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

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Castor Tyndaridae 1 - Admission
Admission
Castor Tyndaridae


Picking this fight, Castor reflected, might not have been the smartest move he'd made today. In fact, it was probably one of the dumbest decisions he'd made all week. It had taken months of petitioning, and a veritable battery of tests, but he'd finally convinced his parents to let him join the ranks of the Mechanikos early, provided he passed one final test. Yet here he was, the test an hour away, and himself about to pick a fight with the biggest, dumbest 1st Heavenstage technician he'd ever-

"HEY! What the hell did you say, you bastard?!" Ah, speaking of.

"Sorry, did I say that out loud Herak? I hope I didn't hurt your feelings." He definitely hoped he'd hurt his feelings. Not that Herak had received much in the way of compliments in his life, he had to have pretty thick skin, at this point. He had a nose like a overripe eggplant, and lips like a pair of ginseng roots. If he had to make a comparison between his ears and another vegetable he'd probably say they resembled two heads of cauli-

"YOU FUCKER! I'M GOING TO BREAK YOUR LEGS!" Whoops, he'd said that out loud again. Still, ugliness aside, Herak was a big bastard. Castor liked to think he was pretty tall, but he was whip-thin in exchange, all lean muscle. Herak was a couple inches taller than even him, and built like an obese rhinoceros. He was slow, but if he had to give Herak anything, it was that he didn't slack off in his martial training, and knew exactly how to leverage all that weight and momentum to his advantage. His automaton of choice was much the same, in every sense of the word.

The Heaven-defying Ogre was, despite it's rather impressive title, a journeyman's automaton at best. What it possessed in size, raw power and durability it lacked in dexterity and fine control. He could see a number of structural flaws in it even as he critically examined it from the other end of the field. Still, at their level, it's tempered bronze hide may as well have been made from a Nascent Soul artifact, and with it's tireless nature even if he could dodge it for hours, it would catch him eventually. And he couldn't afford to wait hours in the first place.

So, his best bet was to eliminate Herak himself. If he wanted to do that, he'd have to get either himself or Pollux close enough, and even then Herak was hardly helpless in close combat. He'd have to measure the difference between them carefully, maybe use himself to bait the Ogre into overextending, then slip Pollux past it and-

"Oi, I can see you scheming over there, and I'm not going to wait any longer." Keh, observant tub of lard.

"Heaven-defying Ogre, rip that glorified training dummy he calls an automaton into shreds!" Castor's eyes narrowed into slits at that, any good humour draining from his face like water through a sieve. Oh how he'd regret those words.

"Pollux, pattern 8." Then he burst into movement, a half-step behind his automaton, who'd already begun to push itself forward, fibrous bronze muscle, built with layers upon layers of bronze filament, propelling it into action. As the tree trunk arm of the Ogre began to swing down on them from above, the attack painfully telegraphed, Castor and Pollux split to the opposite sides in perfect unison, narrowly avoiding the crushing force of the blow as it cratered the earth, dust pluming around the point of impact.

That was one blow avoided, though he might have spoken to soon as the limb quickly began to slide along the ground towards, him, clearly intending to sweep his feet out from under him. Herak, it seemed, had come to the same conclusion as himself, and decided to target Castor over Pollux. A critical mistake, assuming Castor didn't get his legs broken by the arm rushing towards him. No dodging to the sides, the Ogre's arms were long enough that they dragged on the ground as it walked, it would certainly still manage to catch part of him, even if most of his body managed to avoid it. No going down either, it was sweeping low enough to the ground that a dive would just see his skull cracked open. That only left one option. Stamping into the ground to arrest his forward movement, Castor instead directed his momentum upwards, and not a moment too soon. He could swear he felt the ends of his sandals graze the log-like arm as it passed just below his feet.

That was when the second arm snatched him out of his helpless flight, a crane catching the proverbial frog. He wriggled for a moment, desperate trying to slip out of the big automaton's grip, before growling in pain as it began to slowly squeeze him, bone-crushing force making his ribs creak and his vision swim. It'd caught him earlier then he wanted. This would be tight.

Tilting his head back, he could see that Pollux was still a couple of meters from reaching Herak, the fat bastard already beginning to smile at what he thought was his impending victory. Close enough.

"Pollux, Darts!" He managed to groan out past the vice of the Ogre's grip, and as his automaton raised it's wrist up, a thin, almost inaudible hiss was the only indicator of Herak's impending defeat.

The robust young cultivator froze in the moment of his victory, his smile become a stiff rictus grin on his face as his eyes darted around in confusion. Then, with a strained grunt, he toppled forward. At it's master's defeat the Ogre, too, went stiff, and with a bit of wriggling Castor freed himself from it's grip, flexing aching joints as he landed on the ground. That had been much closer then he'd have preferred. A couple more seconds and he'd have had to pay more then a couple of broken bones in exchange for his victory.

He walked over to his defeated opponent with a leisurely stride, confident that Herak wouldn't be getting up any time soon. Those needles had been dipped in the fastest-acting, most potent paralytic agent he could afford at his age, and a triple dose of it would put a fellow first Heavenstage like Herak down for a few hours at the very least, even with his impressive constitution. He squatted down next to his third-cousin, twice removed, and tilted his head up, so he could look him in the eyes. There was hatred there, but beneath that hatred, he could see what he'd been looking for. Fear. Guess he wouldn't need to take things any farther today. He patted his cousin's cheek then let his head drop, standing up and putting his hands behind his head, the very image of a relaxed genius.

"Geeez, you really gave me a run for my money there Herak. A couple of seconds off and I might've missed my-" Ah. The "relaxed genius" stiffened in an instant, as he remembered why, exactly, he'd been in a hurry. In an instant he took off, sprinting in the direction that he hoped was the Mechanikos' head office. "AnywayssomeoneshouldcomealongandhelpyousoonI'msureyou'llbefinecousinbyeeee".

The paralyzed young cultivator groaned from his unfortunate position, face first, spread-eagle on the ground, imagining a thousand different, equally grisly fates for his cousin as he lay helpless on the ground, awaiting assistance that likely wouldn't come for hours yet.

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Fifty-seven minutes, thirty six seconds later Castor burst into the Mechanikos' head office, chest heaving, eyes darting around the room as he tried desperately to pick out someone resembling a proctor. Pollux followed him a moment after, looking no worse for wear after the almost hour long sprint.

"Not a moment too soon, young Castor! Over here, over here."

Groaning in relief, Castor began to slowly jog towards the familiar face, every step sending twinges of agony up through his legs. Senior Mechanikos Vulcus had administered a number of the tests he'd taken over the last couple of months, and out of all of the proctors he'd had so far, he thought that the grouchy older cultivator was probably his favourite.

Wizened and short as an ancient tree stump, his skin wrinkled and bronzed, the curmudgeonly cultivator seemed to have a perpetual grimace on his face, scaring away many of his juniors and even some of his seniors. Beneath that grimace, though, Castor had discovered a mind intensely passionate for and knowledgeable about arrays, knowledge he was happy to divulge, provided that the inquirer didn't ask him any, as he called them "Idiot questions".

He'd spent hours after some of his tests conversing with the old Mechanikos over a cup of bitter ginseng tea, trying to draw wisdom from the grumbling and anecdotes the old goat used to relate his knowledge as he endured the horrible tasting brew. The worst part, though, was that over the months he'd actually begun to appreciate the terrible drink's taste.

Disturbing new habits aside, he'd learned a great deal from Vulcus these past few months, vital information that had helped him on many of the proceeding tests. The fact that he was here to administer the final one was, Castor thought, quite the appropriate coincidence.

"Quick quick, you little troublemaker, sign here and then get inside. I'm not sure what held you up," The older Mechanikos sniffed imperiously as he eyed the young technician's tousled, dirt-covered robes; he clearly had some ideas about exactly what had transpired "But you were almost too late to participate." He handed Castor the form for the test, and Castor hurriedly signed it before rushing past the older Mechanikos, only pausing for a moment as he heard the elder speak up behind him.

"Remember not to get lost in your own head. Some of the answers might seem difficult, taken as they are, so try and break them down piecemeal. You youngsters are always trying to rush into things without looking at the bigger picture. Why, back when I was a strapping young lad…" Wisdom received, Castor got a move on before the older cultivator could launch fully into one of his long-winded rants.

The test administration room this time was, if he had to be totally honest, a bit intimidating. Rows upon rows on desks, test papers and a quill and inkpot their only adornment, hundreds of prospective Mechanikos already sweating over the test that would decide their path for the rest of their lives.

Making his way to one of the few remaining empty seats, Castor veritably oozed into it, sighing in relief as he finally rested his muscles, feeling as if they'd been turned into jelly by the harried, hour-long sprint across the clan's grounds. Pollux stood guard beside him, burnished bronze skin gleaming and form perfectly still, an oddity that drew the stares of some nearby test-takers but otherwise went unremarked upon, as they quickly turned their attention back to the trial they'd soon be undertaking.

Almost as soon as he was seated Senior Mechanikos Vulcus appeared at the head of the room, standing on the lectern that had been placed there to allow proctors to observe test-takers of all ages and skill levels. He suspected there was some sort of array involved, as he'd seen proctors pick out even the most expertly concealed attempts at cheating, but if there was one it was totally invisible, at least to someone of his level of skill. As he stood on the lectern the Senior Mechanikos' gaze swept over the room, staring (or perhaps more accurately, glaring) at the young cultivators, most of whom wilted under the intensity of his examination. Finally, after a moment of what Castor was sure was grandstanding, the withered older cultivator's voice range out, clear as a bell.

"Many of you are going to fail today. Our clan's standards for array crafters are high, and the vast majority of you are going to, in all likelihood, wash out and return to your more mundane lives. But some of you," The Mechanikos clenched his fist. " Are going to succeed. You will become an irreplaceable asset to the clan, a treasure who's future will be nurtured and protected. So, instead of focusing on that chance of failure, that near certainty that after this test, you will return to your lives as normal cultivators, I want you to focus on that sliver of a chance, that possibility that you will be able to rise, head and shoulders above your peers, to become a strong pillar of the clan."

Short and succinct, but it certainly got the point across. Already Castor could see the ambition and desire burning in the eyes of some of the students close by him, and even his own blood was boiling at the thought of finally succeeding, of this seemingly endless chain of trials and tribulations finally coming to an end.

Finally, with all the gravitas of a great bronze bell, a sonorous "Begin" range out from the front of the room before the Senior Mechanikos relaxed into his seat, his eyes still fixed on the hundreds of students in front of him. It was time, at long last. Castor turned his attention to the first problem on the sheet in front of him, something about the core principles of light refraction arrays, and focused his thoughts, honing them to a razor sharp, purposeful edge. Failure wasn't an option.

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It had been a full week since the test had finally concluded, and sat before him, sealed in an envelope with a simple array that required his cultivation signature to open, were his results. He wasn't sure how he felt. Confident, to be sure.

This was exactly what he'd been practicing for. Years and year, poring over an innumerable of different books, learning hundreds of new myriad arrays, designing and discarding hundreds of different secret weapons, many of which would never see the day they were installed into the body of Pollux. More then anyone else his age, he'd studied, trained, and built feverishly, all for this moment. He wouldn't fail. He would make him proud.

But still, lurking beneath that confidence, that certainty of his success, was fear. What if he'd gotten a question wrong? Marked part of an array incorrectly, and undone the whole piece? What if…he failed? What if he had to abandon Pollux? His plans and goals and dreams? Who would he be then?

No, no, he couldn't let the fear consume him, or he'd never know the results, successful or not. Sending a small pulse of energy into the envelop, he pulled forth the small slip of paper inside, hand shaking as he slowly, haltingly, laid eyes on his fate.

"Castor Tyndaridae, the Administration Bureau is proud to announce that you've successfully passed the final test for admission to the Mechanikos Bureau, and have received the personal rank of Junior Mechanikos. You will be expected to report to the Headquarters on the seventh day of the…"

And that was it. With a quiet, hissing exhalation, containing ten years of expectation and effort, Castor collapsed back into his chair, feeling as if he'd run a marathon. He supposed that he should have been cheering, screaming, going to show his parents that he'd succeeded, that he could follow in his footsteps. But all he had the energy to do was sit in his chair, the tension leaving his body as he dreamt ambitious dreams.

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Omake Bonus: Cool Thing - A cool secret weapon or tool I can incorporate into Pollux, if at all possible.
 
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Castor Tyndaridae 2 - Teeth in the Dark
LOOK UPON MY WORKS, YE MIGHTY, AND DESPAIR!

Jokes aside, finished my second omake. Got a bit long-winded with this one, and honestly I'm not particularly satisfied with the quality. Probably going to make a lot of edits when I look at it tomorrow. But here it is. Warning to those of a weak constitution, it gets a tad bit gory near the end. Castor has to employ some...creatively brutal methods to bring down his target. Criticism is, as always, much appreciated.

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Teeth in the Dark
Castor Tyndaridae


Thread the bronze filament, tie it off in the simulated copper nerve endings, then connect those to the purified bronze humerus. Insert the end of the humerus into the glenoid, then begin to reinforce the connection with Brass-winged Eagle tendons-

"CASTOR MY BOY! FOUR MONTHS YOU'VE BEEN DOING NOTHING BUT SKULKING AROUND YOUR WORKSHOP! WE NEED TO GET YOU OUT FOR SOME FRESH AIR!" The boy in question swore, just barely suppressing the twitch of surprise well enough to finish soldering the tendon into the glenoid. His work put on hold, the Junior Mechanikos turned to face his senior, schooling his face in polite acknowledgement of the man and concealing his annoyance.

Senior Mechanikos Helios certainly wasn't a bad sort, per say. He was extremely knowledgeable in the field of conversion arrays, and his designs were used all over the Golden Devil territories, converting the heat of the desert that usually had one sweating through their tunic into spiritual energy that could be circulated into other arrays throughout the clan. And with his golden-red hair and beard frizzing out in great bushy waves from his ruddy face, he looked to all the world like a cheerful sun.

But. He was very, very VERY loud. All the time. If Helios had an off switch, Castor certainly hadn't found it yet. In casual conversation he found the Senior Mechanikos tolerable enough, but when he was hounding him almost non-stop, interrupting his research? Just thinking about all the near disasters made his eye twitch.

"I simply wish to perform my duties as a Mechanikos as efficiently as possible, senior." Castor hoped that, like the last four times, that would be enough to dissuade him.

"AND I ADMIRE THAT WORK ETHIC M'BOY, I REALLY DO! BUT-" Damn. "THE PERFECT OPPORTUNITY HAS COME UP TO EXPAND YOUR HORIZONS AS A MECHANIKOS! ONE CAN'T BECOME A TRUE EXPERT WITHOUT SOME TIME IN THE FIELD!" Castor very much disagreed with that sentiment. Surrounded by more resources then he'd seen in his entire life, with Mechanikos centuries his senior who he could call on for questions or advice, Castor felt as if he'd gotten more done in the last four months then he had in years.

Still, he really did need to get Helios off his back. Hopefully performing whatever task the Senior Mechanikos had in mind would get him off his back for a few months, at least. And excessive volume and can-do attitude aside, Helios was considered a genius Mechanikos. Whatever he had in mind, it probably wouldn't be a complete waste. Possibly. Hopefully.

"What sort of opportunity might that be, Senior?"

"I CAN SEE THAT YOU'RE REINFORCING THE JOINTS AND TENDONS OF THAT AUTOMATON OF YOURS! WELL, THE PROTOSTRATOR'S OFFICE HAS COME IN WITH A REQUEST TO WIPE OUT A SPIRIT BEAST THAT'S BEEN WREAKING HAVOC NEAR ONE OF OUR MORTAL HOLDINGS! THEY LACK THE MANPOWER RIGHT NOW, WITH THAT WHOLE TIZZY IN THE SOUTH, SO THEY'VE PUT THE REQUEST THROUGH TO US! YOU'D BE PERFECT FOR THE JOB!

Castor suppressed a groan. A beast suppression task? He'd likely be out of the compound for months just to make the journey there and back, not even taking account how long it would take to hunt whatever creature he needed to find.

The Senior Mechanikos leaned in, nudging the younger cultivator's shoulder in a conspiratorial way as Castor grimaced, preparing for the sensory overload.

"I EVEN HEARD THAT THE BEAST IN QUESTION WAS AN ELASTIC APE! A BIT ON THE STRONG SIDE FOR A FIRST HEAVENSTAGE CULTIVATOR, BUT I'M SURE A YOUNG GENIUS LIKE YOURSELF COULD HANDLE IT! AND I'M SURE YOU KNOW OF THE USES AN ELASTIC APE'S ARM AND LEG TENDONS HAVE!"

Ears ringing, Castor mulled the offer over. It was true, Elastic Apes, despite their relatively weak cultivation, were considered a premier choice for tendons in automatons, especially when preserved fresh after the kill. The Brass-winged Eagle tendons he'd been using were certainly serviceable, but an Elastic Ape's tendons would far outstrip them, in terms of quality. If it would get Helios off his back for a few months as well…

"I'll respectfully take you up on that offer, senior."

"FANTASTIC! I'LL GIVE YOU A FEW DAYS TO GET THAT POLLUX OF YOURS BACK INTO WORKING CONDITION, THEN I KNOW JUST THE CARAVAN YOU CAN HITCH A RIDE WITH! I'LL SEE YOU SOON, YOUNG CASTOR!"

As the Senior Mechanikos left Castor sighed in relief, turned back to Pollux' shoulder to continue soldering. Seemed things would be getting interesting in a couple of days…..

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Castor squinted as the sun shone down on him, sweat dripping from his brow. This had been a mistake. The first few weeks hadn't been so bad. Most of the caravan was made up of mortals, but they were interesting sorts, and in exchange for tales of what he'd seen as an cultivator of the immortal demons, they'd spoken to him of the different places they'd visited.

The depths of the Organ Meat Desert, where the sun glared down even more harshly then here, and vicious beasts could be found in every corner of the wastes, preying on travelers such as themselves. The Hard Shell mountains, with their soaring peaks and vicious avian spirit beasts. One even spoke of the great rolling hills of the Green Scale plains, inhabited by numerous "Righteous" sects, where lupine spirit beasts roamed in great packs, hunting herds of powerful ungulates of all shapes and sizes. A lot of their tales were of near death experience at the claws of spirit beasts, really. Wasn't exactly filling him with confidence, but the stories were intriguing nevertheless.

Eventually, though, people began to grow lethargic. Simply maintaining a decent pace became an exhausting task for the mortals, while the few cultivators travelling with the caravan, himself included, kept a wary eye on the dunes, watching for bandits or spirit beasts.

Already they'd had to repel a flock of Liver-spotted Spirit Vultures, driven by hunger to attack prey that was quite a ways from death, and a swarm of White Jade Scorpions, which had suddenly burst forth from the sands in the middle of the caravan, killing a number of pack animals with their deadly venom before they were driven off. Every day seemed to utterly exhaust him, the constant state of awareness draining all the energy from his body by the end of the day. At home, he would have consumed his resting hours with idle tinkering and maintenance on Pollux, but out here in the desert he had no tools or materials with which to craft that he could afford to waste on anything other then repairing Pollux. The journey had been, simply put, utterly exhausting.

"Ho there, cultivator!"

Turning his attention from the horizon, Castor looked at the mortal that had called out for him. He recognized this one. The organizer of this caravan, a merchant by trade apparently, who'd travelled wider and further then any other in the caravan, a fact clearly highlighted by the deep wrinkles, which seemed to make a map of his face, and his dark tan. Castor dropped down from the top of the caravan where he'd been keeping watch, and walked over to the man.

"You require something of me, oh illustrious caravan master?" Castor sketched a mock bow, grinning up at the man as he did so.

The caravan master just grunted in return, though Castor was sure he saw a gleam of amusement in his eyes for a moment before his face grew grave.

"I need to speak with you in my carriage for a moment, if you don't mind."

The humour began to drain out of Castor's face as well, at that. If something had the man looking this grim then the situation was probably dire.

"Lead on then, if you please."

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After letting Castor into his carriage, a homey little abode lined with all manner of knickknacks, the caravan master seated himself at the table in the center of the space, next to room's only other occupant, a young (looking) woman, her skin somehow milky white despite the desert sun, and clear of any blemishes, her raven black hair cascading down her cream white robes, unstyled and unadorned.

Castor recognized this woman. Before the caravan had set off she'd introduced herself as a member of the Water Mirror Sect, a small sect based near the Northern edge of the Golden Demon territory. They were renowned for their scrying magic and techniques, if he remembered right, and they'd based their sect around a massive, still oasis lake. He'd even heard tell that they performed a massive scrying ritual on the water's surface once every ten years, foretelling their portents for the coming decade.

"Fei Xuan here's been performing a scrying ritual for us every couple of days, keeping an eye out in advance for any major obstacles we might run into." The caravan master motioned to the bowl sat in front of the woman, filled with clear, still water, despite the rocking of the still moving carriage. "Things had been smooth sailing so far….until her scrying ritual yesterday." He glanced over at the female cultivator, and she picked up where he'd left off.

"During my scrying ritual last night, I saw…a river of crimson ichor sweeping away the caravan as a flayed, dancing skin in the shape of a man hid them from a great golden eye in the sky, and…a mouth filled with razor sharp teeth, crunching and gnawing in the darkness the flayed skin cast." The scryer visibly shuddered as Castor considered the strange imagery. He wasn't sure about the flayed skin or the mouth in the dark, but a river of ichor….

"It has to be Blood Path cultivators, right?" Castor looked to the caravan master for confirmation, who nodded in turn.

"That was the conclusion we reached, as well. Fei Xuan has a couple of ideas for how the other images might be interpreted, but she was certain about what the river of blood meant. Which means we'll likely come under assault by some Blood Path cultivators soon."

"Do we have any idea when?" Castor looked to the scryer, who, having recovered from her panicked fit, shook her head.

"The darkness cast by the flayed skin means they'll probably strike at night, but other then that I couldn't say, except that it will be soon."

Castor nodded, turning the information over in his head even as he turned back to the caravan master. "And I assume you've told the other cultivators guarding the caravan already?"

The caravan master nodded again, looking just the slightest bit sheepish this time. "No offense, but well, you being a young lad as you are-"

"I don't take offense, I'm certainly the most inexperienced cultivator in the caravan. It makes sense to inform me last. I guess we're going to be one guard for the next few nights, then?"

"Aye. Can't take any chances, where animals like those Blood Path bastards are involved. We're on full alert every night for the next week. With any luck, they might not be expecting us to be ready for them, and we'll be able to turn the tables."

"Right, I'm going to get a bit of work in on Pollux then. I imagine the sand's gotten into some of his joints." Castor opened the door of the caravan, stepping back out into the desert sun even as the caravan master's parting words drifted after him.

"Best of luck to you, cultivator. Try not to die."

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Bone Crunching Marrow Eater was fucking hungry, in more ways then one. He was sick of wandering around this fucking desert, eating tough, stringy spirit beast meat and hoping that a caravan would finally come their way. He was sick of living in fear of a Core Formation Golden Demon Cultivator or a massive glass spear descending from on high, even if Skin Flaying Heart Eater assured them that his Skin Skein Concealment Technique was hiding them from any Golden Devil Observation Arrays.

And now, with an opportunity to finally kill some Golden Devil cultivators and return in glory, success, and hope that Old Cannibal wouldn't execute him on the spot for siding with Child Corpse Gulper during the civil war, he was getting damn tired of waiting for nightfall to come.

Off to his right, he could hear Heart Eater giggling in his tent, stitching that abomination together in preparation for the ambush, and Marrow Eater gritted his teeth, imagining his Devouring Maw crunching down on the man's bones as he screamed and thrashed in an attempt to block out the maniac's cackling. Just one more day, one more day.

Then…he'd feast.

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Finally, on the third night after the caravan master issued his warning, the Blood Path cultivators attacked. Castor was watching the western side of the camp the caravan had set up for the night when, from the eastern side of the camp, a cry went up. Castor whipped his head around and, Pollux following close behind, rushed towards the cry. What confronted him as he and the other cultivators that had been accompanying the caravan arrived on the scene was unlike anything he'd ever encountered.

For a moment he mistook it for some sort of spirit beast, a chimera of some sort. Then he saw the stitching. Whatever the monster screeching and bellowing before him was, it wasn't made by natural means.

It's head appeared to be from sort of ram, large, thick horns curling out from the top of it's head as it attempted, unsuccessfully, to gore the cultivators facing off against it. It's torso looked to be made from some great cat, though he saw swathes of scales and feathers here and there, like a poorly patched together quilt. On it's back sat a pair of massive, rotting wings. He couldn't imagine them carrying anything aloft, let alone this great monstrosity, but there they were, flapping and buffeting the surround cultivators with wind. It's arms were scaly, and tipped with razor-sharp claws, though it's swings were slow, clumsy and uncoordinated, and the beast finally ended in shaggy, digitigrade legs, supported by massive black hooves.

The patchwork horror bleated, it's voice a garbled mix of different animal cries at it struck out against it's attackers. It…didn't seem to be doing much damage though. It was large and flashy, in a horrifying way, but it's attacks were slow, and easily avoided. Castor dove in for a strike on the creature himself, planting a fist into one of it's legs as Pollux mirrored him on the opposite side. It's skin felt drawn tight, like he was hitting a drum. No feedback from flesh or muscle underneath, just…skin…

Castor leapt back, screaming a warning, but it was already too late. After a powerful sword swing from Aegean Tabor, one of the two Foundation Establishment cultivators that had been accompanying the caravan, the abomination split open like a balloon, patchwork skin collapsing to the ground as insects buzzed forth in hungry, chittering waves. Cultivators screamed and swatted at the bugs as they bit and stung, and that was when the true attack began.

Blood Path cultivators exploded out of the dunes, cheering and hollering as they fell on the distracted cultivator guards like bloody rain. The first couple of minutes were brutal. The Blood Path cultivators faces were drawn, their limbs thin with hunger, but they fought with a desperation the Golden Demon cultivators struggled to match. One cultivator, his teeth bared in a crazed grin, barreled into Aegean, the two shooting off into the distance to the sound of clanging swords and clacking teeth.

Castor, in the mean time, was struggling to survive. Thankfully only one enemy had singled him out, but as Castor narrowly dodged another slash from the enemy cultivator's saber, he could tell that the swarthy, screaming man was at least a couple of Heavenstages above himself. This was going to be rough. Out of the corner of his eye, he watched as the swarm of insects began to form into a solid mass, coalescing into the form of a giggling cultivator, only for an arrows to seemingly sprout from said cultivator's skull. For an instant Castor's hopes skyrocketed, before the head seemed to explode into a swarm of insects again, letting the arrows clatter to the ground before reforming back into a manically cackling face.

Ducking under a swing, Castor was forced to direct his attention back to his immediate opponent, who was still screaming as he swung his saber in a flurry of blows. Quite the set of lungs on him. Castor sent a probing punch at him, which the sword cultivator easily directed upward with the flat of his blade before sidestepping a front kick from Pollux. Damn. His attacks were relentless, but his defenses weren't half bad either. He'd need an opening if he wanted to land a decisive strike.

