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[Azure Sky World - Redwood City - Chen Family Ho]

[Six Months After Birth]

"Mama."

Lin i froze, the wooden spoon slipping from her fingers and clattering onto the kitchen floor.

She turned slowly, staring at the baby sitting in his basket by the window. Her son. Six months old. Looking up at her with bright, curious eyes.

"Did you just—" she started, hardly daring to believe it.

"Mama," the baby repeated, reaching chubby arms toward her.

Lin i’s hands flew to her mouth. "CHEN WEI! CHEN WEI, GET IN HERE!"

Her husband ca running from the back room, nearly tripping over himself. "What? What’s wrong? Is the baby—"

"He talked!" Lin i grabbed her husband’s arm, shaking him. "Our son just said ’mama’!"

Chen Wei blinked. "He... babies don’t talk at six months."

"Mama!" the baby said again, as if to prove the point.

Chen Wei stumbled backward into a chair. "That’s... that’s not normal."

"He’s a genius!" Lin i scooped up her son, tears of joy streaming down her face. "Our baby is a genius!"

[Two Months Later]

"Yue, watch your brother for a mont. I need to help father with the shop inventory."

five-year-old Chen Yue nodded importantly. "I’ll protect him, mama!"

Lin i smiled and hurried out, leaving Yue sitting on the floor with her baby brother.

The baby—they’d nad him Kai—was propped against cushions, watching everything with those unnervingly aware eyes.

"You’re weird, little brother," Yue said affectionately. "You watch everything like you’re thinking really hard. What’s going on in that baby brain?"

Kai stared at her for a mont. Then, to Yue’s absolute shock, he pushed himself forward onto his hands and knees.

And crawled.

Not the clumsy, learning movents of a baby discovering mobility. Actual, coordinated crawling.

He made it three feet across the floor, grabbed a wooden toy, and looked very pleased with himself.

"MAMA!" Yue scread. "HE’S MOVING!"

[Four Months Later - Kai is One Year Old]

The Chen family ho was unusually crowded.

Neighbors, friends, and extended family had all gathered to celebrate Kai’s first birthday. But more than that, they’d gathered to witness what everyone in Redwood City had been gossiping about for months.

The Chen family’s genius baby.

"Show them, Kai," Chen Wei encouraged, pride evident in his voice.

Little Kai—who could now walk steadily and had been doing so for two months already—toddled over to where a children’s book lay open on the floor.

He looked at the page, his tiny finger tracing the characters, and then clearly spoke: "The... rabbit... jumped... over... the... log."

Gasps rippled through the crowd.

"He’s reading!" soone whispered. "A one-year-old is reading!"

"Not just reading," Elder Hou said, his ancient eyes wide with amazent. "He’s comprehending the characters. Look at him—he knows what they an."

Kai, oblivious to the commotion he was causing, simply turned the page and kept reading.

"My grandson will be a great cultivator," Chen Wei’s mother declared proudly. "Mark my words—when he’s tested at six, he’ll have heaven-defying talent!"

"He might even qualify for the Rising Phoenix Sect!"

"The Chen family is blessed!"

Kai looked up from his book, confused by all the noise. Everyone was staring at him like he’d done sothing amazing.

He’d just wanted to know what happened to the rabbit.

[That Evening - After the Guests Left]

Lin i tucked Kai into his small bed, brushing his hair back gently.

"Everyone thinks you’re so special," she said softly. "Do you understand that, little one?"

Kai looked up at his mother. He understood the words—he’d been understanding language for months now, even if speaking it was still a bit hard with a baby’s mouth.

He didn’t really get why everyone made such a big deal about things though.

He’d wanted to talk, so he figured out how to make sounds into words. Wanted to move around, so he learned to crawl and walk. Books looked interesting, so he paid attention when his sister read and figured out the characters.

It all seed pretty simple to him.

"Your father and I," Lin i continued, "we’ve been saving every copper we can. Because in five years, when you turn six, you’ll be tested for cultivation talent. And if you’re as gifted as everyone thinks... we’ll send you to the best school we can afford."

Kai made a small sound. His mother smiled and kissed his forehead.

"You’re going to be amazing, Kai. I just know it."

She left, closing the door softly.

Kai lay in the darkness, not particularly tired. Babies were supposed to sleep a lot, but he’d never needed much sleep.

That’s when the voice ca back.

System initialization: 95% complete.

Kai blinked. The voice had been happening for a while now—random words appearing in his vision, sounds in his head that nobody else seed to hear.

He’d tried asking his mama about it once, pointing at the floating words. She’d just smiled and said she didn’t see anything.

So he figured it was imaginary. Like the pretend friends other kids talked about.

System initialization: 100% complete.

Host cognitive developnt: Sufficient.

Tutorial available. Would you like to begin?

Kai didn’t really know what most of those words ant. "Tutor-ral?" he said quietly, testing the word.

