Hmmph... this junior is a good seed [Cultivation Management Quest]

Voting is open
Ninth Prince 7 - Funerals and Fathers
Ninth Prince

Funerals and Fathers

The funeral was today, and the Ninth Prince was absolutely not ready for it. Zhu Bhujie, the headman of Liaogai Village, the village that the Ninth Prince owned, had died not three days ago, and his loss rung heavy in the hearts of the villagers, who'd known the old man as the sole founder of their home and the only reason it was still running and organized today.

The Ninth Prince had his own history with the village leader, one that was a bit more personal, one that demanded that the beastmaster witness the old man's funeral.

For both his sake, and the sake of the villagers who needed a beacon of calm in these times of loss, the Ninth Prince had to go, no matter how much he did or didn't want to.

And so he did.

And almost immediately after arriving, the Ninth Prince regretted leaving his home.

The funeral was a somber affair, with everyone - Ninth Prince included - lost in memory as the casket containing Zhu Bhujie's corpse was slowly walked from one end of the town to another, an enormous crowd following it like sheep following a shepherd.

The Ninth Prince staggering back into Liaogai Village, beaten, bruised, and bloody, holding the head of a Blood Cannibal bandit, before collapsing in the middle of the town square.

Waking up weeks later, with a swearing old man hovering over his bed. Zhu Bhujie, noticing that he was awake, letting out a sigh of relief, before letting loose an expletive-filled diatribe about idiot children who don't know how to back down, and about their haggard caretakers who really need some sort of raise.

Laughing with sheer unfettered joy, realizing that, yes, he did have a place to come back to, a home.
A family

Every one of the villagers was in attendance, from the oldest of elders to the children, who were divided into two categories; the ones too young to understand what was going on, and the ones crying their eyes out as the fact that their 'Uncle Zhu' was dead was finally sinking in.

The Ninth Prince being prodded into interacting with the obviously frightened children of Liaogai Villageby Zhu Bhujie, the elder wearing his resolve down over weeks and months, until finally, he agrees, just to get the old man off his back.

The Ninth Prince trying to figure out how to get closer to the children without making them cry, before eventually just giving up and sitting down, letting the young ones come to him at their own pace.

Zhu Bhujie laughing his ass off as the Ninth Prince walks around, arms outstretched, with a few dozen toddlers clambering on him, hanging off his arms, and sitting on his head.

The Ninth Prince laughing as well, as he finally gets to be an older brother again.


At the head of this macabre procession, right behind the casket itself, was the headman's family, his wife, who was trying and failing to cover her tears with an ornate handkerchief, and his three sons, who were all in various stages of grief, from denial to depression to mournful acceptance.

The Ninth Prince looking on, outraged, as Zhu Bhujie smacks a hand down on the table at one of their weekly 'family dinners', asserting without hesitation that no, there is no reasonable time or place to inject deadly snake venom into the food you're going to eat.

The Ninth Prince standing up and jabbing a finger at Zhu Bhujie, defending his claim, that, yes, snake venom should be put into
every food, because it adds spice and it's not his fault that Zhu Bhujie hates flavor.

The two of them arguing late into the night over the stupidest things imaginable, all while Zhu Bhujie's wife and children look on with fond exasperation.


The parade of death wound its way through the village, going through seedy back alleys and by dive bars and then moving onwards to the more reputable parts of the town, the crafting districts, the residential areas, and the entertainment centers, each step and each area a living reminder of what Zhu Bhujie had done for Liaogai.

Zhu Bhujie taking the Ninth Prince on long walks around Liaogai's more reputable areas, the two of them spending hours and hours talking about the politics and logistics involved in running even the smallest of villages.

The Ninth Prince listening as attentively as he can, taking notes, cutting into his own cultivation time, asking questions, and doing all he can to keep himself engaged, recognizing the magnitude of what Zhu Bhujie is telling him, feeling honored that Zhu Bhujie is spending so much time out of his very busy schedule to educate him.

Zhu Bhujie deflecting each time the question of 'why' is brought up, always darting around the core of his reasons.
A son needs to be able to take up the family business after all.

As the villagers moved through their home, the casket and the people following it eventually ended up at the central plaza of Liaogai, the place where Zhu Bhujie was to be buried, right at the center of the village he built, and the place where the headman spent most of his time.

The Ninth Prince wearily staggering back into Liaogai Village, unharmed but exhausted, dusty and dirty and covered in sand, as if he'd just crawled out of the bottom of the dunes, limping out into the large plaza in the middle of the Village, where Zhu Bhujie and a few hundred other people are waiting.

The Ninth Prince trudging over to Zhu Bhujie, plopping an intricate puzzle box from a nation older than the desert itself down onto the headman's lap, before falling over and collapsing onto the ground, fast asleep.

Zhu Bhujie trying desperately to hide a soft smile, and failing miserably. What better gift could he have asked for for his birthday?


Zhu Bhujie's sons and the Ninth Prince were all given shovels made of crude steel, mortal tools being used to remind everyone that death comes for all, from the highest cultivator to the lowest mortal. The shovels dug deep into the earth like the thrusts of a spear, pushing away packed sand like a warrior pushes away blows.

The Ninth Prince growling as he swings his spear at Zhu Bhujie's neck, only to hiss angrily as the older and weaker cultivator stops it with a single finger, the same way he'd blocked all of the Ninth Prince's other attacks.

Zhu Bhujie stopping the practical portion of their lesson there in order to gently and patiently walk the Ninth Prince through what exactly he did wrong, how he could improve it, and a few tips to raise his skills to the next level.

Zhu Bhujie smiling as the Ninth Prince finally beats him in a spear fight, holding out an arm that his student uses to pull the old cultivator up.


After the four men created a fitting grave, they stepped back, and let the elders of the village, Zhu Bhujie's friends and companions, mark the grave in accordance with custom older than the desert itself. Four knitting needles were stabbed into the four corners of the grave, and four different colors of thread were wrapped around the rectangle four times.

The Ninth Prince sitting down next to Zhu Bhujie in the town square as he asks the old man what exactly he's doing with those two needles, that enormous ball of string, and that rocking chair.

Zhu Bhujie laughing as he realizes that, yes, for some reason, the Ninth Prince doesn't know what knitting is, and subsequently offering to teach the snake-man how to knit.

The Ninth Prince gleefully accepting, spending months figuring out how to knit, reveling in the sensation that comes with being
bad at something, and having a teacher willing to guide you.

Zhu Bhujie definitely
not tearing up as the Ninth Prince proudly hands him an incredibly ugly scarf, the first piece he made.

As the final piece of the grave was completed, the casket bearers, the leaders of the town guard, slowly lowered the coffin into the hole made for it, making sure to do so with the utmost respect for a man who deserved the utmost respect from all in Liaogai Village.

The Ninth Prince walking in on Zhu Bhujie coughing and wheezing, and finding out about his teacher's father's sickness, an insidious poison that preys on the user's qi and vital force, slowly sapping it over decades, one of the most agonizing deaths possible.

Racing across the desert and the clan lands, desperately trying to find something,
anything, to stave off the village leader's impending death, some sort of magical herb, an ancient beast, a scrap of forgotten lore, anything that could potentially cure him.

Quietly sobbing as he realizes that, no, there isn't anything like that, that he wasn't able to save Zhu Bhujie.


After the casket was lowered into the grave, and the pallbearers stepped back, Zhu Bhujie's sons and the Ninth Prince picked their tools, and began to slowly, gently, shovel the earth they took out of the grave back on top of the coffin, being careful to never let even a single grain of sand or soil touch the needles and string.

The Ninth Prince spending as much time as he possibly can with Zhu Bhujie, both of them knowing what's going to happen sometime in the future and both of them dreading it.

Helping the old man around the village, taking on a few dozen projects that Zhu Bhujie always complained about not having the time to finish, doing anything and everything to assist the older cultivator and make his remaining time in the Third Sea as comfortable as possible.

Refusing to talk about what was going to occur, putting it off for as long as possible, until the trials, until
Pleuron, until the Ninth Prince's near-death.

After the grave was filled in and finished, Zhu Bhujie's wife stepped forward, holding a carved headstone the size of her torso. With great effort she managed to gently place the headstone at the head of the grave, after which the old woman stepped back and began to quietly sob.

The Ninth Prince immediately rushing back after his healing and encounter with Ferenike and Tasos, desperately hoping that he wasn't too late, that Zhu Bhujie still lived, pushing Ulo to his absolute limit in an attempt to make it back just a few minutes earlier.

Finding the old man on his deathbed, oh so close to perishing but not there yet, and nearly sobbing in relief that he could stay with the village leader in his final moments.

Zhu Bhujie's eyes widening in first shock, then disbelief, then joy, as he realized that the Ninth Prince was still alive, that the younger cultivator hadn't died at Pleuron.
It wouldn't do for a father to outlive his son, after all.

The two just sitting in silence for the hours leading up to Zhu Bhujie's death, both knowing that something needed to be said, but neither able to say it.

The Ninth Prince openly crying as morning dawns and there's nothing left of Zhu Bhujie but a corpse, memories, and too many things left unsaid.


After the funeral was finished, the villagers of Liaogai stayed for a few minutes longer, then, one by one, in small groups and pairs, began to leave for their regular tasks and daily work. Life went on, after all, and while death was a tragedy, it was time to move on. Eventually, even Zhu Bhujie's family left, and the only person left at the grave of the headman was the Ninth Prince.

The Ninth Prince stayed for a few minutes more after everyone had left, but eventually, even he walked away.

If anyone was watching, they would have seen the Ninth Prince quietly slip away from the village and into the desert, with none of his companions by his side, and not even his spear with him.

But no one was watching, and thus no one saw the Ninth Prince, or the headstone he carried.

The Ninth Prince walked until he couldn't see Liaogai, and then walked some more, eventually reaching a part of the desert completely obscured by an enormous sandstorm, easily able to strip the flesh from the bones of Qi Gathering cultivators.

The Ninth Prince had no flesh, and thus walked straight through, to the eye of the sandstorm, where he stopped.

The Ninth Prince placed the headstone down, nestled into the sands. Then, he sat on his knees, bowed his head, and began to speak.

"This is probably selfish of me. No, scratch that, it's definitely selfish of me. You already had your funeral, you already had people mourning you. It's the height of arrogance to assume that I deserve to have another memorial to you, that I'm special enough to have that right."

He let out a short bark of bitter laughter. "Doesn't change the fact that I did though. Doesn't change the fact that I'm out here, in the middle of the desert, with a headstone for you, trying to say all the things I should've said years ago."

"It didn't feel right, doing it in Liaogai. Too many people around, too many people that would see their illustrious defender talking to a dead man's grave, feeling grief and sadness and all the things that I can't feel, that I shouldn't feel." the Ninth Prince said, with no small amount of bitterness.

"I'm the protector of Liaogai, a larger-than-life figure to them, someone who's always smiling, always laughing, no matter how bad things get. I can't break, I can't show any sort of negative emotion, because if I do, then everyone loses hope. I'm a symbol to those people, and I can't let them down."

Shaking his head, the Ninth Prince continued. "Hells, after Pleuron, I'm like that with the entire clan, a symbol to the Golden Devils, 'Unrivaled Under Heaven'. 'Indomitable'. That isn't me. That's never been me. Or, well, it wasn't me. Now, I guess it is. I'm some sort of hero, when all I ever wanted was to protect people, to make it so that nobody had to be afraid any more."

The Ninth Prince chuckled. "Heh. I never wanted to be a hero, just someone in the background. Glory doesn't hold any interest to me. I guess the heavens have a sense of humor, giving this stuff to the person who doesn't want or need it."

"But that's enough of that for now. I didn't come out here to talk to you about my problems. I came out here to tell you all the things I never said. So, I guess, let's do that."

The Ninth Prince took a deep breath, calming himself and getting his thoughts in order, before beginning to speak. "You saved me. Many times over. When I came to the Golden Devil Clan, I was a reckless idiot with nearly no chance of living through the next few trials. For fuck's sake, I knowingly confronted a Core Formation Blood Path Cultivator, and the only reason I didn't get squished into pieces was because of some absurd luck!"

The NinthPrince realized he was near yelling in terms of volume, and tried to tone it down a notch. "But, well, that instance of utter stupidity wasn't all bad. After all, I got Liaogai out of it. And, more importantly, I got you.

You, like I said, you saved me. You were there every time I nearly died and managed to stumble back into Liaogai, half-alive and bleeding out, ready to patch me up. And more than that, more than making sure I didn't die, you made sure I didn't go insane."

The Ninth Prince absently rubs away the tears that begin to blur his vision as he continues to speak. "When I came here, I was on the edge of breaking. You made sure that didn't happen. You gave me a support system, you gave me things to do, you taught me, not just how to fight and kill, but how to live.

I wouldn't be half the man I am right now without your guidance and your help, but even that's not the best thing you did for me."

The Ninth Prince exhales deeply, as he brings up the will to continue speaking. "Right. No more dancing around this, no more dodging the question. This should have happened when you were alive, but it didn't, and so I'm going to say it to a gravestone."

"You gave me a family."

"There, I said it. You gave me a family, you adopted me into your own. For all the both of us liked to pretend this was just a friendly relationship, or a teacher/student one, both of us knew what it was."

The Ninth Prince begins to cry, green streaks of acid dripping down his steel face. "You invited me to eat dinner with your wife and other sons. You taught me how to run Liaogai, something you'd never shared to anyone outside of your family. You did so much more for me than you needed to."

"I'm tired of denying it. You were like a father to me. You took in a reckless child and molded him into a man, with responsibilities and all the tools needed to survive in this horrible, horrible world. And, I'd like to think that you thought of me as your son."

The Ninth Prince continued to speak, even as tears of venom hissed and sizzled against the sand. "And, for that, well, I don't really have words to express how much that means to me. I lost everything you know? My family died to a man in the Fifth Sea, and my memories went with them. But thanks to you, I have a new family, I have new memories. You've given me so much, and I don't think I'd ever be able to repay you."

TheNinth Prince laughed once, a short, sad laugh. "But I know what you'd say if you were here. You'd tell me that the only damn repayment you need is for me to live my life, to be happy. So I'm going to do that."

"But. Before I leave, I have one last thing to say. Thank you for everything, father. My only regret is that I couldn't call you that before it was too late."

The Ninth Prince stood up, and walked back the way he came, leaving the solitary headstone alone, an island of calm in the midst of the shifting sands.


A/N: Well. I finally finished this, and HOOBOY, this omake was certainly a thing. I'm honestly not sure if this omake is one of my best pieces of writing or one of my worst. It's certainly a departure from my normal stuff, but that's what you get when you speedrun a 7 turn planned omake arc into one barely 3k omake. Hope yall enjoy.
 
Ninth Prince 8 - Comprehensive Compendium 2
Ninth Prince




The Ninth Prince's Comprehensive Compendium of Serpents (Part one)




Species Name: Windflute Serpent

Cultivation Stage: Adults normally stabilize around the Third Heavenstage of Qi Gathering, but specimens have been recorded to go all the way up to the Ninth.

Abilities: The Windflute Serpent uses small holes in its body connected to a specialized network of organs to expel jets of air in a melodic fashion, which have a hypnotizing effect and also allow it to fly with no small agility.

Behavior: Typical for a flying hypnosis-based predator, the Windflute Serpent hovers out of sight and out of reach of ground based animals, focusing its melodic jets of air in just the right way so that the area directly under the snake is bombarded by a continuous wave of hypnotic force, until eventually the Windflute Serpent's prey walks underneath and is immediately bombarded with enough hypnotic force to fall unconscious, after which the Windflute Serpent swoops down for an easy meal.

My Thoughts: A very powerful support type spirit beast, able to both act as a flying scout as well as a single target weakener, with its ability to focus its hypnotic powers on a single target instead of in an area of effect. It does have a minor weakness in the demonic tunist area though, what with it being unable to do much more than a brute force hypnotic command, meaning that the Windflute Serpent is 'only' able to use its prowess in soul arts to suppress opponents through sheer hypnotic force. If one has contracted a Windflute Serpent, there are two main paths one can take such a creature. The first path is by far the simpler of the two, focusing on the Windflute Serpent's hypnotic powers by feeding it a series of crystal chimestones, preferably clear chimestones, though any color would do in a pinch. This allows the Windflute Serpent to fire off multiple beams of hypnotic force at once, or a single, incredibly powerful beam. The second path focuses on the Serpent's control over wind and its naturally durable body to turn the Windflute Serpent into a wind-propelled projectile by feeding it White Flying Mice as well as submerging the Windflute Serpent in a man sized vat of molten Auric Silver, Harmonic Springwater, and powdered Galestone in a three to five to seven ratio twice a day, for ten minutes each, until the vat has been fully emptied and the Windflute Serpent has completely absorbed the solution.


Species Name: Desert Shade Adder

Cultivation Stage: Anywhere from the First to the Third Heavenstage of Qi Gathering.

Abilities: The Desert Shade Adder has only one ability of any note, the power to create illusionary copies of itself made out of shadow. These copies have no true capabilities beyond looking nice, as, unlike the original Desert Shade Adder, which is most noticeably a snake, the clones look more like shadowy outlines of a snake than an actual creature.

Behavior: The Desert Shade Adder hunts in groups dozens strong, where each adder is able to utilize its clones to give the impression that the hunting groups are five to six times larger than they actually are, allowing the snakes to 'encircle' their prey,who by this point normally just give up and wait to die, because they 'realize' that fighting is only going to make them suffer more, as there's no way a single Qi Gathering spirit beast can stand against dozens, even with such a disparity in Heavenstages.