Spinning out of the way of another thrust, Castor focused his efforts on defense, mind desperately working as he tried to figure out how to land a decisive strike. He'd have to use Pollux and the dart launchers. They wouldn't knock out a Third Heavenstage cultivator like they had Herak, but they'd hopefully disorient him enough to give Castor the opening he needed.

In an instant, Castor stopped his constant retreat, feigning exhaustion and desperation, and launched himself forward. He saw the Blood Path cultivator's eyes widen in triumph as he brought his saber down in an overhand swing, on a perfect path to split open Castor's skull.

Then, Pollux interceded, arm raised in a solid, side-armed block. Castor winced as he heard Soul Steel screech against bronze, saw the blade bite into his automaton's arm. Still, the risk had been a calculated one, and it was already paying off. The Blood Path cultivator struggled to pull his sword from it's temporary sheath, unwilling to abandon his weapon even at the sight of his impending peril, eyes widening instead in panic, now, as he saw Pollux' other arm come up. Then, with a quiet hiss, the dart launcher delivered it's payload in triplicate.

Castor saw his opponent's eyes grow hazy as he swayed drunkenly in place, and charged forward in earnest now. This would be his only chance. One after another, he delivered strikes to every vital point he knew. A fist to the face, a knee to the gut, and even a foot to the groin, much as he was ashamed to admit it, adrenaline driving him to desperation.

He continued the pummeling even as the Blood Path cultivator fell to the ground, thoroughly out of it, and only after he'd thoroughly exhausted himself did Castor straighten up, chest heaving, pupils dilated as he watched his downed opponent for any sign of movement. Finally satisfied that, no, the enemy cultivator would not be getting up any time soon, Castor turned his attention back to the enemy at large.

To his relief, the tide of the overarching combat seemed to be going in much the same way his had. Though frenzied hunger had buoyed the Blood Path cultivators onward in the opening moments of the fight, it had quickly begun to give ground to the bronze discipline of the Golden Demon aligned cultivators, most of whom had simply weathered their enemy's opening barrages before countering after they'd tired themselves out.

The giggling cultivator, too, had begun to look haggard. Whatever trick he had used to avoid fatal damage from the salvo of arrows that the second Foundation Establishment Cultivator accompanying the caravan, Cothus Callivus, had sent his way had clearly tired him out, and in between crazed laughter he could see that the madman was panting, skin streaked with sweat.

The only area in which the battle seemed to be going badly was the battle between Aegean and the unknown Blood Path cultivator. The swordsmen was swinging his sword wildly, desperately warding off his enemy's ravenous pursuit one handed as he cradled his other arm, the stump where his hand used to be periodically squirting blood. He hadn't caught exactly what had transpired there, but from the maw that had opened up in the man's bare chest, which was currently happily crunching away at the pulped remains of what he assumed to be Aegean's hand, he could hazard a guess.

Still, even with his own battle going well, he could see the Blood Path cultivator snarling in rage, as his eyes darted around, watching as his forces were beaten back and killed. Finally, with a howl of hate, he bit out a "RETREAT!" before taking off across the dunes himself. Castor saw Aegean step forward to pursue, face still screwed up in pain, but Cothus sprung to his side, laying a hand on his shoulder to restrain his compatriot even as he waved a medical cultivator over.

Abruptly, the adrenaline seemed to pour out of his veins, and Castor collapsed into a seated position on the sand, thoroughly exhausted. He felt like throwing up. He'd never fought the likes of Blood Path cultivators before and, well, after that experience he wasn't enthusiastic about a repeat. Still, the long night was over, and they could finally rest. Hopefully the rest of the journey would be less eventful.

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The remainder of the trip was, to Castor's relief, much more peaceful, though many of the mortals and cultivators remained subdued, eyes nervously scanning the horizon for any sign of the Blood Path cultivator's returns. Castor, to his own surprise, had been commended for his actions. The cultivator he'd defeated was the only member of the Blood Path to both survive the confrontation and not escape with his leader, and both Cothus and Aegean had spent the remainder of the trip grilling the prisoner on who his leaders were, why they'd been out here, and what their goal in assaulting the caravan had been.

He'd not taken long to crack, and after learning that the band of cultivators were simply deserters trying to get back into Old Cannibal's good graces, the two had become much more relaxed. A report would need to be filed, and a party of Core Formation cultivators deployed to hunt down the remainder of the band, but yet another Blood Path invasion was, thankfully, no longer a concern.

Castor, in the meantime, whiled away the days much as he had before the attack. Pollux took some time to repair, with the cut in his arm, but the limb was back to full working capacity after a week and a half or so of tinkering. After that, Castor decided to set himself to work on a little secret project, inspired by the confrontation with the Blood Path cultivators. Sickening though the leader of the Blood Path band had been, his technique had given Castor an idea for a secret weapon to install into Pollux that might, if his intuition was correct, serve as the perfect means to defeat the Elastic Ape.

Finally, a full month and a half after their journey began, the caravan arrived at their first, and Castor's final, destination: Jade Frog Village

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Jade Frog Village was, all things considered, a remarkably unremarkable mortal village. Situated on the edge of the Hard Shell Mountains, scarcely a hundred meters away from the dense foliage that marked the edge of the Golden Demon's territorial holdings, the village was made mostly from dried, dehydrated logs, roofed with thatch, and built around two main roads that intersected around halfways down their respective lengths to form a cross. The only really notable locations in the village were the town hall, a large, squat building at the end of one of the village's two streets, where the villagers gathered for meetings and celebrations, and the statue for which the village was named. At the end of one of the streets, as the centerpiece for a surprisingly well-made marble fountain, was a sizeable frog statue, made from pure reflective jade.

The villagers had a thousand different stories for how, exactly, the statue had come to be there, but the most generally agreed upon one was that, at some point in it's muddied history, the village had rendered aid to a Golden Demon cultivator, who had repaid them with the fountain and statue. As for whether this tale was true, well, the Golden Demons certainly weren't going to deny it.

Castor, of course, didn't particularly care for any of the town's history. His time there was only a brief stopover, wherein he consulted a couple of the village's more experienced hunters, who stalked the dense canopy of the jungles near the village, as to the possible locations of the ape that had been terrorizing them for the last couple of years.

Information attained, Castor quickly departed the town, Pollux drawing amazed stares from the awestruck villagers as he followed along behind, and made his way towards the jungle. At the very edge, Castor took a deep breath. This hunt wouldn't be easy. An Elastic Ape was an enemy more suited to an opponent multiple Heavenstages above Castor himself, even if the beast had likely grown cocky terrorizing normal mortals. With a sense of finality, Castor stepped over the threshold into the thick jungle, and sighed internally as his foot instantly sank a few inches into the fetid mud with a wet "schlorp". He was going to be cleaning mud out of Pollux's joints for the entire trip home, he suspected.

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Most of the day was quiet struggling through the undergrowth for Castor, even with Pollux placed ahead of him to destroy any offending roots or branches that might block his path. The jungle seemed to possess an almost physical weight, the shrill bird calls and distressing roars of distant beasts seeming to settle on his shoulders like a yoke. If he ever returned he resolved to finder clothing better suited to this environment. His robes seemed to snag on every branch and root, and only a couple of hours after his hike began he was already dripping in sweat. Finally though, just as night began to fall and Castor reached the final location the hunters has outlined as a likely spot for the ape to make an appearance, his quarry revealed itself.

Castor almost jumped out of his skin as, with a loud thump, a large, furred figured drop from the canopy in front of him. He hadn't even heard this thing coming. If it hadn't decided to reveal itself intentionally, well…best not to think about it. He'd have to invest in some sort of sensory technique, at this rate.

As the figure rose to it's full height after it's crouched landing, Castor's eyes followed it up, and up, and up. Geez this thing was tall. It was at least the same height as Herak's Heaven-defying Ogre, maybe even taller, and with it's barrel-like torso it looked to be even sturdier. It's arms and legs, though, were surprisingly lanky. The arms stretched down to it's ankles even at it's full height, and if what he'd read about Elastic Apes was corrected, they weren't even close to their full length at the moment. The ape's entire body was covered in coarse, reddish brown fur, with the exceptions of it's hand, feet, and face. Under the creature's jutting brow, eyes gleaming with cunning sized up Castor and Pollux curiously. He didn't detect a hint of fear there, just the confidence of a predator examining particularly odd-looking prey.

Castor readied himself in a combat stance, Pollux mirroring him a second afterward. The ape was still a few meters away, but he knew that it wouldn't even need to close the distance to strike at him. Still, it's cockiness was an opportunity he could seize. All it needed to do was strike at the right spot, and the trap he'd been preparing since the Blood Path attack would spring.

Castor's thoughts were cut off as, almost lazily, the Elastic Ape threw it's first punch at Castor. Even expecting it, he just barely leaned out of the way as, with a strange hum, the ape's limb extended almost three meters longer, crossing the distance between it and it's target in an instant and narrowly grazing Castor's jaw. This thing was fast, even faster then Castor had expected. He just had to hope that his quarry would fall for the trick. If it didn't….well, losing Pollux would be the best outcome he could hope for.

As the arm snapped back to it's previous length the ape actually had the gall to look offended that Castor had avoided it's punch, looking down it's nose at him for a moment before huffing in annoyance and turning it's attention towards Pollux, evidently deciding to eliminate what it assumed was the easier target first. This was it. All it had to do was throw that punch and Castor would have the opening he needed. He saw the ape wind back it's arm just slightly, it's shoulder tensing in preparation-

Then it paused, and Castor's heart almost leapt up into his throat. Something, he had no idea what, perhaps simply wild instinct, was warning the ape that something was wrong. The huge beast furrowed it's brow as it stared at it's intended quarry, then down at it's arm, still cocked to strike. Confidence and animal instinct warred in it's mind as it considered it's options. Then, with a quiet chuff, confidence won, and it's fate was sealed.

The punch the Elastic Ape threw was a textbook perfect punch. It whizzed through the air, dead centered on it's target's sternum. The ape had no intention of aiming for the head as it had with Castor, and having it's prey embarrass it again. Had Pollux been human, the blow might very well have been fatal. But, with a loud "KACHUNK", the trap was sprung.

The Automaton's sculpted chest split open, exposing it's internals as the two separated halves formed serrated bronze teeth. Then, as the fist soared into the opening that had been revealed, the teeth snapped shut with brutal force, biting in the Elastic Ape's arm and trapping it, even as they began to dig further and further into the fur and flesh.

For just an instant the ape's jaw dropped open in shocked, two rows of yellowed, razor sharp teeth exposed, before the predator shrieked in agony, thrashing and leaping around as it futilely tried to free it's arm from the vise it had been caught in. Pollux was unrelenting, though, heels dug into the ground as his new weapon bit further and further into the Elastic Ape's arm. The Bronze Jaws had been a risky gambit. A bit too slow to snap shut and the ape likely would have hit a vital part of Pollux's internals. Still, the risk had paid off, the ape's attention wholly diverted to the agony coursing down it's arm.

Castor, in the meantime, leapt into action. Wild animal though it was, the beast would likely recover from the pain soon enough to take proper action and free itself, something Castor couldn't allow. With only moments to spare he closed the distance to the Elastic Ape, which remained wholly focused on a level of pain it had never experienced before.

He needed to make this decisive. Punches wouldn't do it, he doubted even a groin shot would. It'd be gruesome, and hopefully something he'd never have to do again, but he knew a way he could end this definitively. Finally arriving in front of the ape, he could see in it's eyes that it was finally beginning to get over the haze of pain, instincts to seek out the threat that had inflicted this injury and eliminate it rapidly reasserting themselves. With an instant to act Castor leapt, straddling the beast's chest as it switched it's attention to him, shock and confusion showing in it's eyes.

Then Castor jammed his fingers into them. Trying to ignore the absolutely repulsive sensation he drove his fingers deeper and deeper, desperately hoping he'd be able to reach his target as he felt the ape's free arm pawing at his shoulder, it's fangs biting into his torso. Then, with another disgustingly wet squelch, it was over. Castor pulled his fingers out of the ape's eye sockets with a pop, landing on his feet with a slight stumble at the it's body slumped over, tension fleeing it's body in the same instant as it's life.

With a wince he prised the ape's jaws apart, freeing them from his torso. That was going to hurt, when the adrenaline wore off. It's arm, thankfully, hadn't gotten a solid enough grip on his shoulder to start squeezing. As he stared down at the Elastic Ape's lifeless body he zoned out for a moment, trying desperately to suppress the memories of that horrible feeling from his fingers as they-"Urp" Castor wretched, tearing his eyes from the ape's body as bile rose in his throat. The ape was a monster, one that had killed and eaten tens, even hundreds of humans. But still, the idea that he'd killed another living thing, snuffed out the light in it's-don't think about eyes, don't think about eyes-body was still making him sick.

For almost an hour Castor stood there, morals waging war against duty and purpose in his mind. Finally, though, resolve hardened, he turned his attention back to the ape's body, eyes carefully averted from it's face. He couldn't exactly dismantle the body here, and even with the assistance of Pollux it'd be a long hike back to the village. The caravan would be passing through again in a couple of months. He'd need to work fast, if he wanted to install the Elastic Ape's tendons and joints into Pollux in time, and already the clock was ticking on the freshness of the materials.
 
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Castor Tyndaridae 3 - Hundred Armed Giant
Phew, that year 79 post gave me a damn heart attack, thought I'd missed my window.

COMING IN OFF THE TOP ROPE, IT'S OMAKE NUMBER THREEEE!

Feel like I might've packed a bit too much into the last couple seconds of the fight there, and I'm sure there'll be plenty of grammar and spelling errors to correct when I wake up in the morning, along with some general improvements to the writing quality to be made, but otherwise relatively satisfied with how things played out. Criticism is, as always, appreciated.

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Hundred Armed Giant
Castor Tyndaridae


Castor grimaced internally as he weaved out of the way of another Guandao swing, returning the favour with a punch that caused his opponent's head to snap back. The shock of the blow wore off almost immediately though, and Castor leapt out of range, sucking in his stomach to narrowly avoid a sweeping blow that would have cut open his stomach, had it connected. Even as the Guandao swept by Pollux dove in, capitalizing on what Castor had correctly observed to be an overextension on his sparring partner's part. The Guandao user backpedaled in panic, trying to bring back his weapon to ward off the approaching Automaton, but it was too little too late.

With a full two meters to go Pollux's arm snapped out in a blow that, had it not been for some recently installed modifications, wouldn't have reached nearly far enough. As he now was, though, the arm stretched onward, doubling in length as bronze segments of skin came unlocked, exposing the stringy tendons and bronze-wire muscle underneath as the fist sped forward before smashing into the cultivator's exposed face with barely-restrained force.

Poor Remus went down like a sack of Dawn Cries. He was a dab hand with his Guandao, probably one of the best fighters in Castor's sparring class. Against the team of Castor and Pollux though, there was no way he could keep up. As the two clasped hands in acknowledgement of the spar's results and left the ring, though, Castor's mind was in turmoil. Just like his last spar, he felt he could go…further. His strikes were unsatisfactory. Honestly, facing off against Remus without the backing of Pollux, he probably wouldn't win. Still, he wasn't going to try and futilely match the strength and durability of the likes of core families. He knew his limitations. The blood of bronze ran thinly in his veins indeed.

Yet, it galled him to let Pollux do all the heavy lifting while he himself served only as a distraction or annoyance to enemies. He needed to find a purpose in combat, a way to complement Pollux's heavier, bronze-sheathed strikes with his own. This called, he reckoned, for a trip to the clan's archives.

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The archives were, despite their name, no mere glorified library. A towering spire within the clan compound, built from carefully sculpted sandstone and topped by a massive bronze bell, the archives codified and stored almost every piece of written knowledge the clan possessed, great shelves of scrolls and manuals detailing formations, martial techniques, arrays, clan lineages, and everything in between. The archives were tended to at all times by multiple Foundation Establishment members of the clan, with the Head Archivist position occupied by one of the clan's precious Core Formation cultivators. Knowledge was, after all, considered by the clan to be a deadly weapon in and of itself, a sentiment Castor wholeheartedly agreed with.

After presenting his Mechanikos seal to the archivist guarding the tower's entrance, Castor swept past the first five floors, which contained much of the clan's recorded history. What he needed wouldn't be found there, he was sure. The sixth to tenth floor he bypassed as well, though somewhat more reluctantly.

These floors contained the clan's collective knowledge of arrays, and he'd spent many an hour here himself, perusing the shelves in search of some dust covered scroll or tome that detailed an array mostly lost to time. He was sorely tempted to join the other Mechanikos he passed, browsing the shelves at their leisure. Still, he had a different purpose to his visit today, and he wasn't planning on being waylaid.

Finally, he arrived at the eleventh floor, and his destination: The clan's collected martial techniques, both those developed by themselves and those collected from wandering cultivators and, in some cases, even tortured out of enemy cultivators. He'd heard rumours that the archives even contained some Blood Path martial techniques, learned in an effort to understand their enemies, though those were supposedly concealed on the fiftieth, and final, floor of the tower, the so-called "Forbidden Records", which were administered to be the dour Head Archivist himself.

Here, he hoped, he would find a technique or method that would allow him to discover his niche in combat with Pollux. Five floors, devoted to martial techniques in thousands of different styles, for hundreds of different weapons. He'd need to narrow his search quickly, if he didn't want to spend the next century poring over manuals and scrolls. He dismissed styles primarily focused on a weapon out of hand. All of his training up until this point had been in hand-to-hand combat. He had neither the time nor inclination to reconstruct his entire skillset around the sword, spear, or whatever esoteric weapon styles could be found in these shelves.

Martial techniques from outside the clan, too, he mentally dismissed. There might be some technique that he could make use of, but the number of foreign martial techniques far outweighed those of the Golden Devils, and thinly as it might run, the bronze blood flowing through his veins was something he'd be remiss not to take advantage. Good, that was a solid four of the floors taken care of. Still, he wanted to narrow his search just a little further. Fist strikes had always been his forte, so techniques of that nature would be preferable, and techniques that were well-suited to fighting alongside allies were vital, if he wanted to implement the technique effectively alongside Pollux.

That would do it for specifications, he was pretty sure. The next step would be finding an archivist that tended to this floor, a fairly easy task. Many of the archivists on duty were assigned to these floors, he'd heard, as it saw some of the greatest volume of foot traffic in the entire archive, more then multiple quieter sections combined. After a moment of wandering the shelves, passing cultivators ranging from his own level to the vaunted level of Foundation Establishment he located an archivist, a portly older man with a neatly trimmed, graying goatee and a completely bald head, emphasized by his bronze skin. Judging from the Qi fluctuations the man was giving off, he had to be in Foundation Establishment. A lucky find, he'd likely be a much better source of information then an archivist in Qi Condensation. He was already speaking with someone, though, so Castor leaned up against a shelf, waiting for the two to finish conversing.

After a minute the cultivator clasped his hands in thanks to the archivist before striding off towards whatever the archivist had suggested. The archivist turned his attention to Castor then, favouring him with a quiet smile as he approached him with calm, measured strides.

"My greeting, junior brother. What brings you and your automaton to this section of the archives today?" The archivist's voice, despite his considerable bulk, was sibilant and smooth, every word spoken with quiet deliberation. A Dao of Silence, perhaps? No no, couldn't let his thoughts drift. He related what he was looking for, the silent archivist absorbing his words. After Castor finished relaying the specifications he had in mind the archivist stood stock still for a moment, the rise and fall of his chest the only indication that he was still alive. Then, abruptly he spoke.

"I can think of eight, possibly nine books that would fit those requirements. The Bronze Crane's Beak manual, found on the seventeenth shelf of section five, the Harmonious Scrolls, found on the sixth shelf of section four, the…." Castor committed the different locations to memory as the archivist rattled them off. Only a couple of them sounded even tangentially related to his desires, but in his experience, martial techniques were nothing if not obtuse in their naming sense, and there were fewer sources of information more trustworthy then an archivist. After clasping his hands and thanking the archivist, who simply returned the gesture with a genial smile on his face before making his way over to another cultivator that had been waiting for him to finish his conversation Castor set off in search of the manuals and scrolls that had been suggested. Hopefully they'd have what he needed.

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Castor sat at one of the desks that were peppered throughout the different floors of the archives, eyeing the spread of manuals and scrolls in front of him. He'd given them all a cursory skim, and at least a few of them interested him. The Bronze Crane's Beak, for example, had been developed by a Core Formation Golden Demon three centuries past who, like him, had only the slightest trickle of bronze blood flowing through his veins. This Core Formation cultivator had, through a great deal of trial and error, found a way to manipulate the bronze blood that flowed through his veins, directing and concentrating it at the tips of his fingers. Where the rest of his skin had simply been a light bronze, his fingertips became a dark, solid bronze instead, harder then even the normal metal itself. Redirecting the bronze blood from the rest of the body did away with any natural defenses it might offer while the technique was in effect, true, but for members of the Clan such as Castor and the technique's originator the defenses their thin blood offered were paltry at best, barely better then that of the average cultivator. A technique like this would certainly give his attacks more punch then they'd had before.

On the other hand, though, the Harmonious Scrolls called to him in a different way. From what he could infer, the scrolls had been illustrated by a pair of twins five hundreds years back in the clans history, two Foundation Establishment cultivators who, if his memory of notable cultivators was anything to go by, had learned how to fight foes a full Great Circle above themselves when fighting in tandem. Rather then writing, the scrolls related, through beautifully illustrated images, a series of combination attacks and their accompanying footwork, which allowed two cultivators to attack in perfect synch, the strength of their attacks building on one another. Castor might have to alter some of the footwork just so, to account for his need to direct Pollux, but the new combat method the scrolls represented, multiplicative in it's use of two fighters in comparison with the swapping fighting style Castor had been using with Pollux up until this point which seemed so simplistic now, couldn't be understated.

And even beyond these two, one final manual called to him. The Nine Point Acupressure Fist. He had no idea who'd written it. It had no recorded author anywhere in the manual itself, and no matter how he wracked his brain the fighting style it taught was a match for no notable Golden Demon clansmen he could think of. The attacks it related seemed, at first, to simply be some sort of acupuncture. The further he delved into the manual, though, the strangest the points seemed to get. Points to paralyze an arm, send a leg into convulsions, and concluding in the titular Nine Point Acupressure Fist, a high speed succession of precise strikes at nine different parts of that body that, if carried out correctly, would supposedly reverse the Qi channels in a cultivators body, horrifically crippling them at best.

Truth be told, all three of them appealed to him in different ways. The Bronze Crane's Beak would lend his strikes the potency they needed to really matter in a fight. The Harmonious Scrolls, on the other hand, offered possibilities of a level of synchronization with Pollux he'd never even considered, and the Nine Point Acupressure Fist….well, he wasn't really sure what about it was calling out to him, exactly, but call out it did. He was torn about which of the three he ought to select.

Then, the pieces clicked together in his head, like the last part of the puzzle. He'd been looking at this all wrong. He didn't really need to select any one of them, did he? All three of them played to his strengths in different ways. The best option was, clearly, all of them. It'd be a herculean effort, he had to admit, wiser minds then he had devised all three of these techniques. Still, however slim his chance of success, if he could weave these three techniques into one coherent style, it'd suit him perfect.

Eye ablaze with light, mind working feverishly, Castor flipped open the Bronze Crane's Beak manual, beginning to read through it in earnest. Now, how could he integrate Beak Spears Frog with the Flowing Dioscuri Strikes and a strike to the Jin-chen acupressure point? Perhaps if he…..

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The Bronze armoured training dummy screeched in protest as, finally, Castor's finger punched through the two-inch thick plates. He grinned in exhilaration. It'd been the work of months, and his contribution points had dropped dangerously low in the meantime, but he'd finally refined his new style to what he considered an acceptable level. Acupressure points had been rolled into spear-like jabs with his bronze-tipped fingers, which had in turn been rolled into simultaneous strikes with Pollux. He'd finally found the niche within which he could fight alongside his automaton. Where Pollux was a hammer, he was now a chisel, capable of widening and splitting open the cracks in an opponent's defenses that Pollux's powerful blows created.

All he needed now was the finishing touch, to put a capstone on the first iteration of his personal combat method. And a name, he supposed, but that could come later. He needed to temper it in the fires of battle, against a foe that could truly push Castor to his limits. He'd used a technique or two he'd been working on sporadically during sparring classes, if only to observe how well they worked against a live target, but none of those sparring partners had been a difficult opponent. If he needed to drive himself to his limits, he had just the person in mind….

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"The great young genius, Castor Tyndaridae, challenging someone else to a spar? Have gates to the Hells opened in the skies and demonic beasts trapped my mind in some infernal illusion?" The mocking lilt echoing across the field forced Castor to suppress a grin. He never changed.

"Shut it Briar. You know I hate it when people call me that." He was the only one that dared to call him that to his face, after all. His elders didn't want him to "get a big head" supposedly, and most of his peers only whispered the words behind his back.

"That's exactly why I'm using it, cousin." His relative's face was split open in a big, mocking smile, though there wasn't a hint of malice in his eyes. Briareus Tyndaridae was probably the closest thing Castor had to a friend. He'd never let his energetic kinsmen get too close to him, but still, on dark nights as he lay in bed, Castor had truly come close to deciding to confide in him, even if he never went through with the act. Alone out of all his family, Briar hadn't begrudged him his decision to devote himself to Pollux in the slightest. Whatever the reason was, whether it was simply his accepting nature or his own rather unorthodox use of Automatons, that had long since stuck with Castor. He'd long since tempered himself against the criticism, and risen above it, but he'd never forget the one member of his family that'd stuck up for him.

Shared past aside, though, Briar was the perfect candidate to push Castor and Pollux to their limits. They'd sparred only a few times in the past, but every bout he'd shown improvement as fast as Castor's own, every victory was a near thing. He could think of no one that would be capable of stoking the fires in which he'd temper his new personal style hotter.

"Hope you're ready for Gyges." Briar slammed all six of his fists together. Ah yes, his cousin's automaton. It'd been a Hecatoncheires model, before Briar got his hands on it and started his retrofit. Unlike any other Tyndaridae, even Castor, Briar had no interest in fighting alongside an automaton. Instead, he clad himself in what could best be described as animated armour, his two natural arms sheathed in bronze such that they looked like triplets to the extra sets of arms Briar had installed above and below them.

He wasn't sure exactly what the mechanism behind his cousin's control was, but he suspected that he controlled them through pulses of command Qi, allowing his arms and legs to react and act at the speed of his thoughts. It was a potent combination to be sure, and one that'd given Castor plenty of trouble in the past. He didn't begrudge others their use, but Briar himself didn't believe in secret weapons or sneak attacks. With every iteration of his automaton he simply tempered his physical body further and further, his arms and legs reacting with less and less margin for error. Castor was sure that this time would be no different, and no less challenging.

"You ready to get started, cousin?" Briar's call echoed across the field, tinged with excitement, as he entered his ready stance, both feet tensed to send him straight towards his target. It was stance as straightforward as his personality. Castor entered his ready stance too, which he'd taken to calling the Shifting Sand, tensed on the balls of his feet, one foot just slightly in front of the other, ready to propel him in whichever direction he needed to travel. After a pregnant pause, Castor called his assent, and the fight began.

