While living in the Verdant Fields Sect, ti seed to pass by far more quickly than usual. I spent each morning tending to my field of flowers and each afternoon teaching Bao and SuYin to cultivate using the thods I had learned in the Yellow Orchid Academy.
I did occasionally have them practice fighting against each other using basic combat techniques, but our primary focus was on helping each other learn to grow better, more potent herbs. This mostly involved teaching ourselves through experintation and the books in my ntal library, but after harvesting our first crop, we also purchased a few simple herbalism lessons from low-level mbers of the sect.
My disciples seed to enjoy the ti spent in these lessons, but I left the first one feeling more than a little underwheld. I couldn’t be too hard on the kid who was trying to teach us, but as a Disciple from a bottom-feeder sect in the Wastes, he was missing a lot of basic information. I found that the limited collection of books in my ntal library was a far better guide than the teachers available to as a simple farr.
However, while I focused my efforts on my books and my experints, SuYin and Bao continued taking these lessons and shared what they learned from them.
As for my experints, knowing that blue peonies contained wood-based dicinal energy, I set up several different sections in my field to try different formations to see how various combinations of energies affected the growth of plants. These experints proved that the herbs needed so type of energy other than just qi to grow properly, but I didn’t have any filter designs specific to dicinal energy, demonic energy, or any more exotic energy forms, so the conclusions I could reach were limited.
It was easy to grow a peony that was considered to have an efficacy of 100%. More or less, I just needed to place a seed in the ground and wait for it to blossom. However, my goal was to go beyond this. Where any normal farr could grow a peony with 100% efficacy, an herbalist was supposed to be able to push it to 120, 130, or even 140%. I didn’t know what the theoretical limits of an herb's boosted efficacy were, but the best peony I had ever seen had an efficacy of 137%.
Of course, none of the lessons we received from the Verdant Fields Sect addressed this topic. They were more concerned with consistently achieving 100% efficacy instead of pushing beyond it.
Should I have gone to find a real teacher who could have told how to do this? Probably. Should I have just bought the information from the System and had it shoved into my head directly? Maybe. But that wasn’t the point. I was enjoying spending so downti farming and experinting. It had been a long ti since I had allowed myself to just relax and beco absorbed in learning a new craft without worrying about sches and deadlines.
I was learning herbalism far slower than I otherwise could have, but I was doing so with a unique approach. Other than just having fun, I was hoping that whatever I learned by studying in this way would complent what I would eventually learn from more knowledgeable sources.
Of course, I didn’t just focus on herbalism. At night, I would study Jin’s books on refining and slowly improve my skills in that as well. Wood qi wasn’t ideal for use in refining, but it was balanced. Where fire qi destroyed tal and earth qi hardened it, wood qi was more like tal qi. It affected tals evenly. It just took a lot of power to have any aningful effect.
My schedule was simple. In the morning, I tended my flowers. In the afternoon, I trained my disciples. In the evening, I practiced refining. Like this, the days rolled by.
While I had only given SuYin and Bao peak nine-star affinities to start with, I knew that they would need more than that if they wanted to continue progressing. I considered having them learn the wood essence cultivation technique so that they could boost their affinities on their own, but learning a Peak-Earth technique with only a nine-star affinity would have been far too difficult.
I could have boosted their initial affinities to make learning to cultivate easier, but I wanted them to slowly work their way through learning more complicated techniques. I started by having them study a Low-Yellow technique, and when they mastered it, I gave them a Mid-Yellow one.
This process continued until they eventually both got stuck around the Mid-Profound level due to their lacking affinities. To fix this problem, I crafted a Rank 3 Wood Essence Gathering Formation. However, I only allowed them to use it for one hour each week. This was more than enough to slowly raise their affinities to help them master their cultivation techniques while not raising them so quickly that cultivation beca effortless.
During the first couple of years, Bao’s initial knowledge and years of practice helped him learn techniques much quicker than SuYin, so he would often spend his ti helping her master the basics. However, it wasn’t long before he started falling behind. When we first t, he was 22 years old, and stagnation had already set in. Because of this, he found cultivation much more difficult, and by the end of our first four years together, SuYin had far surpassed him. At that point, she beca the one helping him out instead.