My Thoughts: Almost useless for a cultivator aside from as a pet, the Desert Shade Adder would not even be in this compendium if it were not for the fact that I have personally seen exactly one Cultivator turn a Desert Shade Adder into a force to be reckoned with, easily able to take on opponents a full three Heavenstages above her own. At the time that this compendium is being written, this is the only possible path that I know of that would make a Desert Shade Adder viable in combat, which said path does by giving the Desert Shade Adder's clones physicality, allowing them to fight alongside the original. This is done by first finding a large patch of Night's Blood Orchid, one containing at least twenty of the flowers, and then wringing every last possible drop of nectar out of said orchids. This nectar must then be mixed with exactly 432.79 grams of a powder comprised of three parts of crushed Moonstone, two parts of the ground rib bones of a Black-Furred Ape King, and six parts of Godsblood Crystal. Once the mixture is complete, it must be placed in a dodecahedron-shaped Blasphemous Cauldron of the False Gods (which can be purchased at any clan alchemical shop for twelve contribution points), and then both the Adder and the mixture must be sealed in a lightless pit for six days and nights. Once the adder is released, it will be pich-black in color, and will have gained the ability to create physical copies of itself. The interesting thing about the Desert Shade Adder is that, while it is unable to progress past the Third Heavenstage, the only limitation on the number of clones it can produce is practice and time, meaning that it scales with its bonded partner, given sufficient training.


Species Name: Devilish Pogo Snake

Cultivation Stage: Ranges from the Fifth Heavenstage of Qi Gathering all the way up to the Ninth.

Abilities: The Devilish Pogo Snake is able to curl its body up into a sort of spring, and then, with the aid sufficient amounts of Qi, is able to bounce incredibly high distances up into the air, or bounce over a very short distance hundreds of times incredibly fast. In addition to its jumping abilities, the Devilish Pogo Snake is able to reinforce its body with Qi, allowing it to suffer no adverse effects from the impact of its immense jumps or the friction generated from the speed of its lesser hops, though this does have the side effect of making it shimmer and shine incredibly obviously.

Behavior: The Devilish Pogo Snake is, like most other snakes of its size, an ambush predator, with two main methods of hunting prey. The first method is by far the simpler one, and the one it uses for most of its food. When the Devilish Pogo Snake 'sees' the heat signature of a large beast coming close enough, it erupts out of the thin layer of sand it was hiding under in an enormous jump, propelling the snake half a li into the air, after which it lands on its prey's skull with enough force to turn bone into powder. Normally, after that, the beast is dead. If the Devilish Pogo Snake is unlucky enough to run into a beast that can survive its initial attack however, it moves onto its second method of hunting. The Pogo Snake begins to rapidly hop around its prey, distracting and disorienting it with its shimmering scales, getting in any hit it can, using the 'death by a thousand cuts' strategy until it wears out its prey. If neither strategy works, and whatever beast the Pogo Snake was fighting proves too much for it, well, the Devilish Pogo Snake's hops and jumps are well suited for running away.

My Thoughts: A powerful offensive addition to a cultivator's arsenal, the Devilish Pogo snake is a reasonably popular and well known choice for a contracted beast, and this of course means that there are three main ways to raise it, each focused around a different aspect of its quite varied skill set. The first path is the most common, one that takes advantage of the Pogo Snake's powerful jumping impacts by training it to compress all of its force into the tip of its tail. This path requires naught but hard training and a few dozen medicinal herbs that can be bought for a single contribution point all together, but that doesn't mean it's weak. On the contrary, it turns the Devilish Pogo Snake into a potent one-hit-kill unit, able to take down most enemies at its Heavenstage down with a single blow. The second path is focused around increasing the Devilish Pogo Snake's speed and endurance, allowing it to let loose a flurry of attacks. This path requires the eggshell of a Fiend Lizardtoad, Thousand-Year Wind Crystal, and the arm fur of a Fighting Panda, the total cost of which is Seven Contribution points. The final path focuses on turning the Devilish Pogo Snake into a 'tank', albeit one that focuses on evading attacks rather than enduring them. This path requires two sets of materials, one for speed, one to increase the shimmering effect of the Pogo Snake's Qi. The speed set requires a Thousand-Year Wind Crystal, a Dustbird Plume, twelve units of Haste-Increasing Ginseng, and the heart of a Supersonic Hedgehog, all of which must be mixed together with ten units of springwater and then fed to the snake. The shimmering set requires a Mesmermaid heart scale, the horn of a Shining Qilin, five units of Glinting Mud, and the eggshell of a Jewel Eagle, all of which must be mixed into a paste and then smeared over the Devilish Pogo Snake's scales.

------------------------------------------------------
A/N: Another Compendium entry, because why not?
 
Ninth Prince 9 - Naag Archives: Venomsteel Battlegod
Ninth Prince
Naag Archives: Venomsteel Battlegod

The text within this tattered tome is clear and crisp, written in a script similar to that of the fifth sea but subtly different. The penmanship is impeccable, written by the steady hand of a practiced writer.

As anyone with more than a cursory knowledge of the various branches of the Naag will know, the Venomsteel bloodline mutation is one of the more common mutations in the Dynasty, acting as either front line warriors, or, more rarely, long range attackers, their metal bodies providing quite the defense against nearly all forms of physical attack.

Members of the Naag Dynasty itself will certainly know of one of the key skills of this bloodline, the Venomsteel Battlegod. Such a piece of information would be incredibly easy to remember, and I have half a mind to just finish my report here, as clearly everyone who will read this document will already know of this technique.

But, for the sake of any children or outsiders marrying into the Naag, I will provide a brief description of the secret art in question.

The Venomsteel Battlegod is a prana-based manifestation approximately ten times the height of the user, one that appears as the upper body of a steel being with the torso of a man and the head of a cobra, holding a metal fang within each of its hands.

The powers of the Venomsteel Battlegod depend on its user however, with there being two main variants on the technique.

The first variant is used by the body cultivators of the Venomsteel bloodline mutation, in which the Venomsteel Battlegod throws down multiple enormous steel fangs that merge with the cultivator's body, granting them increased physical prowess and larger bodies.

The second variant is used by the ranged attackers of the Venomsteel bloodline mutation, in which the Venomsteel Battlegod acts as a second long range attacker, throwing its steel fangs at enemies with pinpoint accuracy.

The Venomsteel Battlegod is however a Prana based construct, so any disruptions to the user's meridians will of course destroy the technique, although, if one has disrupted meridians, they have much more to worry about than a destroyed technique. The second, more relevant consequence is that Prana needs to be constantly fed into the technique for it to work, which has implications so obvious that I do not need to state it in this report.

Finally, to any Prana Gathering cultivators with the Venomsteel bloodline mutation that wish to attempt the Venomsteel Battlegod, I have one piece of advice for you. Don't.

The Venomsteel Battlegod is a Chakra Opening technique for a reason you idiots, and that reason is the immense strain on one's body, as well as the method of its enhancement/attacks!

For Shesha's sake you fools, it uses your chakra as its fangs, so how are you going to use it without opened chakra?

Beyond that, I have no further comments, and my summary of the Venomsteel Battlegod is now complete. If you wish for a more comprehensive look at the technique, please peruse the Venomsteel Archives instead of the general Archives.

- Aditiya Naag, Eighth Prince of the Naag​



--------------------------------------------------------------------​



The text after the thick line, while in the same script, couldn't be any more different. The penmanship is atrocious, jagged and smudged, barely readable, written by the hand of one who seems to never have picked up a writing implement in their life.

Ignore the stuff above. There's a way to get the Venomsteel Battlegod to work in Qi Gathering. Oh, right, for those of you born in the Third Sea, Prana Gathering is the same thing as Qi Gathering, and Chakra Opening is the same as Foundation Establishment.

Now! Back to my work!

And unlike my brother, I'm not going to leave you to figure out all of this stuff on your own! Bastard couldn't even be bothered to put down an explanation of the Qi Flow, meaning that I had no way to do the technique without recreating it from scratch, because, for some reason, the Orb of Shesha doesn't have the Venomsteel Archives.

If it did, it would be childs play to synthesize the two variations, rip out the metaphorical 'guts' of the ranged technique, and then combine the framework of that with the enhancement stuff of the body cultivation one, in order to create a technique that empowers those other than me, specifically my snakes.

But, seeing as I don't have that, I had to figure it all out based on a description of what the technique looks like and what it does.

Still managed to do it though, just took me about a year that could've been used on literally anything else.

Anyways, here's the science behind the thing.

There are two major areas of focus in attempting to recreate this technique: the actual effect of the technique, enhancement of my contracted beasts, as well as the look of the technique and the way the technique accomplishes said enhancement.

Surprisingly enough, the second point is solved rather easily, as the Orb of Shesha apparently has an imprinted memory of the Venomsteel Battlegod, not enough to recreate the technique itself, but certainly enough to complete the second area of focus.

In order to complete this however, the technique itself must be filtered through the Orb of Shesha as the final step of the technique, meaning Qi needs to be routed through meridian channels 104*, 78*, and 12*, and then finally through meridian channel 99*, after which the aesthetic of the technique will be completed.

Of course, at this stage, while the technique can be activated, it doesn't have any power or abilities whatsoever, solely summoning the snake-headed man, though this does prevent one's body from exploding under the strain of what should be a Foundation Establishment technique.

Now, in regards to the qi flow, we're using the 5-45-19* cycle and the 49-84-72* cycle and making them flow in opposition to each other, using Haung's Fifth Postulate to create the Millstone Effect theorized about by Zhu Feqian, and using the resulting power loop to modulate Rong's Conundrum, effectively removing the exponential energy requirement inherent with long distance enhancement.

In addition, we're using the general enhancement frame (for reference, 13-75-63-8-44-14-82/77-66-55-44-33-22-11-1*, colliding at the 44* point and acupoint 5*) of Ji and Qian for the 'enhancement' basis, but we're connecting acupoint 5* to acupoint 12* in order to route the empty bits of the enhancement frame (channels 54*, 29*, and 9*) through the Orb of Shesha in order for the imprinted memory to fill in the rest of the technique.

After that, all we need to do is link up the general long range frame, minus the attacking bit, (for reference, 13-49-32-15-17-23-52//53-35-18-37-86-42-13*, colliding at the 13* meridian but not linking acupoints) with the enhancement frame, using the 13 meridian channel as the link and exploiting its relation with the 12 meridian channel to route a discordant qi flow through the 12 meridian, allowing the 13 meridian to simultaneously possess both a discordant and harmonious qi flow as in Kong's principle of Harmonious Similarity, and thus support both the long range frame and enhancement frame at once. The final step is completing the technique by using Jian's Whirlpool Qi Flow in every acupoint not occupied, creating a wave flow through the unused meridian channels.

Of course, the stress placed on the physical frame is kind of where this entire thing falls apart. I've checked a few thousand times, and it is physically impossible for any Qi Gathering cultivator to endure the strain that the body is placed under.

But! I managed to find a way around that too!

It was simple really, all I needed to do was take the Jade Blood Beauty Puppet and Rotating Steel Pyramid, and merge them into one, stripping out the Beauty Puppet's core and 'meridians', melt down the Steel Pyramid using the fires of a Solar Drake, and infuse the space where the Beauty Puppet's core and 'meridians' used to be with a mix of molten iron, mortal King Cobra venom, and my blood, at a ratio of 2:3:25. For reference, I needed about 12 liters of the substance, meaning I had to drain 10 liters of my blood for this to work. It was quite painful. I recommend not doing it if you have the choice.

Also, while unrelated to the technique itself, I did find something quite interesting as a byproduct of the infusion. After the infusion was complete, I found an odd pyramid made of a reddish variant of venomsteel that dripped some form of liquid metal that resembled blood. Of course, I subjected it to the standard unknown artifact test (Fei v. 2.5 as modified by the Fang elemental effect experiment), and when exposed to qi-lightning, the pyramid swallowed the lightning and effectively negated it.

It appears as if I have stumbled into some sort of tribulation treasure.

After that, it was a relatively simple task of binding the new Steel Blood Beauty Puppet to my soul, calculating the dimensional geometries necessary for me to place it within a rift in space at a fixed point relative to myself and the calculus necessary to make sure it didn't get torn apart. (said geometries are the twelfth theorem of Huang as it applies to Fexiang's postulate, with said calculus being the sequential Jin Fa Rong proofs when viewed through the lens of the Soul Sage's philosophy)

I also managed to shatter about seventeen theorems and postulates in the process, and create an entirely new field of study, so that was fun.

Now, we only have the problem of me not having any dao pillars, and the technique directly using my dao pillars in order to function!

I will be perfectly honest, I expected my creation of the technique to end here, seeing as having no dao pillars is a problem that's pretty much impossible to solve without getting to Foundation Establishment.

But, somehow, through sheer divine luck, I managed to stumble upon a solution.

A few decades ago, I was crippled in the defense of Pleuron, an iron spike impaling me through my dantian. After resolving that little problem over the course of about a decade, I picked up nine unusual fang-like pillars, each covered in unusual glyphs and runes.

One day, while I was trying to activate the technique, something happened, and one of the fang pillars started glowing black and green, levitated into the air, and merged with the Venomsteel Battlegod, after which the technique worked somehow, though not without a considerable amount of fatigue.

I'm still not exactly sure what happened, but right now, I can undergo the strain of three 'dao pillars' worth of enhancements before I would most likely explode from the force on my body, allowing me to strike at early Foundation Establishment, technically making me the strongest Qi Gathering member of the Golden Devil Clan.

So that's pretty nice, if I do say so myself.

Other than that, I don't really have much to say, the basic information is all there, and if you have the same resources as I do, you should be able to reproduce it. As such, I will end my summary of the Venomsteel Battlegod here.

- Anush Naag, Ninth Prince of the Naag the Golden Devil Clan​


*Written in Xin's meridian notation style Edition 12, Reprint 94, Errata 22.5

A/N: Took me way too long to finish this thing off, but I finally did it. Hopefully yall enjoy this little piece I made, and hopefully I have enough time to get one more omake out
 
Last edited:
Ninth Prince 10 - Trials and Tribulations
Ninth Prince




Trials and Tribulations




A/N: For reference, this is set at the beginning of the turn, and I'm gonna ask for a tribulation boost so I can actually mechanically break through.

It was finally time.

The formations were set, the treasures were put in place, the location was picked out.

He'd gone through a solid decade of tempering and preparation, solely for this moment, and now that the moment was upon him, it was all he could do to not burst out laughing in sheer joy.

Yes, after fourteen decades of preparation and advancement, it was finally time for the Ninth Prince to advance to foundation establishment!

...Hmmmm, that felt slightly off, as if the situation the Ninth Prince was currently in was actually worthy of all the gravitas and weight he'd given it. This was truly a departure from the normal.

Anyways, the Ninth Prince was currently in the middle of some last minute preparations, aligning the ritual circles with the geomantic qi flow, harmonizing the fourth leyline with his meridians, and laying out the various natural treasures that would be used to resist whatever form his tribulation would take.

The Ninth Prince had everything completely planned out, too.

The natural treasures were collected over decades of clan missions, some of them impossible to obtain in the third sea, taken off the corpses of the trial invaders.

The formations were made by Achille Adeptos himself, 12 pointed and able to stand up to an attack from a Core Formation cultivator, aspected to the NInth Prince's unique qi signature.

The location was meticulously planned out, various sites of significance taken into consideration. The ruins of what used to be the Temple of Scales, the spot outside the city where the Ninth Prince first made his legend by scaring off a Core Formation cultivator, the site of his impalement outside of Pleuron, all considered, and all ultimately discarded in favor of a whirling sandstorm housing a single headstone.

Even the time of day was carefully chosen, the dead of midnight, when the entire desert was completely silent, and the moon hung in the night sky like an enormous pearl.

As the Ninth Prince stepped into the middle of his formation circle, Ulo to his left, Kha, Li, and Ya to his right, and Raj behind him, all in circles of their own, he let out a small chuckle. It was funny really, the Ninth Prince had gone through all of this preparation, obtained everything necessary for his advancement, but the one thing he didn't have, the sole thing he hadn't prepared, was his Dao.

Yes, that was right. Even on the eve of his ascension, the moment when his Dao was supposed to be tested to see if it was worthy of carrying him to the next great realm, the Ninth Prince didn't have one.

Normally, he'd take a few decades to figure it out, strengthen it, and prepare for tribulation, but some deep instinct within the Ninth Prince was screaming at him to undergo his tribulation, and, weirdly enough, to bring the nine iron fangs created as a byproduct of the reconstruction of his body at Pleuron.

And the Ninth Prince hadn't gone this far in life without listening to his instincts, even the ones that didn't seem to have any rationale to them. It was why he never skipped his daily dose of liquid fire, after all.

But that was enough talking. It was time to start his tribulation.

With a flash of green light, the Ninth Prince flared his aura to the heavens, a wordless challenge to the Turtle World itself, a sign that he was ready to defy it, and ready for its punishment.

And the heavens acknowledged him.

A door opened in the middle of the sky, crackling with multicolored lightning and leading to nowhere. The Ninth Prince watched as the door swung fully open, and began to descend.

To his left, right, and behind him, the Ninth Prince's bonded companions were in the middle of their own tribulations, completely invisible to the Ninth Prince. He spared a quick moment to wish them luck (not that they'd need it, they were his bonded companions after all), before fully focusing on his impending trial.

The door continued to descend, moving slowly and inexorably until it was at eye level with the Ninth Prince.