Briar surged forward, crossing halfway across the field in an instant. He'd gotten faster, though Castor had expected that. With a quick command to Pollux his Automaton stepped up, snapping a probing jab across the remaining distance towards Briar.

Castor saw his cousin's eyes widen for an imperceptible instant as Pollux's extending fist rocketed towards him, but with a harsh clang his two central limbs slammed together, catching the jab scant inches from his face before hurling the arm to the side as he closed the remaining distance. Castor ducked and weaved the flurry of blows, working overtime to avoid the sixfold attack as Pollux's arm snapped back into place.

"A neat trick cousin, but not enough this time!" As Castor leapt back out of range Pollux tagged in, directing a quick one-two at Briar's head. Two arms were all he needed to divert both strikes before Briar pushed onward though, continuing to pursue Castor. One punch, two punches Castor was able to block, though his arms groaned at the strain. The third and fourth punches though, slipped both over and under his guard, burying themselves in his cheek and stomach respectively. Castor coughed in pain, desperately backpedaling and almost falling to his knees. He was pretty sure he'd felt a rib break under that punch, and as he spat out a glob of blood a tooth went with it. Briar certainly wasn't pulling any punches, and he had a lot of them to throw.

"I'm wise you're your tricks, Castor! You're a clever cultivator, but cunning can't win you every fight, and I don't intend to lose again!"

Briar was right, he knew. Just as he'd suspected, he could see the spectre of defeat looming if he continued to rely only on old tricks and tactics, on Pollux, and refused to evolve himself. Now was the time, backed into a corner by a superior opponent able to push past his usual tactics and injure him. It felt like years since he'd experienced pain in a spar, he'd always kept his opponents far. A year ago, before the trip, before the ape, if Briar had pushed past his defenses like this he probably would've panicked. He supposed Helios might've had the right idea, much as it galled him to admit it. Well, now was the time. Either he'd sink, and lose his position as the "great young genius" (heavens he hated that title), or he'd swim, and continue to rise to even greater heights.

As Briar charged in again, probably expecting to finish the fight, Castor rose to meet him, and, fingers tipped in bronze, he jabbed them into his cousin's throat. Deep, but not too deep to piece. The effect was instant, Briar's eyes bulging in shock as his bottommost hands broke off from the attack, clutching at his flattened windpipe. He maintained the presence of mind, though, to continue four of his attacks, two fists aimed high, at his head, and two low, at his stomach.

All according to plan. Just one finger pointed out on each hand this time, he whipped both arms up, burying the hard bronze points in the Fao-xian pressure points of the joint connecting Brair's upper arm to his lower. Briar boggled again as his arms, his real arms, dropped limp, two neat holes drilled through the armour that'd been protecting them seconds earlier. They wouldn't be moving for a few minutes at least. Still, two arms were speeding towards his head. If they landed, it'd be lights out. Had the command been too slow?

His instant of concern was assuaged as, from behind him, two arms zipped past, even faster then the oncoming fists, catching and clasping on to both. He saw Briar try desperately to dig in his heels as he understood was about to occur, but Pollux's grip was inexorable as his arms hummed past, bringing Briar with them, and with all five fingers presented to form a bronze spear, Castor drove the point into the Jin-chi point, located in Brian's sternum, the combined momentum of Castor's attack and Pollux's retracting arms hitting with the force of a cultivator many stages above their level.

Briar dropped soundlessly, looking to all the world as if the soul had been knocked from his body, and after a moment of tension Castor relaxed, sitting down and waiting for his cousin to wake back up. He'd need to thank him for helping to push his growth further.
 
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Castor Tyndaridae 4 - The Depths
It wasn't supposed to be like this. It was just going to be a some mildly amusing little omake about how Castor fought some big beaver and lost. Then I got seized with a fell mood or something, and it evolved into....this.

Criticism's appreciated, as usual.

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The Depths
Castor Tyndaridae


In the depths of the earth, mortals laboured, mindlessly, tirelessly, seeking to build a palace worthy of their master, a throne equal to his power. No power halted them, even spirit beasts were overwhelmed by their mindless, fanatic tides before the work resumed. This labour was all they knew, all that mattered. It would never end, as their master's glory and splendour was endless and infinite, and so their picks chipped away at the sandstone, their skin growing sallow and frail as their muscles withered and the light faded from their eyes, their movements unceasing and tireless until they simply keeled over, unable to work any longer, and were disposed of by their fellows, a fresh-faced replacement taking up their duty soon after. Such was the lot of the throne-builders.

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"So you want me to help kill a spirit beast?" Castor eyed the Senior Mechanikos skeptically. Usually it was Helios, or one of the other younger Senior Mechanikos that approached him with offers of tasks or missions. Typically, he dismissed those out of hand. Vulcus, though? Vulcus, more often then, not, was simply content to leave him to his work, answering questions only when spoken to. For the Senior Mechanikos to offer him a mission was…odd.

"Mhm. It's been causing quite a lot of troubles for one of our mortal vassals to the East. Disrupted their mining operations and cost them thousands of men. Not usually something we'd concern ourselves with, truthfully, that's what garrisons are for. But when the garrison we had stationed there sent in a team to deal with it, their singular Foundation Establishment expert included, only one cultivator, one of the rookies, returned alive. So, the responsibility falls to us. Young folk these days, I swear, can't even kill a single Spirit Beast…."

Tuning out the grumbling that followed, Castor mulled the idea over. Honestly, he wouldn't have been inclined to participate, usually. The Elastic Ape had been bad enough, and he wasn't exactly in the market for new parts to add to Pollux at the moment. His automated companion was, for the time being at least, at full functionality, and Castor himself was focused on finally breaking through. He'd delayed long enough, and he could tell he was almost ready to break through the bottleneck to the Second Heavenstage. If Vulcus was making the request of him though…

"Might I ask Senior to elaborate a bit on what exactly the mission entails?" It was the politest way he could think of to ask "What's in it for me?" without getting a whack on the head from the curmudgeonly Mechanikos.

"You'll be descending into Fractured Sky city's mines, alongside a team of various other Qi Condensation cultivators and three Foundation Establishment cultivators, a specialist included, to hunt down and kill this Spirit Beast so that the city can resume it's mining activities. Every participant in the mission will be rewarded with a considerable sum of contribution points, as well as a portion of the Spirit Beast's corpse, as we believe it to be at least in the Foundation Establishment stage of it's life-cycle."

Well, he could certainly see some benefits involved, when Vulcus put it like that. Even if he wasn't in the market for new parts, the materials from a Foundation Establishment Spirit Beast were usually well beyond his means, and would probably lead to a useful upgrade for Pollux, whichever parts he acquired. Working alongside three Foundation Establishment cultivators would also be a valuable learning experience, assuming they were open to questions and inquiries. Still though, there was something else. Fractured Sky City, the name sounded familiar to him, for some reason or another…ah.

"Wait, isn't Fractured Sky City where they've currently deployed the-"

"Astute, Castor. Indeed, Fractured Sky City's the current location of one of your family's ancestral works. I suspect you'll find examining it to be quite enlightening, even if it's not one of the more combat-oriented masterworks."

Well, if that was the case, then he simply had to go. Few of the truly exceptional automatons created and deployed by his family survived long past the death of their owners, an unfortunate consequence of the specialized nature of his family's array crafting skills and the fact that most such automatons accompanied their creators everywhere.

Those that did, though, could often be considered nothing short of valuable masterworks, exceptionally well-made and excelling in one area or another. Even if this one wasn't particularly powerful in combat, he was sure he'd be able to gain some valuable insight from observing it, one way or another.

It would be unfortunate to stall his cultivation, especially when he was so close to a breakthrough, but an opportunity like this was rare enough that, combined with the other possible benefits, it would be well worth the setback.

"I'll gratefully accept this offer then, Senior Mechanikos." Castor bent low at the waist. Vulcus certainly knew how to pick out the perfect mission for him.

"Hmph," Despite the annoyed harrumph Castor could see a gleam of satisfaction in his eyes. "The rest of the mission team will be assembled in the next few days, I'll send someone over when they're ready to depart. I suggest you prepare yourself as well, in the mean time." With that, Vulcus turns around, departing with nary a word.

"Very well, Senior Mechanikos. Farewell."

"Harrumph!"

Castor turned back to his work, excitement playing across his features. He couldn't help it, being able to observe, possibly even work on one of his family's masterworks would be a great opportunity to learn and improve, devise new ways to improve on Pollux using it's design.

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"Alright, now that you're all here, we'll elaborate a bit more on the exact nature of the mission. Nothing top secret, but there were a few details we didn't see as necessary information for those who hadn't accepted yet."

Castor really didn't see the need to clear out a muster yard for a small team of thirty cultivators, they could have done just as well with a corner of it, but protocol was protocol he supposed, even if the mission was nothing worth eavesdropping on. Putting the briefing into the back of his mind (something about a beaver? He was sure he'd find out later), Castor covertly looked around at the other Golden Devils he'd be fighting alongside for this mission. Nobody he recognized, unfortunately, though there were a few rather standout characters that he could see from his position in the center of the loosely organized crowd.

Off to the side right of the crowd, looking to all the world like a master class in brooding, was a cultivator almost entirely swathed in a black cloak. Even straining, Castor couldn't quite make out their face, though he something about their body language told him they weren't happy to be here. Either a shortage of contribution points had driven them to participate, or they had some secondary objective in Fractured Sky City, if he had to guess. It was a nominally mortal city, from the reports he'd read, but there were at least a few loose cultivators and extremely minor sects that were active there, even if none of the cultivators were even Foundation Establishment.

As far as their skills….a stealth specialist, maybe? They certainly didn't look like a frontline fighter, and while Mechanikos came in all stripes he didn't really get the vibe of a fellow academic from them either. An enigma, in any case.

Near the front of the crowd, standing more then a head above just about any cultivator in the mission crew, was a man that looked like he'd never taken a bath in his life. His skin was bronzed by both blood and sun, and his stringy blond hair was organized in a loose ponytail, which partially obscured the tattoos running all the way down his back and arms. He couldn't see all of him, but Castor'd bet drachma that he was tattooed in much the same way over most of his body. Many of the tattoos he could see, though, were marred by scars. The scratches of claws, bite marks, burns, his skin was a book that told tales of hundreds of different battles.

As for his clothing…well, there really wasn't much at all. A loose fitting leather vest and…some kind of kilt(?) seemed to be about all he had covering himself, outside of some cords around his arms that seemed to carry teeth, scales, and all other manner of bestial memorabilia. He did remember Vulcus mentioning a Foundation Establishment specialist would be participating in the mission, and this fellow certainly seemed to fit the bill. He'd have to consult him on the journey over, see if he knew any more about their quarry.

Finally, off to the left of Castor's position were a group of rather unremarkable female cultivators. Skin lightly bronzed, with neatly arranged white-blond hair and aquiline features, they looked the part of a traditional Golden Demon cultivator to a tee….all three of them. Exactly. Were they triplets? It would've been odd on it's own, though believable, but their Qi was like nothing he'd ever felt before, a shifting, roiling mass, a living thing that flowed freely though the three of them.

These….three(?), he wagered, were the three Foundation Establishment cultivators that would be accompanying them. A bit of a motley crew, if he was being honest, but cultivators did always seem to develop quite a bit more individuality once they finally escaped the Qi Condensation stages, so he supposed they were about par for the course, even if they didn't quite fill him with the same confidence as the two Foundation Establishment members that had accompanied the first caravan he'd ever been a part of had. Castor would need to see if he could meet them during the journey, especially that beast specialist. He'd likely be able to tell him more about this Spirit Beast they would be hunting then a mission scroll ever could.

As the mission briefing finally began to wind down, and the cultivators began to disperse, Castor followed suit, absorbed in his own thoughts. He wasn't particularly looking forward to another caravan journey, especially with how his last one had gone, but he'd hopefully have the chance to get the know these Foundation Establishment cultivators a little better. Small mercies.

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This caravan's journey was, thankfully, a good deal more peaceful then the one he'd been on before. No Blood Path cultivators or bandits hindered their path this time, only a few packs of spirit beasts, ignorant or reckless enough to test themselves against three Foundation Establishment cultivators and a sizable retinue of Qi Condensation disciples. These attacks had, at the very least, given Castor ample opportunity to see exactly how competent the comrades he would be fighting alongside were.

His fellow Qi Condensation cultivators were, if he was being honest, rather disappointing. They were hardly incompetent, by any stretch of the imagination. Most would label them fine examples of Golden Devil disciples. Still, though, they were just that, average. No interesting techniques or specialties, as far as he could tell, and despite the fact that most of them were multiple Heavenstages above him, he didn't think he'd be at much of a disadvantage in a fight, especially with the assistance of Pollux. The Foundation Establishment cultivators were, at least, quite a bit more interesting. The black cloaked figure hadn't removed that stuffy looking robe the entire journey, and any time Castor'd tried to approach them to speak, be it near the end of the day when everyone was bedding down or in the wake of battle, they always managed to quickly slip away.

Their combat ability remained a complete mystery as well. Outside of a couple of silvery flashes shooting from their robe, which Castor scarcely noticed in the heat of battle, they hadn't apparently taken any sort of action otherwise, never getting within a hundred meters of any of the Spirit Beast attackers. That said, though, every silvery flash seemed to herald a strange effect in some beast or another, Castor'd observed.

Sometimes they'd simply begin to foam at the mouth before keeling over, other times they'd turn their attention from the cultivator they were fighting and attack one of their comrades. In one instance he'd even noticed that, as some vaguely draconic, scaly Spirit Beast attempted to spew fiery breath from it's mouth it had suddenly snapped shut, bewilderment the only emotion in it's eyes before the fire, left with nowhere else to go, melted them from their sockets. The mystique surrounding the senior cultivator, much as it seemed to disturb many of his contemporaries, fascinated Castor. Still, all of his attempts to find out more about them had been rebuffed. Hopefully some kind of opportunity might present itself when they arrived at their destination, but in the meantime he was stumped.

The beast hunting specialist, who's name he'd learned was Persus, well, he was about as straightforward as they came. He was at the front during every Spirit Beast attack, ripping and tearing into enemies with his bare hands, not that Castor was particularly surprised. Despite the strength behind his blows, though, Castor had noticed a great deal of precision. Every strike seemed to rip into his enemy's with even greater ease then one would expect, and Castor suspected that he knew exactly where to strike to deal the most damage. Behind that meathead exterior, there was probably quite a lot of knowledge lurking. Most of the time, though, he appeared to avoid hanging around the caravan, mostly "scouting ahead", though if Castor had to hazard a guess he simply preferred the solitude. Asking around, none of the other Qi Condensation cultivators had heard of him, despite his seemingly young age, a fact that, to Castpr at least, spoke of someone that much preferred the wilds to civilization.

Finally, there was the triplets. Unlike the other two, Castor had actually had the opportunity to converse with them, and found them to be quite the interesting individuals, though a bit…odd. They weren't really three people, for one thing. The concept still rather confused Castor, he had to admit, but apparently they'd somehow fused their collective Qi and consciousness together, with one mind controlling three bodies. Geryis they called themselves, and the fusion had allowed their Qi to become even greater then the sum of it's parts, and reach foundation establishment. Castor'd certainly seen the fruits of their unique constitution during the Spirit Beast attacks. Elementalist attacks were where their specialties lay. By using all three of their bodies, they'd thus far been able to produce a variety of different combination attacks, electrifying and freezing water, creating and controlling scalding scene, and even, at one point, creating a flow of magma to melt a pride of many-eyed lions.

An interesting set of seniors, for sure, even if he'd only had the opportunity to actually converse with one.

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"Alright, we're only a few days away from Fractured Sky city. So, to refresh your memory and give some of my own input, I'll be briefing everyone here on the details of the mission."

From his position at the back of the group packed into the largest wagon in the caravan, Castor could nonetheless see that the Beast Hunter was all business. Boisterous but aloof was how Castor would best describe him for most of the trip, so this was a rather welcome change.

"Firstly, we're going to be meeting with the King of the city, Shang Hong. Ostensibly to officially render our services in dealing with the spirit beast that bested our garrison. Really, though, we're mostly going to be visiting the palace to get a quick briefing from him on any changes to the circumstances that might have happened since we set out. Better safe then sorry. After that, we're going to spend the rest of the day gathering intelligence of our own around town. Then, the day after that we're going to be descending into their mines, and hopefully completing our mission. Nice and simple, but easier said then done."

The Beast Hunter looked around, expression grave.

"Outside of my Foundation Establishment companions, most of you have, in all likelihood, never encountered a proper spirit beast."

At that, one of the Qi Condensation cultivators to Castor's right piped up, sounding a bit offended.

"Senior, we've been fighting Spirit Beasts for this whole-"

"Ah-ah-ah." The Beast Hunter wagged his finger, cutting the disciple off. "Let me finish, if you don't mind."

Though still looking mildly reluctant, the disciple fell silent, letting the Foundation Establishment cultivator continue.

"Right. Now, I'm sure plenty of you have encountered spirit beasts within their Qi Condensation equivalent. Probably fought and killed quite a number of them, as well. But it's only when an animal reaches their equivalent of Foundation establishment that a spirit beast truly becomes a Spirit Beast."

The Hunter looked around, locking eyes with every disciple in the wagon, expression deadly serious as most of them wilted away or looked elsewhere.

"A Qi Condensation spirit beast is simply an animal that's been exposed to some Qi, little different from their natural counterpart. A threat still, sure, but a minor one. A Foundation Establishment Spirit Beast, though, is an altogether different story. A Foundation Establishment Spirit Beast is a creature that has spent most of it's life saturated in Qi, internalizing and feeding off of it, growing, evolving beyond any natural creature. Their intelligence has far surpassed any normal animal's, and though they still lack a human intellect, they're not far off now. The little quirks caused by their Qi exposure have evolved into devastating attacks, their natural attributes evolving into deadly weapons. Just as much as a cultivator of their level, and in many cases even more so, a Foundation Establishment Spirit Beast is a foe to be feared by any fighter below Core Formation. So, the nature of the beast itself aside, I urge the utmost caution throughout this mission. Underestimating this thing could, in no uncertain terms, be the death of you.

For a moment, the carriage is silent and tense, disciples looking around at their peers, suddenly nervous. Even Castor felt a thrill of fear work it's way up his spine. He certainly had his fair share of experience with Spirit Beasts already, after the Elastic Ape, and fighting a creature in a whole different league from that monster….well, it didn't exactly excite him.

After a moment's pause, the Beast Hunter, satisfied that his point had gotten across, continued.

"Right, now, on to the beast itself. Throne-Building Deserts Beavers aren't a particularly well-documented Spirit Beast, normal Desert Beavers are rare enough, and for them to evolve to Foundation Establishment is even rarer. If it has any special abilities as a result of it's evolution, they aren't in any of our records. Still, we can infer it's general abilities, based off of what we know about normal Desert Beavers, and beavers in general."

At that, the Beast Hunter picked up a sketchbook from the table next to him, holding up an illustration for everyone in the carriage to see. It…wasn't the most intimidating creature he'd ever seen, if he was being honest, and his comrades seemed to agree, a ripple of poorly suppressed laughter passing through the crowd of Qi Condensation cultivators.

"Looks pretty ridiculous, I know, but these things are nothing to sneeze at. 300 pounds of fat and muscle, they're durable, and a slap from that tail can snap most other Spirit Beast's in their weight class's neck. As for the teeth, well, normal beaver species use them to chew through trees and logs, but Desert Beavers, on the other hand, with no wood to be found, use them to hew sandstone. I think that you can guess what they'd be able to do if they could sink those into even a durable cultivator's flesh.

That sobered the room up quickly enough, to be certain.

"The Throne-Building Desert Beaver, as an evolution of this, can be assumed to retain much stronger versions of these traits. It's likely increased a great deal in size and resilience, and it's teeth, if what the records say is correct, are capable of shredding steel like paper at this point in their lifespan. Like it's previous evolution, it's also a skilled digger, a tool it uses to work on and improve it's "life goal". Deserts Beavers, like normal beavers, build themselves sizeable homes of their material of choice, in this case sandstone. The Throne-Building variant, in turn, retains an obsession with expanding on it's home, working on it endlessly to create the massive sandstone maze it inhabits. It was likely hibernating underground when something in the Fractured Sky mines interrupted it's slumber. We can, as such, expect to be fighting this creature in a heavily fortified position location, on it's own turf. Myself and the other Foundation Establishment cultivators will do the vast majority of the work, so for the rest of you, the main objective is to make sure we aren't interrupted. Throne-Building Beavers become rather solitary after their evolution, supposedly, but still, we can't be entirely sure where a Foundation Establishment Spirit Beast is involved. That's about the long and short of it, I believe. I'll be going ahead to inform the remainder of the garrison about our arrival, so I'll see you all in the city. Dismissed."

As Castor left the carriage, he resolved to make sure Pollux was in top form for arrival in the city. This mission was, at the very least, obviously not going to be a simple matter.

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Fractured Sky City welcomed it's new arrivals gratefully. The normally murky skies, often stained with smoke and smoke that had earned the city it's name were clear now with no ore being smelted or refined, an affair that seemed to have the entire city in a panic. After they were escorted through the city in what practically amounted to a parade, and gave their official statement to the king that they would slay the spirit beast on the morrow, they were ushered into a side room and, after about thirty minutes, the king finally arrived, looking absolutely exhausted outside of all his court regalia. He carried himself with dignity, but his back was bent as if carrying a great weight, and what must have been a well groomed mustache and chin patch looked ill-maintained and drooping, a match for the dark bags under his eyes.

"Honoured cultivators. Pleasantries aside, I'm glad you're here. The situation has become almost untenable. Miners are vanishing left and right, even though we've closed off the mines themselves, and the citizens are on the brink of a panic. Apologies for not being more verbose but, well, we're desperate."

Stepping forward, Persus clasped his hands, giving a tight bow.

"We understand, you're majesty, and we plan to see to it that the threat to your city in eliminated first thing tomorrow. Has anything about the situation changed since the last report? The fewer unknown variables there are, the easier it well be to do our job."

"Yes, there's one major event that's taken place since the last report. The Under-Light Miner has vanished."

Persus blinked, confused. "The Under-Light Miner?"

"Ah, I can elaborate on that, sir." And that was the moment that Castor decided to step in. As Persus turned his gaze to him Castor hurried to elaborate.

"The Under-Light Miner's an automaton that was made by one of my family's Mechanikos, sir, one of our masterworks. It's owner passed away centuries ago, but it's still in good condition, so it's periodically deployed to different mining operations in the Golden Devil territories."

"One of your family's Automatons? Ah, if you've got an automaton as well, I take it you're a Tyndaridae then? I see, I see. How strong would you say it is, young Mechanikos? I've heard your family's masterworks are generally rather powerful."

He'd heard of Castor's family? Shaking the moment of surprise off, Castor continued.

"Yes sir. The Under-Light Miner's specialty lies in, well, mining, but it's combat abilities are still at around Foundation Establishment level, thanks to the materials it was made from and the skill of it's maker, sir."

"That strong? Damn, something like that could upset the whole mission. Alright Tyndaridae, I want you to head down to the garrison and speak with the Mechanikos there. Even if it's creator's long gone, I'm sure whoever does maintenance on and controls it will have some ideas about it's weaknesses."

"Yes sir."

"Oh, and Argent, you accompany him, if you don't mind."

"Hrm."

Castor almost jumped out of his skin at of his skin at the grunt behind him, barely holding back a shout as he slowly turned around to face the black cloaked, Foundation Establishment Cultivator. Scare aside, he'd been hoping for an opportunity like this. He got to learn about the Under-Light Miner and, hopefully, this mysterious cultivator? Perfect.

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How the hell were they this evasive?! The entire walk to the garrison, Castor had tried to get closer to the cultivator, to even get a word in, but they were like a damn shadow. He hadn't lost sight of them once, he was certain, but they always seemed to be more then a few meters away, no matter how Castor tried to close the distance. It was honestly getting a little infuriating. Still, now that they'd arrived at their garrison, there were other matters to attend to.

After introducing himself to the acting garrison commander, and learning of the location of the garrison's Mechanikos, he took off to find his workshop, a rather simple undertaking, as the squat, ugly building stuck out like a sore thumb. As Castor entered he was, privately, impressed. Mechanikos deployed to garrisons weren't exactly expected to introduce new innovations or designs, but this one certainly seemed to be giving it his best shot. Half finished array schematics and weapons were strewn about the room, and at the very center, in front of a massive forge, a burly figured, goggles concealing most of his face with the exception of the bushy black beard underneath, hammered away at what Castor, if he had to guess, took for a Ballista crossbow bolt.

"Excuse me. Are you the garrison's Mechanikos, by any chance?"

For a moment the man didn't respond, continuing to hammer away at the bolthead. No surprises there, Castor hated being interrupted in the middle of his work as well. Finally, though, he turned around, pulling up the goggles to reveal a pair of clear green eyes.

"Aye. Who's asking?"

"I'm with the Spirit Beast extermination team the sect deployed. One of the leaders asked me to find the garrison's Mechanikos and inquire about the Under-Light Miner, since I'm quite knowledge about in that area." Castor stepped aside, indicating Pollux. The man's eyes widened in surprise for a moment, then narrowed in interest.

"Oh ho, that's a fine automaton ye've got there, lad, 'specially for someone your age. You are Tyndaridae then?"

"Mmmhm, decided to come on the mission when I heard that the Miner was deployed here. I was quite interested in getting a look at it."

"HA! Bet you were, lad, she's a real fine piece of work, some 'o the finest artifice I've e'er laid eyes on. Shame she went missing a couple 'o weeks ago."

"I don't suppose you have any idea why?"

"Well, reckon it's pretty obvious it has somethin' ta do with that beaver down in tha mine, but I'm not exactly a foremost expert on Spirit Beasts, so couldn't say what caused it, exactly. Did notice a couple of things though, not too long 'fore it vanished."

"I'd appreciated any sort of insight you have, we'd really rather avoid anything cause the mission to go awry."

"Right, right, fair enough. Well, a week or so ago, before she vanished, she started goin' a bit…" The man gesticulated wildly, seemingly trying to find a good way to illustrate his point. "…haywire would be the best way ta put it, I s'pose."

"Haywire?"

"Aye, started wandering about when it wasn't told to, stopped and started suddenly, and almost brained a miner a day or two before she vanished. Couldn't find anything wrong with 'er parts or array though, so not much I could do 'bout it."

"Strange. Could you think of anything, anything at all that might have caused it?"

"Well…there was one thing tha' was a bit odd, I noticed."

Wandering over to a workbench in the corner, the man started rifling through vials and tubes, stacks of papers falling this way and that.

"Ah! Here we go."

Crowing triumphantly, the Mechanikos wound his way back through the mountain of blueprints and papers to Castor, handing him a vial. Holding it up to the light, all that Castor saw were…hairs?

