by their own worshipers. Words faded, but essence lingered.
"You are useful," Rin replied at last. "Nothing more."
Zha An's face twisted—pain, then ecstasy. "Then I will beco more useful. I will beco what you need."
There it is again, Rin thought. The human desire to beco, but never to know. The Death Seed blood within Zha An's spirit like a parasite, curling through his veins and thoughts.
Where others decayed, Zha An transford.
And Rin watched.
Three weeks later, Zha An killed a child.
It was in the village of Mourning Dust, a place caught in eternal twilight. The villagers lived in fear of soul leeches—wraiths that fed on regret. Rin had co to study them, seeking the essence of unspoken death. But Zha An had arrived first.
He had presented the corpse of a child like an offering.
"Her death was pure," he said reverently. "Untouched by vengeance. You... you refine death, Master Rin. I thought—this would please you."
Rin did not speak. The wind howled.
Zha An's face broke into a smile like a cracked mask. "She asked if I believed in gods. I said no. I said you had made them unnecessary."
That night, Rin carved a new seal into the Death Seed—a glyph of Witness. The human spirit, once broken, does not shatter into nothing.
It becos sothing else.
Zha An's transformation continued. He replaced speech with ritual. His hands bled constantly—from carvings, scratches, offerings. When Rin walked, Zha An followed three steps behind, whispering prayers that no longer had syntax.
He buried offerings in the shape of Rin's footprints.
Eventually, he stopped sleeping.
Then he stopped eating.
The Death Seed kept him alive—but barely. His flesh was tight, waxy, translucent. Veins black with stagnant Qi pulsed visibly across his skin. His eyes were milky and unreadable.
Yet he smiled.
He always smiled.
Rin recorded everything. Every change. Every expression. He refined it into a new glyph: Decaying Devotion. It etched itself into his Death Core alongside Grief Reclamation and rciful Ending.
Death had many forms. Worship was one.
The final unraveling occurred on the shores of Lake Withering Light, where reflection showed not what was, but what had been lost. The lake was dead—its water still, silvery, filled with bones that never rotted.
Rin sat beside its edge, gazing into his own reflection.
He saw a child.
Not himself. Soone else.
A boy with eyes full of stars and teeth stained with rot. A boy who had once buried his parents beneath shallow soil, and pretended the dirt could keep them safe.
Rin looked up.
Zha An was gone.
Only a figure remained—a thing, draped in bones and silence. It did not breathe. It did not weep. Its face had been peeled clean of expression. Only the Death Seed pulsed faintly in its skull like a candle guttering in wind.
It bowed.
Rin approached.
"Why?" he asked—not because he needed an answer, but because the question itself was part of the ritual.
The thing that had been Zha An rasped, "Because I did not wish to die forgotten."
Rin placed a finger against its chest.
The Death Seed unraveled. Not with destruction, but with acceptance.
There was no scream.
Only stillness.
A final glyph etched itself into Rin's core.
Remnant Echo.
It recorded not death, but what remained after. A soul stripped clean of identity, only devotion, only mory. The final vestige of a human spirit that clung to breath until breath beca aningless.
Rin turned away.
The lake reflected no one.
By the ti he reached the next sect, Rin had already begun to evolve his Death Core. Its color darkened—no longer gray-black, but obsidian laced with veins of white ash. Its shape no longer circular, but spiral—a vortex pulling all concepts of death inward.
He felt no satisfaction.
He had not spared Zha An out of kindness. Only curiosity.
But that single rcy had given rise to an entire new branch of cultivation.
From Zha An's decay, Rin had forged:
Witness Seed – allows observation of a soul's transformation through trauma.
Decaying Devotion – manipulates followers through spiritual unraveling.
Remnant Echo – stores the final psychic impressions of a dying identity.
Each was etched into his core as rings of blackened fla.
Each was proof.
That even the clinging could be useful.
That death was not the end—but the crucible.
And that rcy, when wielded by the unrciful, was just another form of death refined.
To be continued...
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