And then, a figure emerged from the door, a faceless humanoid made entirely of lightning that quickly coalesced into a shimmering warrior, pale skinned and with brown hair, wearing a fur cloak and leather armor, and wielding twin axes that hummed with lightning.

The Ninth Prince got into a ready stance, preparing for an epic clash of equally matched opponents that would tear the heavens asunder, waiting for the tribulation to attack and begin the duel!

And the Ninth Prince waited.

And waited.

And waited some more, as the tribulation projection simply stood there for what seemed to be days but was more likely mere moments.

Eventually, even the Ninth Prince's legendary patience wore thin, and so the Ninth Prince did the obvious thing.

He relaxed, held his spear loosely to his side, and waved. "Hello! How are you doing this fine night?"

The Ninth Prince didn't expect a response, obviously, or at least not a verbal one. After all, this was simply lightning in the form of a being, but even so, he was hoping that the verbal gesture would provoke the projection into doing some-dear Vritra the tribulation was talking.

The white-skinned warrior seemed as confused about the whole thing as the Ninth Prince, scratching the back of his head with one arm. "Yaknow, I've been doing this for a long time, comes with the territory of being an imprint of a transmi-well, I'm not allowed to tell you exactly what I am, but just take my word for it, I've been around for a while. Anyways, I've done this tribulation gig before, hells, I even fought you about a millenia ago, but this is the first time someone's actually tried talking to me."

Well. That was certainly a thing. The Ninth Prince wasn't exactly sure how he was supposed to process this new development. He was expecting a fight, dagnabbit! "So… are we going to fight, or…?"

The tribulation projection (the Ninth Prince really needed to learn his name) chuckled a bit. "Heh. Only if you want to. Otherwise I can just sit down and talk with you, ask you a few questions about your Dao."

"...Might be a little hard now that I think about it, what with you not knowing what your Dao is, but I'll figure something out." The foreigner muttered, looking towards the ground with an expression of slight consternation on his face.

Right, yeah, that worked perfectly. A chance to exercise his prodigious intellect and also not have to kill someone? This might just be one of the better nights of the Ninth Prince's life! "So, how do we start?"

The lightning projection sat down on the desert sands, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same. Obviously, since he wasn't a boor, the Ninth Prince graciously obliged, and soon after, the two of them were crouched down right next to Zhu Bhujie's grave, almost as if the old man was acting as a Dao Protector for him.

"So, how this is going to work, is that I'm going to ask you a question. Just one. And you're going to respond with the answer that you feel is the most correct. This does still count as a tribulation though, so treat it with the gravity you'd treat a normal one."

The Foreigner sighed. "My name is Thorfinn Hekleson, and before I died, I was a cultivator of the stage that this sea calls Spirit Severing. I did things I regret, committed a few atrocities in my day, but for the most part, I've made peace with my actions, and while I regret them, they don't define my life anymore."

Thorfinn paused, looking for the right words to convey his actions. "...Right. There's no real easy way for me to say this so I'm just going to spit it out. I destroyed an entire clan. Some bastard stole my most prized possession, a fragment of a lightning god's corpse that I was going to forge into a weapon of unparalleled power, and then use to pave my way to the next Great Realm, what this Sea calls Spirit Severing..

He took it straight off my body, and I killed him. Flayed him alive with whips of lightning. Then I killed his family, father, mother, siblings, nieces, nephews, uncles, aunts, the whole bloodline. They didn't die peacefully, so I chained their mindless ghosts, and used those to kill the rest of his clan.

I annihilated them, every mortal, every vassal, every cultivator from the first stage to the fifth, and I did it all in a week. Then Ii salted the earth and turned their compound into a hell of lightning."

The Ninth Prince looked on in horror and vague nausea. Now, the Ninth Prince wasn't a stranger to gore, blood, or general atrocities, having seen quite a few committed by blood path fiends he wasn't able to stop in time. And even beyond that, he knew that those atrocities weren't limited to the enemy. Even the Archegetes had his fair share of sins on his shoulders, wiping out towns, poisoning innocents, and quite a bit more. And while the Ninth Prince didn't like it, he could understand the reasons and necessities behind the actions, even if his blood boiled into acidic venom at the mere thought of such things being needed at all.

But this? This senseless destruction of human (or otherwise) life? No, the Ninth Prince couldn't countenance that at all.

He was about to say so to Thorfinn's face, but then the lightning projection spoke once more, head bowed and cast in shadow.

"I believe I already know the answer to this, but I must ask it anyways, as is my duty as your tribulation."

And here, Thorfinn leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the last son of the Naag could hear the lightning crackling under Thorfinn's skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

The Ninth Prince didn't even hesitate. "No. Not in the slightest. Justice is not killing innocents, Justice is never punishing those with no connection to the crime. Justice is making sure that the target of your ire is fully deserving, and that nobody else gets caught up in your struggle against that target."

Thorfinn smiled, something not entirely happy, but not entirely sad. If there was an emotion that the Ninth Prince would put to that smile, it would be pride. "Good. I won't say whether or not that's correct, because I can't say whether or not that's correct, but it's what you truly believe, and that's what's important."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Thorfinn Hekleson, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his first trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Thorfinn, and he began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As he did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's first fang pillar, the one created at the end of his first year impaled on the pillar. "YOU MIGHT WANT TO KEEP AN EYE ON THAT!", Thorfinn yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to examine his first fang pillar, the tribulation door, forgotten up until now, opened once more.

And, for the second time, a faceless humanoid emerged from the door, before coalescing into a warrior, darker skinned than the people of the third sea but much lighter skinned than the Naag, wearing a set of thick fur and metal armor, wielding a polearm encased in lightning.

The Ninth Prince decided to wait again, bringing his spear into a ready stance, just in case what had happened with Thorfinn was a fluke, and his next trial would actually be glorious combat.

And he waited

And waited

And waited some more.

But as the warrior didn't move at all, the Ninth Prince decided to relax his stance, wave to the tribulation projection, and be polite. So naturally, he opened with a greeting. "Hello! How are you doing this fine night?"

And, just like Thorfinn, this lightning projection also began talking. "Anush Naag, Terror of Jharkhand, Lord of Ten Thousand Serpents, Ninth Prince of the Naag. I fought you about a thousand years ago, did you know that? Well, obviously you wouldn't, what with the lack of memory and all, but just take my word for it."

The foreigner crossed her arms. "You weren't very good at fighting back then, though I suppose you were good enough to beat the mindless version of me. But, based on what your earlier trial did, I assume you'd like to go with the 'talking about your Dao' option?"

Well obvi-wait what. "Are you saying that cultivators get a choice?"

The tribulation projection laughed. "HAH! No. Most of the time, almost 99.999 percent of it actually, the tribulation is mindless, because the heavens are mindless. The heavens have will, sure, but that will doesn't have form, if that makes sense. But then there's the weird cases, like with you. You crossed the seas as a first stage cultivator, alone and technically under your own power, and Heaven can't deal with that, so you get echoes of dead cultivators stored in the cycle of reincarnation instead.

And we get to give you a choice. Well, if we want to. And right now I want to."

The cultivator tilted her head and leaned forward. "Hopefully that makes sense to you, because if it doesn't, I'm not gonna explain it again. Anyways, you want to fight, or you want to talk?"

The question was obviously a no-brainer. Killing people was normally bad unless they deserved it. And while Thorfinn might have deserved it, there was no reason to think that this lady would too. "I'll take the talk, please."

The lightning projection scoffed a bit. "Of course you would. Don't know why I even bothered to give you the option to fight me. Anyways, name's Khultal. This is how this is going to go. I'm gonna tell you something I did back in the day, and then you're gonna answer a single question about that encounter. Now, technically, there's no wrong answer except for what feels wrong to you, but we both know that's kind of bullshit, so do your best. This is still tribulation you know, and it still has all of the nasty consequences for failure."

Khultal sat down, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same. As the Ninth Prince wasn't a peasant, he obliged, sitting down next to his father's grave.

"So," Khultal said "I'm just going to get right into this. I did something that I'm not proud of, but I'd do again if I had the chance. I killed like half a sect. There was a bastard who tried to jump me, and I exploded his head. I was gonna let that be the end of it, but then some of his friends got annoyed at me and I exploded their heads. Then their elders tried to kill me and I exploded their heads. And finally, like half the sect mobilized to try to kill me, from their lowliest first stage outer sect disciples to the fifth stage sect master himself. And, as you might guess, I exploded all of their heads.

So, Anush Naag, Ninth Prince. I have one single question for you."

And here, Khultal leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the former Nascent Soul could hear the crackling thunder under Khultal's skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

Hmmmm. This was actually an interesting case, because, on the surface, it seemed completely horrific, Khultal killing those much weaker than her with seemingly no hesitation whatsoever and barely any remorse. But if the Ninth Prince dug a little deeper, it was actually quite nuanced. Khultal, according to her account, hadn't killed anyone who wasn't trying to attack her first. Even the inciting incident was some sort of young master type trying to jump her, thus turning the following actions of his sect into a bunch of bullies trying to get revenge, instead of people trying to get justice for the untimely and unjustified demise of one of their friends or juniors.

And the Ninth Prince decided to say so. He had to, this was technically a tribulation after all. "Yes, this is justice. Justice is making sure that all who are involved in your wrongdoing are punished, and punished appropriately, and you did that. Those cultivators attacked you with intent to kill, over an incident that wasn't your fault. You were entirely within your rights to kill them."

Khutul smiled, fierce and proud."Good! I'm not allowed to say whether or not you were right, but the fact that I'm not trying to strike you down where you stand should be proof enough."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Khutul, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his second trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Khutul, and she began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As she did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's second fang pillar, the one created at the end of his second year impaled on the pillar. "KEEP THAT ONE CLOSE BY, YOU'LL NEED IT EVENTUALLY!", Khutul yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his second fang pillar, the tribulation door, for the third time, opened once more.

And, for the third time, a faceless humanoid emerged from the door, before coalescing into a warrior, slightly lighter skinned than the Naag, wearing the pelt of a large feline, and wielding an enormous club, edged with obsidian and wreathed in electricity.

The Ninth Prince decided to wait again, bringing his spear into a ready stance, not because he thought the third trial would be a fight, but because there was no sense in being incautious.

And he waited

And waited

And instead of waiting some more, the ninth prince just decided to get on with it, directly speaking to the lightning projection. "Hello there! I am the Ninth Prince of the Naag, and whenever you're ready we can start the whole debate thing. There's no real rush, I'm happy to wait for as long as you need to get prepared."

The tribulation projection looked a bit perplexed, blinking once and not saying anything for a solid minute. Just when the Ninth Prince was worried that his third trial was somehow defective, the foreigner began to speak. "I am… not entirely sure how to proceed from here. You knowing that the trial isn't single combat to the death brings a lot of the fun out of the entire thing. I was going to be mysterious about the whole endeavor, hit you with the old bait and switch, but we can't do that anymore, so I suppose I'll just get right into the debate."

Ah. That was unfortunate, the Ninth Prince didn't intend to ruin somebody else's dramatic entrance. Why, such a thing was the height of improper conduct! "My apologies for ruining your entrance. If you wouldn't mind, could you tell me about what you had planned?"

Asking about what the projection was going to do was the least the Ninth Prince could do to make it up to him.

As expected, the projection noticeably brightened up once the Ninth Prince asked him to explain his plot to shock and awe the Naag. "Well! I'm glad you asked! I was going to start with just staring at you wordlessly until your patience reached its end and you asked me what I was doing. After that, I'd say something cryptic about the stars having changed and a blood moon hanging in the sky, which would lead into a spiel about the fundamental nature of life and the universe that would enrapture you for a solid five minutes, after which it'd be revealed that my club was at your throat.

I'd remove my club from your throat, citing that I wanted a fair duel, hype the battle up by talking about how you defeated the mindless version of me in our previous clash, but now you didn't just have to fight some puppet, you had to fight a warrior of legend! Here I'd pause to talk about my great deeds for a while, bragging and leaving some key opportunities for you to hop in with your own bragging, then I would formally challenge you to what I'd refer to as 'the greatest contest in existence'. Once I'd hyped you up enough and got you ready for a fight, I'd sit down, and say that I was challenging you to reasoned debate."

The projection looked at the Ninth Prince expectantly. "So, would that have worked on you?"

The Ninth Prince thought about it for a moment before shrugging. "Maybe. Solidly maybe. In a vacuum, it'd probably work, I wouldn't be expecting it from you, that's for sure. But in this instance, I'm not entirely sure. See, both Thorfinn and Khutul made it very clear that I had a choice between fighting them and just debating them, and I've been doing the same trick to dozens of juniors, peers, and enemies since basically the day I arrived in the Third Sea. on anyone else, in any other time and place, it would be guaranteed to work. Even against me, here and now, it's still a solid maybe."

The lightning projection hummed. "Hmmmmm. Better odds than I expected, less than I hoped for. But that isn't important right now. What's important is actually continuing with your tribulation and debating you. So, let's just get right on with that shall we?"

The foreigner sat down by Zhu Bhujie's grave, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same, before opening up with his story. "First off, my name is Tolcotl. Just wanted you to know that. Now, the thing I actually did is very specifically something I don't regret in the slightest, but that the heavens have decreed that I should ask you. Well, technically they didn't decree it, since the heavens aren't actually sapient, but it comes to more or less the same thing either way, so I'm just going to roll with it. Anyways, the thing I did was breaking a bunch of laws. Basically every law of the overarching equivalent to your 'demonic path', as well as most of the ones of my sect. At the end of it all, I was supposed to be executed twelve times, but I managed to wriggle my way out of it. And if you're wondering exactly what I did, I organized a rebellion, and tried to cast down every single one of the sects that used slave labor, which was all of them.

So, now that you've heard the barest bones of my tale, I have but one question for you."

And here, Tolcotl leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the former Lord of Ten Thousand Serpents could hear the crackling thunder under his skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

...This was perhaps the easiest trial he'd faced so far. "Yes. One hundred percent yes, I could hardly think of something that would be more just. The law is not justice. Sometimes laws are just, and sometimes they aid in the process of justice, but laws are not just simply because they're laws. There's a law that allows blood path cultivators to eat any mortal, any time they wish, and I don't stop killing blood path villains just because they're technically obeying the law."

The Ninth Prince frowned. "This really shouldn't even be a question, it's a bit obvious isn't it?"

Tolcotl smiled, quiet and happy."Well, that's actually quite reassuring to hear, and I'm glad you think so."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Tolcotl, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his third trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Tolcotl, and he began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As he did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's third fang pillar, the one created at the end of his third year impaled on the pillar. "LET THIS BE MY FIRST AND FINAL GIFT TO YOU!", Tolcotl yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his third fang pillar, the tribulation door opened again.

And, for the fourth time, a faceless humanoid emerged from the door, before coalescing into a warrior, dusky skinned but lighter than the Ninth Prince, wearing desert garb along with an ornate gold neckpiece, wielding a curved sword that sparked with lightning.

The Ninth Prince decided to wait, despite being completely certain of how this was going to go, partly because he felt bad about interrupting Tolcotl's dramatic entrance (really, that was quite unforgivable of him, blood feuds between Fifth Sea noble houses had started for less), and partly because for some reason he was quite exhausted, though not enough to actually affect hm in any meaningful way.

So he waited.

And waited a bit more.

The Ninth Prince didn't really wait any more than that though, since at this point, the dramatic entrance thing would've happened or wouldn't have worked anyways, so he felt no guilt at trying to speak to the tribulation projection. "Hello there! My name is the Ninth Prince, as you already probably know, and I'm wondering exactly how we're going to do this. Is this going to be some sort of a fight, or a debate, or something else?"

The foreigner looked up, a bit startled, though her face quickly smoothed out into calmness. "Ah, my apologies, I was a tad lost in thought there. I am Nefara, and if there are no objections, shall we continue with your tribulation and trials?"

Huh. That was new. "So, just to be clear, you're not going to do some entertaining and time-lengthening prelude, filled with witty repartee and bearing the unique stamp of your personality?"

Nefara looked mildly confused. "Does… Does that happen often? Is that the correct protocol here?"

The Ninth Prince shrugged. "Eh, kind of. It isn't a protocol thing, but most of the challenges I've faced, even beyond this tribulation, mind you, spent a few minutes talking before we got into the actual challenge, and Thorfinn, Khutul, and Tolcotl did the same, though I suppose that something like this does technically count, so barring anything you want to add, I think we're good."

Nefara blinked, before continuing onwards. "All right then. I believe the protocol for this sort of trial is for both of us to take a seat?" Nefara sat down on the sand floor, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same.

"As you already know, my name is Nefara, and this will be your fourth trial. I will relay one of my many experiences relating to justice, and then I will ask you a question. This question must be answered to the best of your capability, after which I will judge whether or not you passed this trial. Is that clear, and are there any questions? This will be your only chance to ask them."

The Ninth Prince shook his head. "Everything seems quite clear, thank you."

Nefara clapped her hands, the sound echoing unnaturally, as if propelled by qi. "Wonderful. In that case, we shall now begin your fourth trial. The experience I will be relating to you is one of the various court cases I have presided over, specifically my greatest regret. The case in question was one between a noted, I believe you would call their cultivation stage Nascent Soul, and a minor family, the strongest among them being equivalent to your Foundation Establishment cultivators. The minor family had brought a list of grievances against the 'Nascent Soul', most notably murder, theft, deception, and the rape of the family head's daughter. The 'Nascent Soul' gave no justification for their acts beyond the fact that they were a much more powerful cultivator who had jurisdiction over the family and thus was entitled to do what they wished with the family in question.