"Every day when she came back from tha mine her, and a bunch 'o the miners besides, were covered in this stuff, no clue where it came from, and it didn't seem to be doin' any harm, so we just left it alone. Still, considering the Miner and a bunch 'o workers have vanished now…"

"Mm, yeah, it seems likely that they're linked. Thanks for your assistance senior, I'm sure this will help a lot. One last thing though, much as I hate to ask it. About the Miner, does it have any…weak points? I more then anyone would hate to damage one of my family's masterworks, but well, if something's happened to it…"

"Aye, aye, I understand. She's a fine piece 'o work, but lives're lives. Well, y'see, most of 'er body's heavily armoured, make sure she isn't damage by cave-ins and all tha', but here and here…"

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Castor'd been left with a lot to think about after he left the Mechanikos's office, and the quiet streets, now almost empty with night falling, were the perfect place to delve deep into his thoughts as he made his way towards the quarters the King had mentioned he'd prepared for them before Castor was sent on his errand. So, lost in his thought, he wasn't quiet able to conceal a shriek of terror this time as, from a very innocuous looking shadow, a sibilant voice rasped out.

"Let me take a look at that vial."

Castor, in the meantime, was panting, clutching at his chest as he stared at what he'd previously taken to be an empty shadow. He only began to relax as, finally, a black cloaked figure Castor'd kind of forgotten about in the excitement of automatons and strange hairs began to melt out of the shade.

"Geeez, don't scare me like that, I don't want to end up as some cultivation junior's ghost teacher just yet."

Taking the vial out of his pocket, he tossed it over to the Foundation Establishment cultivator as he stared at them curiously. Much as they'd startled him, he was pretty sure the voice was feminine, which…made sense he supposed, even bundled up like that they didn't seem particularly tall. Why all the secrecy though? The Golden Devil cultivator was, meanwhile, content to ignore Castor's pointed examination, removing the hair from the vial and examining it.

"…There's Qi in it."

Castor paused again at the quiet voice. It felt like it was coming from her figured, yet echoing all around him at the same time. "Hm? Qi? If there's Qi…the Beaver then, I guess?"

"Mm."

With that, she stepped back into the shadows and…vanished again. Castor sighed, staring at the spot where she'd disappeared. This concealment was really getting a bit troublesome, even if there was probably good reason for it. She'd taken the vial too. Well, he supposed she'd probably bring it back to Persus, at least, but still, she could've at least given it back, he'd rather wanted to examine it himself.

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The next morning, the whole mission team stood outside the primary entrance to the mine, the Qi Condensation cultivators lined up before their Foundation Establishment seniors, Persus at the front.

"Alright! Thanks to some helpful investigation on the part of Argent and Castor, we've learned at least a little bit more about our enemy. The beaver, according to Argent's examination of one of it's hair, appears to be able to conduct Qi through it's fur, and even retain a remote charge. With that remote connection, it can use it's Qi to seize and manipulate the Qi of those the fur's in contact with. It's pretty useless against any sort of cultivator, due to our refinement and control over Qi, but for a mortal it's impossible to resist. With some effort, the beaver was also able to take control over an automaton that was being used in the mine, known as the Under-Light Miner. It's not a combat specialized automaton, but it's an extremely well-made piece of artifice, so it's combat ability is apparently around the level of a Foundation Establishment cultivator. This would've been a major kink in the plan, since we would've needed to divert one of our number to deal with it, but junior Mechanikos Castor presented a plan that he believes would allow a few of you Qi Condensation cultivators to at the very least immobilize it. Castor, you're up."

Stepping out of the line and to the front, Castor hid a gulp. He could be social when he needed to, but speaking in front of crowds…well, he preferred a quiet workshop, to say the least.

"Well, the Miner's an extremely high quality automaton, which presents a lot of difficulties. Most of it's body is covered in heavy, spiritually reinforced bronze plate a foot thick. Most Foundation Establishment cultivators could barely dent it, let alone break through it, and with a body specialized for mining, it's extremely strong. It has one big weakness, though. Rather then legs, the Miner was fitted with treads, since they allow for easier movement in an enclosed space like a mine. A strength for mining, however, is a weakness for combat. If we can do something to damage or gum up it's treads, we can completely immobilize it."

Persus stepped up as Castor stepped back, nodding to the younger cultivator in acknowledgement.

"Thank you Castor. To that end, Geryis spent most of last night preparing a pair of talismans. They're single use, but the Frost Qi embedded into them is strong. As long as they're in physical contact with the treads when they're activated they should completely ice them over, immobilizing it."

One of the Qi Condensation cultivators spoke up at that.

"Er, sir, I respect your combat knowledge, but asking Qi Condensation cultivators to get that close to a Foundation Establishment level opponent is a bit…" The young man paled for a moment as many of his peers shied away from his position, evidently expecting a rebuke. The heavily muscled beast hunter, though, just nodded in acknowledgement.

"Yeah, you're not wrong, against a normal Foundation Establishment enemy, sending Qi Condensation fighters would just be asking them to die. In this case though, there's a chance. Castor?"

"Well, the Miner's incredibly strong, probably only a step or two below Core Formation in that regard. In terms of speed though, it's extremely slow. Not even at the peak of Qi Condensation. Not that that would normally matter, since it can wear down just about any opponent's stamina before they pierce it's defenses, but with a tactic like this one even Qi Condensation cultivators like us should be able to get in and out to deliver the talismans, though it's still a risky prospect."

"There you have it. Assuming there are no other objections I'll need two of our fastest Qi Condensation cultivators, to deliver these talismans. If you're confident in your speed, then step forward."

Slightly hesitatingly, two sect members stepped up. One of them, to Castor's surprise was the young man who'd questioned Persus earlier. The other was one of the other Golden Devil cultivators, a slim younger girl with straw blonde hair plaited down her back. Persus presented them with the talismans, then turned back to the rest of the group.

"Right! With all that said, it's time to descend. We'll step in if anyone looks like they're in serious danger, but for the most part the three of us are going to try and preserve our Qi for the fight with the beaver, so we'll be travelling in the middle of the group. Golden Devils, advance!"

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The silence in the mines was oppressive. Every breath Castor took, he felt as if he might awaken some ancient, unfathomable creature, a being that humanity hadn't laid eyes on for incalculable eons.

They'd been descending through the winding tunnels of the mine for a few hours now, and though things had begun jovially, cultivators talking excitedly amongst themselves about what they'd spend the mission's contribution points on, as the surface became further and further away, the damp, all consuming darkness began to weigh on hearts and minds. They began to whisper, then barely speak at all, as flickering lanterns that had been brought along for the trip to conserve Qi cast shadows that seemed to ebb and flow like ink, immediate surroundings brought into sharp relief but anything beyond them an invisible wall of pitch black that promised unknowable horrors.

It was only once they'd reached the deepths of the mines, hundreds of meters below the surface, with a rock mass that could kill a Nascent Soul cultivator hanging over their heads that they finally heard something. It could've been anything, some tiny spirit beast, or a bat, or even just a pebble, carelessly kicked ahead of them. Regardless, though, a pall settled over the group in an instant, quiet, whispered conversation fading out of existence as everyone in the group listened, straining their eyes in hopes of catching a glimpse of something, anything, in the darkness beyond the lanterns, something to dispel that ominous mystery of what lay ahead. Nothing made itself known, though, and hearts weighed even heavier then before, the mission team pressed on into the umbral abyss, hairs on end and nerves already frayed to their limits.

Finally, they came upon what could only be the entrance to the Throne-Building Desert Beaver's home, the rough tunnel stretch off past the range of their lanterns and hewed with distinct bite marks.

Then, in the distance, a patter. Almost imperceptible at first, it built up to a rumble. Something was coming up the tunnel. Weapons were readied, eyes straining once again until, to the belief of all, Geryis cast an incantation, illuminating the tunnel with soft but steady light. Castor almost wished she hadn't.

What was charging towards them could only be described as a tide of flesh. Hundreds of mortals charged down the wide, their clothes tattered and covered in reddish gold fur that glinted in the magical lack.

The miners themselves looked horrible. To a man they were horribly emaciated, flesh seeming glued on to thin, twiglike limbs and malnourished torsos, ribs poking prominently out of their chests. Many of them sported festering wounds and scars, unbandaged and unseen too, and some even lacked limbs, blackened, rotted stumps all that remained where their gangrenous limbs had once sat. They wielded pickaxes, looked as chipped and worn down as they were, with manic strength. The worst part for Castor, though, was their eyes. They weren't the eyes of human beings. Even the Blood Path cultivator Castor had fought's eyes couldn't even be compared to these lifeless glazed, milky white marbles, locked on to their targets yet at the same time seeming to look right through them. Not one of them uttered a sound as they charged, the only noise they made the patter of their shoeless feet against the sandstone floor of the tunnel.

As the two sides finally met, resolute cultivators against a mindless horde, what ensued couldn't even be called a fight. Every strike from the Qi Condensation cultivators killed or crippled, but their enemies didn't care in the slight. When they died their bodies seemed to simply curl up, dying as soundlessly as they'd attacked while two more of their fellows took their place, swinging their picks with wild abandon and no regard for their own comrades. When a blow was crippling they simply carried on without a sound. At one point Castor was almost brained with a pickaxe when a hand gripped on to his ankle with rictus force, one miner continuing his attack even after Castor had shattered both his knees. Still, though, they were in no true danger. Whenever a blow came too close one of the Foundation establishment cultivators stepped in. It was a surreal, silent battle, the dim blue magical light lending the scene and ethereal quality.

When the last of the miners finally fell, though, Castor only felt sickened. Already some of the other young Qi Condensation cultivators were doubled over, vomiting in disgust as the Foundation Establishment cultivators looked on, even their expressions (The ones not concealed by a black hood anyways) showing a disquieted disgust.

When calm had finally been restored, and gorges were no longer on the rise, the Foundation Establishment cultivators gathered everyone together, then pushed on. Argent scouted ahead, melting out of the shadows with a warning whenever another horde of mindless miners was imminent while Geryis kep the battlefield illuminated and the Qi Condensation cultivators alive, if only just. Persus directed the battle lines, occasionally stepping into the melee himself when the line became strained, though with none of the savage joy he had shown fighting beasts. It was the most grating, exhausting and brutal next few hours of Castor's life. Finally, though, it came to an end when, at the end of the longest tunnel yet, they emerged into what could only be described as an arena.

An almost perfect semicircle, the room stretched on for what Castor estimated to be a few kilometers, the ceiling stretching so high it almost vanished out of range of Geryis' light. It gave Castor the impression of being in a globe, especially with the loosely packed sand underneath his feet. And sitting in the dead center of the room, and a massive, raised sandstone dais, was their quarry.

The beaver was even bigger then Castor had expected it to be. It looked almost three meters tall, and nearly that wide, built like a massive, furry barrel. It's fur was wiry and thick, a lustrous, tawny red-gold. It's eyes, though, looked like malevolent black marbles. This wasn't a simple animal. Castor could feel the hatred in it's eyes as it sized up the intruders in it's throne-room, flashing bladelike front teeth as it almost barked at them, it's voice a feral, bass rumble. No words, but the intent was certainly clear enough. More so then even the beaver, though, it was the figure standing next to it that really seized Castor's attention.

The Under-Light Miner was everything Castor hoped for it to be, and more. Standing a meter taller then even it's current master, the Miner shone, it's burnished bronze form seeming undamaged by it's time without maintenance. It was armoured in a style Castor had only seen in books, heavy plate covering it's form in the approximation of some mortal knight, though the image was destroyed somewhat by the massive pickaxe resting on it's shoulder. Barely visibly under it's bronze visor, blue sensors gleamed in an approximation of eyes, zipping across the team of cultivators squaring off against it at the chamber's entrance. Just laying eyes on the treads, Castor felt his confidence in his plan begin to track. The thick bronze wheels looked as robust and strong as the rest of the automaton, the rubber tracks unblemished by the sand and sandstone. Still, his idea was their best change. They would just need to trust in Geryis's skill.

As the beaver glared down at the intruders, most of them glared right back. If any of them had simply seen it as a wild animal that doubt had vanished the minute they entered the creature's tunnels. Animal or not, even members of a "demonic" sect like the Golden Devils couldn't help but be disgusted by what they'd seen. After another moment of silent standoff, the three Foundation Establishment cultivators blurred into movement, Geryis taking to their air with talismans in all three sets of hands and chants on their lips as Persus charged the Spirit Beast directly, low to the ground in a dead sprint as a grin finally bloomed on his face. Argent seemed to just vanish into a blur and puff of sand. The beaver, in the meantime, leapt from it's throne, and, as it touched the sand the sand, seemed to simply sink in, slipping under the sand without even a ripple.

Their battle, though, wasn't Castor's concern. Half of the Qi Condensation cultivators had been assigned to guide the door while the other half, Castor included, would try and enact the plan to incapacitate the automaton. Quickly, those few among them equipped with ranged weapons opened fire one on the automaton, which had begun to move into the path of Persus. As arrows, spells, and other projectiles clanged off of it's helmeted head, though, the Miner turned it's attention away from him, and towards it's aggressors. It's advance was slow but deliberate, it's pickaxe poised for a devastating swing as it advanced towards them. Taking one of it's hit dead one was a non-option, even a mostly nullified blow from a foe as strong as this one might cripple them.

So, they split up. The ranged fighters continued to retreat backwards, sonorous incantations and the twang of bowstrings signifying their continued assault. Melee combatants, on the other hand, broke off the sides, many of them making their way all the way around to it's back. Castor himself, well, he mostly just stayed out of the way. Automatons didn't exactly have pressure points, and he doubted the pitiful amount of bronze blood he could focus into his fingertips would have a prayer of even scratching the thick plates.

Pollux, though, was on an all-out assault. A barrage of extendable jabs clanged into the automatons torso, the brazen front to the combined melee attack as swords, spear, clubs and various other weapons screeched and clanged into the automaton's arms, head and torso. He almost paid for it too, as Castor desperately directed his automaton to leap out of range, narrowly avoiding a swing from the pickaxe as it whistled through the air. It was slow by the standards of a Foundation Establishment cultivator, maybe, but to Qi Condensation cultivators like them, it was still quick as a whip. If they wanted to plant the talismans, they'd need to do better then this to grab it's attention. A risk would need to be taken. Luckily, much as it had been a slapjob when first developed, there was a weapon installed in Pollux that could do the deed.

Rushing over to a spear wielding Qi Condensation cultivator, Castor relayed his idea and asked him to help spread it around. They looked, well, skeptical to say the least, but it was obvious nobody else had a better idea so they reluctantly agreed. That done, the two of them were able to disseminate the idea quickly, and soon enough, Pollux stood alone, narrowly avoiding the Miner's ponderous swings, Castor wincing at every tortured shriek of metal on metal that signalled a close call. Then, the perfect opening arrived, a horizontal swing aimed directly at the side of Pollux's. Twisting to face the oncoming blow, though, Pollux didn't dodge.

Instead, with a series of whirrs and clicks Pollux's chest cavity opened, bronze jaws ready. As the tip of the pick sped into the opening they snapped shut, metal grinding against metal as Pollux was carried into the air, pick still caught on the bronze jaws. Castor grimaced as he saw the tip of the pick piercing out through Pollux's back, but he'd been more or less expecting that. Pollux's vitals had been rearranged shortly after he'd returned home from the Elastic Ape mission, wouldn't do to have such an obvious structural weak point.

As the pick's movement was finally arrested, Pollux still impaled on the tip, Castor feared, for a moment, that Pollux would simply be flung off by the moment. Thankfully though the jaws held, the pick, unlike the automaton, was hardly master artifice. Staring up at it's fellow automaton, impaled on the tip of it's weapon, the automaton's eye sensors blinked as it considered how to address this strange variable.

On cue, both of the cultivators holding the freezing talismans sprung into action, closing in and planting both on the burnished bronze wheels before quickly retreating. Distraction successful, Castor released the bronze jaws, Pollux pulling himself off the pick's tip with a metallic screech before dropping back to the ground and leaping out of range himself. In that same instant Geryis, who had been keeping just a sliver of her consciousness directed towards the other battle in the room, activated the talismans.

The effect was almost explosive, chilling air blast any too close to the Automaton back as ice and frost quickly crept over the treads. With a sickening grind, the Miner tried to move forward and attack one it's targets, but the treads were unresponsive, it was stuck fast. The Miner was, for the time being at least, no longer a threat. With a sigh of relief, a mixture of thankfulness that he hadn't needed to destroy one of his family's masterworks and that Pollux hadn't been too badly damaged, Castor turned his eyes to the other battle that had been taking place in the room in the meantime, and almost wished he hadn't.

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Damn it, he knew he shouldn't have trusted a report from some rookie. This beaver was easily near the peak of Foundation Establishment. Another decade or two, and it might reach Core Formation at this rate. They needed to kill this thing here, or it'd become a big enough issue that a major section of the clan's forces would need to be deployed to deal with it, and that couldn't be allowed. This damn beaver, of course, didn't particularly care how inconvenient it's existence was to the clan. Persus had been hunting Spirit Beasts for 80 years now, and he could honestly say this was one of his toughest quarries yet. His companions weren't too bad either, Geryis was excellent heavy artillery with her combination spells, and Argent's Qi needles were able to keep it somewhat disoriented, even if this thing was a terrible matchup for her. But damned if this Spirit Beast wasn't given them a run anyways. He threw himself out of the way of another high speed pillar of sand, cradling the massive bite in his side as he concentrated the bronze into his nails, charging forward to try and strike at it's haunch to try and arrest all it's movement, only to be met with a blast of air as it swung it's rudderlike tail. He needed something more then just his current backup if he wanted to do any more then keep it in check. If he could just land a crippling strike, anything to slow it down or bleed it, then he could turn the tables and bring it down.

Then, off to his right, he felt a slight blast of chill air. Persus looked over, hopeful, and sure enough, the Miner was stuck in place, pick swinging futilely at targets well out of it's range. They could count on the Miner not to join in now, at least, and tip the balance. Still, he needed a chance…

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The fight didn't look to be going well. Persus was clutching at wound in his side, and as resilient as body cultivators were even they couldn't regenerate blood at the speed he was using it. Geryis was still aloft, but all three of her bodies were sweating and panting, incantations coming out in laboured gasps. Castor didn't see Argent but well, he couldn't imagine her state was much better.

The beaver certainly hadn't emerged unscathed either. It's skin was marred with cuts and gouges, patches of burnt and frozen fur dotting it's frame. One of these baleful, glaring eyes even appeared to have been pierced by a precisely aimed fist. Still, though, none of the strikes looked grievous, and the beaver didn't look nearly as exhausted as it's opponents either.

One bow wielding cultivator, not thinking, blurted out what was nevertheless of everyone else's minds.

"They're losing."

The cultivators next to him cuffed him on the back of the head, but they all knew he was right. The Golden Devil cultivators were one wrong move away from a bad blow that would tip the scales in the beaver's favour. Still, what were they supposed to do? The fight they were watching now was in an entirely different league from the one they'd just gone through. Interfering would be tantamount to suicide.

"We've got to do something to give them a chance, anything."

"Are you kidding? If any of us got involved in that we'd die."

"If we don't step in they'll die, and then we'll just be next on the menu."

"…You're right, but what can we do? If any of us tried to attack it we'd just get in the way."

"…I don't know."

As discussion raged, Castor stood silent, mind whirling. They weren't wrong. The Miner might have been one thing, but this fight was an entirely different beast. The difference in strength was just way too big for them to even try and injure the beaver. But they still needed to do something. But there didn't seem to be anything they COULD do. Then, it hit him. They didn't need to do anything to the beaver, injuring it was simply outside their abilities. All they needed to do was give Persus, Argent or Geryis the opportunity to do the job themselves. The difference in power, in comparison with the beaver, was as much of a strength as it was a weakness in this situation, as long as he was willing to take the risk. And Castor was. It had one big weakness, something it hadn't had before, that Castor might be able to use to disrupt it.

So, Pollux in tow, Castor began to make his way towards the fighting. Slowly and deliberately, Castor approached, breathing quiet, steps light, trying to do as little as possible to make his presence known. Persus and Geryis both looked confused for a moment, he even saw a flash of anger on the Beast Hunter's face, until he saw Castor's angle of approach. It was no small risk, but still, an opening was exactly what they need, and this might provide one, however small. Persus dove in, redoubling his assault and keeping the beaver in place, attention focused on his as Geryis and Argent peppered it with spells and near-imperceptible flashes of silver. Close and closer Castor came, until, finally, he was only a meter or so away, even the blowback of the exchange forcing Castor to dig in his heels to remain in place. Then, in time with Pollux, he punched the beaver in the ruins of it's eye.

The reaction was instant. With a bark of pain, the beaver swung a paw out, smashing into Castor's chest, a purely reflexive reaction. Castor felt a crack, then a rush of air, and then…black.

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Apparently the opening he'd created had been just enough to do the job. In the same instant he'd been hurled away, Persus had struck with a punch to it's abdomen, burying his entire forearm into it's vitals as Geryis use her remaining major talisman, scorching the flesh from it's back with a massive fireball. Argent, in the meantime, had caught him before he was turned into a grease stain on the wall, something he was quite grateful for, much as it annoyed him that she'd vanished as soon as the mission was done, ostensibly to travel back to the clan compound and inform them of the mission's success.

The contribution point bonus was nice, Castor supposed, and considering how much of the beaver's body he was going to be given he was sure he'd be able to install something interesting into Pollux. For the time being, though, he certainly wouldn't be cultivating, with half the bones in his body broken and his meridians thoroughly out of balance.

On the plus side, stuck in the city as he was, he'd been given free reign to watch the resident Mechanikos work on and maintain the Under-Light Miner, which was why he was here in the first place. Something to look forward to. In the mean time, though, he was going to take a nap. Bones weren't going to heal themselves, and he needed to get done with this bedrest quickly, so he could redouble his cultivation efforts. Couldn't be falling behind.

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Would like to request a lifesaving treasure as my reward this turn, for, well, obvious reasons.
 
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Cerina Polya - Good Seed Background


Cerina Polya




Born an oddity, opening a single eye to see the beauty of the world, skin the color of pale porcelain, with hair a pale white-blond. Her parents, the midwife, everyone had little idea of what to make of tiny Cerina. How could they? They were one community among the many mortals in the lands of the Dawn Fortress. A dozen mortal families all welded together to better survive in the Beast-Raising Forest. They were of the Clan, in that way that mortals protected by the Clan are subjects of the Clan, but they did not need the great libraries or teachers that the Optimatoi possessed. Why would they want them, as people able to live simple and comfortable enough lives under the Golden Lords' aegis?

The first time she turned her head completely around to look behind herself like an owl, she startled her mother so badly the poor woman could not stand to be in her presence for an entire day, frightened of her own mutant child's oddities. However, in a display of astounding virtue and kindness by comparison to most, neither of her parents abandoned her for that or any of her other oddities. Terrified of her, frightened for her, yes. But they would not let her go. Her parents fought for her with words and the weight of old friendships and debts to convince the others of her harmlessness.

They were convinced, to a point. Cerina grew up amongst the sheep and the goats and the monkeys and every other creature that the village cared for. She particularly liked the sheep. The sheep liked her too, though they were dumb as bricks. She grew and she grew quickly, gaining a maw of sharp, strong teeth it was rumored were able to crush rocks. The community's fear grew as her stature did, and by the time she was five she towered over kids twice her age. Her and the other children spoke little, so instead she talked to the sheep. All though the sheep did not respond and did not comprehend what the little girl prattled about at any given moment of any given day, in their soft bleating and wanderings for food and exploration Cerina found answers anyway. She was very good at that, seeing things no one else did, like her dreams of the golden eye in the sky. Sometimes when she was awake she could almost trace out the pattern of stars correctly.

She told the sheep how beautiful it was all the time, how sometimes it changed, and looked this way or that. She told them how beautiful everything was, in the gaze of her single eye. She had tried to tell the other children and her parents about it, but to capture the depths of hue she saw was beyond her. How to describe the sixty hues of red in a single stone retrieved from the roots of a tree, and other such dilemmas frustrated her constantly.

When she was eight and the height of most in their late teens she had already spent several years as a shepherdess caring for any flock she could convince people to let her watch. Often in a week she would care for three or four or even five different flocks and she had gained a reputation very quickly for never losing a single beast. She always knew where they were and what they would do and what to do to keep them safe. This softened the opinion of the community towards her, but she was never a particularly welcome guest on their doorsteps, even for as bright and quiet as she was.

The most memorable incident of her eighth winter was when four wolves attacked the herd of the local village head and were set to consume them, and then her, in a frenzy of starvation. Like the melons she had crushed with her mother the day before, she shattered their skulls with her shepherd's staff with ease. Frightened by the wolves howls and rage, she was surprised when the child of the headman appeared and tried to make sure she was okay and reassure her.

She had smiled then, bright and sharp, as her fear went away and relief came in its place. His joy when he smiled back was the most beautiful thing she had ever seen. In that moment she resolved to see other people make that face, to have that joy, though she didn't know how she would achieve this seemingly insurmountable task.

She got her answer shortly after she turned ten in the Clan Year 235 of Grand Elder Konstantinos during the day of the Blood Mist and the coming of the Great Era. The words she saw that day as her family hid themselves from the blood-mad were the most terrifying thing she had ever seen, and the most fascinating. The following night she spoke with her parents, and a month of rebuilding and burial later she was on the road to the Optimatoi with a good stick in hand, good shoes on her feet, and a sturdy pack on her back.



Current Status as of the Start of Turn 16: 76 Years Old, Foundation Establishment 1-Pillar (103 Cultivation Years).

Starting Perk: The Eye of Anastasi - A single cyclopean eye takes pride of place in Cerina's face and with it her sight is unparalleled in both precision and clarity, easily perceiving both the mundane and magical. Fragments of single sentences exist in the Archives of the Clan about this strange mutation. Post-Foundation she understands this to be the common feature of all Paratiritis, and has begun to understand the history of the House of Watchers.


Additional Impact: +34 Total (Foundation Establishment 12.33)
-The Four Purifications (+13 Impact) she underwent in the First Realm have been refined through her Tribulation. The true power of the First and Second are now expressed by the creation of her Threefold River-Armored Shell and Art of Vital Function Transference transforming her into a puppet-like state and increasing her Qi network's efficiency, massively empowering her while reducing her vital points to only her Eye. The Third and Fourth in the First Realm gave her insight into the Dao-Step, the knowledge and belief to move through will and ideals alone, and now in the Second Realm she has begun the long road to refining this sublime method of movement.

-The Withering Eye (+8 Impact) is a strange power, gifted by an ancient cyclopean corpse she found in Mountain Bell lands during her first mission, which was assimilated by the Eye of Anastasi. It has two effects; the first being that she can see perfectly through her own closed eyelid. The second is that opening her eye causes things she looks at to wither and dissolve, wasting away before her gaze, making her a dangerous opponent even for those greater than herself.

-The Stolen Time Panoply is a set of three powers earned by Cerina during her time in the Yuan Man-as-Mountain Array in the 290s. They give her 13 Impact in total.
  • The first is a silver ring called the Foresighted Eye (+4 Impact) which lets her see trails of motion and constantly predict ten to fifteen seconds into the future. This ring has been implanted into the roof of her mouth, to secure it against theft and leave her fingers free for fighting.
  • The second is the Shattered Gravestone Herb (+8 Impact), which grows from her left temple as a sunflower with long and pale petals. This herb was reputedly grown at a place where time collapsed and fractured inwards and by mixing its sap with her blood Cerina may enter a state of mind that allows her to perceive and manipulate the flow of time. She may slow it down or speed it up in Qi Condensation, and in Foundation Establishment the herb lets her stop time in a space for a few subjective seconds, and in Core she expects it will let her reverse time by a second or two to heal her own wounds. She wonders if this herb has some kind of historical connection with the Heavenly Time Shatter Sect.
  • The third power is her Shattered Servant (+1 Impact). One of the spectres of the Yuan trial now serves her, its broken and mangled body much weaker than her own, but still fast and able to fight. She can summon it anywhere within her field of vision out of the twisted time she controls. Just a distraction that appears from nothing, for now, but when applied with her incredible precision and precognition it can act as a useful tool.