When SuYin turned 20, I guided both her and Bao on their breakthroughs to Martial Master. They then spent the next 8 years exploring and mastering that realm. After that, they broke through to Grandmaster. During the following four years, I trained them in everything they needed to know about the Grandmaster realm.
Bao, with his stagnated cultivation base and poor aptitude, struggled at tis, but SuYin was always there to pull him up with her. I had no idea how high her talent in cultivation or herbalism was, but her blessing of a perfect mory ant that she never forgot a single word I said. After only a single practice session, she could rember everything I told her and was then able to guide herself and Bao in mastering it.
As their skills and cultivation bases grew, my own abilities grew as well. I was limited to only practicing Rank 1 herbalism because of the limits of my environnt, but I gained several insights on how to grow peonies, astragalus root, and schisandra berries. Being a skilled Rank 1 herbalist after 16 years of practice was not impressive in any way, but I was having fun and was happy with whatever gains I made.
More important than my ability to grow random herbs, my experints helped better understand what I would need to do to create a viable ecosystem within my storage space. I had tortured peonies in nearly every way imaginable, and I did my best to understand exactly what they needed to survive and thrive.
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While Bao’s cultivation base was languishing behind SuYin’s, his blessing allowed him to beco an exceptional herbalist. Simply by looking at a plant, he would gain a unique understanding of its condition. When studying my experints, he was easily able to pick out small problems and find ways to make minor changes so that the herbs would grow quicker and more vibrantly.
SuYin had the ability to morize everything she was told, but Bao was able to go far beyond what he was told.
Unfortunately, he lacked the solid theoretical frawork necessary to understand most of the information that his blessing provided him. So, while he always had ideas for how to improve my experints, he could usually only give vague advice, and sotis he was entirely incapable of putting his thoughts into words.
Still, every bit of advice he could give assisted in my endeavor to make the best Rank 1 herbs possible. While I was never able to create anything with an efficacy above 120%, by working together, we found several different thods of pushing these simple herbs to that limit.
Of course, none of these ‘special’ herbs were submitted to the sect. As far as the Verdant Fields Sect was concerned, the three of us were normal farrs with lower-than-normal success rates. I had no desire to get wrapped up in sect politics or have so elder decide that I needed to be shipped off to the Verdant Forest Sect. I was happy just spending my days tending my simple herbs.
As the years passed, my progress in herbalism might have been sowhat limited, but I did gain a rather firm understanding of Rank 1 and 2 refining. While crafting true weapons and armor would be a bit beyond until I first learned rudintary smithing, I was still able to perfect Jin’s thod for growing specific grain patterns in low-Rank tals through the use of qi and then imbuing them with energy.
I might not be able to create a deadly Rank 2 sword, but I was more than competent enough to make a shiny Rank 2 steel ingot.
Another task I checked off my to-do list was learning about all the spirit fire seeds I now possessed. Including my Cold Mountain Fire and the Expanding Realms Fire, I now had copies of 22 different fire seeds, and each of them had different, unique functions.
To figure out what they all did without risking large-scale destruction, I decided to turn to the System.
“System, how much for an analysis ability that will give the basics of what a fire seed is and what will happen when I supply it with energy? This only needs to work on seeds Profound-Rank and below.”
Cost 1 billion credits.
“Purchase.”
Purchase confird. 743,954,373,487 credits remaining.
Then, I looked through my various seeds.