Both sides gave their arguments, the minor family speaking of unfairness and the compact between a lord and their vassal, that the vassal would only serve the lord if the lord protected them and treated them fairly, while the stronger cultivator repeated their point of being able to do what they wished to lower cultivators under their jurisdiction.

I ruled in favor of the 'Nascent Soul', judging that their actions were, while distasteful, still allowed.

My question to you is as follows, Anush Naag of the Golden Devil Clan."

And here, Nefera leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the Beast Tamer from the Fifth Sea could hear the crackling thunder under her skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

There was absolutely no question here. The answer was as clear as the desert glass formed under the Ninth Prince's feet from the sheer heat of his incandescent rage. "This is not justice. Justice is treating all equally in both reward and punishment. The crimes that this Nascent Soul has committed, with seemingly no remorse or guilt, are worthy of death ten times over. In addition, as the arbiter of this unjust sentencing, I would recommend that you undergo some sort of penance or punishment yourself." The Ninth Prince said, voice as cold as ice and fury within his heart.

Nefara smiled, sad and forlorn. "Thank you for your judgement, I simply wish I had possessed such wisdom earlier."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Nefara, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his fourth trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Nefara, and she began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As she did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's fourth fang pillar, the one created at the end of his fourth year impaled on the pillar. "KEEP THIS NEAR YOU, IT WILL BE NECESSARY LATER!", Nefarata yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his fourth fang pillar, the tribulation door opened.

And, once more, a faceless humanoid made out of thunder and lightning emerged from that door, before coalescing into a warrior, almost as light skinned as Thorfinn, wearing shining metal armor and wielding a double-handed greatsword that crackled with electricity.

The Ninth Prince, sort of lazily at this point because it was really obvious that nobody was going to actually fight him, got into a ready stance with his spear and waited a bit. Not out of any thoughts that this was going to go different than the last four trials, but because it was protocol at this point.

And he waited.

And he waited some more.

And, finall-

"WHAT HO, YOUNG HERO! I AM SER LUCINA CHATTERBURY THE FOURTH, AND I AM HERE FOR ONE PURPOSE! TO CHALLENGE YOU TO HONORABLE, RIGHTEOUS DEBATE!" Before the Ninth Prince could even greet this projection, she introduced herself with a bombast that nearly put the Ninth Prince to shame.

Nearly.

Slightly thrown off his game, the Ninth Prince took a second to compose himself. "Well! Hello there! I am the Ninth Prince, and, unless you have any witty repartee or banter you would like to complete beforehand, should we start the trial?"

Thankfully, Lucina responded in a much quieter tone of voice. "Of course! I have quite a large stockpile of witty banter I would like to empty out by the time this trial is over, but my duty requires that I act as the arbitrator to your trial, sharing one of my personal experiences and asking you a question about that experience! After the trial, however I'd be sucked back into the heavenly tribulation, and I wouldn't be able to actually use any of my banter. Truly a conundrum for the ages, one of life's greatest problems!"

The Ninth Prince was engaging in a spot of self reflection. ...Was this how he sounded to others? He hoped so, this was amazing!

But Lucina's conundrum was quite worrying indeed, especially as a possible fate that could await the Ninth Prince. Would he have to one day worry about doing his duty versus having a bit of fun? To that end, the Ninth Prince decided to try and solve her issue, or at least mitigate it. "Well, it seems to me that while you won't be able to use your banter on me, there have to be at least four other people stuck in the tribulation with you, right? Why don't you just start a good banter with one of them?"

Lucina reeled back as if struck, getting her bearings with a smile on her face. "OF COURSE! Why didn't I think of that myself?! Thank you The Ninth Prince, you have opened my eyes to an entirely new world of possibilities! But, now, we must continue with your trial, as time is of the essence! It isn't really of the essence, but I want to finish this up so I can put your advice into practice!"

Lucina sat down by Zhu Bhujie's grave, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same. "I am Ser Lucna Chatterbury the Fourth, and this is your trial! The experience that I wish to share with you is as follows: I was the leader of a Knightly Order, the equivalent to one of your sects, and we were at war with quite a few other Knightly Orders. One of these enemies eventually mustered an enormous army, made up of cultivators equivalent to your Qi Gathering, Foundation Establishment, and Core Formation stages, trying to assault my castle. My subordinates and juniors wished to fight them all in an enormous battle, but I forbid them from doing it, because I didn't want to see any of them get hurt. Instead, I warded the castle with all of the formations I could, killed the enemy leader, equivalent to what your sea would call a Nascent Soul, after one hundred years of combat, sped back to the castle, and destroyed the army laying siege to the fortress.

I'm not sure why I was directed to ask you this, the answer is pretty clear cut, but I suppose I have to.

So, The Ninth Prince."

And here, Lucina leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the Terror of Jharkhand could hear the crackling thunder under her skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

Hmmm. The answer seemed quite clear at first, of course this was justice, Lucina solved the problem and did so without a single one of her juniors getting hurt. But, the more the Ninth Prince thought about it, the less certain he was, until, finally, after half an hour of thought, the Ninth Prince gave his response. "No. This is not justice. Justice would be letting your juniors fight like they wished to, instead of trapping them in a siege for a hundred years. Coddling your juniors isn't justice, because when you are gone, they'll once more become prey to all the horrors around them, unable to fight back. Justice is making your juniors stronger, not doing everything for them." The Ninth Prince said, as Lucina stepped back as if struck by a mighty blow.

Lucina smiled, shaky and unsure. "I… I have a lot to think about. Either way, thanks for the insight. I don't know how long it would've taken me to figure this out on my own."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Lucina, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his fifth trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Lucina, and she began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As she did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's fifth fang pillar, the one created at the end of his fifth year impaled on the pillar. "HERE, AS A BIT OF A THANKS FOR HELPING ME OUT!", Lucina yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his fifth fang pillar, the tribulation door opened.

And, for the sixth time, a faceless humanoid made out of electricity emerged from that tribulation door, before coalescing into a warrior, one with a skin tone almost exactly like the natives of the third sea, dressed in ornate silks and armor and wielding a bow whose arrows sparked with thunder.

The Ninth Prince didn't even bother getting his spear into a ready stance. He knew the drill, he knew what was going on, and there was no real point to moving into a battle stance when there was zero chance of an actual battle.

As was customary by this point, the Ninth Prince waited for the projection to speak. It wasn't out of any hope that the projection would speak first, since that only happened once, and Lucna seemed quite out of the ordinary for a tribulation projection.

And he waited, but only for a little bit before speaking. "Hello! I'm the Ninth Prince, and, unless I am quite severely mistaken, you are my trial examiner. Would I be correct in that assumption?

The tribulation projection looked at the Ninth Prince with something quite similar to contempt, albeit less severe. "Hmmm, yes, yes I am. It is good to see that your mental faculties are capable of basic logical leaps. I will in fact be debating you today, and unlike the vast majority of the beings that I must unfortunately call peers, I have no patience for small talk. I despise being on this mortal plane for more than an instant longer than I actually must. My name is Wutian, I am from this Sea originally, though I was here before that Soup Chef fool killed the damn Turtle Young and damned this place to forever be the least of the seas. As I have said twice already, I am your examiner for the sixth trial of your tribulation. I say this three times so that I am certain you will remember it. Now, do you have any questions that I am required to answer, or shall I move to the important part of this trial?"

The Ninth Prince already hated this guy. But dislike of a person shouldn't be a factor when interacting with them, unless that person was someone like a Blood Path fiend of course. So, in the most polite tone he could muster, the Ninth Prince responded to Wutian. "No, I have no questions to ask you."

Wutian gave the Ninth Prince a look that from anyone else would be approval. "Well, perhaps you aren't as idiotic as I had assumed. But that is irrelevant. Now, sit." Wutian took a seat by Zhu Bhujie's grave, and motioned for the Ninth prince to follow.

"I will not waste my time explaining your trial, as you have undertaken it five times before this and I trust that you already know what it is. My name is Wutian, and this is the experience I will share with you today. In my travels, I came across a minor clan of qi gathering cultivators and mortals. The Patriarch of the 'clan' was barely in early foundation establishment, but their hidden valley and complete lack of any importance whatsoever allowed them to live peacefully with almost no strife. That is, until a young master from one of the larger Righteous Sects in my region took a fancy to the Patriarch's sister, promising the clan eternal stability if she married him. The sister had no interest in the young master, already having a husband and happy family, but the young master was insistent, throwing around the weight of his grandfather's reputation as a Nascent Soul. This is when I stepped in, claiming that this family was a clan of my descendants and daring this young master to bring his grandfather into this, as his grandfather was a weak old pissant who didn't deserve the title of nascent soul.

After the young master was scared off, I told the 'clan' that I had lied, they weren't related to me, I did all of this because I disliked the young master's face, and that we would never see each other again. I gave them a small stone that would call me if the pissant made trouble, which I would then use as an excuse to kill the pissant and his grandson. After that I left and never returned.

So, whatever your name is."

And here, Wutian leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the transmigrator could hear the crackling thunder under his skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

This was… mildly complicated, but not as thought provoking as the situation given by Lucina. On the surface, it seemed like Wutian was meddling with affairs that weren't his to meddle in, but the fact of the matter was that the clan had no other option, and as soon as the situation was resolved, Wutian stopped meddling. In that light, the answer was clear. "Yes, this was justice. Justice is not meddling with the affairs of your juniors, but that wasn't what happened here. You didn't coddle or save your juniors from a situation they could've handled, you stepped in when there was no other option for that clan, and once you weren't needed, you left."

Wutian smiled, arrogant and proud. "Of course my actions are justice. Really, you make it sound like there was any other option."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Wutian, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his sixth trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Wutian, and he began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As he did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's sixth fang pillar, the one created at the end of his sixth year impaled on the pillar. "YOUR PERFORMANCE WAS ADEQUATE!", Wutian yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his sixth fang pillar, the tribulation door opened for the seventh time.

And, for the seventh time, a faceless humanoid made out of tribulation lightning emerged from the tribulation door, before coalescing into a warrior, browner than the residents of the third sea, but of similar lightness of skin, wearing deerskin clothes, beaded necklaces, and a feathered headpiece, wielding twin daggers that sparked with lightning.

Once more, the Ninth Prince waited, though not for nearly as long this time, barely even a few minutes really, since he knew the score and was, by this point getting quite tired. As a cultivator of the Twelfth Heavenstage, he didn't need much sleep, but the Ninth Prince had been up for a solid week straight preparing for his tribulation, and he was beginning to get to the 'eyes feeling heavy' stage of sleep loss, which wasn't healthy. Proper sleep was the foundation of a proper life, after all.

So, after barely a minute or two, the Ninth Prince decided to just get on with it. "Hello! My name is the Ninth Prince! Shall we get on with my examination, or trial, or tribulation, or whatever you want to call it?"

The tribulation projection, to her credit, barely blinked at the Ninth Prince's brazen request, instead just rolling with it. "Well, yes, if you wish to, we can skip the formalities and move straight to the important part, though, based on your previous trials, I assumed you would have wanted to engage in pre-debate talking, witty remarks and that sort of thing. If you don't want to do that, however, I am perfectly fine with continuing onwards. Oh, also, for reference, my name is Dyani."

The Ninth Prince shrugged. "While normally I would be quite interested in banter and witty repartee, as of current, I am getting quite tired, and I do believe this actually counts as banter, so barring anything you want to say, I think we're good to go."

Dyani nodded her head, then took a seat next to Zhu Bhujie's grave, motioning for the Ninth Prince to sit down next to her. "Now that both of us are seated, we may start your trial in earnest. Of course, there is protocol to follow, so I'll be explaining the rules of the trial. I will share one of my life experiences with you, after which you will be asked a question. This question must be answered with complete sincerity, and there is a right answer. After you have answered your question to the best of your ability, I will judge whether or not you have passed the trial. If you fail, you will be struck down by the full force of what you would know as a nascent soul."

Dyani clapped her hands. "Right! With that out of the way, let us move on to the actual trial. The experience I will be sharing with you today is one I regret deeply. During my time as a wandering expert, I fought dozens of monsters, the beings you call spirit beasts, that were at my power level. During one of these hunts, the monster fled into a small hamlet that we destroyed through the sheer force of our battle. I could have let the monster flee, catching up to it somewhere else and fighting it away from civilization, but during that time, it would have almost certainly been able to eat an entire city's worth of cultivators and mortals alike, at the very least. This beast was a glutton of a monster, with ten mouths and a voracious appetite. I sacrificed the lives of the few for the survival of the many.

And so, Ninth Prince of the Naag."

And here, Dyani leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the member of the Indomitable Thirteen could hear the crackling thunder under her skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

The Ninth Prince was genuinely unsure about this one for a second. Not long, not more than a second or maybe even two, but even that hesitation was enough to show just how exhausted he really was. Still, after breaking through that little mind fog, the answer was obvious. "No, this is not justice. Justice isn't calculating the worth of a group of lives, because every life is immeasurable in value, more so than all other lives in the turtle world, yet paradoxically equal in importance. You cannot weigh lives as arithmetic, or, at the very least, you shouldn't. There are times when hard decisions must be made, yes, and this was a hard decision for sure, maybe even the correct decision. But that doesn't mean that this decision was just. Justice is saving everyone and anyone you can save, never letting an innocent get hurt if you can help it. True justice might be impossible, but the closer we get to it, the better things are for everyone."

Dyani smiled, soft and calm. "I concur with your judgement, and I appreciate the affirmation of my personal beliefs on the matter."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Dyani, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his seventh trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Dyani, and she began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As she did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's seventh fang pillar, the one created at the end of his seventh year impaled on the pillar. "A TOKEN OF MY APPRECIATION FOR YOUR JUDGEMENT!", Dyani yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his seventh fang pillar, the tribulation door opened for the eighth time.

And, for the eighth time, a faceless humanoid made out of thunder and lightning emerged from the tribulation door, before coalescing into a warrior, darker skinned than those of the third sea, and around the same as the Ninth Prince before he was turned into iron, but slightly redder skinned than those of the fifth sea, wearing brightly patterned cloth and wielding a shield that sparked with lightning.

Once again, the Ninth Prince waited, though this time, barely for anything more than a few minutes, since there was no other real way this was going to go other than a debate. Still, traditions had to be upheld, and at this point, it was kind of a tradition for the Ninth Prince to wait for a bit before calling out to his trial giver, almost like the invisible hand controlling events just beyond the fabric of the world had intentionally set up a formulaic method of weaving the tapestry of fate, in order to make things easier on themselves.

But that was silly, after all, the Ninth Prince had full control over his decisions and actions!

The Ninth Prince punched himself in the face.

...What. Why did he-

...On second thought, it was probably best not to think about such things.

ANYWAYS, it was time for the Ninth Prince to greet this tribulation projection, and greet them he would. "Hello there! I am the Ninth Prince, as you might already know, and I assume you're here to be my eighth trial?"

The tribulation projection looked up at the Ninth Prince, as if only just now realizing he was there."Ah, yeah, you assume correctly. I'm here to be your trial and also your examiner, but you know the score by now. A debate, although it's more me just asking you a question than a debate, and then you have to answer whatever question I ask you. You probably already know what the question I'm gonna ask is, but we have to do this by the book otherwise the higher-ups get mad, so I can't tell you what I'm gonna ask.

Now, you got any questions, or can I just get into this? Afraid we don't have any time for witty banter or stuff like that, you're gonna need all the time you can get for dealing with your ninth trial examiner." The tribulation projection winked. "He's a character, that's for sure."

The Ninth Prince blinked. "Alright, I appreciate the heads up, and I don't have any questions."

The foreigner sat down by Zhu Bhujie's grave, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same, which he obviously obliged. "Last thing before we get into this; my name's Alinta. Now, here's the experience I'm going to share with you. During my youth and my travels, I was approached by a coalition of lesser cultivators, minor sects and clans that had leaders at the peak of what you would consider the 'core formation' stage. They were being beset by bandit cultivators and raiders, of equal cultivation to their own but potent killing arts, and they had no recourse but to beg me to act as their champion and protector, and slaughter the raiders so that they could know peace. Naturally, I refused.

Instead, I taught them, showed them secret realms useless to one such as myself but of immeasurable value to their lesser cultivators, parted with small trifles from my vast library of techniques, and offered insight on the Dao to the greatest among their number. Eventually, I forged the cultivators into an army capable of standing up to the raiders, and after many long and bloody battles, the forces I had trained stood victorious, even as their numbers were severely lessened by the conflict.

And so, Ninth Prince of the Naag."

And here, Alinta leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the Good Seed of the Golden Devil Clan could hear the crackling thunder under her skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

The Ninth Prince was actually a bit perplexed. On the surface, this looked simple, but it was actually surprisingly complicated, because both sides of this question were obvious answers. This was obviously not justice because she let innocents die, but at the same time, hadn't the Ninth Prince himself said that letting one's juniors rely on oneself instead of growing on their own was actually injustice?

This was going to be tricky indeed.

Eventually, after quite some time of deliberation, ten whole minutes in fact, the Ninth Prince had his answer. "Yes. This is justice. Honestly, any choice that you could've made there, other than allying with the raiders or leaving them to rot, would have had a good argument for counting as justice, but what you chose was perhaps the most just option you could've picked. You laid out quite a few of your own secrets and techniques in an attempt to help them, and more so, you did it in a way that made it so that they could stand on their own two feet after you'd left. The acting as a champion thing would have been kind and perhaps the right thing to do, since you could always teach them afterwards, but kindness and justice aren't always the same thing. Justice is giving someone the tools they need to solve their own problems, not solving their problems and then giving them the tools they need to solve them."