Cultivation Goal: The Emperor's Pillar.
Omake Goal: Tribulation Treasure.
Mission or Secret Realm Goal: Helping Rina in the Colossus Footsteps Path

Dao of the Sublime: She has faith now. A faith in the idea of enlightenment, changing the path, and the acknowledgement of that sublime moment. She believes the Moment will come again, where she might be jammed into the sublime gearing of creation and singing strings of Fate to aid the Clan. She understands this world is a prison that ought to be escaped.

Goodies
Life-Saving Treasures: One (Ironwood Sentinel Talisman)
Lifespan Enhancement: 0 Years
Tribulation Enhancements: None
Plot Coupons: None

Noting what is possible to get from the Caves
Foundation Caves Floors 14-25: 5 Impact, 35 CY, Plot Coupon
Core Caves Floors 26-40: 4 Impact, 40 CY, 2 Plot Coupons
Nascent Caves Floors 41-47: 8 Impact, 55 CY, goes to floor 75
17 Impact, 130 CY, 3 Plot Coupons


Omake Word Total: 178,188

Turn 13: 31,241 Words
Cerina Polya - Year 235, Turn 13, I - A Body (5259 Words)
Cerina Polya - Year 235, Turn 13, II - A Cell (6997 Words)
Cerina Polya - Years 240-245, Turn 13, III - A Soul (7509 Words)
Cerina Polya - Year 245, Turn 13, IV - A Corpse (8592 Words)
Cerina Polya - Years 240-245, Turn 13, Side Story 1: The Run (2884 Words)

Turn 14: 41,674 Words
Cerina Polya 5 - Year 245, Turn 14 - Parents (8443 Words)
Cerina Polya - Year 246, Turn 14, Side Story 2: In Which Cerina Fist Fights a Building (3261 Words)
Cerina Polya - Year 246, Turn 14, Side Story 3: The Three Heavenly Curses (4044 Words)
Cerina Polya 6 - Year 246, Turn 14 - The Dao-Land (6699 Words)
Cerina Polya 7 - Year 246-247, Turn 14 - The Lands of Purity (6446 Words)
Ferenike/Cerina Side Story 4: Senior Advice 2 - Assessment (5380 words split between @Insane-Not-Crazy and I. 2690 Words for me)
Rina Callista/Cerina Polya Side Story 5 - A New Silverine Bracer - Recruitment and Lessons to a new Legionnaire (5211 Words split between @Alectai and I. 2606 Words for me)
Cerina Polya Side Story 6/Katha Theodoros 23 - Dinner with a Shepherd (14970 Words, split between @Swordomatic and I. 7485 Words apiece.)

Turn 15: 31,676 Words
Ajax Tripedes 10/Cerina Polya Side Story 7 (3864 Words, split between Curious Raptor and I. 1932 apiece)
Qinglong Shu 31 And Cerina Polya Side Story 8 - Eye To Eye (5344 Words, split between ObsidianNoir and I. 2672 apiece)
Mia And Katha Theodoros 27/Cerina Polya Side Story 9 - The Parable of the Board and the Nail (8720 Words, split between Swordomatic and I. 4360 apiece)
Ajax Tripedes 14/Cerina Polya Side Story 10 (5780 Words, split between CuriousRaptor and I. 2890 apiece.)
Katha Theodoros 30/Cerina Polya Side Story 11 - The Four Bandits (6010 Words, split between Swordomatic and I. 3005 words apiece)
Cerina Polya 8 - Mountain Bell Flashback Part 1, Turn 15 - A Memory of Terrible Meetings (8514 Words)
Cerina Polya 9 - Mountain Bell Flashback Part 2, Turn 15 - The Eye and Unwanted Allies (8303 Words)

Turn 16: 73,597 Words
Cerina Polya 10 - Mountain Bell Flashback Part 3, Turn 16 - Wing Cutting (7833 Words)
Cerina Polya 12 - Year 285, Turn 16 - A New State of Home (6579 Words)
Cerina Polya 13 - Year 290, Turn 16 - A Precocious Youngster Entertains Her Elders. Yuan Part 1. (4674 Words)
Cerina Polya 14 - Year 292, Turn 16 - The Doors. Yuan Part 2. (8925 Words)
Cerina Polya 15 - Year 292, Turn 16 - The City. Yuan Part 3. (13570 Words)
Cerina Polya 16 - Year 292, Turn 16 - The Shattered Century. Yuan Part 4. (9339 Words)
Cerina Polya 17 - Year 294, Turn 16 - An Invitation They Won't Refuse
Cerina Polya 11 - Year 295, Turn 16 - Letter to Brother Gabriel (849 Words)
Gabriel Pompeius 6 and Cerina Polya Side Story 12 - Lines and Circles (7450 Words, split between MrRageQuit and I. 3725 words apiece)
Cerina Polya 18 - Year 299, Turn 16 - The Teacher's Errors
Flavius 29 and Cerina Side Story 15 Collab - The First Peak (4166 Words, split between me and Theaxofwar. 2083 words apiece)

Turn 17?
Tribulation - The Revelation of Incarceration.

Post-Foundation (Written for Turn 16 Fate)
Iskander Pallikari & Cerina Polya - Curses and Endeavors, Part 1, and Part 2 (20,200 Words, split between no. and I. 10,100 words apiece)
Apalos 1/Cerina Polya Side Story 14 - For Her Sake (ObsidianNoir and me. All words to Apalos)
Katha Theodoros 37 and Cerina Polya Side Story 16 - Lunch with a Wild Friend (11840 Words, split between Swordo and I. 5920 words apiece)
Artorius Philocrates 1- Artorius/Cerina (Shining Bright and me. All words to Artorius)
Cerina and Bao'er Collab - Precious Child Collab Link (With DragonGrimoire, all words to Bao'er)

Turn 17 Continued
Bullying Blood Path
Bug Adventures.
Interlude: Kai Lin Lang



Turn 13 Fate:
Cerina ventured far and wide into the Mountain Bell lands, and while there secured a small route for a group of allied cultivators to escape, though she never saw them. Creeping through the lands and dropping caches of Spirit Stones, her efforts were dangerous and she was almost caught by an enemy Foundation Expert, but managed to hide until he left. Her life being saved, she fled into a nearby forest, and there found a head far larger than her own, bearing a single emptied eyesocket. Yet when she neared it, a ghostly eye appeared in the socket, and flew out into her own, its power merging into her. Unconscious for nearly a week, when she awoke she discovered she could see even with her eye closed, but upon opening it, the things she stared at would weaken, wither and die. From trees to flowers, to beasts and even human beings. The stronger, the slower, but in a fight her Withering Eye (+8 Impact) made her a fearsome opponent, and one that must be killed quickly. As she left her mission, she assisted an allied Foundation Expert, staying well back in a fight but using her Eye to slowly weaken an enemy Expert enough to allow her own ally to win. For such a contribution she was rewarded greatly, given sufficient stones and cultivation resources to let her reach the 9th Heavenstage in 20 years.

Turn 14 Fate: Abel Angelus, Katha Theodoros, Armus Hekurion and Cerina Polya had set off, and had been sent into the Eternal Deep on a joint bandit-hunting mission out of goodwill for the Yuan Clan… The Yuan Parasites Mission. She gained 70 years of cultivation from the core of a long dead Seven-Stinger Nascent Wasp, taking her to the Tenth Stage. In the retreat from the Yuan mountains she found more years, many more, in the flesh of the land and ascended into the 12th Heavenstage.

Turn 15 Fate: Cerina entered the Yuan Secret Realm, seeking treasures and rewards untold. Since the advent of the Great Era, many new trials had revealed themselves, Qi empowering more and more once-unused trials and the like. The first she faced was a simple puzzle trial, one she was unable to enter due to being pushed out of the way by a hasty Sorrowful Blacksmith cultivator. She confronted him on his exit, and he challenged her to a fight. Defeating him easily, she seized the Bone-Age Herb (+10 CY), a powerful herb that helped qi sit in the bones. Secondly, a new trial had opened. One that had laid dormant for centuries if not millennia.

Entering, she was forced through a series of doors in which scenes played out before her eyes, and as she changed things in one the casuality of all others was altered. As though touching onto the past, if she failed to arrange for the correct outcome, the trial punished her, draining her lifespan. Her first gain was the Foresighted Eye (+4 Impact), a ring that when activated allowed one to see trails of movement in the air, constantly predicting the likely futures to come in the next ten or fifteen seconds. It was not infallible by any means, but few in Qi Condensation would be able to resist its capacity. The second was a far more difficult trial, in which she needed to use the power of the Eye to alter another shown timestream, constantly intervening to prevent events from collapsing, to save an entire city.

Of course, it was merely an illusion, but upon succeeding a single herb lay at the reward altar. The Shattered Gravestone Herb (+8 Impact) was a sprig of a plant reputedly grown at a place where time itself had been shattered in upon itself, and by ingesting it Cerina would be able to manipulate the flow of time, speeding it up or slowing it down. At Foundation she would be able to bring it to a halt briefly in spaces, and at Core Formation even reverse time by a second or two to repair wounds she had just taken. She left, and the people she had let die in the visions to save others came to life, and tried to kill her.

Upon defeating them, she found that a single one remained. Her Shattered Servant (+1 Impact) could be conjured through the use of her new time manipulation, able to act in the seconds where time was sped up or slowed down. While much weaker than her, it could rise from nothing and appear anywhere in her field of vision, throwing weapons off-balance or striking enemies before it dissipated into nothing to be summoned again. Its body of brick and metal and flesh has had the names of her friends inscribed onto it - and eventually it will become one of those friends.

Turn 16 Fate:
 
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Cerina Polya 1 - Year 235, Turn 13, I - A Body

Cerina Polya Year 235, Turn 13, I - A Body​



Click click.

Cerina Polya blinked the grit out of her eye, rubbing gently as she hunched against the gentle wind and pulled her hood and face wraps tighter. She'd been traveling for a few months now and it was still so pretty out here, she hated to hide herself or obscure what she could see. But the weather wasn't always conducive to that.

She grimaced. Nor were people. But they were so interesting and pretty and all of their expressions were always new and fascinating! She couldn't resist saying "Hi!" even if they got all weird about her a lot. Pausing for a moment and leaning her staff against a nearby building she reached up her arms and stretched an elbow. It'd be dawn soon, the light of the sun growing and shading the rising mountains that dominated the land to her northeast. Huge edifices rendered in purple and green and stubborn black, piercing the clouds that hid their peaks from even her eye. They had been her constant and comforting companions as she traveled.

Right now though she had just passed through the town gate and things were quiet this early in the morning, as she headed for the little waystop just down the street. She wondered what her parents would be doing right now. Tending to goats? Playing with the sheep? She hummed. Given the season the bats would probably start gathering in huge numbers to mate, so her parents might be handling them as they came in for sleep. She liked the bats, having a lot of fun watching them fly or trying to catch them in the dark when she should have been sleeping. They were also a good food source for the God-Metal Brass Shrikes of the Clan. Seeing those was always a little harrowing, but very interesting! And so pretty as their bladed wings shimmered with a dappling of rose brass and gold only she could see.

Her musings ended as she arrived at the waystop, shouldering her pack a little more securely. It was a humble little thing on the town's main road, a squat round building of two levels with the doorway shaped to funnel attackers into single file. There was a stable attached to one side, a quick glance telling her it had six animals in it. She walked up to the door and went in.

The blast of smoky air and heat made her eye begin to water and she winced, coughing. A little collection of burly men, women, and a smaller handful of others so wrapped up in travel robes she couldn't tell, were gathered in the room. A good number were around the oval shaped ring of the counter that took up the center of the common room. In the middle of the ring the waykeeper reigned, manning a grill and well as he rotated between patrons. The smell of beer was also present, from kegs under the counter. The other patrons sat in ones and twos at small tables dotted here and there. The back of the room had a stairway presumably going up to rooms and the arrow slits upstairs. There were no windows on the ground floor. Another doorway at the back to the right of the stairs seemed to go to a storeroom.

No one else in the room seemed to care about her with her unusual features covered. She cared about the people though, interested in all of their little fashion quirks and curios dangling from belts and shoulders. One man alone at a table in the corner seemed really angry and deep in his cups. Scowling and red faced and snarling at everything near him as he stabbed into slices of meat with a short skewer. She went for a seat at the counter far away from him. The waykeep walked up to her as she plopped into her seat, setting her staff against the counter.

"Ah! Newcomer," he said gently, "What can I get you?" From his expression and tells she knew he hadn't realized she was a child, probably due to her height and obscured features.

She responded, asking. "Water? I don't have much to spare. Can I wash dishes to pay it off?"

The man nodded agreeably and set a mug of water in front of her, filled from a pitcher sitting near the well. This was a normal enough deal in these sorts of places, particularly those which had been set up specifically by the Clan. Do a little work, get a little back, enough to have you carry on. "Want to fill up your skins?" The man asked, quirking one blonde brow.

Cerina shrugged. "Why not. I can wash the floor for that too before I leave," she said.

He grunted. "Good enough for me," before turning to deal with some other patrons.

She didn't need to offer to do the entire floor, this water was supplied by the will of the Lords and the well was probably magic, but she was bored of walking and needed a rest for her feet anyway. Reaching up to her hood and face wraps she started pulling them down, drinking her water down in two gulps once her mouth was free. The man came back to her and her empty mug as she finished pulling down her hood. "What brings you out this--?" He trailed off, brows climbing and mouth falling open a little in surprise.

Click, click. She blinked again, her single big blue eye fixing him in place with its stare.

"I want to be an Aspirant," she said honestly, her words and the sudden surprise of the waykeeper making everyone look up at her, quite conversations ceasing. She grimaced inside, pouting as expressions twisted into concern, confusion, bits of fear. She hated all of those feelings. But her mother had told her that no one who rejected her for who she was was worth it, and she had no desire to hide from people. It still hurt though, and she hunched up as some of the gazes became darker and meaner. She scanned the room and saw trouble approaching fast. That tall and angry drunk man she'd noticed before at that corner table was staring at her like she'd slapped him.

"I don't think I heard right. You want to be an Aspirant, freak?" He grumbled, filling the room with his disdain. He leaned towards her menacingly, half out of his chair already, with a sneer twisting his face. People huddled away from the growing confrontation.

Cerina growled back at him. "What's your problem then, sir?" She glared at him too. No one liked her glares. A hot gaze with a frowning intensity, like being pinned by a bright blue spear. This man was no different, getting even brighter red in the face as he slammed his hands on the table and stood up, approaching rapidly.

"Hey hey! Knock it off!" The waykeeper shouted as he ran out from behind the counter and reached out for the man. His hands were thrown off as he tried to grab at the angry man's arm and he was shoved hard, sending the keeper stumbling back into the counter painfully.

The angry man started shouting. "I'm not giving up my spot to a wet nosed little brat who doesn't even know to kowtow to her betters! I should beat you for the audacity!" He roared, spit flying, and then when he came in reach tried to grab her.

"No!" She yelled, slapping his hands away before he grabbed her collar and pulled her up out of her seat. Like this she realized she was almost his height, but quite a bit lighter. His breath was thick with the smell of drink and made her eye almost itch from the unpleasantness. With all of her attention on him it was easy to see the scars on his hands and arms, the callouses on his fingers and the wrinkles at the edge of his eyes. This man was old, thirties at least, and those looked like training scars.

"Come 'ere you little whelp. Let Big Shen smack some sense into you!" He raised his other meaty hand. "Go home!"

"Ugh! Fine!" She yelled back, twisting. Her fist smacked into his guts, causing him to crumple, and then she smashed her brow into his face with a thwack that filled the whole room. Blood spurted. He fell like a sack of potatoes, blood dripping down his face as his eyes rolled back into his head.

The secret she'd found to raising so many sheep and goats was a hard skull. Whenever they got uppity she could just give them a soft bonk and that was that, they fell in line. A metaphorically hard skull helped a lot too when she needed to outstubborn them. This man did not receive a soft bonk and was now bleeding from a probably broken nose. Wiping away the blood on her face she huffed and looked down at him haughtily, which she was also naturally extremely good at with her singular eye placed above her nose.

"This Polya is going to Emporikipolis and you, Shen, aren't going to stop me," she said into the frightened silence of the waystop. Shen groaned, too pained to come up with a coherent response. She sat back down with another huff and a pout, throwing her waterskins onto the counter. The people around her edged away, the clunking of chairs loud as she grumbled. The waykeeper scooped his pitcher off the counter, almost seeming to use it as a shield against the girl as he approached.

"'M ten, but so what!? Can't I be one too…" She hissed, unintelligible to the other patrons, glaring down at her empty mug. The waykeeper however, did hear her, and paled. He leaned close.

"Miss Polya, please calm down," he whispered urgently. She looked up at him, eye rolling to track him as she hunched down further. His eyes flicked to the downed man and back to her. A slight twist of his expression was parsed, and she understood. A small sick feeling gurgled in her guts.

"Let me go take this drunk to the healer," she could say more to help the man's face, but frankly she couldn't be arsed. Reaching down she grabbed him by collar and belt and slung him over both of her shoulders with a hup. He struggled weakly. "I'm coming back for those," she said with a frown as she looked back at the waykeep, a small red bruise growing on her forehead. The waykeep nodded. She turned to leave. Shen was frankly lighter than some of the big sheep she'd had to haul around sometimes, so she found his weight no trouble at all. She hoped he didn't bleed on her pack.

***​

She'd been hoofing it down the dusty road for barely a minute before luck turned against her, and a trio of nearby guards saw her and her erstwhile cargo. "Stop!" The biggest one in the lead ordered. She complied immediately, anxiety growing tighter in her chest.

"What in the Lords' names happened!?" Another demanded, ruddy from what would be a future sunburn, all three of them with hands on their swords hilts.

There was the big burly leader, a slightly portly man beside him, and the soon to be sunburnt man who was built like a stone outhouse and they all surrounded her. Looking them over quickly, their expressions were angry, confused, suspicious and a bit disgusted as they examined her. Dozens of little tells and changes in expression passing by in a moment or two all tucked away into her memory. Their armor was normal enough fare, and while they all outweighed her, they didn't seem like they were tense enough to clap her in irons right this second.

She sighed. "Drunk hit his head," she said awkwardly. Desperately hoping that her messy ball of emotions would cover her poor lie and that they would hurry up and go away. Praying hard, her stomach dropped as one of the guards looked at her with a suspicious squint. The fatter one crossed his arms. None of the trio could stop looking at either her eye or her sharp teeth.

"And what are you doing with this drunk who hit his head?" The lead questioned, tanned muscles bulging under his lamellar armor dangerously.

She hunched up. "Taking him to the healers!" She said insistently.

"Right, Marik, watch her. Make sure she does," the lead strongman said, waving her off. The sunburnt one rolled his eyes and shuffled closer to the shadows, ignoring her. Her eye turned, watching the portly man slide next to her, and he just smiled a bit menacingly. With a shudder she tried to hide under shifting the drunk's weight, she started walking again.

The people she passed looked interested, confused, and then worried as her and the guard walked by.

"A cultivator?" A man sitting by the road blinked at her in surprise.

"Look, is that a beastwoman?", one woman gossiped.

"Wonder what kind she is…" another mused.

"Someone's hurt too!" Someone said as they pointed at her cargo.

Cerina tried her best to just shut her ears off, focusing on finding a healer. Then she realized after about thirty seconds or so of walking that she had no idea where she was going. Her head turned to look over her shoulder unnaturally, causing the portly soldier to twitch in surprise. "Where are the healers?"

He shrugged. "Dunno," he said nonchalantly.

Cerina's singular brow rose to almost meet her pale hairline. Overcoming the urge to drop Shen and kick this man in the balls caused her heart to race and her teeth to grind. Then she turned with a 'haughty' huff and looked towards one of the people who looked a little more wary and concerned than the others. Maybe they would do better than this asshole and the others who just looked mean and disgusted.

She marched up to them, a fruit seller hawking their wares and stared down at him. "Where is a healer?"

The small man shivered and then looked helplessly between her and everyone else, finding everyone was studiously not looking at them. He sighed in defeat. He raised a trembling hand. "Ma'am, over there. Down the street, take a right, look for a sign with an open hand on it."

She smiled, happy for once in the past half hour. "Thanks!"

Unfortunately the man just flinched at all her sharp teeth. She tried to keep her sigh bottled up, as she turned and went as he directed. The crowds of people in all of their interesting fashions and colors and-- she was getting distracted. The crowds kept away from her as she marched to the healer's and it was a handful of minutes later when she spotted the long and low building with a sign matching the description of what she was looking for. There were characters beneath it too in a very neat hand, and while she wasn't good at reading by any means, the gist she got was something like Li Hana's Hall of Miraculous something something. Something good and useful and if she'd been sent to a brothel she might just scream.

Thankfully when she walked in, the little bell on the door ringing, the sight of a large open room with couches and cushioned benches to relax on and an age bent woman bustling about at a counter mixing a thick greenish-white-yellow herb paste dispelled that notion. Herbs hung from the ceiling and dotted the walls on shelves, some growing in pots or pressed and dried to lay in thick sheets. In the back of the room to one side of the counter a large open doorway led to a hall with beds going down either side, only two filled.

"Ah! Hello there," the old healer said as she set down what she was doing and hurried over. "What happened?" The old woman, presumably Li Hana, asked. Cerina's gaze was fixed on her. Her hair was pure white, and she had more wrinkles than skin, skin tinged the faintest by green. Lady Li was a cultivator! The hints of patina were incredibly faint, fading from a dim hue of bronze yellow to a verdigris green. Wrinkles like tree bark, her skin was marked by subtle patterns in very thin lines, patterns she could barely even see. To another person she probably just looked extremely wrinkled, with a faint yellowing to her skin.

"Drunk guy hit his head," Cerina answered, annoyance, upset, simmering anger, and confused awe all curdling in her tone. The bent old woman, having stepped close to the young girl, took a look at her and raised a brow at the slowly growing bruise on Cerina's forehead. Cerina ducked her head, pouting and wincing, trying to hide behind her long pale-white blonde hair.

The healer shrugged. "Well don't just let him hang there with all the blood rushing to his head, which I now see is bleeding onto my floor. C'mere, lay him down on this couch," Li Hana said as she guided Cerina. Together they got him laid out and the healer hissed as she checked his head wound. Shen moaned, curling around his gut, holding one hand to his broken nose and not quite conscious.

"Well, that's pretty nasty, broken too" she said as she cleaned the wound and prodded around it. His nose look half-squashed. "He definitely has a concussion. How long has he been like this?" She turned and asked Cerina bluntly. Shen gurgled something incomprehensible.

The girl considered how far the sun had moved, used to telling the time very precisely from how its light changed. "Eight minutes and a few seconds," she answered.

The healer woman didn't comment other than a thoughtful grunt, turning around and heading to her counter where she pulled something out of it. A bored sigh from the soldier, Marik, caused Cerina to roll her eye to glance at him. The bastard looked half asleep, idly scratching at his chin. But under that she could see the subtle quirk of a grin, and a nasty little twinkle in his eye. He probably wasn't done causing her trouble. Returning, the old healer held a little jar of salts and another jar of ointment. The salts she held under Shen's nose and he awoke with a flinch and a growl.

His wild gaze immediately found Cerina. "Not you! I will be an Aspirant, not you! Not you, you owl-freak! Fuck, ow!" He shrieked, stopping his squeaky tirade as Li Hana deftly pressed down near his wound as she started spreading the ointment.

"So, what happened here Feng Shen?" Marik asked, thumbs in his belt as he cleared his throat and stared at Cerina. She knew if she tried to run she was fucked.

But she also knew how this was going to go, and Shen didn't surprise her. "The little freak attacked me as I was drinking, claiming to be an Aspirant or some wet behind the ears nonsense!"

"I see." Said the healer sharply as she fixed everyone in the room with a gimlet stare. Marik grimaced, interrupted and scowling at the older woman. The wizened cultivator looked at Cerina. "So young miss, what happened?" She asked pleasantly.

"You-! Ahhgh!" Shen tried to butt in, stopped by the healer woman pressing on his wound again.

Cerina winced, then took a breath. She had to speak quickly. "I was at the waystop getting water and resting my feet when the keeper asked what I was traveling for. I said I want to be an Aspirant. Then this man objected and tried to beat me, so I hit him before he could hit me."

Marik's eyes glimmered with a callous cruelty. "Well I think that's a lie," walking closer, hand on his belt for the set of manacles there.

The freezing chill down Cerina's spine made her whimper. Her eye flicked to look for any escape route. A window was just over the couch, she could leap through that! She started edging towards it.

"Well I don't, Little Marik. I may be over a hundred years old, but I'm not bloody blind nor have sand between my ears," the healer. The woman's voice stuck Cerina in place, wobbling hope, terror and confusion bouncing around in her head. Marik froze too, paling.

Shen looked absolutely livid, and Marik not far behind. But they were silenced by the presence of this little old woman. Cerina stood there shivering before Li Hana turned to her and smiled. "You can go, little girl. Go back and get your water."

Cerina nodded rapidly and ran out of the door. Kicking up dust from the cobbles she hurried as fast as she could back through the streets towards the waystop. Unfortunately her luck turned against her again when she was about two thirds of the way there. Walking down the street she saw the same guards from before on their patrol, heading towards the healer. She ducked into a dead end alley with nothing to hide behind beside some small piles of wood, before they saw her. What was she going to do?

Um. Peeking out around the side of a shop building down the road she looked at the slow flow of people going by. She couldn't sneak out, she'd be seen really obviously! Breathing hard she pulled back around the corner and scrunched herself behind a stack of wood, pulling up her face wrap and hood. She tried to stay as still as possible in the shadows as she heard them clank closer with their boots, praying they wouldn't look down this alley.

The clanking approached, and then passed, the two men joking about Shen's misfortune. They didn't look down the alley towards her at all.

The clanking faded from hearing and her head landed in her hands. Heart thudding, she closed her eye.

Click.

She opened it again and just looked at the stones beneath her feet, trying to calm down. Each stone was hexagonal, about the size of her hand, and fit tightly so they needed no mortar. The one right between her two booted feet was a pale grey in the center, leading slowly to a darker green-grey at the edges from collected grit. Hues of yellow and white threaded through the dust and thin layer of grit, little plants and weeds, or bits of wood from the stack she crouched beside pounded into the stone by passing feet.

Texture was calming too, the stone was dotted with little pinhead sized holes, or little pockmarks where water had dripped and made the dust sticky so it piled up in little craters. More water dripped onto it and she hiccuped. She was crying. She watched a tear fall, light flickering off it to paint little prism sprays on the stone before it splashed away into nothing. Like this, she could feel her heart pumping and the sting in her eye as just another piece in the palette of 'color' all around her.