Cold Mountain Fire, Yellow-Rank, Elents: Earth/Water, Consus: Energy, Produces: Granite/Water
Expanding Realms Fire, Profound-Rank, Elents: Space, Consus: Energy, Produces: Space
Flowing tal Fire, Yellow-Rank, Elents: Water/tal, Consus: Energy, Produces: rcury
Blazing Inferno Fire, Profound-Rank, Elents: Fire, Consus: Energy, Produces: Fire Qi
…
Red Lotus Fire, Profound-Rank, Elents: Fire/Wood, Consus: Qi/Matter, Produces: dicinal Fire Energy/dicinal Wood Energy
Black Tortoise Fire, Profound-Rank, Elents: Earth/Water, Consus: Matter, Produces: Demonic Earth Energy/Demonic Water Energy
Aside from the fact that so of these fires could produce dicinal and demonic energies, what most intrigued were the seeds like the Blazing Inferno Fire that could consu any type of energy to produce pure fire qi. It could essentially act as a supercharged version of a qi filter, except instead of blocking unwanted energies, it would convert them into the desired form.
These flas opened up a few possibilities for providing energy and resources to my storage space as it grew, but I would need to carefully consider the implications of using them for such a purpose. Placing the seed of the Flourishing Grove Fire in my soul and allowing it to flood the space with wood qi might be beneficial in so ways, but as I had seen in my experints on Rank 1 herbs, such an imbalance could have catastrophic consequences.
Speaking of my storage space, at the end of these 16 years, it had grown to a staggering 42 million cubic ters. It was now a sphere with a radius of over 200 ters. This was nice, but I was beginning to realize a problem. If my storage space continued to grow in this manner, it would be sowhat wasteful.
If I wanted to build a large farm or a city, I would need the largest horizontal cross-section possible, and a sphere wasn’t an efficient way to achieve this. I wanted to let the space expand a bit more first, but soon, I would have to try altering its shape.
With only a short ti left until the sixteenth Su Clan blessing ceremony since the start of the loop, it was ti for to leave the sect and return to the clan, but before I did so, I needed to have one last eting with SuYin and Bao.
Looking at my two disciples, I was proud of how far they had co.
Using the Essence Gathering Formation, they had only been able to raise their wood affinities to mid seven-star, and even with that sowhat limited affinity, they had both been able to form pristine foundations as Martial Grandmasters.
“Bao, SuYin, my ti in the sect is over. I am leaving, and the two of you need to decide what you will do.”
Bao looked at SuYin and encouraged her to speak.
“Master… Where are you going? Can we go with you?”
I smiled and nodded. “I am returning to my clan to take care of a few simple matters. You may co with if you wish, but I would recomnd a different path. You have both remained farrs in this sect for a long ti, but your current skills are far beyond anyone else here. Try to push yourself and see what you can achieve on your own.”
I looked around at our fields of blue flowers. “We are all Grandmasters, but we have only tackled learning Rank 1 herbalism. This sect may not be very powerful, but they should still be able to help you with the basics of Ranks 2 and 3. Why not try it out and see what you can learn? You might even get a chance to move up to the Verdant Forest Sect and beco a Lord. I will visit you in a few years and see how things turn out.”
The two looked at each other silently for several monts before turning back to .
SuYin was the first to bow her head. “Yes, Master.”
Bao followed only shortly thereafter. “Yes, Master.”
I spent a few more hours talking with them, and I handed off a few items that I felt would be helpful, but what I could give them was limited. There weren’t any storage bags in the Wastes, and carrying around the plate of an Essence Gathering Formation seed like a quick way to end up dead.
After a final farewell, I returned to my cave and got dressed in a bright red robe that I had bought from the Blue Wind Pavilion years earlier. It was made of the finest silk and was embroidered with golden dragons. Then, I did my hair up in a traditional topknot and fixed it in place with golden adornnts. Finally, I carefully shaved my face, leaving only a tidy short beard behind.
Fully prepared, I stepped out of my ho and collapsed the cave I had been living in for the past sixteen years. Then, I departed.
While I wanted to teleport to my next destination directly, advancing to Peak Grandmaster had made the cost of teleportation much more expensive. Therefore, I instead took a carriage east, deep into the territory of the Rising Sun Empire.
Then, once I got close enough, I used a short-range teleport to mask my movents.
“System, teleport to a secluded spot in Lushan City.”
Purchase confird. Cost 1,590 credits. 743,954,371,897 credits remaining.
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