Alinti smiled, sharp and proud. "Well, thanks for saying that I was right. Obviously I can't tell you whether you were right or not, protocol and all, but you should probably know already."

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Alinti, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his eighth trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Alinti, and she began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As she did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's eighth fang pillar, the one created at the end of his eighth year impaled on the pillar. "HERE'S YOUR GIFT FOR PASSING YOUR TRIAL, DO ME PROUD KID!", Alinti yelled, before disappearing completely.

As the Ninth Prince went over to collect his eighth fang pillar, the tribulation door opened for the final time.

And, finally, signalling the beginning of the end of the Ninth Prince's trials, a faceless humanoid made out of thunder and lightning emerged from the tribulation door, before coalescing into a warrior, one with the exact same skin tone as the Ninth Prince pre-ironification, dressed in the finery of the Cultivator Dynasties from the Fifth Sea, some sort of bloodline giving him snake-like eyes, angular facial features, and fangs, wielding a spear eerily similar to the Ninth Prince's own.

And then the Ninth Prince realized who this was, and he was stopped dead with shock. The tribulation projection seemed to feel the same way, both sides shocked into silence, waiting for the other to make the first move.

And they waited.

And waited.

And waited some more.

Until finally, both sides, the Ninth Prince, and the nascent soul version of him that was currently acting as his trial examiner, replied with the exact same words at the exact same time.

"WHAT IN THE FUCK IS GOING ON?!"

Sadly, there was no answer.

The Ninth Prince held his head with one hand. "...Al-Alright. I can-I can figure this out. We can work through this. This is pretty weird, I'm not going to lie, but I think I have a basic theory. All the other trial examiners were Nascent Soul, so it stands to reason that you are too. And the only time I was a Nascent Soul was before I was wiped of my memories and transported to another Sea. Add me moving from one sea to another has something to do with the entire thing, so, unless I miss my mark, you're me, just the me that was lost in the space between the seas due to the Curse of Regression and Exile, somehow absorbed into heavenly tribulation. That sound about right?"

The other Ninth Prince (right, this was going to get weird fast. Note to the Ninth Prince's internal narration: the Nascent Soul Ninth Prince would be referred to as Anush, while the normal Ninth Prince would be referred to as the Ninth Prince.) blinked, before speaking. "Yeah, that sounds about right. Now, no offense, but you're kind of creeping me out, so instead of exploring the moral, societal, and psychological implications of this, I'd prefer to just start the trial. So that's what I'm going to do."

Anush sat down by Zhu Bhujie's grave, motioning for the Ninth Prince to do the same. "So, you know the drill, I'm an intelligent person so I know you are too. I'm just gonna skip the entire introduction. Here's the experience I want to share with you. My younger sister, my favorite sibling, was raped by a man I considered my closest friend. Bhrigu fled his punishment when I heard of his deeds, and I chased him all the way to Jharkhand, where I slaughtered every man, woman, and child within the city's walls, mortal to what your adopted clan calls core formation, and used their corpses to create snakes of blood, bone, and sinew, which I used to attack Bhrigu, nearly killing him before his father intervened.

And here, Anush leaned in close to the Ninth Prince, close enough that the Naag Prince could hear the crackling thunder under his skin. "I ask of you this: Is this Justice?"

What.

What.

WHAT.


The Ninth Prince HOWLED his rage to the skies, a wordess cry of fury that broke the sandstorm around him through sheer anger. BHRIGU had done this? That bastard of a man he once called friend?

Death would be too good for his sins, and the Ninth Prince would burn the rivers and SALT THE EARTH, RAZE THIS BASTARD'S CLAN AND HOME TO THE GROUND, LEAVING NOTHING FOR EVEN THE VULTURES TO FEAST O-

With supreme force of will borne from years of repressing his problems until designated brooding time, the Ninth Prince calmed himself.

He knew Bhrigu's clan had fallen to deep dark depths, the Randhawa were obviously those who were attacking the Golden Devils, but beyond Bhrigu, the Ninth Prince had no real interaction with them, not even enough to talk about their fighting style, and he fully assumed that his old friend was either unaware or had raged against this injustice.

But Bhrigu would get what was coming to him eventually, this the Ninth Prince swore on his very soul. For now, however, there was a trial and a tribulation to finish. So the Ninth Prince gave his answer to himself. "No. This was not justice, as much as it pains me to admit it. Bhrigu deserved anything you did to him, but the mortals and lesser cultivators of the Randhawa? I cannot say that all of them were free of heinous sin, but I can easily say that not all of them possessed said sin."

The Ninth Prince frowned. "But that isn't the question you're trying to ask, is it? This is too easy for a final trial of a tribulation. The real question you're asking here is if I am Justice, is that correct?"

Anush nodded. "Right on the money, as expected of, well, me."

The Ninth Prince continued on with his speech. "And the answer to that question is no. I'm not justice. I'm someone who tries to execute its will, who tries to bring justice wherever he goes, but I'm not justice. My opinions are not automatically justice, and I'm not automatically just. I'm a person, and I'm imperfect. Hopefully, one day, I'll be able to get as close to justice as possible, but that isn't right now."

Anush smiled, fanged and happy. "Alright, that's good enough for me. Let's wrap this up, shall we?"

The tribulation projection looked up towards the heavens and spoke in a voice like thunder, addressing some unknown entity far out of sight. "I, Anush, do swear that the Ninth Prince of the Naag has faced and completed his ninth and final trial."

With those words, a bolt of lightning struck Anush, and he began to dissolve into sparks of electricity. As he did, some of that electricity was dragged into the Ninth Prince's ninth fang pillar, the one created at the end of his final year impaled on the pillar. "THAT'S ALL OF THEM, NOW YOU JUST NEED TO FIGURE OUT WHAT TO DO WITH THEM!", Anush yelled, before disappearing completely.

The tribulation door began to fall apart, dissolving and ascending back into the heavens, until it was completely invisible.

The Ninth Prince picked up his final fang pillar, looking at all nine of them together. He had a faint inkling of his dao, and he'd passed his tribulation, but he still wasn't Foundation Establishment yet.

There had to be something he was missi-

Oh.

Metaphysical parallels, rebirth and rejuvenation.

Yeah, the Ninth Prince knew what he was supposed to do.

The Ninth Prince stowed away eight of his fang pillars, leaving only the first in his palms. Gripping the dagger sized fang with both hands, he angled the tip towards his stomach, the exact area where he'd been impaled at pleuron, and, in one fluid motion, stabbed the fang pillar into his stomach and out the other end.

Miraculously, this did nothing bad to the Ninth Prince, the fang pillar slowly being absorbed into his body instead of acting like a dagger should act when it's stabbed into a person.

Eventually, the fang pillar was fully absorbed into the Ninth Prince's Dantian, and with that absorption came understanding, a sublime epiphany.



रक्षा करना





PROTECT




THE




INNOCENT





रक्षा करना





And, on the heels of that epiphany, came a smaller one. The Ninth Prince's Fang Pillars weren't Fang Pillars (Or, they were, but not just that), they were his Dao Pillars.

But the Ninth Prince could have all the realizations he wanted later. For now, it was time to relax, as Ulo, Kha Li and Ya, and Raj emerged from their circles, bearing the auras of Foundation Establishment, similar to his own.

The sun began to rise in the distance, visible through the sandstorm and painting the sky with a rainbow of reds and golds and purples.

The Ninth Prince took a deep breath.

So this was Foundation Establishment, huh?

It felt good.

Yeah, it felt real good.

A/N: It's certainly been a long ride, hasn't it? And I can't wait for more.

@occipitallobe
Thank you.
For this quest, for the writing, for the system, for everything.
I can't wait to see where we go next.
 
Ninth Prince/Rina Callista Joint Omake - Councils and Conversations
Ninth Prince Rina Callista

Councils and Conversations


The deployment of the Silverine Bracers--with the aid and support of the Fearless Line's guides of course--went without a hitch. The full muster of Rina Callista's forces integrated into the defensive lines without a hitch. Auxiliary detachments regularly trickled in--squads on loan from more specialist Legions who could be slipped in with the confusion, leading to the establishment of several strongpoints within the No Man's Land.

The Legion was divided up into fifty centuries of one hundred Qi Condensation Legionaries, split up to serve as rapid reaction to breakthroughs--able to assemble formations and redeploy to collapse on raider elements that don't yet require a more generalized approach.

While it was the usual doctrine of the Golden Devils to mass up the greatest sum of numbers possible and strike with tremendous force--this more detached strategy had its uses as well--especially against the flowing sand that was the Blood Path.

No, the problems invariably came from another avenue.

"Noble Knowledge has expanded their involvement in this theatre" Xu Zhen muttered, setting down the photographic jade brought in by the scouts on the table of the war room, filled corner to corner with the top Chosen of the Fearless Line's forces. "We've got reports of a Hungering Abyss Tower being raised over the peaks of one of the Sha Yu Mountains."

"Ugh, I hate those things." Millet chimed in. "Even putting aside the edgy name, they're monstrously expensive to field, they're just burning money keeping that thing up."

"Yet they're still known for their potency as watchtowers." Leafsplitter cautioned--his wounds bandaged--but the healers here knew their work--he'd make a full recovery in no time. "Leaving it in place as it is… They'll be able to see everything we do, we'll be at a grave disadvantage."

"So, we knock it down." Bright Iron chimed in, his face pale from the poisons that once ravaged him, but his spirit unbroken. "Mass up our cultivators and strike at their foundations before it can be completed."

"Would a Tower like this warrant a Nascent Soul or Core Formation response though?" Rina asked. "Many of the Elders are tasked to capacity right now--but if one were to intervene… Our losses wouldn't be light."

A representative from the Bear Enslavement Sect snorted. "When it is fully established--absolutely. Until the Tower is completed though, they do not need to commit one of the Black Sky Diagrams to fuel it. If we strike swiftly and with great force--we will save ourselves a great deal of suffering."

"Mmm.." Xu Zhen nodded. "I'll agree that I don't like the idea of them seeing our movements in advance--do we have any options to shroud ourselves on approach?"

Millet mused on that for a moment. "Against a Hungering Abyss Tower? Not so much--it drains all of the ambient Qi in its surroundings even at the early stage--even concealment arts would stand out by the elevated energies surrounding you."

"Damn" Leafsplitter spat. "So there's no chance of a surprise attack. We'll need direct force. That's going to be a hard sell to the other Sects."

"Better than letting them seize the initiative though." Rina agreed. "The problem is weathering that storm--if I commit twenty centuries, we can probably force our way through any siege weapons they'd have established there…

"Not an option" Bright Iron shook his head. "Your Bracers are good, they're anchoring much of our efforts in the No Man's Land at the moment, taking half of them on a single mission would leave openings in our perimeter."

"Which is probably what they want." Xu Zhen rubbed his chin and peered at the battle map, looking for an angle. "Either let them build the Tower and let them see our moves, or attack it and expose an opening on the field. Neither is an appealing option to me."

"What we need…" Millet began--a little cryptically--"is a surprise of our own…"

"What do you have in mind?" Xu Zhen inquired, getting an impish grin from the former Witch. "Oh, you'll see in three… two… one…"

"REPORTING!" A voice shouted from the outside of the tent, a scout emerging and lowering to his knee. "An armed force of Golden Devils has emerged from the pass unscheduled!"

"Their colors man!" Rina shouted, the scout flinching, but withdrawing a painting of the flags. Rina looked upon it--and grinned.

"We may have just gotten our solution." She chuckled, looking back. "The new arrival is the Ninth Prince, leading the 99th Legion, newly refounded, but he himself is a seasoned veteran of the same generation as myself, he wouldn't lose out against any Chosen."

"His timing is suspiciously good…" Xu Zhen mumbled, looking suspiciously at Millet--who whistled and leaned back against her seat, reaching for some fruit. "What? I'm a prophetess, not a god--I just decided to wait on commenting to leave it as a pleasant surprise!"

Xu Zhen shook his head and smiled wearily. "Well, I won't look down on an unsought gift." He looked to the Scout. "Guide him in! We'll invite him to our war council."

Well it was about time, now wasn't it?

The Ninth Prince had just spent a month marching his legion through whatever little pass they'd gone through -- he tended to leave the unimportant stuff like geography to the people who were interested in those things -- and finally emerged in the great battlefield, home of the two strongest sects in the region, home of the infamous Poison Crushing Siege, and the Demonic Altar itself, and in all honesty, he was pretty disappointed.

Where were the enormous battles where he could test his wits and skills against a Core Formation cultivator? Where were the deadly tombs guarding hidden treasure? Where were the messengers inviting him to council with his peers, so that they might take action and bring GREAT JUSTICE to the vile Noble Devil Alliance?

Oh. There they were.

A minor Qi Gathering cultivator was making haste towards his position, Qi absolutely reeking of the Strength Purity Sect.

The Ninth Prince began to call out for his Legion to stop and wait to see what this messenger had to say, instead of continuing on as they had, running full force towards the action in the hopes of getting to actually do something. Then he noticed that they'd already stopped, the Communications Fang of his legion doing their job with the classic efficiency expected of members of the 99th. Truly it brought a tear to his eye. Or, it would, if he was still able to cry.

Well, it seemed that while the Ninth Prince was thinking about how amazing his legion was, he'd missed most of what the messenger had said to him. Luckily, it didn't seem to be incredibly important, just recounting titles and members and such.

Still, he should probably actually listen to the poor cultivator, ti wouldn't do to get him in trouble for the Ninth Prince's mistake.

"-Millet, formerly of the Noble Knowledge Sect, Rina Callista of the Golden Devil Clan, and finally, my own lord and leader of the war council, Xu Zhen, Legacy Echelon member of the Strength Purity Sect. On their behalf, I invite you to take council with such esteemed personages."

Ohohohohoho! Now this was interesting!

It'd been many decades since the Ninth Prince had met up with Rina Callista, but he'd heard the rumors about her reaching some sort of Single-Pillar stage in Foundation Building, something that instantly put her in the realm of an early Core Formation cultivator. And yet this Xu Zhen was the one leading the war effort?

Well, he had to see this.

...And maybe also send a snake forward to Rina so that his dramatic entrance wouldn't be ruined by them all attacking him. Yes, that was probably wise.

For now, however, the Ninth Prince merely turned Ulo to whichever direction the messenger pointed, and called for his legion to mobilize. If the Ninth Prince was going to do an entrance, he'd do it in style.

The entrance to the war room was opened by a small snake, barely a foot long, one that dropped a small paper on the floor labeled FOR THE EYES OF RINA CALLISTA and then immediately left, the sheer pressure of that many powerful talents nearly suffocating the poor thing.


"Oh?" Rina saw the snake with a very tiny letter on it with her name on it. She popped it open, looked through, and sighed.

"Oh, he's doing it again…" She facepalmed.

"What's this about?" Xu Zhen looked confused.

"He's going to make an entrance."

And not five seconds after those words left her mouth, the door to the war room burst open, revealing a parade of steadily larger and more colorful snakes, all of them somehow playing trumpets.

(The Ninth Prince spent so much timetrying to get that trumpet trick to work.)

And then, walking into the room like he owned the place, voice echoing from five different areas all at once, was the Ninth Prince. "GREETINGS! I AM THE NINTH PRINCE, AND IT IS A PLEASURE TO BE IN SUCH ILLUSTRIOUS COMPANY! DO NOT FRET MY CHOSEN COMPATRIOTS, WITH OUR COMBINED POWER, WE SHALL SURELY SEND THESE FIENDS SCURRYING BACK TO THEIR LAIRS! FOR GREAT JUSTICE"

With that out of the way, the snakes filed out of the room and the Ninth Prince walked up to the war table, and to the frankly oppressive presence in the room. "I believe you are Xu Zhen, yes? Do you by any chance happen to have a spare chair?"

Xu Zhen stared at the… Scene before him--other cultivators in the room reached for weapons and treasures, and Rina merely put her face into her hands and rest her head against the table.

"... Right, entrance." He said, quickly picking up on what was going on. "Right, you would be the Ninth Prince then? Much as I'd like to indulge in the theatrics myself, we are in the middle of something of a war council, so I'll try to be brief--how many cultivators do you have at your back and how soon can you have them here?"

The Ninth Prince nodded his head. "Alright, if that's how we're going to play this, I'll stay in business mode till we're done.

Currently, I have a full legion, 999 cultivators not including me. Nine of them are early foundation establishment, while the rest are varying stages of Qi Gathering. "

"As for time, well." The Ninth Prince smiled, unable to resist the slight theatrics even when being 'serious'. "How does an hour sound?"

"I'll take it" Xu Zhen shrugged, sounding at least a little disappointed, but gesturing to an empty seat at the side of the table, raising his head as the other Cultivators began to relax. "So, with that reinforcement, we have at least one additional theatre of operations we can nail down or backstop for our assault on the Hungering Abyss Tower, we'll need at least four thousand Qi Condensation to give us the necessary mass, and a hundred Foundation Establishment to serve as the tip of our spears. We need to do this without compromising on our other defensive obligations though. How do we make this fit?"

"At least fifty percent of our numbers will need to come from the Righteous Powers on the Fearless Line." Rina cautioned, adjusting her glasses as she said her piece. "Even putting aside my Legion specializing in second line work, if the mailed fist of our attack is made up of Golden Devils, we're liable to draw reprisal from the Noble Devil Alliance--it would accomplish none of our goals if we were to be knocked out of the War by a Nascent Soul strike on our heartlands.