She took a breath. Click click.

It's fine, it is, I'll be okay. I just, need to...


She took a huge breath, tears stopping.

It was at about this point, with a bit of calm fighting against the panic, that Cerina realized that if she didn't hurry, that bastard Marik would probably catch up with his buddies and tell them she'd run off. No cultivator around to save her would make that so much worse. She got up, wiping at her reddened eye, and rushed back out of the alleyway at a fast walk. Cerina tightened her face wrap against the wind and ducked her head, trying to be unnoticed and unremarkable.

She would have to take the chance of going now and maybe sneaking back to the waystop and hide there, or get the waykeep to help? Blossoming paranoia forced her to check for guards again. There were none. Pulling her hood and other wrappings tight, she tried to make her long body seem as small as possible and hurried on.

***​

A few minutes later Cerina scuttled around a corner and felt a surge of relief when she saw the waystop. When she entered she heard the quiet rush of conversation pause. There were a good number of the patrons who had been here that had left. There were a few less animals in the stable too. Guess they'd cleared out?

They looked at her for a moment before going back to their own conversations and meals as she walked up to the waykeep. He was cleaning off his pitcher and looked up at her arrival. He sighed and relaxed a little. "Oh good, you made it back," he said, sounding relieved. She nodded and sat back in her old chair, her walking staff where she'd left it.

The waykeep set her full water skins and a new mug of water on to the counter. "Anyone give you trouble?" He asked. She slumped and shrugged.

"Yeah, some guards," she whispered.

The man sighed again, deeper this time, then threw his towel over his shoulder. "It'll be fine, you're safe in here," he said confidently.

Click click.

She blinked at him in confusion, hands wrapped around her mug. "I saw what happened, remember? You ain't got anything to worry about kid," he told her.

"Oh…," she said, eye downcast. She hunched up.

His eyebrows climbed up his forehead. "You didn't do anything wrong, so it'll be fine."

She almost choked up again then, but managed to keep it back and just nodded as she drank from her mug. Sitting in the smokey atmosphere she tuned everything but her still racing heart out, closing her eye and trying not to think for a little while. Many breaths later and her mug of water emptied, her heart was a bit calmer. When she looked back up and checked the room, things were calm and quiet, the murmur of conversation flowing back into her attention.

She stretched, rolling her shoulders slowly then waved at the waykeep. He walked over, "The dishes?" He asked.

"Yep!" She said. He led her through a lifting section of the counter and showed her to a basin sitting by the well with a stack of dirty dishes set next to it and then left her to it. Kneeling down she got to work, scrubbing at the dishes with a cloth and soap, pulling up water from the well when she needed it. Like that she worked for about half an hour, rubbing at her eye occasionally to scrub dust and stinging smoke out of it, before something intruded into the calm.

The three guards came through the door, clank clank clanking in their armor. The burly lead man was at the head of the trio arrayed near the door. "Julius, is that girl still here?" He asked the waykeep. They couldn't see her from where she crouched by the basin behind the counter.

Julius shrugged. "Yeah, but we can talk about this outside," he said in a hard tone. Worry spiked through Cerina. Was he going to fight them or something!? She watched him go as she sat next to the basin and flinched when the door thudded shut.

What should she do?

Her eye flicked around looking for any kind of inspiration, before landing on the door again. Scurrying back out from behind the counter she hurried to the door and pressed her ear to the gap between it and the frame.

"-- in complaining and drinking away his latest failure. I let him be while he sat at a table," she could hear Julius saying.

There was a snort from the burly guard. "What happened next? Feng Shen is convinced she came in and started a fight with him then and there, all but spitting in his face," the big man said.

"What face Tang?" Julius grumbled. "No, the girl came in all wrapped up for travel, sat down and gave me more than she needed to for some water," his voice dropped, sounding a little guilty. "I asked her what brought her here, and she said she wanted to become an Aspirant. Shen didn't like that, stormed her way, and knocked me down."

Metal clanked as someone fidgeted. Julius continued. "And then he grabbed her and tried to teach her a lesson. She headbutted him and he went down, then on her own volition went to take him to the healers."

She could hear someone sigh, probably Tang? Then there was the voice of Marik, the fat man. "Boss Tang we--!"

"Yes, we can. This isn't our problem, Marik. Let her go," the bored voice of Tang cut off his subordinate.

The giant rock of anxiety stuck in her throat dropped away and Cerina stepped away from the door, making her way slowly back to the counter. When she was almost to the counter she heard the door open, and guiltily scurried behind the counter and back to the basin. Julius joined her a moment later and gave her a nod. "They've left, you're safe," he told her.

The relief was palpable and heady as she set back to work, finishing up the dishes and then moving onto the floors with a reed broom for a few more hours. Julius offered her a breakfast of meat and bread which she took happily and after that left her to her own devices as she rested. Now with the lunch rush approaching she stared down into the basin and considered what she should do.

She was tall, long and almost stretched with how quickly she had been growing. Round faced, with her big blue eye dominating it, surrounded by a corona of white-blonde hair and a lean teen's musculature. No hints of bronze in her anywhere, her flesh porcelain-like even with all the time in the sun, but from the stories she had heard, she sometimes wondered if her hair and eye were like theirs. It certainly wasn't impossible, or even that unlikely that a given mortal would have a little Bronze Blood. But the words Julius had said about Shen, a man thrice her age failing to become an Aspirant, stuck. Doubt crawled into her skull, whispered to her that she wouldn't succeed, but she had to try.

Sighing, she finished washing her final dish and weighed her options. Between continuing as soon as she could and staying for a little bit longer when Shen might know where she was, it was an obvious choice. Before the sun peaked, she had said goodbye to Julius, settled her pack, picked up her staff from where it leaned against the counter, and went looking for a caravan to Emporikipolis.



[Word count: 5259]
[Omake Reward: Lifesaving Treasure, the nature of which is detailed in Part II - A Cell]

Heyooo @Kaboomatic @ReaderOfFate, I'm back and would like a threadmark for this one and the others following please :D
 
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Cerina Polya 2 - Year 235, Turn 13, II - A Cell

Cerina Polya Year 235, Turn 13, II - A Cell​


Click click.

Clunk clunk.
The wheels of the wagon thudded against the Scorpion Road as the spirit ox chuffed and groaned up at Cerina. She sat on its neck, quietly running her hands through its short bronze-brown fur. Each strand a slightly different hue and shade to the next, a slightly different length, all coming together to make a shimmering cloak across the beast's russet hide. If she stretched her imagination a little the shading could almost form pictures, like one might see in clouds. It was so much like the mortal oxen she had played with five months ago back home, but the colors and shapes were deeper.

A big brown eye rolled to stare at her, patterns shifting in its depths that could maybe be a forest, or maybe rocks. It was so much fun to trace them out and tuck them away into her mind for safekeeping. She laughed at its complaints about its sibling, who in turn grumbled and eyed her ride for a nipping. "Enough of that now you three!" The wagon master said lightly, tugging on their reins slightly. She waved at him, rolling back on the big beast's neck, coming to a stop standing and facing the man.

"Thanks for letting me play with them Elder Hektoen," she said with a bow. The old man, black beard thick with great and a fire scarred forehead waved her off. He had the bronze skin of the Lords, and when she'd asked about being his status as a cultivator he'd told her he was in 'Qi Condensation'. The beginning of the Path of Immortals apparently, where one awakened to the energy that existed unseen around them.

"Not a problem, little miss," he shook his head and shrugged. "How could it be when they seem to like you so much?" Hektoen waved her to the seat next to him, and with a running start she hopped the gap, landing heavily on the wooden seat, backrest briefly digging into her guts.

"Ooof!" She groaned, flopping on her side on the huge seat.

Hektoen shook his head. "Careful, I told you. Don't want you to fall off and all."

"I won't!" She promised for what must have been the fifth time today. She levered herself back up and kicked her feet. They were nearly five meters off the ground, each of the wheels on these wagons were like three times her height! Everything was so big. She'd seen cultivator wagons before a handful of times, and could never quite get over the idea of something so much bigger than her moving around so fast. The wheels and their bronze bandings were almost hypnotizing to watch turn too, flickering like they did in the sun.

She'd spent a lot of time watching them actually as she rode this caravan down the Scorpion Road towards the City she'd heard so many tales about: Emporikipolis, the Golden City, the City of Immortals. This was the place to be if you wanted to try and become an Aspirant. If you succeeded at their tests you would be accepted and taken across the Bronzewall. Hektoen had told her the caravan would stop at this place for probably a month or so. They would barter, trade and exchange goods here before heading back the way they had come. What they carried right now would go on the backs of other caravans towards the east and lands far away. The only bad thing about the caravan so far was that it was loud enough for sleep to be a little hard unless she ran herself ragged everyday. So she had bargained and begged her way into getting the wagon masters to let her play with and tend to the various animals of the caravan.

Now, in the distance their destination loomed, with the mountains of the Indomitable Peaks on the left hand and the open span of the desert on the right. The Scorpion Road descended towards it, a slight dip in the landscape the City grew out of like the bulk of some huge beast. The City's walls rose for an enormous height straight up for thousands of meters, five li high and built from perfectly cut blocks of red-brown stone. The blocks were layered in bronze like the scales of a lizard or snake, and the sparse morning dew gave everything on the walls a faint rainbow sheen. The top of the wall was dotted with towers and bunkers for siege engines and cultivators, pennants flying. Distantly she could hear bells, morning muster bells maybe?

Excitement thrummed through her like a taut wire, trying to pull her everywhere at once before she clamped down on it and sat. She stared, turning slowly to watch the passing wagons and carriages and foot traffic, the occasional cultivator racing by or strange beast galumphing past. They were all heading towards the huge iron gates which stood open in the distance, and through them she could see fields of grain and other staples. Many li inside, another smaller wall rose, guarding the inner city. It was built from white stone and red banners draped across its top. Between the two walls spanned the Scorpion Road, ferrying goods back and forth ceaselessly.

Closer to the inner wall, warehouses, trading halls, inns and tea shops, blacksmiths and a dozen other things grew to either side of the road. "Alright, time for you to get back in the wagon kid. Traffic can get a bit rowdy. We'll stop at the foot of the Inner City and then you can come back out," Hektoen intoned, slapping the door back into the wagon.

She pouted. "But there's so much to see out here!"

"You can use the windows inside to look around," Hektoen rebuffed her placidly, well used to this argument.

She groaned, flopping over again and bemoaning the injustice of the world and her fate. As it had prior, her complaints left Hektoen unmoved, and so after a solid ten minutes of whinging she gave up and scurried back inside the wagon. It was a lot like a two level building on wheels. The upper floor was split between some living space, some beds for Hektoen and his family, the remaining two thirds for storage of more delicate and lighter items. Bags and bags of them, herbs, spices, glassware and a ton of other things. The bottom floor was basically stacked top to bottom with crates and barrels of slightly less fragile things. And all of it could be accessed by the entire back of the wagon opening up in two great doors.

Cerina settled down at the foot of her bed, listening to Hektoen's family move about their day out while she dug her current book out from the bed sheets. It was an illustrated and basic recounting of the start of the Ninth Demon Annihilating War, which had begun centuries ago. She still wasn't good at reading by any means, she had had so few chances to practice, but… she loved it. The sweeps of the characters and calligraphy, the hues of the inks, the images conjured up from the minds of others and put together in hers, the stories people told and how they told them. What she read stuck with her.

Click click went the time, flying by as the wagon rumbled down the road. She split the wait between reading and gazing out the windows at the shimmering hustle and bustle, taking the time to think as she slowly and agonizingly pieced together a better understanding of the words. Sometimes she would murmur aloud to herself, other times she read silently, going back over old sections for more practice. A part of her wondered how much reading could be like cultivation, but for now she had so little idea of what cultivation even was that she had no hope of answering that question.

She was about done with the current chapter in her book when the wagon train slowed, the noise outside intensifying, and then stopped. "We're here!" Hektoen shouted, causing everyone inside his wagon to look up and start running around to grab what they wanted before heading out into the city. They'd be going off to see loves, find deals and interesting products, and generally go about relaxing. She'd be looking for a place to stay and the recruiting office. A small pang of loneliness passed through her, only to be brushed aside by the idea that if she succeeded, she'd probably be able to find Hektoen whenever she wanted. She'd be a cultivator with all sorts of incredible magic powers and stories to tell!

Setting the book she'd borrowed down on the bed she made her way back to the door to the driver's seat and stuck her head through. They were now settled in a large clear area with low walls dividing it from other clear lots, set to one side of a very large plaza. Around the plaza were several other caravan stops, most of them full of wagons and beasts of their own. Towards the wall the buildings ended abruptly, leaving an open space several hundred meters wide in front of the Inner Wall. Turning away from the view was a struggle, but she turned to Hektoen and smiled.

"Many thanks for the ride Elder!" Cerina said brightly.

Hektoen just snorted. "You know how to get to the recruitment office, little miss?" He asked her again.

She nodded. "Big building with the three towers over there," she pointed to the building in question, which rose over the other businesses and buildings of the outer city, girded with large columns in a Golden Devil Style. Hard to miss it really.

Hektoen nodded. "Off you get then," he said. "Remember, the Glorious Bass's Hall of Rest is a decent place to start looking for a mortal. They know people there at the very least."
She gave him a bow. "Thank you, I'll hope for your good luck," she said formally.

He gave her a bow back. "May Heaven not impede your path," Elder Hektoen said.

With that, she started climbing down.

"Oh! I just remembered, if you can find a guy named Marius Elgabalus, tell him I sent you. He's a friend of mine," the old man said as he leaned over the edge of the driver's seat and looked down at Cerina.

Cerina nodded. "Marius Elgabalus! I'll keep an eye out!" She said and then giggled and dropped onto the ground. "Bye!"

Now to find a place to sleep for the night.

***​

Hektoen hadn't known how old she was, but she appreciated the care and advice he'd given her anyway, as well as the money he'd paid her for tending to the animals. Without any of those three things she'd have floundered for sure and been lost in this giant heap of a city. It was packed. The sound and smells were nearly overpowering and her face hurt from staring wide eyed so much at the multi leveled buildings that surrounded her. Tiny parts of it were like her hometown or the other towns she'd passed through in miniature, little neighborhoods tucked away between massive thoroughfares and big city lights. The other parts were bewildering, and more than once she'd had to sit down and just process it all for a bit before moving on.

So, with Hektoen's advice and her money, she'd managed to find a room. Not at the Glorious Bass unfortunately, it was simply too expensive, apparently their prices had gone up as the Aspirants piled in. That was the story anyway. She had been able to cajole another place to go out of some of the patrons and sympathetic staff there. Apparently the Glorious Bass was part of a network of inns who had banded together to share profits, and one of the places even lower 'class' than the Glorious Bass had been affordable. That had landed her here in Laoshen's Hall of Serenity.

At the moment she was wrapped up in a blanket in her room, wondering about the different response she'd gotten in this City of Trials. There were still many people who looked at her weird or looked down at her or tried to ignore her out of disgust. But there were so many people here that the nice people outweighed the assholes. The entire thing left her in a good mood, relaxed and wrapped up in a blanket near the window to people watch.

She'd spent the last little while wrapped up in her cocoon on her room's single chair, looking out the window down at the night time pedestrians walking by four stories below. The streets had lamps and paper lanterns, but many people carried their own lanterns or candles as they went about their business. She'd watched five different thieves, three of them near her age, if not her height, filch things from passersby and not a single one had been caught yet. Everyone she'd seen she'd noted down in her memory, just in case she needed to avoid them. It was odd too, they really should have been caught by now. But the guards here were slow, few in number, and frankly kinda lazy? She'd sat here wondering why things were like this for a few hours before finally getting it.

The thieves were kind of playing a game. They weren't stealing pouches, boxes of unattended goods, or cornering people to mug them. Instead they were reaching sneaky little hands into pockets and pouches and boxes, and taking handfuls away as their prizes. She'd been counting, and while she couldn't see every coin or bauble taken, she'd estimate that it was both a small amount and slow in the grand scheme of things. People weren't ruined by this kind of thing. So maybe the guards just didn't care about it? Also she'd been watching one kid of ten or eleven, just like her, with a bright shock of red-brown hair and they were good. The best out right now, and not a single mark noticed a thing. It was kinda fun watching this thief in particular? She couldn't quite articulate why she found herself giggling any time she saw them pull off a successful snatch and grab.

It was after the Best Thief had pulled off their latest heist, as her eye turned away from them that she noticed something that made her tremble and her hands clench in fright. A familiar head of hair and a scowling squash nosed face on a man in his thirties she'd last seen two months ago. Feng Shen. Cerina's brain ground to a halt, sputtering as she saw him walk towards this building and then disappear under the curling edges of the stone archway sealing the entrance. Blurting out a word neither of her parents would approve of, she reached for the pack she hadn't even unpacked yet and scampered to her room's door. Ducking out, she locked the room behind her and rushed for the stairs.

Was he looking for her? Did he know she was here right now or was this just awful luck? She didn't know and she also wanted to be closer to a way out like the ground floor kitchen than trapped up in her room if he did know. Down and down the spiraling flights of stairs towards the common room. At the final stretch she crouched instinctively and slid up to the doorway into the common room, peeking past its edge. Behind her past the stairway lay the hall that led to the kitchen.

Out in the common room, Shen was standing at the front desk with not a care in the world. The room only had a few patrons in it at the moment, most were out conducting evening business or had already retired to their rooms with business guests of their own. Shen had walked directly up to the proprietor Laoshen Gon, a wiry and grey bearded man wrapped up in red robes bordered in green. It wasn't hard to hear them either.

Laoshen was speaking, looking down at something Shen was holding. "Hmm. You say you are this girl's father?"

He said what!? She though in a sudden spike of fury.

Shen smiled and nodded. "Yes! Her mother passed a few years ago and she's become willful ever since. She ran away from home seeking to become an Aspirant, before she was ready!" He lied like his tongue was blessed with only Heaven's truth and it sounded vile in Cerina's ears. She huddled deeper into the shadows of the doorway, listening.

"Hmpf. You're in luck. A girl that matches that sketch came to this inn earlier tonight. She even told me she was aiming to be an Aspirant," Laoshen said with a slightly exasperated tone and a shake of his head.

"Wonderful!" Shen said, bowing deeply to Laoshen. "Thank you for helping this father collect his wayward daughter," he smarmed. "Many favors I've had to spend to track her down. Once I am an immortal I will be sure to remember you sir Laoshen."

Laoshen snorted. "As a father, how could I not help another? Come," he said and waved to one of his sons. "Kang, take over the desk while I show this good sir to the little miss's room."

Fuck.

Cerina turned and sprinted as fast as she could towards the kitchen, boots thudding on the stone floors of this inn turned trap. "What? Wait, that's her!" She heard Shen shout behind her. She slammed through the kitchen doorway to the screams of the servants inside and bolted for the back door she'd seen the servants carry the slop out of for tossing.

"Polya! Get back here!" Shen roared behind her. Glancing back as she hit the back door with her shoulder she saw him bursting through the kitchen door. Scrambling in her pocket she came up with her large and heavy iron room key and threw it at him. It flew and smacked him directly in the face, causing him to shout in pain and reel backwards. She was already gone down the back alley, running as fast as she could.

The city's night crowd parted for her without protest, people looking at her and the commotion with confusion. By the time Shen burst out of the back of Laoshen's inn, she was already across the street and ducking around a back alley corner. His shouts echoed after her as she scrambled away frantically. She wove through the alleys of this unfamiliar city, heart thudding and lungs burning as she tried to escape from her pursuer. Unfortunately the man was hardy and athletic, for all his apparent inability to become an Aspirant, and she heard him getting closer and closer as he ran faster than she could. The clanking of boots chasing after the both of them was also getting stronger, and that might just be worse than Shen catching her, if the guards believed him.

The chase had been on for what felt like an hour, but from the change in the light she knew it had really only been about ten minutes, and now they were deep in the residential areas and tangled alleys that butt up against the fields. Cerina hoped she could hide in the fields and lose Shen in the man height stands of wheat and barley. Barely anyone was out here right now, and those who were scattered when they heard Shen calling for her and demanding she face him. He was so close.

"I knew you couldn't hide from me! Get back here so you can face your punishment!" Shen shouted from half a block behind her as he careened around a corner and spotted her.

Desperate, she jinked left and dove down an alley, leapt over the barrels in its mouth and then over the short fence which separated it from a garden courtyard. The back walls of several buildings enclosed the courtyard, each several stories tall and without anywhere to climb to. She stuck to the shadows around the edge, heading for another alley tucked into a corner on the right side of the courtyard, partially hidden by the shrubbery and small trees dominating the center.

Dashing into the alley beyond the garden, she found herself in a maze. Closed and locked doors lined the walls with little paper lanterns hung here and there beside them, casting everything into gentle gloom. Shen had stopped shouting, and she couldn't hear his heavy footsteps behind her anymore. She slowed down, straining to see anything, listening intently. Where is he? She wondered as she slid around a corner cloaked in shadows.

There was nothing, not even sounds of the guards they had left far behind by now. Turn after turn in the maze and there was nothing but the buildings on either side of her. Stopping in a T-intersection, she realized the slightly brighter lit path to her west would lead towards the fields. Carefully, as quietly as she could, she slid her way closer and closer to the brighter path, head turning back and forth to scan for any sign of him. Seeing none she shuffled down the alley, shoulders hunched fearfully.

She didn't see Shen waiting in a doorway a little way past the intersection, obscured by a colorful curtain and before she could react he'd leapt out and grabbed her. He yelled triumphantly. "Now I can finally fucking kill you!"

What.

Panic blinded her to everything but the flashing knife he pulled from his belt as he yanked Cerina closer and tried to wrap a thick arm around her throat. The knife flashed towards her face. Pure instinct drove her to bite. There was a hideous scream and a huge spurt of blood as her sharp front teeth tore into his knife arm. Struggling and twisting she slammed into him and the blow caused him to let her go, clutching his savaged arm to his other as the knife clattered onto the ground.

"Damn monster! You're going to scream for that," he growled, staring at her hatefully as he lurched towards her.

"You're disgusting!" She shouted at him, spitting out chunks of his arm and gagging as she backed away down the alley.

With a yell he lunged, and kicked her in the stomach. His next blow she caught on her arm, and the third smacked her in the temple, sending her stumbling down the alleyway as her head rang like a bell. Desperate, she caught his next strike in both hands and kicked for his balls, only to have her foot deflected by his thigh and as she overbalanced he tried to tip her to the ground.

Terrorized fury and desperation not to be thrown to the ground and then killed gave her a strength she shouldn't have had and his arm suddenly cracked as she yanked it hard. Pulling him close as he shrieked in pain she slammed the top of her head straight into his nose, shattering it again. He fell, moaning and coughing on his own blood.

Panting, tears leaking from her eye Cerina backed away from him down the alley. He laid there, whimpering and clutching at his injuries. "Stay away from me. Stay away, and don't come back," she begged as she backed up further and further. Not waiting to see if he would get back up, she turned and ran down the alley, heading back towards the light and sound of the city and as far away from him as she could.

Blinded by fright and tears and the star-bright pain of a headache, she couldn't dodge the guards she nearly ran into. Iron strong gauntleted hands clamped around her arms and she froze up in shock.

"Hey! I found her! The girl's right here!" A harsh voice shouted, unintelligible shouts from what must have been other guards answering. "Sorry girl but you're going to need to come with us," the harsh voice said.

Click click. Her vision cleared, revealing what must have been just a boy, a few years older than her, with thinly freckled and tanned skin. His expression was pitiless and hard and as cold as the manacles she felt clamp around her wrists. A hole opened in her stomach and she felt all of her frantic energy just bleed out of it entirely.

"No! No please! Don't put me in there with him! Please don't!" she babbled, struggling wildly against the guard before suddenly a massive wave of pain slammed into her head and she lost consciousness.

***​

She blinked in and out of awareness during the trip to the Legion dungeons, a few times anyway. When she came to properly, it was as she landed heavily on the straw strewn floor of her cell. Breathing hard and head throbbing, the terrified ten year old struggled to make sense of what was going on. Why was she in here? Did… did they believe him and his lies?

She whimpered, covering her head with her manacled hands as she curled up against the wall. Eye screwed shut tight, she tried to think of what to do through the swirling panic, and failed miserably. She had nothing to go on and nothing she could do. This was the Legion, the very same people she'd wanted to join. And they thought she was the wayward daughter of some jealous madman.

Cerina sat there in her cell, misery pulling her deeper and deeper for who knows how long. There was no light in the cell other than the lamps hung up in the hall outside. She thought she might have been underground. Nothing moved down here but her harsh breaths and the lamp flames, until the clank clank of boots echoed down the hall of cells. She looked up, the dimness not impeding her as she watched two guards stop in front of her cell. One was short and wizened with wrinkles, holding an oil lamp in one veiny and liver spotted hand. He ignored her, nodding at his companion.

"Here you are sir, the girl," the old man said with a strong and surprisingly deep voice for his small stature.

The other man nodded. He had skin of bronze, no patina visible anywhere on him, clean shaven and with hair rather similar to her own. The shades were not the same, hers was even lighter, almost like the snow on the mountain slopes, while his hair was more brassy. His eyes were a blue several shades darker than hers. He stood in his lamellar Legion armor like it was a second skin and the rank insignia on his shoulders marked him as a Centurion.

"Thank you Meng, you may go," the cultivator intoned calmly.

The old man saluted and bowed. "Yes sir," he said as he straightened and then shuffled away.

The cultivator looked her over, and sighed quietly. "Alright. I have some questions."

Of course he did. Her view was wobbling, she was shivering so hard she felt like she'd fly apart as she stood up and faced him.

"What is your name?" He asked her.

She gulped. "Cerina Polya, sir," she somehow managed to answer clearly, some instinct guiding her.

"Where are you from?" He asked.

"Three-Streams Gulch in the Beast Forest, sir" she recited the name of the little town she'd called home for most of her life.

He huffed and nodded, a thoughtful look passing over his face. "Why are you here?"

She shuddered. This question had brought her nothing but trouble it seemed. But that didn't cause her voice to waver. "To become an Aspirant, sir."

She slumped, looking down at her feet. "I just want to join the Legions."

His voice was softer. "Ah. I see. How did you meet that man?" He asked slowly, weighing his words carefully.

She sighed, propping herself up and gingerly moving along the wall closer to him. She was nearly as tall as this man, who was a few hands shorter than two meters himself, so she was able to stare him dead in the eyes. "That bastard attacked me in this little waytown two months by caravan west of here."

She had to get her side out or all of her hopes were just going to go up in smoke. She grabbed the bars, manacles clanging against them as she kept going. "I'd just stopped into this, little safe waystop to get some water. Just water! A-and when I told the waykeep, Julius, what I was doing there he, Feng Shen," she his name tasted like rot. "Tried to beat me for 'taking his spot' as an Aspirant."

She shook her head, looking at the guard Centurion plaintively. "Was he captured too?" She asked.

The guard nodded. "He was alive, and wounded. You're doing I presume?" The man asked, gesturing at her chin.

