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Stepping out of Emperor LI’s portal, i and I appeared in a musty cave deep underground.

In the center of the cavern, there was a ring of five large, black vats the size of beach balls. Each of these vats had been sunk half a ter into the floor and was covered by a thick wooden lid. At the center of this ring of vats, a weak fire burned within a short tal brazier, serving as the cave’s sole source of illumination.

The light from this fire didn’t stretch far beyond this circle, so I couldn’t see what else this room contained, but sight wasn’t necessary. Subdued, incessant chittering sounds told all that I needed to know. Turning on energy vision, I looked around and saw thousands of tiny energy signatures huddled together in hundreds of small groups. Within these groups, every elent–save lightning–was represented at least once, but wind was the most common by far.

Emperor Li strode confidently to the opposite side of the circle of vats and turned to face us, allowing us to look at each other with the room’s small brazier illuminating our faces. “Disciple Fang, you wish to beco a gu keeper. Before we can begin, you must fully understand the answer to one simple question: What are gu?”

Initially, I thought that this was a rhetorical question, so I just waited for him to continue, but after more than a dozen seconds passed, I realized that he expected to answer it. “Insects.”

Emperor Li shook his head, and the hint of a sneer entered his voice. “The answer of a talisman artist.”

He turned to i. “Disciple i, please, explain.”

This startled i, whose eyes had been locked onto my feet, causing her to glance over at Li. The mont she did, her blessing flared up, and she began stamring incoherently. “I… I… They… They….”

Li grunted and flicked sothing into her mouth. “When we are done here, you will cultivate your soul, understood?”

“Ye… Yes, Master Li.”

Li waved this away. “Answer the question. What are gu?”

“Poi…” i shifted her gaze to . “Poison. While gu take the form of insects, treating them as such is a mistake. They are poisons–semi-sentient poisons. If you forget this for even a mont, then gu can beco as deadly to you as they are to your target.”

The corner of Li’s mouth twitched in about the greatest show of approval that I had ever seen him give. “Exactly. Do not let appearances deceive you. Gu are alive, and they follow commands, but they are not beasts, and gu keepers are not beast tars. We are poison masters.”

He pulled out a jade bottle and threw it at . “Disciple Fang, tell what you can about that pill.”

I recognized it with only a glance. I didn’t even need my analysis ability. “Rank 4 Frigid Twilight Poison. It’s made from a combination of caliginous nightshade, gelid alismatis, and a vine of soulless monkshood.”

Li nodded once in agreent. “Yes. Any number of alchemists can combine the appropriate quantity of those three ingredients to create such a pill, and, except for minor differences in quality, all their pills will be the sa. They will look the sa, and they will have the sa effect.”

He pulled out a jade-wire cage and held it up to the light. A tiny blue scorpion was skittering around inside it.

“This is a Rank 4 Black Frost Gu. I created it to mimic the effects of the Frigid Twilight Poison. Another keeper might be able to create a gu with similar effects, but even I would find it difficult to create an exact duplicate. The next ti I try to make this gu, it might end up as a snake instead.”

Li walked into the darkness and deposited the scorpion with a group of similar creatures before returning to the topic at hand.

“That said, appearances are not important. A gu is a poison. A pill is a poison. As long as they have the sa effects, they are functionally identical. The only aningful difference between a gu keeper and an alchemist poisoner is one of control. Unlike with pills, after infecting a person with gu, I remain in control of the poison’s effects. If I want them to feel more pain, I can make that happen. If I want their symptoms to disappear, I can make that happen as well.”

That statent made feel more than a little uncomfortable. I had always been wary of gu keepers, but I had been dabbling in alchemical poisons since my early days in the Su Clan. Was the difference between us really so… aningless?

Disregarding my inner turmoil, Emperor Li stepped outside the small circle of light and entered the darkness beyond. When he returned, he was holding six large boxes, three in each hand, containing a variety of different venomous creatures–snakes, scorpions, toads, spiders, and centipedes.

“Disciple Fang, step forward.” He used his head to point at one of the vats, so I walked over to stand next to it.

“This is an Eclosion Pot. It is what we use to transform mundane creatures into gu.” He lifted the boxes in his right hand. “To begin, simply toss these creatures into the pot.”

Following Li’s instructions, I accepted the boxes one at a ti, poured their contents into the pot, then set the lid back in place. Putting so many critters into a normal pot would have caused it to overflow, but this Eclosion Pot had an expanded space, similar to a storage bag, so there was more than enough room inside.

Once all the boxes were emptied, Li gestured to the side of the pot. “The poisonous creatures will now begin fighting and devouring each other, slowly turning into a true embodint of poison. The formations on the side of the pot will let you interfere with this by adding new stresses to the environnt. The gu you create will be determined both by the creatures you started with and by how you guide them during their ti in the Eclosion Pot. For now, do not concern yourself with specifics, just experint with the formations and get a feel for what they do.”

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Using energy vision, I was able to quickly understand each formation’s function. There were controls for temperature, humidity, ambient energy, and other variables. There was even a control that allowed to grow and shrink the amount of space inside the pot. I could let the creatures spread out, or I could force them together.

By playing with these controls, I found that each type of creature reacted differently to the changes I made to its environnt. For so, more heat made them more sluggish. For others, it made them more aggressive. The only change that appeared to be universal was that, when I shrunk the space as much as possible, all of the creatures went absolutely crazy.

As I worked, i tried to say sothing, but Li held up a hand to stop her.

Roughly an hour and a half later, only a single centipede remained, and Li gestured for to remove it from the pot.

Li’s appearance and motions were extrely casual, so while I was still wary of handling gu, I wasn’t nearly as cautious as I should have been.