"Mmm" Leafsplitter nodded, face darkening.

"I can bring five hundred Disciples to the table personally," Xu Zhen added. "Half of my total subordinates--I'd count them as worth two fighters each myself, but only if they've got enough support to keep from being encircled."

"I've a hundred bandits at my command," Leafsplitter confirmed. "I'll be detaching many of them to continue surveying the No-Man's Land, but I can bring half with me on the attack."

"I've got fuck-all" Millet waved her hands. "Loose Cultivator, you know? I'm lucky to have my shoes."

"Bear Enslavement can spare two hundred riders" The representative of that Sect suggested--and the numbers continued to be dickered over, as the negotiations continued apace.

Rina crossed her arms, and leaned backwards, listening to the discussion carefully.

Meanwhile, the Ninth Prince was also listening to the elites of the Righteous Path divide up the work. At first at least.

But, well, none of what they were saying was directly relevant to him or his legion, and as the Ninth Prince was completely new to the Great Battlefield, he wasn't about to offer up any suggestions until he actually knew what was going on.

Of course, if he was asked, the Ninth Prince would be more than happy to oblige with a few pearls of wisdom, but nobody was asking.

Honestly, it felt like the Ninth Prince was kind of being forgotten, the various sects and clans happy to just talk among themselves while leaving him by the wayside, the newest member to their little meeting watching while everyone else actually did stuff.

Of course, that didn't mean he had to do nothing. Rina was right there and seemingly doing nothing important, and he'd been pretty curious about her whole single pillar deal.

It was probably going to be the only time the Ninth Prince would be able to actually ask her about it, since they'd soon be busy with the whole war deal.

So, the Ninth Prince sent out a psychic tendril, the same technique he'd used back at Pleuron all those decades ago. Hopefully Rina would accept the telepathic link, but he had no real way of knowing until she responded.

Still, the Scaled Mindweb was his best (and only) communication technique, and it'd allow the two of them to communicate without anyone hearing.

"Hello! Can you hear me?"

Rina didn't react openly as the technique appeared--though Millet seemed to latch onto something in between and titter quietly to herself. Probably thinking something obnoxiously rude or mischievious.

The back and forth of debate continued, and Rina settled herself back, opening her mind to the voice transmission.

"You're quite fortunate that they're used to people making a scene, and that the Saber Palace's contingent are out on the front lines right now." Rina chided.

The Ninth Prince winced a bit. "In hindsight, perhaps not my best moment. It worked out fine though, and besides, did you see the looks on their faces? Priceless!"

"Anyways, how've things been with you? It's been a few decades since we were able to actually talk, and I'm very curious about what the 'Shining Hope' of the Clan has been up to."

"I've mostly been getting run ragged from theatre to theatre. My Tribulation was well timed, but we're still in a period of crisis right now--and between myself, Jin Muyi, and Minervina Barda, we've been striving to make up for many of our lost Elders. It's to our good fortune that so far, we've not been found wanting."
Rina's voice explained, as her eyes seemed to slightly glaze over as the Divine Tunist representative got drawn into a debate with the Great Drunkard representative.

"Since then, they have mostly been showing the flag, protecting the innocent, and securing the Clan's business interests here. How have things been going on your end?"

The Ninth Prince laughed, but telepathically. "It's been, well, fun wouldn't be the word for it, but it's certainly been something. I did a lot of stuff, fought some blood path members, my adoptive father died, I invented an entirely new single person bloodline formation from effectively first principles, and then I broke through to Foundation Establishment. My tribulation was an acid trip and a half, let me tell you that." The Ninth Prince said, as the Gemstone Justice representative seemed about half an inch away from punching the Bear Enslavement representative.

"Speaking of, I've heard your tribulation was quite interesting indeed. Something about a Single Pillar?"

"The Thirteenth Heavenstage, yeah, you get a mutated Pillar that holds everything at once if you make it through that Tribulation."
Rina explained. "It definitely has its perks, even if it's something of a money hole."

She glanced to the side of the table, noticing Xu Zhen glancing her way, and sat up, clasping her hands before her on the table.

"I'll be bidding two thousand Qi Condensation cultivators and twenty five Foundation Establishment, led personally." Her voice rang out, and the other groups suddenly blanched. "We will take the center, our shields will hold against the tide."

There were rumblings throughout the crowd at that, as she cocked an eyebrow. "The remaining greater half of my Legion will hold the Stalwart, Valiant, and Triumphant wards as we launch our assault. With the Blade Pact besieging the Tempest Ward, that should permit us enough force to assault the tower without unduly compromising our defenses."

"Incidentally" Rina's voice transmission continued to the Prince. "It's your choice, do you want to help knock down a curse tower or show up the Saber Palace's detachment by doing what they've neglected to do in their assault?"

The Ninth Prince smiled. It wasn't a nice smile. "As if you don't already know what I'm going to choose."

The Ninth Prince moved forward ever so slightly, before speaking. "I, personally, will assist our... esteemed allies in the Seven Saber Palace in their assault. Perhaps my thousand cultivators will be just what they need to actually produce results."

As the assembled elites muttered among themselves, some in amusement, some in anger, the Ninth Prince stepped back, offering an apologetic look to Xu Zhen, one the Strength Purity Sect cultivator didn't believe for a moment.

"Sorry about making your boyfriend's job harder, but I can't exactly pass up the opportunity to take a jab at the Saber Palace." This time, the Ninth Prince was actually sorry. Not very sorry, but sorry enough.

"We could definitely use someone to pick up and extract the refugees he's releasing." Xu Zhen agreed. "Fang Tai's forces are doing no small amount of damage, but he's also leaving a lot of innocent people to die in his wake, if you can secure and extract them while denying the enemy a chance to pour in behind him, you'll win no small number of merits." He placed another token on the map, representing the Prince's 99th Legion. "Our strategy hinges on choking the Demonic Altar Sect out and forcing them into a decisive battle, making sure they not only waste time retrieving the slaves the Blade Pact releases--but fail to reclaim them at all, accelerates our timetable and reduces our losses."

The Ninth Prince nodded, getting ready to agree with Xu Zhen's plan, before stopping. What. "What."

"So, just making sure I'm getting this right. This Fang Tai is just leaving innocents to die. Using them as ablative armor and shields for his own forces and campaign, and not helping these refugees and prisoners in the slightest?" The Ninth Prince was beyond angry at this point. "I-that isn't right. That isn't justice. And this is the man I'm going to be under the comma-."The Ninth Prince deflated halfway through his rant, letting out a rueful laugh before turning to Xu Zhen.

"I presume that if I were to try and challenge him to any sort of duel or exchange of pointers, I'd be killed almost immediately through some sort of special technique bullshit?"

"Don't even think about it" Xu Zhen shook his head. "Even if Master would tolerate the challenge, he'd butcher you--his saber is special, you'd have no defense against it."

Of course the amoral cultivator that the Ninth Prince would almost certainly come into conflict with had the ability to kill him instantly. Fuck.

...Well, if the Ninth Prince couldn't fight him, or change his mind through words, the Hydra would just have to do an even better job than normal of saving mortals!

Yeah! What was he thinking? He was the Ninth Prince, and the Hydra was his Legion! Of course they'd be able to save anybody and everybody!

Hells, maybe he'd even be able to debate the Saber Palace bastard into changing his mind!

...Probably not, but you never knew until you tried.

WIth the Ninth Prince sufficiently pumped up, it was time to actually do stuff!

The last scion of the Naag turned to Xu Zhen once more. "So. I have my assignment, and I know what I need to do. Do you need me here for anything else, or can I go off to save some mortals before Fang Tai leaves them all to rot?" ...Whoops. Seemed like the Ninth Prince was still a bit bitter there.

"I'll send runners to deliver our latest intelligence reports to you" Xu Zhen nodded his head. "For all that the timing isn't the best though, your aid is greatly appreciated, I'll arrange for quarters for your Legion and access to our supply network.

He sighed, and leaned back. "Everyone, to your places then--we'll be starting our march by first light tomorrow morning."

The Ninth Prince nodded once, before leaving the tent, far less dramatically than when he came in. There were soldiers to mobilize, mortals to save, blood path fiends to slaughter, and Saber Palace bastards to annoy.

He'd have to navigate a careful web of falsehoods, niceties, and promises that even allowed the Golden Devils to be here in the first place, make sure not to piss off the Saber Palace Chosen that could kill him with ease while also needling said Chosen enough that Fang Tai could see that he was wrong, and fight off blood path villains while protecting mortals, some of which were almost certainly blood path in disguise.

Hah! Maybe the Great Battlefield would be exciting after all!

A/N: So, this took a while, but we got it finished. Huge thanks to @Alectai for writing about half of this thing.
 
Last edited:
Ninth Prince 11 - Liberations and Letdowns
Ninth Prince

Liberations and Letdowns

The mission had actually gone much better than the Ninth Prince expected.

Sure, there were the normal and obvious pitfalls of working behind enemy lines while trying to save mortals from blood path villains, like legionnaires dying or mortals being blood path sleeper agents, but by and large, stuff was working out.

The Hydra worked like a well oiled machine, killing Altar Sect members, rescuing mortals, and destroying blood path legacies and other such things.

It wasn't bad work for a newly reformed legion, and the Ninth Prince was quite proud of all of his soldiers.

There were a few areas that the Hydra could improve however, specifically in terms of versatility. While each of the fangs did their jobs, the concept of combining squads from separate fangs was a bit beyond the legion as of right now. The fangs were working more like individual but allied legions than a full cohesive unit, meaning that teamwork drills were in order.

Yeah, that sounded about right for an after action report.

Seriously though, when the Ninth Prince decided to take up the mantle of a legion leader, he had no idea his job would involve so much paperwork. There were dossiers, gear requisition forms, spirit stone requisition forms, pill requisition forms, conflict mediation forms, training forms, forms that allowed him to fill other forms, after action reports, pre action reports, subordinate reports, superior reports, and all of that was per legionnaire.

Thankfully, the Ninth Prince had an entire fang of cultivators on which to offload most of the paperwork, but the Ninth Prince was the only one with enough influence and rank to fill out the paperwork and forms that concerned the entire legion, and there were a lot of those.

But that was enough griping about paperwork for one day. The Ninth Prince had mortals to save!

And, putting the professionalism mandated when writing an after action report aside for a second, the mortal-rescuing operation was going fucking amazingly.

Xu Zhen's intelligence reports allowed the Ninth Prince to plot out the most optimal route to hit each abandoned mortal farm (accounting for diffusion of the populace, blood path pursuit, and infiltration, obviously. He wasn't an amateur) and save as many people as possible.

Couple that with the Hydra's near-fanatical dedication to carrying out the Ninth Prince's orders perfectly, and the 99th Legion currently had about ten times their number in mortals with them.

Of course, they hadn't just saved ten thousand. Most of the mortals the Ninth Prince's legion had rescued had been escorted to righteous path territory already, since there was no real reason to keep the people who couldn't defend themselves in an area where they'd need to constantly defend themselves and be defended.

And even better, the Ninth Prince and his legion were still gaining ground. Even with the constant detours to drop off mortals and come back, the Hydra was getting closer and closer to the source of all the mortals they were rescuing, Fang Tai and his minions from the Seven Divine Saber Palace.

It probably went without saying but the Ninth Prince already hated Fang Tai, and he hadn't even met the bastard yet.

Seriously, what kind of absolute asshole leaves mortals stranded in blood path territory with only a few basic saber cultivation manuals and tells them to 'figure it out'?!

The only way Fang Tai would be even remotely a decent person would be if he was just some absolute idiot who legitimately didn't realize that not everybody was suited for saber cultivation, and there was absolutely no way that was the case.

But that was enough griping about how bad of a person Fang Tai was, because the Ninth Prince (really just some of his subordinates) had just spotted more mortals to save!

Specifically a group of about two thousand (which was pretty weird, seeing as normally the mortals split up to avoid notice, large groups being more valuable than small ones and all), being lazily pursued by a Foundation Establishment cultivator, one with 5 pillars too!

How adorable!

Well, this would be easily taken care of.

--------------------------------------------------------

Cai Ruxi of the Demonic Altar Sect was feeling good.

Hells, she was feeling more than just
good.

It wouldn't be a stretch to say that Cai Ruxi was currently fucking ecstatic at the turn her life was currently taking.

Instead of having to tangle with the frankly bullshit Fang Tai and his little goonsquad, she'd managed to use her connections with a Core Formation elder, her teacher, to get assigned to the cushy job of chasing down the escaped mortals Fang Tai'd left in his wake. And that wasn't even the best part! Nobody would notice if she skimmed a few mortals off of the top of her captures, just enough to boost her cultivation.

Now, all she needed was to not run into one of the Chosen super-geniuses from the 'Righteous' Path or the Golden Devils, and she'd have her path set for the foreseeable future.

And that wouldn't happen, after all, all of the Chosen from both sides were mustering for some sort of battle for a Noble Knowledge tower.

There was no
way that one wo-

Ah.

Some sort of metal-snake-man-thing with a spear just appeared right next to her.

From the looks of it, he was only in the second pillar too.

Perfect!

She was getting hungry!

Cai Ruxi turned towards her lunch, hair floating in the wind as she called upon her Blood King's Axe. "Oh, this just
isn't your day, is it? You made the mistake of running into me, and now I'm going to drink your blood for my lunch. And then I'm going to drink the blood of those little followers you have trying to hide over there. And then I'm going to capture these mortals and bring them back to their farm."

Oh she loved this part, watching their wills break. "And there's nothing you can do about it."

Cai Ruxi activated her divine sense, along with using her mundane senses, trying to pinpoint the exact moment her lunch's spirit broke, waiting, searching, scouring his expression, body language, qi emanations and more.

But yet, the single shining moment she was waiting for didn't come.

Instead, the man began to speak, calm, collected, and cold as ice. "I was planning to make a speech. I was going to monologue, bait you into a battle of wits, have some fun and let you have some fun before you died. Then you opened your mouth."

"Now? Now, I just leave you with this. I am the Ninth Prince of the Golden Devil Clan. And you will die by my spear, in the name of great justice."

Ninth… Prince?

Where had Cai Ruxi heard that bef-

Oh.

Oh fuck.

Oh fucking shit.

This was one of the Chosen of the Golden Devil Clan, or their equivalent anyways, she didn't know what they were called.

More than that, this was one of the Chosen that could go toe to toe with
Rina FUCKING Callista, the Single Pillar herself. And he had an even chance of winning too.

This was a man one step below Fang Tai and Xu Zhen in power.

And she had just pissed him off.

The Ninth Prince began walking towards her, slowly, purposefully, and not flanked by any of his beasts, and Cai Ruxi knew that unless she managed to talk her way out of this, she would die today.

Frantically, the Blood Path user began scrambling backwards, talking and pleading even as she did. "M-my master is a Core Formation expert, Vileblood of the Thousand Deaths! I-if you kill me, he'll spare no expense to eradicate you, body and soul!"

The Ninth Prince paused in his tracks, looking thoughtful, and Cai Ruxi began to think she could get out of this. A small smile broke out on her face, as she started plotting ways to exploit this opportunity. Truly, things were coming up Ruxi.

And then the Ninth Prince spoke, and all her hopes were dashed.

He smiled. "A Core Formation expert, eh? Tell me, do you know the fates of the last two Core Formation experts that I was in conflict with?"

...Oh.

Flying Poison Dagger, one of the left hands of Old Cannibal himself. Her master had been laughing for months after his defeat and the loss of his weapon at a Qi Gathering brat known only as 'The Ninth Prince'.

And the other one. Her master rushed out of his cultivation at the news that one of the Cores that attacked the devils every century (as part of some sort of 'trial') was killed. Killed by a group of Qi Gathering brats known as the 'Indomitable 13'. A group the Ninth Prince was a part of.

The Ninth Prince continued. "So no. I don't fear your master. And if you have nothing else to say, this is when I kill you."

...She was going to die.


She, Cai Ruxi, she who was almost certain to reach Core Formation and join her master as one of the Sect Elders, was going to die here.

Cai Ruxi barely noticed that she'd fallen to the ground in shock, only seeing the Ninth Prince looming over her like some sort of vengeful specter.

She scooted back, scrambling and scrabbling as the demon in front of her walked forward. "W-wait! I-I can tell you secrets! I can-I can show you treasure! My master has a map of the region and I've memorized it! I'll even be your concubine if that's what you want! I-I'll renounce the sect! I'll join the devils! I'll swear oaths! I'll betray my master! I'll do anything you want!"

The Ninth Prince leaned down, scrutinizing her face for any signs of dishonesty. "Anything?"

Cai Ruxi felt like her heart was about to burst from sheer joy. Dizzy and lightheaded, she frantically nodded, grasping onto the lifeline offered to her with all the force of a drowning woman. "YES! A-anything! A-anything at all!"

If it meant she could live, Cai Ruxi would do anything her new master wanted.

The Ninth Prince smiled, and some small part of Cai Ruxi hoped what he asked of her wouldn't be too demeaning. The rest of her knew that life was far more important than dignity.

Her new lord opened his mouth, and Cai Ruxi sat stock-still, ready to fully absorb whatever he wanted of her and make it her new reason for being.

The Ninth Prince smiled once more. It was the most beautiful thing she had ever seen. "Then perish."