She looked down and flinched, retching as she realized she still had Shen's blood all over her chin. Frantically she scraped at it with her hands and her clothing, most of it flaking off. She heard the clanking of guard boots as she scrubbed harder at her face.

"Here, water and some soap," the man said, holding a small bowl of foamy water through the bars. Cerina snatched it gratefully and almost dumped the entire thing over her face, scrubbing at the blood till most of it came loose. She was even able to get most of the stuff on her teeth off too, and her mouth stopped tasting mostly of blood.

"Right," the guard said as she slowed down her frantic scrubbing. "Where were we?"

She twitched, then took a breath, and started laying out the rest of her story up to the point she'd been tossed into this cell. When she mentioned Hektoen, the immortal's eyebrow rose and a flash of recognition passed over his features. Cerina latched onto that faint hope, pulling herself against the bars and looking at him intently. "Do you know him? He told me to look for a man named Marius Elgabalus. Do you know that man?"

The man's other brow rose, both soaring for his hairline. "... that's my name, miss Polya," he said, amused.

Click click.

"Huh?" She blurted, shock overriding everything that had happened in the past fifteen minutes.

He chuckled a little. "How odd, Fate," he muttered, then shook his head. "Yes, I'm a friend of Hektoen. He sent you to find me, if you wanted to join the Legions?" He asked her.

She nodded.

"Hmm. Interesting. We can come back to that, after this," he said.

She sighed, rubbing her temple against the bars to soothe the headache she still had.

"What happened after you came here with Hektoen?" Marius asked her.

"I found this place called Laoshen's Hall of Serenity, to stay in for the night with some of the money I'd been paid by Hektoen. For taking care of the animals. Anyway, I was -- well, people watching?" She said hesitantly, suddenly unsure whether mentioning the thieves was a good idea.

Marius waved his hand for her to go on. Steeling herself, she bulled forward. "They were, um, thieves? Thieves out on the street in front of Laoshen's that I was watching from my room and that's how I noticed Shen. I ran away after I went down and spied on him and Laoshen talking about me. He chased me down," and now the panic was coming back three-fold as she remembered what he'd said.

"He said he wanted to kill me, when he caught me," she murmured.

Marius sighed, coming a little closer and leaning down to look her in the eye as she hunched around the pain and nausea in her gut. "I think we can stop this here, okay. I've already talked to this Feng Shen, and frankly the man was raving. Mad, almost certainly. And I don't forget faces easily,"

She looked up at him, a little confused. "Have you…? Seen him before?" she asked.

Marius nodded. "I believe I have, in previous entry tests for Aspirants. He failed all of them rather miserably. Now, that brings us to your desires."

He crossed his arms and stared her down. "You want to be an Aspirant?" He demanded.

She gaped at him. Was… was this actually happening?

"Am… am I not in trouble?" She could scarcely believe that something else wasn't going to drop on her head all of a sudden.

He shrugged. "No. His story leaks like a broken sieve, and frankly, he's a horrid piece of work,"

Cerina collapsed against the bars, shuddering. "Thank you," she whispered to Marius.

He smiled, a tiny quirk on an otherwise stiff face. It made his eyes twinkle. "You're welcome."

She took a deep breath, steeled herself and then met Marius' eyes. "I want to be an Aspirant," she said with as much weight as she could muster.

"How old are you?" The man asked.

Um. Well lying would get her nowhere, she was pretty sure, given her track record.

"...ten, almost eleven…" she said.

His eyebrow raised.

"I'm ten! Okay!?" She shouted at him, huddling down as tightly as she could against the bars.

There was a snort, and then a chuckle. "Okay then!" He said, waving his hands. She pouted at him. His chuckles turned back into a snort and shake of his head. "Hmm, well that'd make you too young to become an Aspirant proper," He said, crushing her dreams in a single swoop.

No, no no no. What was the point if she was too young!? What was-

"Wait! You can still become an Aspirant later," he told her, raising a hand to forestall her protests and confusion.

"It's a good thing because it means you can get put into a training program. Can you read?" He asked.

She winced. "Um… I can read okay? My parents taught me," She hedged.

"This place would teach you how to read well, and train you. It might well give you as many books as you can stomach," he said.

Wow, okay, that sounded awesome. Her worries were evaporating the more Marius spoke. He gestured expansively. "The way it works is that Aspirants are mostly those in their late teens or early twenties who we can put through rigorous physical training to prepare them for Qi Awakening and Blood Infusion. You're far too young for that kind of thing, even with your impressive strength," that made her feel all warm and fuzzy. Most people were a bit freaked out by how big she was at only ten.

"And thus you are too young to technically be an Aspirant proper. However, a Legionnaire needs to know how to read, and do a number of other things in order to do their duties. I can put you into training for these things and then when you're older you can attempt Qi Awakening as an Aspirant."

As Marius had continued Cerina had gotten more and more wide eyed, heart soaring, thudding in her ears like a trapped bird. This was actually happening.

This was actually happening!?

"Why?" She blurted at him, utterly confused and elated.

He huffed, raising a hand, ticking off points on his fingers as he spoke. "You were determined and resourceful enough to travel all the way from the Beast-Raising Forest at ten, you clearly have some talents in fighting, Hektoen recommended you," Marius rubbed his chin before raising the fourth finger. "And I have a hunch, which has rarely led me astray," he finished.

She gulped. That was… yeah, she could see where he was coming from.

"So what now?" She queried.

He reached down to the key ring at his belt and then unlocked her door, ushering her out. She shivered in relief as she stepped out of her cell. "Well we get you sorted out for a place to stay, and then lessons begin," he answered. "You said you had parents?"

She nodded.

"We can send letters to them, and once you become an Aspirant proper, the Clan will send them a stipend in compensation," he informed her. "You'll have a small debt to pay off for the tutelage prior to being an Aspirant, but for an immortal it is not much.," he finished.

"Just like that?" She said, doubt gnawing at the back of her mind.

He looked at her, pausing. He considered her for a long moment.

"You know what, let's run a little test," he said confidently. He raised another key in his hands. "This is the key to your manacles. I don't think I need to use it," he said.

Surprised, she looked down at her manacles, then back up at him. Was he…? His steady stare convinced her she was right. He wanted her to break out of her manacles herself. The chain between them was thin, only a few millimeters in thickness, and the material of the welds fixing each link together was even thinner. It… might be possible? One of her more ornery big rams might be able to break it. But... A sudden blot of suspicion crawled up her throat.

"I'm not going to get in trouble for this?" She asked him, glaring at him a little, uneasy.

He gave her that little smile again as he gestured to the hall they stood in. "None, I'll even leave the path to the door open," he said as he stepped to the side, leaving the path to the stairway up clear for her to bolt past him. Though a part of her whispered she still probably wasn't fast enough to actually get past him, it was enough for her to give this a try.

She hated the cold iron things on her wrists, so destroying them sounded kinda fun anyway. Looked down and furrowing her brow in concentration, Cerina carefully wrapped her hands around the middle of the chain of her shackles and gripped them tightly. With a deep breath she began to pull. Muscles strained, and veins bulged all along her arms as she concentrated as much as she could on pulling the life out of this blasted set of chains! It didn't budge, seconds ticking by as her nerves tried to rise.

She stopped, panting, then set her feet and steadied her breath before trying again. Harder and harder she pulled, veins standing out on her head around her eye, and all over her body as she growled and strained white knuckled against the iron. Everything else fell away; no more Marius, no more dungeon, no more light, no more nervousness or anything else but her and the single weakest link of this stupid chain. Energy seemed to buzz through her arms.

Hands wrapped on either side of it, she watched the black-grey of the iron beginning to fail and become silvery as it stretched. Her efforts redoubled at this sign of her success, energy and breath buzzing through her, and the chain groaned, the sound rising quietly in the silent hall. One more deep breath and she tried one more enormous pull. With a sharp ping the weakest link separated, all of the tension releasing as one half of the chain slipped free from the other, leaving the broken link dangling limply from the other half.

Marius chuckled again. "Yeah, you'll do," he said, amusement warming his tone.

She just blinked down at the wreckage of her bindings. She wasn't even a cultivator! Shocked at this, she twitched when Marius snapped his fingers to get her attention. "Qi seems to act a little unusually around you. Not quite being used, but… interesting," He said. She didn't understand what he meant but it worked well enough for now.

With that said, he reached down to a pouch on his hip and pulled out some kind of bark strip, marked with characters on the inside. It still looked fresh. "Here kid. Take this Ironbark of the Sentinel Tree, in return for all the trouble you've faced," he told her.

She looked down at it, intrigued by the depths of the whorls of wood grain and color in the hand sized section of peeled bark. Was it magical in some way? Usually only magical things had this depth to them. "What is it?" She asked as she took it from the Centurion.

"Its a piece of bark from a magical tree that grows in the Tall Wheat Fields. Break it, or have it be broken by an attack, and you'll be surrounded by a sphere of ironwood that flies through the air to carry you two hundred li closer to the Sentinel Tree it came from," he explained.

She was holding an actual treasure from a cultivator. Trembling, she gave Marius as deep a bow as she could. "Thank you Lord Elgabalus. I…," what little formal manners she had failed her as she looked down at the bark in her hands. She straightened, holding onto it tightly.

He nodded. "You are welcome," he gestured for her to follow. "Come, we have a lot to do," he said encouragingly. Hopeful, she followed after him up the stairs and out of the dungeon.



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Cerina Polya 3 - Years 240-245, Turn 13, III - A Soul

Cerina Polya Years 240-245, Turn 13, III - A Soul​


The sun beat down as Cerina walked to the wagon parked in the recruitment building's courtyard, book under her arm. She was in a crowd of other potential Aspirants, but she towered over them, having crested well over two meters tall after her recent seventeenth birthday. She was still thin and gangly, her frame only starting to fill out with lithe muscle. Her hair had gotten lighter too, an even paler white-gold now.

"Class three, load up!" Instructor Jun called, waving Cerina's group towards the Clan wagon. Cerina hurried aboard, leaping up to the back and then reaching down to help her classmates board quicker.

"Polya! Cerina!" Her friend called from inside the wagon when the last person hopped on and she climbed up herself. Zhao Hana was already in the wagon, sat near the front, her class having been called to load up earlier. There were fifty trainees all together, and Cerina was thankful once again for the scale cultivators built at giving them all foot and headroom. After she turned twelve she had become cursed with a nasty habit of smacking her head on doorways in buildings not built by cultivators. She plopped down next to Hana, stretching out her legs as she leaned against the side of the wagon. With another call from the instructor the wagon was closed up and with a loud snort from the spirit ox at the front, they set off.

"So! So so so, Cerina. You excited?" Hana chattered next to her, the girl flipping her thick red-brown hair, green eyes inquisitive. Cerina nodded rapidly. Similar conversations were starting up all along the wagon as people chatted with their own friends.

"I wonder what it'll look like! I've seen art and illustrations and a bunch of other things but I want to see it Hana." Cerina exclaimed.

"I know, I know," Hana said, laughing, "I wonder what kind of books we'll be allowed to read while training?" She asked. They'd both met about a month after Cerina met Marius, after Hana nearly tripped over Cerina in the school's archives, leading to a two way apology fest and Hana running away in embarrassment.

Cerina shrugged, setting her book on her lap. It was a small volume depicting artwork of Legionnaires. "I'm not sure?" Cerina started listing off possibilities, "Training manuals, treatises on war, lists of Legions, works by Great Scribe Tisamenos, poetry on the secrets of the world, geography…"

Hana huffed. "Those are all important, but also expected, I think?" She rubbed her chin. Her face lit up. "Want to guess what else they might have in there?"

Cerina smiled and leaned over. "Bet they have a bunch of lewd romances," she whispered to Hana.

Her friend went bright red and slapped her on the back of the head. "Cerina! Cerina, ugh!"

Cerina leaned away, laughing and fighting off her friend's strikes. Hana did always have a weakness for great tawdry epics. After a few moments of venting her embarrassment, Hana stopped and huffed. "No more of that, you," she said sternly.

Cerina just giggled. A glance around and she saw they had a pocket of privacy around them on the benches. That suited her just fine. "Okay, okay. More seriously my first guess is," she began as she leaned against the bench back, "I think they will have a lot of stuff on historic songs, not all of it is going to be mysterious koans meant to make trainee's brains hurt," she said.

Hana loved poems and songs and calligraphy, while Cerina liked art and illustrations and illuminated manuscripts more. Their second, much better meeting had happened over an artbook Hana was looking for for an assignment, which Cerina had been reading.

"I hope so," Hana said. "What's your second guess though? For real?"

Cerina hummed in thought. Something unusual. "Hmmm… poems on clock making," she answered.

Hana raised an eyebrow. "Clock making poems? Really?"

Cerina nodded. "See, its kind of like arrays. They're so good at arrays and magic, which need so many intricate details all working together correctly. So interest in clocks makes sense, don't you think?"

"Huh. Okay, I'll accept that," Hana said with an impressed look on her face as she rubbed her chin. She raised her finger. "I'll do two as well. I think that they are going to have art books on baking," Cerina raised her eyebrow as Hana kept going, gesturing grandly. "Art books with no words you see, full of baking recipes."

Cerina crossed her arms. "How do you figure that?"

Hana shrugged. "Cultivators need pills and drugs made in furnaces. A furnace isn't very far from an oven. Now the reason it'd be in art is that immortals are weird and this particular one was made by a really old and eccentric cook who didn't want his recipes stolen by the unworthy. Simple as that."

Cerina snorted. "Alright, okay that does make some sense," she said with a chuckle.

Hana smiled. "And for my second guess, I think they have books about you."

Click click. Cerina blinked in surprise, then leaned closer in excitement. "Really? You think so?"

Hana nodded, smile softer. It had been a topic of interest for both of them for years now. "I do. Not sure how much. You're the only person I've ever heard of who looks like you do, but they know so much and have traveled all over the Sea. So they've probably heard something right?"

Cerina nodded, considering that. "Yeah, that makes sense. I hope you're right."

She leaned back in thought, as they both lapsed into comfortable silence, eye on the windows set into the wagon's walls. Castles and dragons and sheep and marching armies formed and whirled in the clouds, only to disappear with the next shift of the wind.

Several minutes later Hana prodded her again. "Hey, did your parents' response arrive yet?" She asked.

Cerina smiled as she stretched upright. "Yeah! Here, let me…," she said as she dug around in her clothing and pack before pulling out a neatly folded and stamped letter. "Read it together?" She said as she scooted next to Hana and started unfolding the letter. Hana leaned against her shoulder.

Most of it was about the general trials and rewards of life in the Beast-Raising Forest, as well as amusing anecdotes. The biggest being that apparently someone had gotten into the firework stock and decided it would be fun to light one while riding an ox. They had ended up carried all around town and then rudely deposited into a mudpit by the irate beast, the lady they were trying to impress amused by their misfortune. At the end however, there was something Cerina had been looking forward to with trepidation and excitement.

… The village is growing quite happily. The renovations to the meeting hall have completed, and your contributions have helped much, our wonderful daughter.

You have worked so hard for us these past few years between school and jobs to send money back home, thank you.

We love you and pray for you and your friend's success in the trials to come.


Cerina hugged the letter to her chest. Hana sighed as leaned her head on Cerina's shoulder. "Are you gonna go back the minute you Awaken?" She asked.

Cerina was tempted to agree immediately. She really wanted to, but… a sense of something, duty maybe, pulled her away. "Cerina?" Hana asked, looking up at her.

"I'm going to try," she finally answered. Her family was important to her. The village too, she realized, a sharp homesickness poking through her heart.

Hana straightened and stretched. "Well, that's that then, you stubborn goat."

"Of course!" Cerina said, smiling at the 'insult'.

Hana shook her head ruefully, and then joined Cerina in looking out of the window. The two of them started chattering excitedly about the scenery to pass the time. The hours-long ride to reach the pass went both too quickly and took far too long for Cerina's liking, excitement becoming foot tapping nerves as they got closer and closer to the Bronzewall. It affected the other trainees too, their excited babbling rising as they arrived at the mountains and groups of them started to crowd the windows.

Within the pass the road became a thin causeway and to either side the land dipped away into ravines full of sharp rock and broken rubble, a forest of rocky spikes growing up from it. Many li away, rock walls and cliffs reaching for the Heavens flowed past them smoothly as their wagon raced along. This terrain forced the road to wind like a snake and obscured the view ahead.

But, after about an hour more along this dangerous causeway, the rocky spikes began to part, and revealed a rocky plateau. Atop that plateau the tower Ypopsifios was a great black spar. It looked like a natural spire of the Peaks that had been commanded to grow into a more pleasing and smooth shape before being clad in bronze armor and bristling weapons. She could see people moving about on the platforms and weapons emplacements that dotted its exterior wall. At its base were smaller buildings, supporting structures for staff and auxiliaries, all enclosed in a small wall.

A little further along another plateau rose to her left, and rising from it was Epitiritis Tower, older and rougher, though not smaller than Ypopsifios. And it was hewn, in comparison to the East Tower, she could see the marks of old tools and ancient hands that had carved it from the grey-white spires and cliffs that clung around its base like children around their mother's skirts. Grey and white encased in spirit bronze, she could almost imagine a haze around it from the sheer Qi invested into its stones, the spell-arrays and formations that textured the bronze cladding.

Beyond the Two Towers another edifice slowly rose into view, bronze mixed with reds and brassy tones. Bronze mixed with blood. It felt like something was watching her, some great weight pressing on her mind from outside the wagon. Her anxiety bled away in the face of a burning curiosity, her eye dancing over every section of the Bronzewall she could glimpse as they wound their way through the forest of spires. The other trainees were whispering now, awed at the sight. She paid no attention to them as they rolled forward inexorably.

When they stopped she was the first out, stepping down to the plaza before the Wall, clinging to the back of the wagon. The Bronzewall soared for several li into the sky, a shining expanse of solid bronze. She didn't understand how it could have been built at all, like some massive god had reached down and simply laid down a line of metal which was then polished until the sun's reflection was nearly blinding. She squinted against the glare. Patterns emerged as she looked at the swirling colors within its surface, tracing the arrays that were pressed into it. It looked almost molten in the sunlight, folded over and over on top of itself again and again millions of times. An accretion of power built up over thousands of years, and the colors of the sun reflected off the wall filled her mind.

"Cerina!" Hana whispered desperately, tugging on her elbow and pulling Cerina out of the trance she had fallen into. Blinking, Cerina tore her focus away from the glory and hurriedly joined the rush of trainees exiting the wagon. Looking around almost hurt as she fought through a headache from the reflected brightness, and spotted class three lining up. She thanked her fortune that she wasn't the last one of the class to line up, she didn't want the stink eye from her teachers on the first day.

She stood at her best parade rest, which was surprisingly good for someone with no training in proper parade rest, staring down at the plaza stones to avoid the Wall's glare. Out of the corner of her eye she glanced at the two people who had come to meet them, both women of the Clan. The one on the left was an absurd looking figure near Cerina's height, with a massive and complicated arrangement of lenses and eyepieces set over her face like a helmet, clad in the formal toga of the Clan. The one on the right was of a more normal height and clad in legion lamellar, helmet on her head. Ash seemed to drip from her constantly, particularly from the sword that rested on her hip and the black plume on her helmet. There was a basket at their feet.

The one on the left spoke. "Well, far too slow. Far, far too slow," she cackled. "This crop of sprouts definitely needs discipline, Instructor Agatha," she said to her companion mockingly.

Instructor Agatha snorted. "They always do Instructor Vasso, and it gets worse every year," she said, voice resonant and crisp, as she shook her head ruefully. The crowd of teenagers tensed, some beginning to whisper.

"Silence," Agatha said. The whispers died, choking in terror at her tone. Cerina felt a little of that, but the weight of the Bronzewall and the weight of these two women who must be Experts fascinated her. There was no space in her brain for entirely reasonable fear.

Vasso laughed, lenses glinting. "Well at least they can listen!" She shook her head and then stepped forward. "Pay attention you babies!" She reached into her toga and pulled out an amulet; a long heavy chain with a sun-like disk hanging from it. "These are Wall-Crossing Tokens. Each one of you will receive one! Do not lose it! If you do, the Wall will kill you!"

The crowd of children in front of her paled even further. Cerina heard someone behind her trying not to hyperventilate.

"Now! Agatha and I will distribute your Tokens," Vasso said, turning to Agatha.

The women both bent to the large basket and then in a flurry of motion fifty tokens were picked up and thrown from it, and before Cerina could react one landed around her neck. It flashed dimly. Yelps of surprise exploded from the crowd as people tried and failed to instinctively dodge the flying jewelry. A wave of exclamations and distracted muttering followed.

Cerina was not distracted like others, still watching Agatha intently. The other woman clapped and a sound like a house sized gong rang out over the trainees, silencing them and half deafening them. Menace bled off the woman as she set her hands on her hips. "You will follow us through the Bronzewall, you will do as we say, and anyone who disobeys today will be flogged five times. Am I clear?"

Cerina was the first one to respond. "Yes ma'am!" With the other trainees following a half beat behind her. Vasso looked at the girl sharply, the weight of her attention and approval wrapping around Cerina's head like a vise. A sharp toothed smile spread Vasso's lips briefly, before it and the pressure disappeared as she looked away.

Agatha snorted. "Pitiful. Do it from the chest! Again!"

"YES MA'AM!" The teens screamed in mixed terror, awe and confusion.

Both of the instructors laughed.

"Well then!" Agatha shouted. "Welcome, you hopeless whelps, to the first day of the most awful years of your life!"

***​

Three months later and Agatha's words still rang through Cerina's mind as she hefted a small rock in one hand. A basket of more rocks was in her other arm. She was standing behind a folding screen, on the other side of which were the other trainees, seated in meditative postures, many tense in anticipation. Standing next to her was another girl named Zoe Sarkiadi, stocky and with her black hair bound up with a red ribbon.

On the other side of the screen, Vasso clapped. "Alright you weak hearted babies! Those seated will close their eyes and meditate. You will not stop until we say so, am I understood?"

"Yes ma'am!" They all shouted.

"Begin!" Vasso ordered.

Agatha stepped up behind Cerina and Sarkiadi, leaning in to whisper to the two girls. "Your orders are simple. Throw rocks at them without hitting them. I want them distracted and scared out of their wits. Got me?" She growled.

"Yes ma'am!" They squeaked, and hurried out from behind the screen to the other trainees. Cerina paused for just a moment to examine them; there were forty three including her and Sarkiadi. Some hadn't been able to handle the pressure already. Weighing the rock in her hand, she had a sinking suspicion that more would be leaving before the end of this.

Cerina threw her rock, aim impeccable as she flung it past one of the trainee's ears. The boy twitched and yelped, almost tipping over in surprise, staying in place through force of will. The other trainees also jerked, many cutting off aborted attempts to look.

Sarkiadi threw her rock at a muscle-bound boy, Hao Papati, and he flinched as it soared over his shoulder. The bullish boy had been tense like a wire for the past week as the pressure mounted, argumentative and surly with everyone. He snapped and exploded to his feet, face purpling with rage and eyes blazing.

"What the fuck!?" He shouted at Sarkiadi. She flinched, holding up her basket defensively. Cerina could see the other trainees twitching again.

"Bye," Vasso said from behind the angry boy. A flick of her hand flung him away in a blast of wind. Cerina watched him tumble and then land on the dirt of the training yard, hard enough to bruise but not break bones.

"Trainee Papati will be sent home," Vasso said with a droll tone. A chill passed over the trainees as they realized their places as Aspirants were at stake here. Sarkiadi and Cerina shared a panicked look.

Their next tosses were shaky and only landed roughly near their targets. Quickly, the two girls adjusted, rocks flying rapidly from their baskets. With each whistling projectile and loud clatter, the line of trainees flinched. Hana was still holding out, thankfully. Cerina knew who Sarkiadi's friends were, so she avoided throwing rocks at them. Sarkiadi picked up quickly on what she was doing, and in a moment of shared looks and subtle head tilts, they made a quiet agreement not to throw at each other's friends.

No one was getting up yet. The fear of being sent home was holding them all down, as each rock and each clank of the instructors' footfalls ratcheted the tension higher. Vasso slid up next to Cerina, nearly causing her to jump out of her skin. "Pick up the rocks you toss," she ordered very quietly before retreating to the edge of the training yard. Surrounding the yard were a ring of gongs, and after inspecting them Vasso raised a mallet and struck one.

A hideous clatter and roar filled the training yard, the sound of tortured metal plunging inside their ears and disturbing the rhythms of their breathing. It climbed in pitch till it was almost painful, and then began to fade. Before it could mercifully end, Vasso struck another gong, this one creating a different horrific screech. As the gongs continued to ring Cerina felt a horrible and unnatural fear climbing in her guts. She swallowed down her nausea and kept going.

That became the new pattern for the next twenty minutes. Some of the trainees were trembling and sweating now, Hana among them as Cerina's rocks sailed past her head and body. Guilt that she couldn't help her friend gurgled sickly in Cerina's guts. Vasso's cold bronze hand landed on her shoulder. "More Trainee," she ordered, clearly audible somehow through the cacophony. She leaned down and looked Cerina in the eye. "Faster."

Then she was gone, leaving Cerina trembling. A quick glance around showed her that Sarkiadi was not any better off, looking pale as she gripped a rock tight. The trainees nearby were shivering, some panting from the effort of staying still. Cerina knuckled down and tried her best. The fear of failure ate at her, driving the tempo of her throws faster and faster to match the tempo of the gongs.

At least they were more reliable than bows… she thought sardonically. She wouldn't be able to do this if she was using a bow, she hated the things. With a rock, she found it much easier to get the precision she thought she needed to satisfy their devilish instructors. She could feel their eyes boring into her back with every throw she made.

But something had to give eventually. One of Sarkiadi's throws passed too close to a thin boy with a shock of blonde hair, his green eyes snapping open as he flinched away from the rock that clipped his ear, nearly falling over. Hyperventilating, eyes wild, he got up and ran away back to the barracks at the far end of the training field. Sarkiadi froze. Cerina's heart stuttered in shared fear. Agatha appeared next to Sarkiadi and told her something that made the other girl's face screw up in disgust.

"Trainee Su will be sent home," Agatha said as she walked away. Her words hung over the trainees for a moment that seemed to stretch longer and longer, until like a dam breaking another trainee flinched and fled the field.

After that over the next hour more names were called out. Some of them fell and then ran, some crawled away in shame, others burst out angrily like that first boy only to be tossed aside by the magical winds. By the end of it, twelve people had failed and were being sent home. Blessedly, when the hour ended, the gongs fell silent and Cerina and Sarkiadi were told to stop, the test now finished.

The remaining twenty eight trainees were sweat soaked and twitchy as they filed back into the barracks, many snapping at friends, and voices tense as they tried to settle back down. Cerina sat herself near a window looking out over the Tall Wheat Fields that surrounded their little training compound's walls. The fields nearby were like a sea of gold, thick sheaves of wheat crowning stalks as tall as her.

Further in there were rumored to be stalks three times the height of a man, almost small trees in their own right, and that the plants might be somewhat aware and liable to eat the unwarry. She let herself wind down by imagining what that 'forest' of wheat might look like.

