Another three days passed. The ghosts returned from their outward work, robes dulled at the hems, their motions still crisp, so they would not be discovered as not of the living.
In Radeon’s new stone pavilion, Calyx sat across from him. The Preta’s composure tried to hold, but anxiety kept leaking through the cracks.
A pot of tea stead between them, untouched. The scent of bitter leaves hung in the air like a question no one wanted to answer first.
"Lord Radeon," Calyx said, "may I ask whether my efforts t with your approval?"
Radeon did not reach for the cup. His gaze stayed on Calyx, steady and unhurried.
"What’s your guess?"
Calyx hesitated, then let honesty slip.
"I cannot help but think we might have spared more lives."
Radeon shook his head before Calyx could build excuses on top of regret.
"Tell , Calyx. What happens if you hand those manuals to the dics?"
Calyx’s thoughts ran through it in quick steps. Gratitude would follow. Reputation would follow. The healers would rember the na Cairnlight, and that mory would beco leverage.
But handing over the thod would also expose the limits of what Cairnlight could offer. It would show the edge of the blade, and once people knew where the edge ended, they would start testing it.
Radeon nodded as if Calyx had spoken aloud.
"Both your assumptions are right," Radeon said. "Now answer this. If you only skimd the dical arts, how many days until you could reverse-engineer the technique?"
Calyx’s fingers tightened on his knee. He had been reading the technique for six days, and he could feel the pattern in it.
Not all of it. Not yet. But enough that the shape had started to reveal itself. In his estimation, he was already a quarter of the way through the intricacy.
Then the point struck him like cold water.
If he could do that, then others could too. Geniuses. Specialists. People with nothing to do but take apart a gift and sell the pieces.
Give them a year, maybe two, and they could master the whole thod. Worse, they could twist it into other forms.
They could derive arts from it the way a butcher turns one carcass into ten cuts.
They could even make it offensive. Calyx stood and bowed.
"I have learned a great deal of how the world truly is," he said quietly.
Radeon’s mouth barely moved, not quite a smile.
"Here’s what I do," Radeon said. "I assu everyone’s better than they look, and I’m worse. I plan like I’m already behind. Then I flip it."
Calyx felt the lesson settle, not as wisdom, but as a habit he would have to practice.
"I understand now," Calyx said. "You an there is no judgnt entirely uncoloured. One must shift one’s view, again and again, until one is forced to look upon the angles one would rather not see."
Radeon finally lifted his cup, took a small sip, and set it down again.
"Co," he said. "Let’s check the terraces."
They left the pavilion and descended into the Voulgrim Evershades. From above, the place still felt like a scar in the earth.
Inside, it had been stripped down and rebuilt into sothing that did not resemble ruins at all.
The old wreckage was gone. In its place was a maze that shifted as they walked, passages tightening and opening, walls breathing with a slow, stony patience.
It was not ant for comfort. It was ant for challenge.
A secret realm.
This was what they would offer cultivators. Entry by paynt.
A hundred spirit stones at the lowest, ten thousand at the highest. There was also a hell maze that opened only once a year, its entrance locked behind tickets sold through the auction house.
Even the tickets were tiered. Breath tempering. Cornerstone Setting. Up to gilded core, the limit of what the maze would allow without breaking its own balance.
Here, ghosts could harvest fear from those who entered without needing to hunt in the open.
People would not die inside. Wraiths and ghosts would pull them out before the last breath slipped away.
What the challengers fought would look like undead, ghosts dressed up as elental spirits, threats with masks the living already feared.
At the end of each branch of the maze, a prize waited. A martial art. A weapon.
The moving mazes analyzed every move. Every thod used to draw qi. Every habit of footwork and breath.
Then the maze awarded sothing that fit the entrant’s needs, like a tailor sewing in the dark.
Radeon wanted to build connections with the other sects this way. It looked like generosity.
Masters loved challenges for their disciples. They would send them gladly. They would call it opportunity and pay for the privilege.
As they passed through the shifting corridors, they entered a vault. This vault opened only to two people. Calyx and Radeon.
Inside, the wealth was not piled like a dragon’s hoard. It was organized like a factory’s output. Manuals lined shelves in dense ranks, over ten thousand of them, written and copied and sorted.
Newly minted gold lay in stacks that rang with a sharp clang. More still being poured in from outside.
Elixirs and pills collected in trays that refilled themselves with a quiet, persistent rhythm.
Spirit stones glead in reserves taken from Spendworth Hills and Silvertoll Summits, stored not as trophies but ergency funds.
It was not just a vault. It was a dispenser.
The chanisms were infused with the rged imprint of Calyx and Radeon’s consciousness.
The cache was alive in its own way, alert to anomalies, refusing anything too foreign, as if the place had an immune system.
Calyx looked at the ordered abundance and felt a strange calm. It was not joy. It was the relief of a man seeing that the foundation would hold weight.
"It appears the peak is prepared, Lord Radeon," Calyx said.
"Not yet," Radeon said. "I need your help with one more thing."
Calyx did not know what it was, but he followed Radeon back up to the terrace surface.
Outside the pavilion, two figures waited. Spice Cure and Gauge Point.
They had been roaming freely most days. Their eyes tracked Radeon first, then Calyx, the way people look at a doorway they have been told leads sowhere new.
Calyx understood at once why they were here.
These were his disciples, and they could not cultivate. Not properly. Not the way ghosts and wraiths did.
Radeon had said he had a thod for them to cultivate, and Calyx had not asked how. So questions were safest when delayed.
Now the delay ended. Calyx watched Spice Cure and Gauge Point stand there, expectant and tense, and realized he would be learning the thod alongside them.
Whatever Radeon planned, it was not only a gift. It was also a test, and Calyx could already feel the cost waiting behind the very doors of the pavilion.
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