The last thought Cai Ruxi ever had, as the Ninth Prince sent her head onto the dirt below, was that it wasn't nearly as fun when she was on the other side of this.


--------------------------------------------------------

The Ninth Prince sighed in boredom.

That was less than amazing to be honest.

That blasted woman (he hadn't thought to ask for her name) had just sucked the entertainment out of everything with her little opening monologue.

He'd wanted to engage in witty banter, dammit!

Instead the Ninth Prince had just gotten angry.

He did have to admit though, that last bit? With the 'then perish'?

That was just inspired!

It almost made up for the lack of banter!

Almost, anyways.

Still, the Ninth Prince was assigning way too much thought towards an ultimately unimportant Blood Path villain, especially when he could assign more importance to a Saber Palace bastard like Fang Tai.

And even beyond that, there were mortals to save.

The Ninth Prince, remembering the mortals, signaled to his lieutenants that everything was fine, and that they should enact the standard procedures for acclimatizing and rescuing a bunch of former meat farm mortals.

With that out of the way, and the Hydra working at top efficiency to carry out his orders, the Ninth Prince began the march back to his legion, ready to once more begin their March to Fang Tai!

--------------------------------------------------------

Meanwhile, in the Vitae Cave of one Vileblood of the Thousand Deaths, a statue of viscera and bone that bore a resemblance to Cai Ruxi shattered, splintering into a thousand fragments that spelled out the name 'Ninth Prince' on the floor.

When Vileblood exited his meditation, he would see this name and rage, ordering his subordinates to bring him information on the whereabouts of the fool that had killed his prized disciple.

He would weigh the cost of killing a Chosen elite of the Golden Devils, before ignoring his instincts and deciding to go on with his revenge.

But first, Vileblood had to come out of his meditation, and that would take months.

The Ninth Prince was safe, safe to continue on his merry way.

For now at least.


A/N: Well, this took a lot longer than I expected. But my first omake of this turn is finally done.
 
Last edited:
Ninth Prince 12 - Arguments and Anima
Ninth Prince

Arguments and Anima

The time had finally come.

Sure, the Ninth Prince was dreading this a tiny bit, but that was completely and totally natural.

After all, he was going to be face to face with one of the strongest Chosen in his generation, the probable next Sect Master of the Seven Divine Saber Palace, and also a colossal bastard.

In addition, said colossal bastard hated the devils with a fiery passion, and cared so little about mortal life that he was willing to just let hundreds of thousands of escaped mortals wander aimlessly in the heart of blood path territory with nothing but a few saber cultivation manuals to protect them.

No, the Ninth Prince wasn't really looking forward to this at all.

Still, personal sacrifices for the greater good were inevitable, and sticking close to Fang Tai would help the Hydra rescue even more mortals than they would have otherwise.

Step one to that plan was, regrettably, trying to convince Fang Tai.

But all of the Ninth Prince's current internal musing was just to stall for time, lengthening the blessed peace before he had to meet someone he already despi-

The Ninth Prince slapped himself. Hard.

Then, as a condemned prisoner walks to the headsman's block, the Ninth Prince slowly and methodically made his way to the hill upon which Fang Tai was standing.

The first thing he noticed was the sheer pressure emanating from the Chosen, something he'd only felt from the Nascent Souls of the Naag when they were truly pissed, sheer will radiating out and forming a physical force.

Only- It wasn't coming from Fang Tai. It was coming from his saber.

...Yeah the Ninth Prince wasn't gonna touch whatever that was with a ten foot spear.

Instead, he turned towards Fang Tai, making sure to give away nothing of his disgust for the bastard, burying it between dozens of layers of pure willpower in the sake of cooperation between the Golden Devils and the Righteous Path.

The Ninth Prince slowly extended his hand to shake, making sure to be as non threatening as possible, and got ready to deliver a carefully crafted speech about cooperation, what an honor it was to work with such an illustrious chosen, and a dozen other platitudes that made him sick to his stomach but were necessary to making sure their nascent alliance didn't crumble in on itse-

And then before he could do anything, Fang Tai spoke, almost confused at something. "The mortals you currently protect."

...The Ninth Prince had a bad feeling about where this was going. Desperately keeping himself from jumping to conclusions, the last scion of the Naag plastered a carefully neutral expression onto his face. "...Yes? What of them?"

You know, the Ninth Prince was actually proud of how he'd handled that! There was barely a single tremor in his voice, and to basically everyone else, it'd look like he was perfectly calm. Yes, the Ninth Prince had a feeling all of this was going to turn out just fine!

And then Fang Tai opened his mouth.

The Dao Child of the Seven Divine Saber Palace looked honestly baffled as he asked the Ninth Prince his question, which obviously just made everything so much worse. "Why exactly are you doing so?"

What.

No, legitimately, what.

The Ninth Prince just. Couldn't right now.

What the fuck.

Wasn't he supposed to be a fucking Righteous Path cultivator?

...Ah, there was the anger.

But unlike other times, the Ninth Prince wasn't too inclined to hold himself back. This fucker wanted to play, to get a reason to kill him? The Ninth Prince was more than happy to give Fang Tai a reas-

No. No, that wouldn't do. The Ninth Prince didn't just have himself to worry about, or even just him and his snakes. He had a legion counting on him, and if he gave Fang Tai a reason to break the truce, then that would mean a battle that the Hydra would lose without a doubt.

Hells, the Ninth Prince technically had the Clan to think of. After all, if Fang Tai killed him, the Grand Elder wouldn't let the Saber Palace off lightly, and that would almost certainly cause war, a war that the Clan couldn't afford with the trials this close.

So, instead of listening to the venom bubbling in his veins, instead of listening to the howling will within himself screaming to crush Fang Tai into the dirt, show him what would happen if he messed with a PRINCE-

Instead of that, the Ninth Prince took a single breath, pushing his rage and fury down. Then, once he was fully calm, or as calm as he was going to get, he began to speak, voice still tight and shaking with anger. "And… What exactly do you mean by that?"

Completely unconcerned (or completely oblivious) by the Ninth Prince's incredibly obvious rage, Fang Tai replied. "Two things. One, why are you even bothering in the first place? If they die, it's their fault for not cultivating hard enough. I did leave them some Saber Path manuals, high quality stuff too. They had the ambient qi, they had the manuals, and they should've had the drive. Two, why are you in particular bothering in the first place? You're a member of the Demonic Path. I'd expect this kind of thing from Xu Zhen and the Strength Purity Sect, maybe the Bear Enslavement Sect and the Ma Clan, probably the Arrow Rebels too. Not a Devil."

The Ninth Prince couldn't help it. He started laughing. No, that was inaccurate. The Ninth Prince was straight up cackling, laughing his ass off and generally looking like a madman.

As Fang Tai's troops slowly reached for their sabers, and Fang Tai himself looked completely confused as to what was happening, the Ninth Prince finally stopped laughing, or at least, stopped laughing long enough to speak. "Hooo… I needed that, let me tell you. I really did. Here I was thinking you were some sort of monster, an evil bastard who just didn't care about mortals or general human decency."

The Ninth Prince wiped a venomous tear from his metal face, flinging it down to the ground, where it burnt straight through about a meter of soil. "It is such a relief to be proven wrong. You don't have any inherent malice or anything like that."

"Thank you?" Fang Tai was just. So confused. Apparently spending all of your time training to be a 1v1 melee beast to the exclusion of everything else didn't really play well with politics and wordplay.

But that was fine, because the Ninth Prince was more than happy to educate him. "Yeah. You're not a monster or anything. You're just an idiot."

Almost immediately, the Ninth Prince was at the center of a perfect ring of sabers, each held by a Saber Palace cultivator, and each cultivator charging a technique of some sort. The saber immediately in front of him was the one wielded by Fang Tai himself, whose eyes blazed with fury as he bit out a single word. "Explain."

Despite being in a situation where he could easily die, the Ninth Prince was still confident and cocky, leaning back and putting his hands to the back of his head. "Gladly."

"So, the first thing we're gonna talk about here is your first point, specifically the thing about the mortals dying being their fault. Your argument is that if they wanted to die, they simply wouldve cultivated, right?"

Fang Tai looked slightly less murderous, but still ready to gut him at the slightest provocation. The Ninth Prince just hoped that his legion didn't see this, since they'd almost certainly do something incredibly stupid. "Yes. That's correct."

The Ninth Prince smiled. "Well, as you already know, I think that's incredibly stupid. And, since I'm actually trying to change your mind here, I'm going to explain why exactly this is a shitty idea."

"First off, talent isn't a thing that exists. What we call talent is just compatibility with a certain technique or manual. It's why I can reach the Ninth Heavenstage in 20 years with my Nagaraj Art, but I'd need about ten times the time to reach the same level with something like a water manual."

The Ninth Prince put up a single finger as Fang Tai opened his mouth. "A-bup-bup. Before you say anything, I already know exactly what you're gonna talk about, so there's no real reason for you to say it."

"However! Since I doubt that your minions can read your mind like I can, I'll do you the honor of explaining your train of thought."

Huh. The Ninth Prince didn't know that Fang Tai could turn that shade of red.

...Maybe he should let off on him, just a little bit.

Nah.

"You were about to say something like 'You're just proving my point. If talent doesn't exist, then the mortals should've been able to cultivate to a high enough stage to save themselves'."

The Ninth Prince smiled again. It wasn't a nice smile. "Am I right?"

Fang Tai didn't say anything, simply nodding tersely once.

The Ninth Prince clapped his hands. "Perfect! But if you'd actually listened carefully instead of dismissing my words as unworthy of your time, seeing as they came from a Golden Devil, you wouldn't think that. As I said earlier, what we know as talent measures how compatible someone is with a cultivation technique."

Fang Tai sucked in a sharp breath, as he finally got what the Ninth Prince was going for. "So, you mean that-"

The Ninth Prince smiled once more, this time with no malice. "Exactly! The cultivation techniques you left the mortals were all Saber techniques, and more than that, pure saber techniques, the exact sort of thing that you cultivate, and cultivate well."

"But wait. Surely there have to be mortals that do have an aptitude with saber techniques right? How come they didn't reach the heights you did?"

The Ninth Prince put on a surprised expression, tapping his head as if deep in thought. "Actually, Fang Tai. How exactly do you cultivate so well with the Saber techniques?"

"Surely it has nothing to do with your innate Saber Body, or the mountains of Spirit Stones you use on a daily basis (mountains we sell you by the way), or the Nascent Souls and Core Formation cultivators that are all too willing to assist you with anything you need, or the Secret Realms the Saber Palace pays for, or the-"

And then the Ninth Prince saw god.

A God of War, each breath, each blink, each motion containing power enough to shatter a world, a Shura God whose steps caused the cosmos to quake, caused dragons and phoenixes and immortals to prostrate themselves in front of him, not out of respect but out of fear, fear that his saber would cut them down.

There was a saying in the cultivation world, one that the Ninth Prince had previously scoffed at. 'The sword is for war. The saber is for slaughter.'

When he'd first heard it, the Ninth Prince didn't understand the proverb. Both the sword and the saber were equally useful in most forms of combat, yes? He chalked it up to the obsessive rivalry between the two types of cultivators, laughed a little, and went along with his day.

The Ninth Prince wasn't laughing now, for seeing that Shura God's saber made him understand the truth.

The divine saber the Ninth Prince beheld was simultaneously a holy and demonic weapon, the final arbiter of death and the instrument by which it was dealt.

Hundreds of millions of howling souls swirled around it, cursing the world and universe that had spawned such a grand and terrible weapon, a weapon to cut worlds and break nations, a saber able to shatter the devil and suppress the demon, a saber made in hell to kill those of hell.

Merely looking at it caused the Ninth Prince to feel a thin line bisecting his body, as if the intelligence of a cosmic beast was very briefly on him, and had left a mark for later ease of cutting.

The God of War and his saber stood on a mountain of corpses, immortals, demons, dragons, gods, devils, and ghosts lying broken before and under them, hacked to pieces and left to rot.

The sheer pressure in the air, a thousand million cuts all aiming straight for his heart, an unsurpassed killing intent and will to slaughter guiding them with unerring accuracy, forced the Ninth Prince to his knees, hoping, praying that perhaps if he prostrated himself in front of the Shura God, the divinity would spare him and move on to more worthy prey.

Then, a voice began to boom from all around him, infused with the pure essence of hacking, each letter and syllable an all out attack that could slaughter devils and suppress gods.

[Oh for the love of the Divine Saber, will you please shut up?]

In the face of a will like that, what else could the Ninth Prince do but obey?

[Good. Now that that's taken care of, I can actually respond to your points.]

[You've made some relatively reasonable arguments, as you show yourself to be in possession of the low animal cunning that characterizes the members of the Demonic Path, but the sheer mental capacity of one of the Chosen of the Righteous Path shall vanquish you.]

[You say some mortals have no aptitude for the saber. You say that I was afforded more time and advantages than any of them, that my saber body and resources and the advice of my elders allowed me to gain unsurpassable advantages.]


The skies darkened and crackled with thunder, heavenly tribulation lightning that bowed to the Shura God's will.

[To that, I say this.]

The God of War spread his arms wide, looking up to the heavens, fanaticism written all over his face as his saber began to move on its own, hovering point up over its wielder's head, slowly rotating over and over and over and over again.

[Those fools didn't believe in the saber hard enough.]

The saber continued to rotate, picking up speed and generating holy light, until it was a single unbroken pillar of metal and light stretching up into infinity.

[The Saber is truth, the Saber is life, the Saber is death, the Saber slaughters the demon and suppresses the devil, stifles the blood and chokes the plague, cuts the strings of fate and pierces through space and time! It is the source of all that is needed for cultivation, the ultimate equalizer!]

The Shura God rose up into the air, earth shattering around his feet as he kicked off the ground, earth that was drawn into the saber pillar like iron drawn to a magnet, earth that was devoured by the saber until there was nothing left.

[TALENT?! TALENT IS NOTHING COMPARED TO THE GIFTS OF THE SABER! RESOURCES?! THE SABER IS THE ONLY RESOURCE YOU NEED! THE SABER WAS ALL THOSE MORTALS NEEDED TO CULTIVATE, FAITH IN THAT MOST PERFECT OF WEAPONS ALL ONE NEEDS TO SLAUGHTER ONE'S ENEMIES!]

The sky shattered and the earth broke, corpses died once more and space itself was crushed into a million billion infinitely small fragments, the world around the Saber God collapsing into the God Saber until there was nothing left in all heaven and earth but a man and a saber.

[So yes. I was right to leave those mortals with nothing but sabers and saber manuals, for if they had believed hard enough, if they had wanted to live hard enough, all of them would have been in Foundation Establishment already, and all of them would have survived.]

The Ninth Prince forced himself to his feet, cut by razor saber winds until his flesh was as ribbons.

"...No."

"...Y-you're wrong."

The wind howled around him, pushing the Ninth Prince to his knees once more as the world closed inwards onto him, the same divine voice resounding from all around him.

[Oh? What did you say?]

"...I ...said."

The Ninth Prince stood up, bloody, broken, and battered, but unbowed, unmovable and undefeated.

The wind howled, but didn't cut him. The world closed in, but didn't touch him.

"...You're WRONG."

And then the Shura God disappeared.

----------------------------------------------------------------

Fang Tai watched as the Ninth Prince slowly stood up from his kneeling pressure, the Dao Child's Anima Flare being shrugged off through sheer willpower.

And then, the Ninth Prince disappeared from his view.

Actually, everything disappeared, his sworn brothers, the terrain around them, the feeling of his father's saber in his hand, all of it gone.

Instead, in their place, Fang Tai saw a monster.

A Snake-Man-Hybrid thing, a perfect fusion of both reptile and humanoid, visage equal parts beautiful and terrifying.

Its entire body was covered in thick scales, each scale containing an array carved in twisted iron and corrosive acid, glowing a sickly greenish grey, Fang Tai's skin starting to melt just by looking at them.

Its body was shot through with wires and cables and plates of iron, hollow iron haunted by the ghosts of murderous demons from beyond the stars, howling out for vengeance against a cosmic serpent that ate and ate and ate and ate until there was nothing left.

Its claws, hands and feet alike, dripped with a greenish grey venom and acid and molten metal, corroding and poisoning and shattering space and time as they slowly, lethargically dripped down towards the ground, a ground that parted before the droplets like it was a mortal crowd getting out of the way of a gang of cultivators.

The spear in the hands of the monster was not entirely
there, shimmering and flickering out of view like a heat haze or mirage, twisting and shifting into dozens of different forms until it was impossible to tell which part of the spear was real and which was merely an illusion.

At the monster's feet, hundreds of millions of snakes of all shapes and sizes and powers, from mere mortal adders to the oldest of the true wyrm dragons, bowed at the monster's feet, not out of fear or even respect, but out of an instinctive reverence for the greatest of their kind, the true heir of Vritra, Plague Incarnate.

But even beyond that visage of snakes and venom and otherworldly steel, there was a second presence hidden within and behind the Serpent King.

A being of pure and unfettered golden power, a man who was a natural law unto himself, a universal constant like Qi or Gravity. The sky was blue, the Third Sea was dead, and Anush Naag of the Naag Clan would rule the world.

There was an instinctive desire to prostrate himself before this God King, not out of respect or fear or reverence or any other emotion, but because that was simply how the world worked. Cultivators fought, the Saber was the premier weapon, and he bowed before this figure.

Fang Tai was halfway through kneeling when he snapped out of it.

Immediately, he exerted his own Anima on the surroundings, Saber God manifesting over a mountain of corpses, Saber ready to slaughter demons and suppress devils.