Tutorial: Instructional program designed to teach system functions.

"Nuh-uh," Kai mumbled, rolling over and hugging his stuffed rabbit. "Sleepy."

The glowing words in his vision seed to... hesitate?

...Tutorial postponed. Sleep well, Host.

Kai smiled. The imaginary friend voice was nice. It didn’t push.

He drifted off to sleep, completely unaware that he was quite possibly the only being in the entire Azure Sky World who’d just told a reality-warping system to ’go away, I’m trying to sleep.’

[The Next Morning]

"Little brother! Little brother, wake up!" Yue burst into Kai’s room, her face bright with excitent. "Mama said you can co play in the garden today!"

Kai sat up, rubbing his eyes. Morning. He liked mornings. Mama made good breakfast.

"Play!" he agreed enthusiastically.

Yue scooped him up—she was strong for an eight-year-old—and carried him outside.

The Chen family ho was modest but comfortable. Father ran a small rchant business, buying and selling goods between Redwood City and the neighboring towns. They weren’t wealthy, but they never went hungry.

The garden was Kai’s favorite place. Lots of things to look at. Bugs. Plants. Birds. Everything was interesting.

"Look, little brother!" Yue pointed at the sky. "That’s a cultivator!"

Kai followed her pointing finger and saw a figure flying through the air above the city. Actually flying, like a bird, moving between buildings with graceful leaps that defied normal movent.

"Soday," Yue said dreamily, "I’ll be able to do that too. When I get tested and start cultivating."

"Fly?" Kai asked.

"Fly!" Yue confird. "Cultivators can do amazing things, Kai. They’re strong and fast and can live for hundreds of years! Father says if you have good talent, you can beco really powerful."

Kai watched the flying person until they disappeared from view.

Flying looked fun.

Would Host like information on cultivation systems? the voice in his head asked.

"Later," Kai mumbled, distracted by a butterfly that had landed on a flower.

He toddled over to look at it, completely ignoring the system notification that appeared in his vision:

Host continues to display unusual priorities.

Analysis: Host personality significantly differs from origin template.

Conclusion: Fragntation successful. Independent developnt confird.

Monitoring will continue.

Kai didn’t see any of that. He was too busy watching the butterfly’s wings open and close.

Pretty colors.

[Three Months Later - Kai is Fifteen Months Old]

Chen Wei sat at the kitchen table with his wife, both of them looking at their son with a mixture of pride and concern.

Kai was in the corner, writing. Actually writing, with a brush that was almost too big for his small hands, carefully forming characters on cheap paper.

"He’s writing full sentences now," Lin i said quietly. "The neighbors think we’re blessed by the heavens."

"Or cursed," Chen Wei replied, worry in his voice. "i, I’ve been thinking... what if his body can’t keep up with his mind? What if he’s brilliant but has weak cultivation talent? The disappointnt..."

"Don’t say that," Lin i said sharply. "Our son is special. The heavens wouldn’t give him this intelligence without the talent to match."

"I hope you’re right," Chen Wei sighed. "I’ve already started saving more aggressively. If he really does have high talent, the tuition for city academy will be... significant."

"We’ll manage," Lin i said firmly. "Whatever it takes."

They watched their son finish writing and hold up the paper proudly.

It was a short story about a rabbit who made friends with a bird.

Grammatically perfect. Imaginative. Written by a toddler not yet two years old.

"He’s definitely special," Chen Wei admitted. "I just hope the world is kind to him."

[Two Years Later - Kai is Three Years Old]

"Kai! Kai, co play tag!"

Three-year-old Kai looked up from where he’d been building an elaborate structure with wooden blocks. A group of neighborhood kids stood at the gate, waving at him.

"Okay!" Kai abandoned his blocks and ran over, his coordination now completely normal for his age—which ant he occasionally tripped, got dirty, and acted like the little kid he was.

The genius baby had beco a bright but fairly normal toddler. Still smart, still learning fast, but not in a way that seed supernatural anymore.

He’d figured out that acting too smart made adults nervous and other kids feel weird around him. So he’d started... not hiding his intelligence exactly, but not showing off either.

"I’m fastest!" one kid declared.

"No, I am!" another argued.

"Let’s race and find out!" Kai suggested.

They did. Kai ca in third—not because he couldn’t have won, but because winning seed less fun than just running with everyone.

The afternoon dissolved into the simple chaos of children playing. Tag beca hide-and-seek beca climbing trees beca making up stories.

It was, Kai thought, pretty great.

Quest Available: Make 5 Friends

Reward: 50 Skill Points

The words appeared in Kai’s vision. He’d gotten better at reading them over the years.

"Not now," he whispered, hiding behind a tree during hide-and-seek.

Quest Declined.

The system had learned not to push. Host clearly had different priorities than anticipated.