The mont my hand ca close, the centipede struck, trying to bite into my hand and burrow into my muscles. Reflexively, I jerked away in a motion that crushed the creature into the side of the pot, but there hadn’t been any real need. The bug hadn’t even been strong enough to break my skin.

Li looked at i. “Disciple i, explain. What did Disciple Fang do wrong?”

“He…” Her gaze shifted from Li to my feet. “When using the Eclosion Pot, he allowed the formations to draw qi from the surrounding environnt. He should have been feeding them his own qi. This would have allowed the gu to adapt to his qi signature and beco familiar with it. This step is vital. If it is not done, then the gu will see their keeper as a stranger, no different from anyone else. They will not obey orders, and if given the chance, they will attack.”

Li glared at , and when he spoke, there was an unnatural weight behind his words. “While they are little more than sentient poisons, gu are still intelligent, living creatures. Using the formations of the Eclosion Pot, you can grow them and shape them to beco what you need them to be, but they must feel your presence in all things. If they do not, then they will turn on you.”

Li walked to the side of the room, grabbed several more boxes, and tossed a collection of snakes, scorpions, and toads into another pot.

“This is not the only pitfall that a gu keeper needs to be careful of, however. When you start the process of breeding a new gu, you should have a clear idea of what you are trying to achieve–of what your goal is. You need to continually monitor the pot to ensure that whatever is being created matches your desires.”

Li’s head jerked up. “Disciple i, a group of toads is close to eting my needs, but it appears that a group of scorpions is about to devour them. What should I do? Should I kill the scorpions, or should I just block them?”

“N… No.” i wrinkled her brow. “Just… adjust the formations. Increase the space and humidity. Lower the temperature.”

Li nodded and looked at with aning. “Exactly, a gu keeper should not ddle directly. They need only adjust the formations to ensure the proper outco.”

Over the next decade, Emperor Li guided through a variety of techniques for breeding and controlling gu.

At first, I was only able to create Rank 1 gu, but the process of making a higher Rank gu was brutally simple. To make a Rank 2 gu, one just needed to start the Eclosion process with Rank 1 gu instead of mortal insects. To make Rank 3 gu, one just needed to start with Rank 2 gu.

The only thing that made this a challenge was that several dozen gu were needed at the start of each step. So, to form a single Rank 3 gu, a keeper first needed to create hundreds of Rank 1 gu and combine them into dozens of Rank 2 gu.

This was a ti-consuming process, but it resulted in a ‘mother’ gu that was capable of producing a large number of easily controlled ‘child’ gu. These children couldn’t participate in the Eclosion process, but they were what would be used to infect people.

As an example, a Liquor Gu was only able to produce a single jar of alcohol. So, back in the Grain Jar Sect, i had created a single mother gu and used it to spawn hundreds of children. These children were what was then put into the jars to make the actual alcohol.

Aside from just the sheer ti involved with funneling gu through so many generations, another difficulty was ensuring that the final ‘poison’ was exactly what one was looking for. Creating a deadly toxin was simple enough, but creating a gu would lie dormant within a person’s soul was much harder. Worse still was trying to create a Healing Gu—a poison designed to target infections and cancers and kill them while doing no damage to the host.

While he was with us, Li rushed us through the basics of how to do all of this, but the year I turned 39, he ran out of ti and called us back for a final eting.

“Disciple Fang, Disciple i, you both show promise, but rember, there is a long road ahead of you. While gu are ‘poisons,’ do not allow this to limit your thinking. The job of poisons might be to destroy, but only with destruction can you achieve creation.”

Li turned his attention fully to . “Fang, use what you have learned of the Eclosion Pot thod well. You are a gu keeper. Your creations must survive and thrive on their own, but if you wish for them to be able to help you achieve your goals, then you need to shape their environnt, and they must feel your hand at work. I may not be fond of the creature that calls itself the incarnation of the Earthly Dao, but there is much that you can learn from it.”

Emperor Li hadn’t co right out and said what he ant, but his aning was clear.

After he passed, I followed his advice and spent the rest of my life huddled over my Eclosion Pot. I needed to begin shaping its environnt properly, but before I could do that, I needed a clearer understanding of the beings that I was working with.

Of course, this ‘Eclosion Pot’ was not one of the five in Li’s underground chamber. It was my inner world.

For millennia, the Su Clan had developed in wild and unpredictable ways. I barely recognized them anymore. After growing to the maximum size and power allowed by the constraints of our situation, the clan had shifted its resources to ensure the continued power and influence of the main branches instead of focusing on the prosperity of the clan as a whole. They… They now reminded far too much of the original Su Clan.

Worse, when Emissary Yun visited this ti, her evaluation of the clan’s effort was rely ‘adequate.’ Because of this, instead of being left to our own devices, the Saint sent Emissaries and Envoys to check in on us every decade or so. It was like we were living under a thumb that could decide to squish us at any mont.

I had made mistakes, but I could still recover from them. I just needed to shape the environnt to produce my desired outco.

By the ti I was 437 years old, I was ready. When I recalled everyone into my inner world to start the next cycle, I did so in a deliberate manner and positioned people in specific places to create the outcos I desired.

While a gu keeper tries their best, the results of the Eclosion Pot thod depend mostly on the quality of their materials. As I sat down and swallowed a poison pill, I could only hope that my ‘materials’ were suitable for the task ahead.

You have died. Calculating…

You died as a Martial Sovereign Peak – 100 trillion credits awarded.

You died at Peak of Rank 7 in Body Cultivation – 100 trillion credits awarded.

Total Credits: 208,737,587,576,486

Rank 4 Small World – 1,349/10,000 km3 (Earth, Wood, Fire, Dark)

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