The Ninth Prince's Anima faltered and grew hazy, before almost immediately springing back into full view, Serpent King standing at the head of a world of snakes, ready to devour everything in its path, as the God King stood behind it, exerting its
right to rule over all before it.

Two wills clashed, Anima Flares sparking and crashing off of each other as each avatar tried to suppress its counterpart with presence alone, the prowess of their controllers showing in their every action.

This battle of the will could have gone on for eternity and a day, and most likely would have, Fang Tai being too proud to back down and the Ninth Prince much too angry to give up, the two locked in a silent contest of Anima until they abruptly died of old age.

Of course, this didn't happen.


----------------------------------------------------------------

Instead, their conflict was abruptly halted.

The Ninth Prince snapped out of his battle trance first, shaking his head to get rid of any lingering traces of Fang Tai's anima, and opening his eyes to see what lay before him.

The Ninth Prince really wished he hadn't opened his eyes.

To his right was a band of Noble Devil Alliance Chosen, representatives from the Demonic Altar and Noble Knowledge sects heading a group made up of those from the Gao Clan, Heavenly Time Shatter Sect, and more.

They wielded masterful arms and armor, manifested sublime techniques, and shone with Qi, visible even to the naked eye.

The leader of the band, a muscular demonic atar sect member clad in black and red armor, wielding a mace that howled with blood and souls, stepped forward and bellowed out a challenge, voice amplified and replicated by the hungry ghosts swirling around him. "FANG TAI! I NAME YOU COWARD, I NAME YOU HEATHEN, I NAME YOU DISGRACE TO YOUR SECT! DO YOU DARE TRY AND REGAIN EVEN THE SLIMMEST BITS OF YOUR HONOR BY FACING US ALL AT ONCE?! THIS SHOULD BE NOTHING TO SOMEONE OF YOUR… CALIBER!"

To the Ninth Prince's left, a tiny dot in the distance but quickly eating up ground, surrounded by an enormous shroud of poison, death, bones, and blood, all bent to his will and all made for a single purpose, was a Core Formation Cultivator.

...Yeah, there was nothing else he needed to say.

Apparently that one girl's claims of having a Core Formation Master weren't false, proven even more so by the furious howls that drowned everything else out. "YOU IMPETOUS FUCKING BRAT! KILLING MY DISCIPLE AND THINKING YOU'D JUST GET AWAY WITH IT?! JUNIOR, YOU DARE?!"

The Ninth Prince and Fang Tai shared a look.

"Truce?"

"Truce."

"You take the Core out for my blood-"

"-And you take the Chosen who'd dogpile me before doing something to kill me?"

"Sounds like we have a plan."

"Sounds like we do."

As Fang Tai sprinted off into the distance to cross blades with the Early Core Formation cultivator, the Ninth Prince jumped high into the air, iron muscles and tendons propelling him far farther than he could otherwise.

As he sent out a call for aid from Ulo, Kha Li and Ya, and Raj through the Mindweb, and landed right in the middle of the Chosen group, spear already darting out to slash the Time Shatter chosen across the ribs, the Ninth Prince allowed himself a smile. Maybe this meeting wouldn't be so bad after all.

Of course, that was immediately when everything went to hell.

A/N: This took me way too long, like, yall have no idea, this took so much time, but thanks to a few suggestions from a few people on the discord, and a few music playlists (side note, I always reccomend listening to some sort of instrumental music if you're gonna write, it really gets the creative juices flowing, especially if you pick music that matches the mood/scene you're going for), I got through this little omake.

Anyways, I hope you enjoy this, it took a lot of time and I'm actually pretty proud of it!
 
Ninth Prince 13 - Conflicts and Captivity
Ninth Prince

Conflict and Captivity


The Ninth Prince was fucked.

He was so fucking fucked it wasn't even funny.

The magnitude of his fuckening was so high it pierced straight through the heavens and came out the other side before wrapping back around to do it again, a metaphorical ouroborous of fuckitude.

The reason for his current fuckitude?

The nine Noble Devil Alliance Chosen currently surrounding him, each one wielding a needle as big as they were, who had initially gone down like sacks of grain as the Ninth Prince pummeled them into the ground.

(The Ninth Prince did have to give them credit, they were obviously quite a talented bunch, and if they'd played their cards right, kept on working together, they could be the next big thing to come out of this 'Noble Demon Alliance'. Didn't stop him from preying on their surprise and disbelief that the Ninth Prince would just jump in and attack them though.)

Of course, this was only initially.

After the shock had worn off, they'd quickly picked themselves up, and once their little group had started working in concert, well, it was probably going to be easier to monologue about with a well timed flashback.

--------------------------

The Ninth Prince was actually feeling pretty confident, all things considered.

Sure, there were nine obviously special foundation establishment cultivators surrounding him, all at his level, and all bearing obviously special treasures.

Sure, they seemed like trained combatants and could probably give him a run for his money all at once.

And sure, they all had their own secret arts and legacies, and were all probably some of the best of the best in terms of talent and drive in their respective sects and clans.

But he was the
Ninth Prince.

And really, wasn't that all that needed to be said?

With a pulse of Qi, the phantom of an enormous snake-headed battlegod appeared before him, sending down enormous javelins of metal and poison, though ones that speared the Ninth Prince instead of his enemies.

The minute these ten javelins touched his body, the Ninth Prince erupted in a glow of grey and green light, before that light coalesced into winding tattoos curling all across his body.

Taking advantage of the chosen being forced back by their fear of his sheer power, the Ninth Prince rushed at the nearest one, spear in hand.

The tall, thin Heavenly Time Shatter Sect member frantically yanked out an hourglass, which exploded in a shower of sand and glass, each fragmented particle carrying a single instant of the Dao of Time.

The sand and glass swirled around the Ninth Prince like a desert storm, each piece of dust and dirt working its will on the Ninth Prince, transferring every instant and moment bound into those particles into the body of the Ninth Prince.

It was an attack that would age any cultivator by five hundred years, flesh turning into dust, blood leaking away and being absorbed into the earth, and bone being dispersed across the entire Third Sea.

But the Ninth Prince's flesh was Venomsteel, a Qi metal and thus one that never corroded, never dulled by the sands of time. His blood was pure venom, firmly linked to his soul, and would stay in its container for an eternity. And his bones were pure trial iron, a material which had stood unbroken and unbowed since the invasion of the Sea Conquering Army, and certainly would not fall to a paltry Foundation Building time attack.

The sand and glass fell inert to the ground, and as the lanky youth smirked at his 'victory', the Ninth Prince emerged from the dust cloud, unbloodied and unharmed, surging forward to plant his spear straight through the Demonic Chosen's chest.

Cursing under his breath, the Chosen in question performed a two handed incantation gesture, spat out a puff of blood, and summoned a ghostly yellow clock shield, utterly unbreakable to those on his level.

The Ninth Prince broke straight through the clock, shattering it into so many fragments.

Unfortunately, this gave the Chosen
just enough time to barely dodge out of the way, blinking out of existence and reappearing where he'd be a millisecond into the future.

Dammit.

Ah, well, the Ninth Prince had a wealth of targets to choose from. His next object of attack was the Gao Clan Chosen, seeing as their poison had no hope of even hurting him.

The Ninth Prince sprinted forward, to the muscular Gao Clan Chosen, who paled in fear as she saw that she was next in the Ninth Prince's line of sight.

Having actually
read the dossier about the various Chosen on the other side of the war, she ignored the wealth of actual poisons on her person, instead grabbing an enormous silver needle, wounding herself and smearing a paste containing a cocktail of combat drugs on her injury, a cocktail that caused her muscles to bulge and contort violently, making her look like more of an Oni than a human.

Pulling out an enormous studded club, the Gao Chosen
roared as her veins were turned a bright blood red, eyes bloodshot and face contorted into a grotesque parody of a human expression. In this state, it seemed impossible that anyone would be able to stand up to a single swing of her cudgel.

The Ninth Prince met her attack and pushed it away with his spear, scoring an impressive gash across her waist as the acid-metal of his weapon both cut and burned away at the Gao Chosen's flesh.

Twisting away from her inevitable retaliation, the Ninth Prince dashed towards his next target, one of the members of the Noble Knowledge Sect.

However, none of the Chosen were idiots, and the moment they saw the Ninth Prince's powers, each Chosen pulled out an enormous needle and focused all their Qi into it.

As the Ninth Prince rushed towards his third enemy, the Gao Clan Chosen quickly poured Qi into her own needle, and then the array was complete.

A thick red string emerged from each of the needles, quickly binding and ensnaring the Ninth Prince, making it impossible for him to move.

The Demonic Altar Sect Chosen, the same armored man that had bellowed out a challenge to Fang Tai, slowly stepped forward, as if he had all the time in the world.

He squatted down, until he was eye level with the prone and bound Ninth Prince, and within the dark recesses of the Chosen's armor, the Ninth Prince swore he could see a demon grinning back at him, always just slightly behind and to the left of the Chosen's actual face.

"Well, we were supposed to use the Demon Fate Needles to snag Fang Tai, but seeing as he's tangling against a fucking
Core Formation cultivator, fucking Vileblood at that, I think Jin Shufeng is gonna be fine with just bagging the Ninth Prince."

--------------------------

And, yeah, that was about where they were now, the Ninth Prince trapped by a bunch of Chosen while the leader of their little band was monologuing in front of him.

Oh, shit, the leader was still talking, he should probably listen.

The Ninth Prince tuned in about 20 seconds after he tuned out, and… apparently didn't miss anything, which was pretty great actually!

"You back? Good. I can excuse a bit of a flashback now and then, Altar knows I've indulged in some now and then, but it does get a bit annoying when I'm monologuing."

...Ah. Yeah, that wasn't that great actually. "Well, I suppose an apology is in order. I'm sorry about that, nobody's monologue should be interrupted."

The great darkly-armored figure shrugged. "Eh. No skin off my back. But anyways, back to the monologue."

"So. We're sick and tired of everyone looking over us in favor of the 'true chosen'. We're powerful, we actually work together, we actually
like each other, and we're gonna go places in the future if our big plans pay off. So we figured some shit out, and for now we've decided to work for the one 'True Chosen' who doesn't treat us like shit!

You know, this was our first mission for him, and we were supposed to nab Fang Tai, though he said any Chosen would do in a pinch. So, here's what's going to happen.

We're gonna take you to Jin Shufeng, he's gonna use you in some sort of weird ritual, and then we're gonna get
paid!"

...Really. The Ninth Prince was a bit put out honestly. It wasn't like that was a very impressive monologue. Sure, it hit all the requisite points, explanation of motives, assertion of superiority, current plan, and final declaration that theoretically left no other possibility open, but it didn't really have heart, as if this Chosen didn't really feel like monologuing and he was just going through the motions. "I hate to criticize someone else's monologue, but frankly that was soulless and you should be ashamed."

The armored Chosen nodded. "Yeah, it wasn't really my best work, but what are you gonna do when some arrogant fucker interrupts your original monologue?"

The Ninth Prince winced. Yeah, that was. That was fair.

Actually, he did have a question for them. "So, what exactly is this array thing supposed to be? It looks pretty impressive."

This time, one of the other Chosen spoke, a tall, long haired Noble Knowledge Sect member. "It's actually quite ingenious if you know the underlying metaphysics."

She lazily uncoiled from her sitting position, arching her back like a cat as she stood up. "See, the needles themselves have their own arrays carved into their interiors, and those arrays store and create the Red String that we've used to trap you. On its own, the string just saps Qi and makes it harder to move, it's nothing special to a Foundation Establishment cultivator."

The Noble Knowledge Sect Chosen smiled. It wasn't a nice smile. "That's where this little Nine Needle Array comes in. If we pour our Qi into these needles at the exact same time, the Red Strings of Fate inside the needles combine to create a binding able to trap even a Core Formation Cultivator!"

"Well, to be fair, only for a little bit, there isn't really enough juice in this thing to permanently hold a Core. It's perfectly sufficient for a permanent binding for a Foundation Establishment Cultivator though" she explained.

Ah, yeah that made sense. It was actually a pretty good explanation too. A bit on the short side, to be fair, but certain people would consider that a plus, and the information was conveyed quite well. All in all, the Ninth Prince would give it a seven out of te-

Nope.

Now wasn't the time for tangents, now was the time for questions.

And the Ninth Prince had one more question.

"So, I have one more question." The Ninth Prince said. "And it's one that's been bugging me for a while. This array and its associated thread is supposed to be quite powerful, yes?"

A short haired, short bodied (really just short in general) Heavenly Time Shatter Sect Chosen began to speak. "Yep! I mean, everyone here's already modified their own needles, customizing them and all that good shit, and we've done it in just the right way so that the secondary combination array's been made exponentially stronger. It's actua-"

The Ninth Prince hated doing this, but you know, sometimes you just had to interrupt people to inform them of just how fucked they were. "Alright, thanks for the info. Anyways, follow up question."

Now thoroughly pissed off at the Ninth Prince's dismissal and poor treatment of his friend, the armored Demonic Altar Chosen nonetheless deigned to set him up for whatever punchline the Ninth Prince was going for. "Yes?"

The Ninth Prince smiled. It was so nice to have proper help with a set up, it really elevated the entire bit. Anyways, time to actually finish the bit.

"If this array is supposed to be so strong," The Ninth Prince stood up, unrestrained and unfettered, as the thick red string fell apart like ragged old cloth, slowly respooling itself. "Then why hasn't it actually done anything?"

The group of Noble Demon Alliance Chosen was mighty indeed, each one a powerful figure, revered and hated by the lesser members of their sect and clan, possessing hidden legacies and secret inheritances, premier talents and future pillars of their sects and clans.

In front of the Ninth Prince, they could do nothing.

The Demonic Altar Chosen in the heavy armor, so confident beforehand, so sure that he and his friends had the better of the Ninth Prince, stood stock still. A few of his allies sank to their knees, knowing that they wouldn't get out of this alive, gripping onto their needles like lifelines as the red string slowly retracted into its arrays.

Eventually, the Armored Chosen snapped out of his shock, though he was still halfway in and out of reality, mind shaken and body weak. "...Just make it quick. For them at least, if not me."

The Ninth Prince could make a joke here. He had a really good one too, one that he'd been waiting a few years to find the perfect spot for, along with a few other rapid fire ones that the Ninth Prince had made up on the spot.

Normally, he'd do it, he'd make the joke, he'd take the quip, he'd refuse to give his enemies any basic respect or common courtesy beyond what his sense of theatrics compelled him to do, because they were blood path fiends and mortal-exploiting villains and they didn't deserve a dignified death.

But here, something stayed the Ninth Prince's hand (or tongue, as it were). Maybe it was the fact that, despicable as they were, this group of Chosen had some twisted form of honor. Maybe it was that he hadn't actually seen them perform any atrocities, even though they almost certainly had. Maybe it was because the Ninth Prince empathized a bit with their desire to become known, to become important. After all, how many equally gifted clan members were languishing in his shadow?

Whatever the reason, instead of saying anything, cheapening the moment, the Ninth Prince merely gave a single silent nod of acceptance.

Then, he motioned to Ulo, Kha,Li, and Ya, and Raj. His companions had been lying in wait for the past few minutes, waiting for the right moment to strike, or, more specifically, the most narratively appropriate one. Now, they emerged out of their concealment, readying quick, painless attacks that would put these Chosen out of their misery.

With a flash of Qi, their techniques released-

-And were interrupted, as the Red Strings of Fate had finally retracted all the way into their respective needles, after which the needles stabbed the Chosen in the throat, killing them instantly and draining the blood and Qi from their bodies before disappearing in a puff of purple light.

Of course, before the Ninth Prince could process that, Fang Tai emerged, bruised and bloody, scarred by venom and plague. Notably, his entrance was not followed by a vengeful Core Formation Elder.

The two looked at each other, one a ruined mess of a man, scarred and battered and broken, the other perfectly unharmed.

Fang Tai opened his mouth to speak, thought the better of it, and closed his mouth, looking off to the side with a sullen expression.

It seemed like it fell to the Ninth Prince to be the bigger man in this situation, so that was exactly what he did. "So, normally I'd make a crack about our respective states, but you just fought off a Core Formation Elder who was trying to kill me. And I just fought a bunch of Chosen who were almost certainly going to be able to trap and kill you. I say we call it even, never talk about this again, and work together to do even more damage to the Noble Devil Alliance." the Ninth Prince said, marvelling at his own humbleness and self-restraint.

Fang Tai slowly looked up at the Ninth Prince, a small smile on his hideously scarred face. "You know, I think that's the first good idea I've ever heard come out of your mouth, you demonic bastard."

The Ninth Prince let out a short, surprised bark of laughter. "And you're one to talk, you pompous prick?"

"Snake loving automaton."

"Saber worshipping fanatic."

"You say it like it's a bad thing, Golden Devil by choice."

"You say that like it's a bad thing, you pampered young master."

And so, after fighting off people that would have certainly killed the other, the Ninth Prince and Fang Tai walked side by side towards their worried subordinates, trading barbs and insults as they went.

Who knew, this might be the first stirrings of an actual positive relationship?

"So, want some wine? I have some excellent vintages, despite being unable to get drunk myself."

"Don't push it."

Or maybe not.

"Ah. Alright then, I'll just wait for you to come around."

"The moment this alliance is over, I'm going to cut your tongue out."

Definitely not.

A/N: Holy fuck this is finally done. I'm severely behind schedule, but hey, at least this is finally over. I hope you enjoy!
 
Voting is open
Back
Top