Threads Of Destiny(Eastern Fantasy, Sequel to Forge of Destiny)

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Cultivation quest QM: What you would you like to do:
[] Defy the heavens
[] Take the safe option

[X] Grab the ghost-child-whatever, grab the young spirit and run (50% success, injury to party based on degree of failure. Additional benefits for Su Ling on success.)

:D
 
Cultivation quest QM: What you would you like to do:
[] Defy the heavens
[] Take the safe option

Look, we already have Shenhua defying the heavens and whatever she feels like defying, i doubt we could do more than her, at least for now.

And what do you mean by safe option?

Safety is just an illusion, you are always in danger in a Xianxia world, you could offend someone or become a target just by existing, and sometimes even before that.

It is better to take some minor risk to get some benefits that would reduce the danger we would be in later.

I know you made a joke, i tried to make one too and this is what i ended up with.
 
Currently the kid is a proto-spirit. Could congeal into one if bound I think, but like freh Hanyi, would be largely useless for a while
 
There's also the fact that Xicheng is a composite being but only because of their shared trauma. It makes sense for Su Ling to develop her sense of empathy by helping the ghosts start to establish their own independent identities and then allow them to pass on as individuals (if that's what they want) rather than being the spiritual equivalent of a mass grave.

That's not to say that the resulting individual ghosts will actually represent the real children who died, of course. This would also be the work of decades but then that's also the case for killing Madame Grey.
 
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Meizhen got a spirit made from the congealed terror of an ancient battlefield and had it live in her shadow so it's personality would grow into something amenable, Su Ling could do something sort of similar as what happened with the Heartbursting Phantasm
 
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Meizhen got a spirit made from the congealed terror of an ancient battlefield and had it live in her shadow so it's personality would grow into something amenable, Su Ling could do something sort of similar.
I think there is a difference between teaching someone, a child, how to be better and bonding it for the sole reason of altering their personality. I also believe there are key differences between the congealed terror of a battlefield and a collection of child ghosts.
 
[X] Grab the ghost-child-whatever, grab the young spirit and run (50% success, injury to party based on degree of failure. Additional benefits for Su Ling on success.)
 
"Sometimes you'll be going on a mission you don't think is a heist. You're wrong. You're going to bump into something, and you're going to think wow that sucks and that's the cue for you to start looking for things to steal. They don't have to be useful to you, if you've got a good employer they'll know how to fence it. Just try to find something that they seem to really be relying on and just, yoink it. A power formation, a book of knowledge, their life, you know. Stuff they'll really feel bad about losing."
- from Burglary Three: This Book is a Stick Up

Reposting a quote from JowKeen because it's very relevant to this arc
 
Snake and Spider 7
"A supply contract?" Bai Meizhen asked, tilting her head to the side. She crouched amongst a bed of wildflowers, her fingers brushing a set of colorful petals. Her inky shadow pooled about her feet, cold and dark. It kept the little carnivorous spirits that lurked there silent and still, as mice before the serpent.

"It's the best cover I have been able to think of," Bao Qingling replied shortly. The branch she held snapped up, rustling disgruntledly as she released it, and stoppered the vials pale green fluid she had squeezed from the bark.

Collecting reagents oneself, particularly mundane ones such as these was a bit plebeian, Bai Meizhen thought, deliberately plucking specific flowers from among the bed, her shadow slid like a knife into the soil, severing and bringing her the roots. However, she had asked Qingling what she wished to do, and so she endured. She chose to think of it like a particularly hands on nature hike.

Bai Meizhen stood smoothly, depositing her take in the storage basket brought along for the trip. The fragrant toxic oils tingled pleasantly on her fingers. "I have the authority for that. I am meant to learn some administrative duties as well. However, I will have to run it by the Ambassador."

It wasn't all bad she mused, hooking the basket over her arm, she stepped close to Qingling's side, arm brushing against hers. She watched with some satisfaction as the tall girl's impassive gaze flicked down, lingered and then flicked back up. It gave her an excuse to wear her hair up for once, in a tight braid, coiled into a bun. Qingling seemed intrigued by the bare curve of her neck. A most satisfying realization.