[Age Four - Basic Education]

"Students, please recite the Virtuous Scholar’s Poem."

The classroom—fifteen children ages four to six—began reciting in unison.

Kai recited along with everyone else, though he’d morized the poem the first ti he heard it. The teacher, Master Tong, was a kind elderly man who ran the city education program for families who could afford the small fee.

"Very good! Now, let’s practice our characters."

They spent the next hour copying characters onto slates. Kai did his dutifully, making sure his writing looked good but not perfect. Perfect made adults ask too many questions.

After class, he walked ho with his friend Lin Hua, a cheerful girl his age who lived three houses down.

"My big brother started cultivating this year," Lin Hua said excitedly. "He’s six now! Old enough for the test!"

"What’s cultivation like?" Kai asked. He’d heard the word a thousand tis but still didn’t really understand it.

"You get strong! And you can do magic! And you live really long!" Lin Hua’s eyes shone. "My brother says when he’s powerful, he’ll protect the whole family."

"That’s nice," Kai said simply.

"Don’t you want to be a cultivator?" Lin Hua asked.

Kai thought about it. "I guess? If it’s fun."

Lin Hua giggled. "You’re weird, Kai. Everyone wants to be a cultivator!"

"I just want to not be bored," Kai replied honestly.

That, he was beginning to realize, was becoming a problem. Everything was starting to feel... say. He learned things quickly, which ant lessons were boring. He could read anything, which ant books beca predictable. He understood people easily, which made conversations less interesting.

Host is experiencing understimulation, the system noted. Recomnd engaging with cultivation path.

"Maybe," Kai muttered.

[Age Five - One Year Before Testing]

"Kai, co here son."

Chen Wei’s serious tone made Kai look up from the book he’d been reading. His father sat at the table, gesturing for him to sit opposite.

Kai climbed onto the chair, curious.

"You turn six next year," his father began. "Do you know what that ans?"

"Cultivation testing?"

"Yes." Chen Wei leaned forward. "Kai, this is important. The test will determine your future. If you have good talent, we’ll send you to the city academy. If you have great talent... maybe even a sect will take interest."

"Okay," Kai said, not really seeing what the big deal was.

"I need you to take this seriously," Chen Wei continued. "Other families, their children have been preparing for years. Physical training, ditation exercises, spiritual awareness practice. You need to start doing those too."

Kai tilted his head. "I have to exercise?"

"Every day," his father confird. "And ditation. And reading about cultivation. Your mother and I believe you’re special, Kai. But talent ans nothing without effort."

"Your sister didnt have the talent for cultivation, but we our hopes on you. So you have to give it your all."

"I’ll try," Kai promised, because his father looked genuinely worried.

"Good boy." Chen Wei ruffled his hair. "Tomorrow we start training. I’ll teach you what I know."

[That Night]

Kai lay in bed, thinking about his father’s words.

Cultivation testing. One year away. Apparently very important.

He hadn’t really thought about it much before. Just seed like sothing that happened when you turned six, like losing baby teeth or growing taller.

Host is approaching cultivation age, the system noted. Recomnd beginning preparation.

"What kind of preparation?" Kai asked quietly. He’d gotten used to talking to the system over the years. It was always there, always trying to help, even if he usually ignored it.

Physical conditioning. Energy sensing exercises. Combat training. Theoretical study.

"That sounds boring."

Cultivation often is. However, results are rewarding.

"What do I get out of it?"

Power. Longevity. Ability to protect those important to Host.

Kai thought about that. Power didn’t really interest him. Living a long ti seed neutral—not good or bad, just... long.

But protecting people he cared about?

He thought of his parents, his sister, his friends.

"Okay," he decided. "I’ll try this cultivation thing. But if it’s too boring, I’m stopping."

Acknowledged. Tutorial will activate when Host begins formal training.

"Cool."

Kai rolled over and closed his eyes.

Tomorrow he’d start training. Tonight, he’d sleep.

Outside his window, the Azure Sky World continued its eternal dance of cultivation and power. Sects maneuvered for resources. Cultivators fought for advancent. Treasures were sought and defended.

And a five-year-old boy decided to try cultivation because his father asked nicely and it might help protect his family.

Not because he craved power. Not because he sought immortality. Not because he wanted to stand at the peak of the world.

Just because it seed like the right thing to do.

The system, monitoring his thoughts, made a notation:

Host personality: Fundantally different from origin template.

Elias Vance: Driven by curiosity, optimization, protection through power.

Current Host (Kai): Driven by contentnt, relationships, protection through presence.

Fragnt developnt: Successful independent identity formation.

Conclusion: Reincarnation technique functioning as designed.

But Kai didn’t know any of that.

He just knew tomorrow he had to wake up early for training, and that sounded like a pain.

He smiled anyway.

Life was pretty good, even with boring training coming.

He had family. Had friends. Had food and a ho and books to read.

What else did he really need?

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