"I will have to run it by my brother as well," Qingling grunted, her expression tightening. Bai Meizhen's mirth faded a little as well. This was… dangerous. There was only so much that one could hide from higher realms who wished to investigate.

They resumed walking, heading for the next site, not quite arm in arm, but letting their limbs brush now and then.

"I have been corresponding with the Ambassador for some time," Bai Meizhen said quietly as they walked under the evergreen boughs of the forested valley. Somewhere off to the left, a stalking shadow the size of a horse froze in place at her glance. "She is a very liberal woman I think. So long as there is no break in public propriety, I do not believe we will be troubled."

A flash of silver, a needle flicked. There was a crash as the terror frozen beast crumpled to the ground in a heap. "My brother is nosy, but… he is like my father, or so I have heard. Building a relationship with such a highly valued client will not bother him."

Bai Meizhen was silent for a moment as Qingling turned, their walk carrying them down to the edge of a wide but shallow brook. She could hear the faint sneer in Qingling's voice. She disliked framing things in such a way. "So it seems that we will simply have to continue our public charade then? It seems good."

"For now," Qingling said, crouching by the streams edge.

"Try to be more optimistic," Bai Meizhen said, smiling faintly. "Now, what are we here for? Some manner of waterweed or reeds."

"I thought we would do some fishing," Qingling replied, not turning from the water.

Bai Meizhen blinked, tilting her head. "Bao Qingling, was this trip a ruse?"

She grunted. "No, I do need reagents, I just happened to have a need for these as well."

Bai Meizhen gave her a patient look, not believing her at all.

***​
Ugh, that look on her back. She was not good at this. Bao Qingling hunched her shoulders. "I do not like surprises. I have observed that you do. I merely rearranged my gathering schedule."

Clear, concise, that was the best way to answer questions. That it bore some resemblance to a deflection was wholly coincidental. Bai Meizhen had asked her if she had wanted to direct one of their leisure activities. This had been the best plan she could construct.

"Well, thank you," Bai Meizhen said. Her tone indicated amusement, but also happiness. Bao Qingling would endure one for the sake of the other. "What is our quarry then? I see few fish here, and the bed of the brook is shallow."

"Focus your senses," Bao Qingling replied. She reached out, grasping Bai Meizhen's hand and guiding her fingertips to the water. "Feel the ripples and vibrations. They are there, you do not see them."

She waited a moment, listening to her own heartbeat, and feeling the back of the small dainty hand brushing her palm. Forward, too forward, part of her grumbled. Finally, Bai Meizhen let out a breath, her dark qi bleeding into the sparkling water. "Fascinating. What are these creatures called?"

"Glasscale Minnow," Bao Qingling replied. She felt them herself, tiny and darting. "They naturally warp light and sound around them and can briefly become ephemeral, the oil produced by their scales is part of this and can only be harvested from live specimens."

"I see, a different sort of challenge than I am used to," Bai Meizhen mused, not removing her hand from Qingling's grasp yet. "Is there a particular method to their capture?"

"Yes," Bao Qingling replied, she straightened her shoulders, drawing from her storage ring three items, a clay jug filled with clean river water, and a pair of small formation inscribed hand nets. She passed one to Bai Meizhen, who took it and turned it over in her hand. "These will hold immaterial creatures, so it is only a matter of scooping them out."

There, a productive but enjoyable activity, to quiet the voice that told her that she was wasting time. If-

Bao Qingling stiffened as soft warmth brushed her cheek, Bai Meizhen's lips. The pale girl smiled impishly at her as she drew away. "Thank you Qingling. I shall be catching the most of course."

Bao Qingling let out snort, ignoring the warmth in her cheeks and the beating of her heart. "You are too arrogant… Meizhen."

"Naturally, I am a Bai," she chuckled, turning her eyes to the brook. "I am glad our little dream can go on for awhile longer."

"As am I," Bao Qingling said quietly, already reaching her senses into the brook. Silly and childish it was, but she would cherish it while she could.
 
I was right, high noble families know about Bai and fishing.

I suppose with Weilu it was stargazing and Zheng make love and war simultaneously.
 
Adhoc vote count started by EternalObserver on Feb 6, 2022 at 11:23 PM, finished with 198 posts and 96 votes.
 
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