Hana slowly approached, sliding in and sitting down next to Cerina. The other girl was quiet for a moment, letting Cerina come back from her imagination. Cerina turned to look at her friend. "Thanks Cerina," Hana said, shivering a bit from lingering tension.

Cerina blinked at her. Hana smirked. "I peeked, so I knew you were the one throwing stones at me. It helped."

Cerina let out a huge sigh, head flopping onto her friend's shoulder. "I needed that."

Hana's hand came up and patted the back of her head. After a moment of recovery cuddling, Cerina sat back up. The both of them settled to look out the window, quietly chatting about the weather and the rumors of sentient plants.

A step and cleared throat caught their attention. Sarkiadi had approached the pair of them, hands hidden behind her as she bit her lip. Her blue eyes flicked between them before she bowed towards Cerina.

"Thank you Polya, for not terrorizing my friends," she said.

Cerina nodded. "You are welcome, Sarkiadi. Thank you as well," she said earnestly. Then she frowned. The other girl was shaky, eyes dim as she rose and then looked away from the pair of them. She looked about to go.

"Can we join you?" Hana asked, picking up on Cerina's idea before she had it.

Cerina leaped in to support her. "That sounds fun," she said, trying for an encouraging smile.

Sarkiadi twitched, then looked back at them, eyes interested and bright again. She considered it, and then nodded weakly. "Yeah… yeah that'd be nice," she said."

Cerina's smile bloomed, frown reversing. Hana got up and pulled her along as she followed Sarkiadi.

Cerina took a moment to compare them. The other girl was a little shorter than Hana, but blocky compared to Hana's graceful dancer's build. Hana's hair was braided, while Sarkiadi bound hers up in a single bun at her neck with that ribbon. The silence was comfortable, though new and fragile as they made their way across the barracks. Emboldened by her prior success Cerina stepped up to Sarkiadi's side and her asked a question. "If I may ask Sarkiadi. What did the Instructor order you to do?"

The other girl flinched, nose wrinkling. Her mouth opened, then she blushed in embarrassment. "... latrine duty. For a week," she sighed.

Hana winced behind them. Cerina just looked at Sarkiadi intently. "Do you want help?" She asked seriously.

Sarkiadi stopped, blinking at her in surprise, before shaking her head rapidly. "No, no I was the one who disobeyed orders so I couldn't…"

There was a long pause, and then Sarkiadi caved under the earnest gaze of the girl in front of her. "... please?" Cerina smiled in triumph. Hana shook her head fondly, while Sarkiadi was pulled into their chatter. The rest of their rest period was spent in happy relaxation between the three girls and Sarkiadi's other friends.

Unfortunately, Agatha didn't let Cerina help when it came time for latrine duty, though as a silver lining she was certainly amused by the attempt and seemed to be in a good mood for the following week, to everyone's quiet relief.

***​

Out the window, the stars heralded the changing season, and her approaching twenty first birthday. Cerina dozed in the Archives of the Golden Devils and her dream was a shadowed thing, pierced in points by a feeling of being watched. Far above a burning eye glowed, acting as a shield against something cruel and pitiless that watched from on high.

As her cheek slipped off her hand she jerked up with a sniffle and shook her head, the dream fading away before she could grasp more than a sense of familiarity. She'd had that dream before, probably.

Click click.

She stretched, yawning and rubbing her cheek while she checked to make sure she hadn't drooled on the books in front of her. Designs for clocks and poems penned with amusing meters and puns about time sat at one corner of the desk as well. Nothing about her and her unique constitution unfortunately, neither her nor any of her friends could find anything in the archives accessible to Trainees. Just a disappointing tome named A Treatise on Meditations for the Blind Novice.

When she found no signs of water damage she leaned back, spine popping and looked out towards the night sky. It'd be midnight soon. I should go get some actual sleep… she thought, and sighed. Tomorrow she'd face the Infusion Trial and she'd thought to cram in a bit more studying beforehand but, well…

It hadn't helped frankly. She'd been training for three years, preparing for seven before that. A decade of her life tossed into the wind and hoping it would be enough. Looking at her hands, calloused from both pen and sword and chisel, she hoped it was enough. She seemed ready. Hana and Zoe seemed ready too.

That dream she'd woken from had set her mind off kilter, fretting again. Shadows and an eye, and cruelty beyond its protection. She couldn't help finding the starlight cruel with the memory circling in her skull. Especially with what she had begun to learn of the Devils in preparation for awakening and infusion with the Blood. They really were cursed by Heaven in very real ways.

But worries about that were simply a disguise for her deeper worries, doubt circling in her brain. It'd been ten years since she'd seen home, ten years of preparations, ten years of bloodyminded effort. And it didn't feel like enough, here in a little corner squished between two shelves on a little chair behind a little desk. She felt a bit… small, for once.

Her hands on the desk turned, clenching and unclenching. She sighed, watching the starlight play over her flesh. From another perspective though… could it actually stop her? Was she going to let it actually stop her? She had grown much, several inches over seven feet tall and her frame packed with muscle. She could read Turtle World characters perfectly now and was learning the strange script of the Devils, she had grasped the basics of formation drilling and meditation, and educated herself on a host of things that caught her interest. She had been tested over and over again and not found wanting.

Not wanting at all.

She sighed, annoyed at herself.

She looked up at the sky and in that near endless expanse of black she could almost see the burning shape of the Eye in her dreams. That thing that guarded her and watched over her since her first memories of her dreams. This path was the one that would make her able to see it, waking or sleeping.

That made it easy. Doubt couldn't stop her from trying.

Rising, she picked up the book and carried it to its proper place then left the library. Here in the Outer Walls, the corridors of the Dawn Fortress were a winding maze she had spent a great deal of time memorizing. She stuck to the shadows on the trip to her quarters, avoiding the other late night inhabitants. Some were servants, some were other trainees like her, some true cultivators who ignored her entirely.

She reached her barracks door unimpeded and slipped inside to find the six other remaining trainees of her cohort all asleep and tucked into their cots. They had been winnowed greatly in the first year, Agatha and Vasso sending away those they judged not worth their time before spending the remaining two years diving into their tutelage. Quietly she prepared for bed and slipped into her own cot. Whatever she faced tomorrow, she'd take it as it came.

Her sleep was easy.

No more dreams haunted her that night.

The harsh sun of the dawn peeking over the faraway mountains stabbed into her eye as it had everyday, and she woke with a familiar and long held annoyance. She was going to be very glad not to be in this barrack for much longer, one way or the other. The others were stirring too, Hana, Zoe, Yating, Peng (no relation to the vassal kingdom), Zervotis, and De. She was the first to start morning stretches, the others quickly joining in, quiet chatter flowing around the barracks as they prepared.

When they broke up she went to Hana and Zoe. "Are you ready?" She asked them. Like her the other two girls had grown, Hana getting a little taller and taking to a passion for dance she hadn't been able to explore before. Sometimes she entertained them by dancing and reciting poetry during their rare moments of free time.

Sarkiadi had gotten even more muscled from her work in forges. She wasn't one that liked a wide variety of books like her two friends, but she did like books and scrollwork on blacksmithing and the lives of famous smith saints. Cerina carried a knife Sarkiadi had made for her nineteenth birthday, and Hana had a hair pin made for hers.

Zoe snorted. "I don't want to go back," she said.

Hana paused while folding an extra trainee uniform, thoughtful. Then she nodded. "It's this or nothing, really."

Cerina chuckled. "Alright," she said.

When their preparations were complete, the trainees gathered together and waited for their instructors to appear. It did not take long, the light still thin as the sun struggled to rise over the mountains when they arrived. Agatha and Vasso hadn't changed at all, it seemed, over the past three years, both imperishable and intimidating women as they entered the barracks. With quickly belted orders the cohort formed up and were sent quickly marching down the halls with their instructors at their head.

The passersby and other inhabitants of the Fortress cleared the way for them. Trainees watched with wide eyes, and servants scurried from the path of the two women leading them. The eyes of cultivators passed over them briefly, some haughty, some curious, but they did not interfere as the trainees were led through the halls of the Fortress. Deeper and deeper they traveled, into paths that quickly grew less and less populated, until they reached a flight of ancient stairs and descended to tunnels thick with incense and bright stones inset into the walls.

Cerina's eye watered and she suppressed a sneeze. That tiny huff echoed quietly, the only other sounds the echoes of their footfalls and their quiet breaths. The incense was spicy and caused her nose and tongue to tingle, and she winced as the light seemed to grow even brighter. Was it drugged?

She didn't know what they were being dosed with, but her concern rose as first Zervotis and then others staggered, eyes wide and dilated. The light brightened more and more until it became piercing and she had to squeeze her eye shut and stumble forward by feel. A hand landed on her arm to guide her forward as the others groaned and hissed as their senses were also opened. It was disorienting, and a pressure began to build in her head, but she tried to keep her wits about her and keep track of where they were going as best she could.

She was uncertain for how long they had been walking when they finally arrived at their destination; a pair of iron doors festooned with embedded Spirit Stones. Their guides ordered them to stop and approached the doors, activating mechanisms she couldn't see. The doors groaned open, revealing a great chamber.

A huge circular space that was dozens of meters tall and a hundred meters in diameter, there was a massive oculus in the peak of the dome over their heads. Through it a beam of sunlight fell upon their faces, forcing them to shield their eyes and turn their gazes down to the rest of the room. In the center was a pool of crystal blue water surrounded by a lip of white stone. Around the pool were arranged seven seats, each seat placed neatly into the center of a complicated array, Spirit Stones placed at the vertices of the arrays.

Leading them to the edge of the pool, their guides turned and had them spread out. Blinking her eye open cautiously, Cerina looked around. If she squinted the intensity was bearable, so she tried to focus on her instructors and block everything else out. They turned to face the trainees, standing at the edge of the pool.

"We have been training you for the past three years; your bodies and minds, your wills and grasps of Qi. You may have sensed some flickers of the energy that surrounds you, but that has been your limit," Agatha lectured. The woman seemed cut of sharper edges, each flake of the ash dripping from her standing out to Cerina as she listened.

"We have taught you to breathe properly, and the theory behind pulling Qi from Spirit Stones. Today you will apply that theory. At each seat is a bowl of purified Bronze and a Spirit Stone. You will drink the Bronze and cultivate from the Spirit Stone," she ordered.

The seven of them separated, picking seats and spreading around the circle. Cerina chose which put her back to the entryway, so she did not have to look at the beam of sunlight coming through the oculus. Her seat was a cushion with a single Spirit Stone placed upon the red cloth. In front of the cushion sat a stone bowl filled with what looked like molten bronze. Taking the Spirit Stone, she found it warm, almost hot and buzzing with energy. Surprised, her fingers tightened around it. When she had held Spirit Stones before they were just slightly warm to the touch. The drug maybe?

She shook her head and pushed it out of her mind as she sat in a lotus position on the cushion, waiting for their instructors to continue.

Once they were all seated Agatha nodded at Vasso, who spread her hands and said. "This test is simple. Drink the Bronze, meditate, and harness the Qi from the stones to fill your dantians to their limits. If you succeed you will finally climb to the first Heavenstage. If you don't, you will remain mortal forever and will never be able to try again."

With that ominous proclamation, the trainees steeled themselves and reached out for the stone bowls with their free hands. Cerina peered into the Bronze, finding her reflection surprisingly clear in the strange fluid. She drank, and found it tasted slightly of coins and blood and a spice that spiked through her brain and nearly tipped her over. Coughing, Cerina closed her eye and focused on what she had been taught, clearing her mind of everything but her breath and the stone in her hands. The drug made this almost painfully easy, the stone a burning coal in her hands. The taste of the Bronze lingered heavily. Carefully, she reached out to the stone and settled into the rhythm.

In.

Out.

On her next inhale the stone surged in brightness in her mind's eye, other flames joining it around her as she felt the array humming beneath her. Slowly and carefully she imagined threads of energy being pulled out of the stone and into her breath, trying to tease Qi out of the stone. The pressure she had been feeling built and built with each cycle, as did the taste strangely, and she wasn't sure what to make of it but pushed on regardless.

Two hundred and four cycles after beginning something stretched within her, pulling apart until with a snap she suddenly became aware of a roiling sea of heat in her navel. Qi, much more than she expected, all being added to a cauldron within her. That cauldron of energy bubbled, rising and falling with each breath. Qi in hand she just had to grasp and shape it, compress it down based on what they had taught her.

Four hundred cycles. Eight hundred. Sixteen hundred. By two thousand cycles the pressure had built to a fine point behind her eye and each breath had her suppressing a grimace. She held that point there as best she could as she compressed more and more Qi into what she hoped was her dantian, until finally a critical tipping point seemed to be reached.

The point behind her eye exploded in agony and the energy within her rapidly compressed into a hot ball in her guts. Pain raced along her body from her crown to her feet, through channels she could just feel. The heat and pain did not stop, rising faster and faster until it was entirely unbearable.

Cerina screamed in pain as her skin flushed red. It split, bronze tainted blood pooling on the array as the last of its energy was pulled into her, her back hunching as she writhed. Her scream was choked off as more bronze bubbled up from within her throat and spilled out of her mouth.

Vasso watched in disturbed fascination as her trainee changed drastically, waving her hand to activate the sound suppression arrays. Mortal flesh faded away, replaced by shiny new bronze, wounds opening and then sealing rapidly as more bronze continually flowed forth. It seemed like the Blood was reacting to fragments of itself that had already been present in her body. But it was intense enough she could use some help and Vasso signaled Agatha. The other woman was moving before she finished the signal, and pulled the water from the pool in a great stream and doused the girl in it. They watched her ascension in silence, as the torrent slowed and the bronze seemed to cool and solidify into a single form under the healing water.

When the flow of bronze and water stopped, Cerina was left crouched in the middle of her depleted array, wrapped in a faint sheen of steam and the bronze stained remains of her trainee's robe. Her body glinted in the light now, a thick skin of bronze like other Clan members now cladding her in a statue-like form. Heavily, Cerina clanked as she pushed herself upright and coughed.

Red mortal blood had dripped from her eye as she ascended, staining her face. Her eye opened. What was once mortal flesh was now a sphere of metal, her iris the deep blue of the clan and her pupil a black pit. Stuck close to her body from sweat and drying stains, her hair was the only thing that hadn't changed, still a pale white-gold.

Click click. She blinked heavy lids and twitched at the newly emphasized sound. Looking down at herself Cerina saw her changes and felt the hot ember in her gut and realized very abruptly that she had succeeded. She exhaled, tension expelled in a half-gasping laugh. She looked around the room, not quite realizing she was spinning her head in a full circle on the new seam and joint that had formed in her neck. Everything was a little sharper now, edges between colors and shapes she hadn't quite grasped before now obvious, like everything had a little bit of that depth she'd normally only seen in magical items or creatures.

She stopped her awed blinking when Agatha walked up to her. The older woman snorted haughtily as she held out a new trainee's robe. "Dramatic, now go change," she said, indicating a folding screen that had been set up to one side. Cerina leapt to obey, clanking clumsily around, unused to the new weight of her body and its strength.

She probably spent far too long marveling at all the little details that had changed, because when she came out her two instructors were looking at her with intense bemusement. Carefully she walked with as much grace as she could muster to stand beside them. Vasso gave her a nod. "Let us wait for the others now, Junior," the older woman said, sending a thrill through Cerina.

She'd done it!

Fractically suppressing the urge to squeal, she watched as one by one, the other trainees drained their own arrays, and approached the first Heavenstage. She watched with fascination as they faced their own changes, though none were quite as significant as hers. Some manifested bronze flesh, some only coloration, while others grew visibly more muscled and sturdy. Of her two friends, Hana's eyes became more hazel, cut with inclusions of blue Cerina saw as she blinked. Zoe's black hair lightened significantly, becoming near grey and her skin darkened with bronze tinting threading through her muscles. Each transformation was subtly different, a complicated gradient of transformations. But, when the last spirit stone was consumed and the last trainee was finished, all of them had made it through the trial intact.

"Impressive, Aspirants!" Vasso said. She raised her hands and gestured to them. "Come on then you Juniors, let's go celebrate your success!"

With a tired, wondering cry, the Aspirants got up and awkwardly clanked after their older Seniors as they were led back up out of the tunnels and into the light of day. As they returned to halls busy with other people, they were given a new deference and attention, many of the trainees they passed whispering as they were recognized.

Their barracks was full of drinking and singing as they celebrated, for once not being tormented by some new task or training. Their celebrations carried them deep into the night, until eventually Cerina could party no more, and fell asleep amidst the cacophony. She dreamed then, a clear and precise dream, tracing out the lines of the great array in the sky with such skill that her dreaming self knew she'd be able to draw it out perfectly when she awoke.


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Cerina Polya 4 - Year 245, Turn 13, IV - A Corpse


Cerina Polya Year 245, Turn 13, IV - A Corpse​


Cerina finished her last stroke of the image, hand coming away covered with rock dust. On the cliff side before her was another rendition of the Golden Eye Array's manifestation in her mind's eye. Not its inner workings or anything sensitive, just a great eye carved into the rock, dark sandstone cut away to reveal lighter stone beneath to create a masterpiece of shading and hue. After a moment's examination she huffed and nodded, pleased.

Clean lines, and yet more detail in the hues. Satisfied, she swung a bronze fist and shattered the image into powder. No use in leaving that kind of thing lying around, even bereft of technical details like it was. She'd have to show her parents her latest rendition when she went back again. They'd loved the first time she'd been able to really show them what she'd always talked about as a little girl. Turning away from the wreckage she hummed a little shepherd's ditty about three blind sheep and a dog as she packed up her camp. Heavy iron staff in hand and pack on her back, she carried on down the game path through these scrubby hills.

She was hunting a very specific beast for her mission today, and had been tracking it for three days across these hills north of Seven Heavens Trade City. She hummed, kicking up dust and letting the sun warm her pleasantly. Tracking like this brought her back to the days when she was tracking down sheep over hills a lot smaller than these fellows around her, and frankly she'd gravitated towards these kinds of missions for the familiarity. Of course, she'd only been allowed out of the Tall Wheat Fields for missions a few months ago, aside from visits to her parents, so she had not had a lot of time to really get into it.

Scanning the sandy hillside, her eyes looked for familiar shapes and spoor. A crushed brush could have been what she was looking for, or perhaps a rock upturned to get at the den beneath, but both were discarded from consideration. The path wound along the hillside, then descended, and the plants encroaching on the game path changed from bramble and stickers to spreads of fleshy cactus. As she had hoped, large swathes of the cactus patch had been chopped and bitten cleanly down to the roots.

Wary, she scanned the thicket and quickly saw a lead; large scrape marks in the sand and dirt heading south east before they stopped in a hump of disturbed earth. "Hmm." Carefully she turned, checking for any other humps or signs of tunneling. The Ten-Year Bull-Headed Sandfish was only accidentally and incidentally carnivorous, but it did have extremely poor vision and thus treated everything else as a threat…

She paused that thought to listen carefully for any rumbling, and when she heard none sighed quietly in relief. They liked to avoid things, most of the time, but if you surprised one they had a tendency to leap out of the sand like a ballista bolt and crush anything unlucky enough to be in their path. For someone like her in the 1st Heavenstage a run in with one of them would be extremely painful.
She picked her way down the hillside, stepping into the cactus patch and heading through it towards the hump of disturbed earth. It was huge, at least eight feet in diameter, which was about the right size. Kicking a foot through it, it was soft and powdery, relatively fresh. Further seeking and searching turned up a vague path to follow and she trekked out into the desert along it.

It only took her about an hour's more effort to find much more recent signs.

Further down into the valleys she found another patch of devastated cactus, their thick green and purple bodies crunched and broken spines scattered about wildly. The water and juices were still dripping. She could see marks from the creature's four fingered forelimbs, having scraped at the dirt as it hauled itself around. This time she made sure she was standing on solid rock so it couldn't tunnel up under her easily. Quietly, she set her staff aside and grasped one of the large rocks resting on this ridge, hefting the torso sized stone with ease. And then she waited and watched. After a long moment of silence, a patch of sand to her left sank slightly, movement under the earth.

With a yell of effort she threw the stone in front of the patch. It sailed through the air magnificently and then landed with a bone shaking thud. There was a great blast of air like a snort like a geyser, and then a deep bellowing grumble that rose to a screech as a greenish scaled form leapt out of the sand. It smashed into the rock, cracking it, and then sprawled over the wreckage.

The Ten-Year Bull-Headed Sandfish was a twelve foot long fusion of a dolphin, lizard, and a bull. Its head was bull-like, with two thick horns and a spade shaped snout covered in scales, while its jowls were fuzzy with greyish fur and trailing moss. It had a large boney dome in between its horns. Its front limbs and shoulder were like a lizard, each of its four toes webbed, with great digging claws on the ends. Past the front however, its body became a dolphin-like taper with a fluked tail. The entire thing was covered in a thick armor of scales, some of those on its face cracking away as it started to lumber upright, eyes dazed. It was a pretty one too, with a soft blue iridescence tipping some of the scales along its shoulders and then down its back.

Cerina hefted her staff and leapt down from the ridge, speeding her fall and then dancing across the sand with blunt applications of her Qi to prevent her heavy body from sinking in. Before the thing could clear its head she landed in front of it and with a yell smacked it hard across the snout with her staff. It lurched back, snorting and reeling. Taking advantage of it's stunned state she continued smacking it as it tried to retreat to its tunnel, driving it away as best she could.

Unfortunately, its head was rock hard, and it quickly overcame her assault and got its feet under it. With a roar like grinding rock it charged at her and Cerina leaped, soaring between its lowered horns. One hand smacked into its armored skull, forcing it down and throwing her upwards. Her eye and head stayed fixed on the beast as the rest of her body spun rapidly in a circle, building up speed.

Her arc ended above its back, and her foot slammed into its hunched spine, propelled by Qi and enhanced muscle. There was a sharp crack as something inside it broke and its huge body was smashed into the dirt. It rolled, front half writhing from side to side, its rage filled thrashing churning up the sand around it into a huge cloud. She was lucky her eye didn't get as irritated by dust anymore since transforming into metal. Raising her iron staff above her head she steadied her footing as best as she could and struck its back over and over, shattering scales and bone again and again.

It finally bucked her off as it tipped completely over, sending her rolling into the desert sand. Flashing horns forced her to dodge back again and parry with her staff, but after a moment's struggle and waving of her arms to clear the dust she regained her stance and examined the beast. It was broken and bloodied, eyeing her with simmering animal rage, plant shearing teeth gnawing at the sand as it tried to lift its body. But it couldn't move, bones broken, one of its horns cracked.

Waiting a moment to be sure it was done, she straightened and set aside her staff to pull out her knife. It was simple enough to maneuver around the beast and stab it through a soft spot into the brain, putting a clean end to it. Leaning against its bulk she huffed, blowing white-gold hair out of her face. "Okaaaaay, okay you big bastard. Time to get you into town," she muttered to the corpse. After a short prayer to hope this hunt would make the desert flourish, she started pulling ropes out of her pack and tying them around the beast's large gut.

After securing it, she stowed her staff across the top of her pack, looped the rope around it and crawled under the beast. Hefting its front up on her shoulders, she huffed and puffed and started dragging the carcass out of the desert and towards the town with the crafter who had contracted the Legions to help him out. Hopefully it wouldn't smell too bad and the sun would still be up by the time she got back.

***​

Tao Zan was doing his best to hide from the evening sun under the gate post tower's roof, fanning himself quickly to try and ward off the heat, thankful for the simple cooling array set into the roof above him. Fourth-Green-Hill Town was not large enough to be put on most maps, and was a fair distance from the trading hub of Seven Heavens Trade City, but they were fortunate to be home to the cultivator Lefteris Five-Handed. That one had helped make things livable after they decided to seclude themselves in the region.

His fanning slowed as he spotted a slow moving blot on the horizon, coming down the road to the gate. With a thoughtful grunt, Tao Zan grabbed the monocular hanging on a stand to one side and looked through it. The image caused him to tense in surprise, leaning against the railing in front of his seat. After a moment of examination he chuckled and sat back.

"Cui Qing! Cui Qing! That weird one eyed girl came back, and she's got a huge catch too!" Tao Zan shouted towards the trapdoor and ladder down to the lower level of the guard tower. Cui Qing stuck his head out of the trap door with a look of a man rising from the depths of paperwork hell.

"Let me see this," the other man grumbled as he shuffled up the ladder and slumped down into the chair next to Tao Zan's. They both squinted at the now much more defined shape of the huge beast Cerina was carrying.

"Bloody huge thing," Cui Qing said as he watched her approach.

Tao Zan just shook his head. "What else could we expect from one of the 'Ladies of the Sun'," he waved a hand sardonically.

Cui Qing snorted, pulling his hat down a bit against the sun. "We'll have to see if we can catch her telling the tale at Wong's bar tonight."

Tao Zan laughed in agreement.

A couple of minutes later Cerina finally dragged herself and the beastie into speaking distance with the gate, setting it down with a heavy thud.

"Ho up there! Aspirant Cerina Polya reporting back," she called up at them.

Tao Zan looked down over the railing and shouted back. "Ho there Aspirant! Are you looking for Five-Handed?" He asked.

She nodded. "Yeah!" She waved her hand at the corpse of the Ten-Year Bull-Headed Sandfish. "I need to deliver this to them!"

Tao Zan nodded. As expected then. He waved towards the north of town and Five-Handed's workshop. "They're out at the workshop. Apparently some messages also came through, I'm not sure what they were about though."

Cerina smiled up at them. "Thanks guys!" She said as she picked up her kill and started dragging it north.

"Will you share the story of how you killed that thing?" Cui Qing shouted from his seat.

"Yeah! If I can," Cerina shouted back as she jogged into the distance, the huge body she carried bobbing amusingly as she dashed away.

Tao Zan shook his head. Cultivators! He could never be mad at them, when their antics were so entertaining.

For Cerina, the trek out to Lefteris Five-Handed's workshop was a short one, though she'd have made it in minutes instead of half an hour if she didn't have to lug this body around everywhere. But, griping aside, she reached it without incident; a stout oval dome set on a rocky prominence, temple columns adorning the front around the huge front door. Smoke stacks sprouted from the roof around a tower designed to pull in air for fueling the forges and providing cooling when necessary. The din of struck iron and hissing metal rang out from the workshop.

Cerina walked right up to the thick iron front door and banged on it loudly. They wouldn't hear her over the din of their work. "Five-Handed! It's Cerina with your delivery," she roared. A minute or so of pounding later and shouting later and there was a clunk from the door.

A voice shouted through it. "Come on in!" They said, the noise not lessening at all. Shoving the door open Cerina stepped inside, thankful it was large enough to admit her and her kill. The room was smoke filled and hot enough to make her sweat straight through the bronze, tinted red by the three active forges set against the walls. Tools hung on shelves all around the room, and a huge anvil of Spirit Iron stood center stage in the middle of the room. Near the door was a large stairway that curled away to a basement storage room.

The figure working bent over the anvil as they struck a molten bright sword into shape was a curious one; cloaked in thick grey fire retardant fabric, with an equally thick leather apron sewn to the front, the most notable features of them were their five muscled arms emerging from the cloak which each wielded a tool of the forge, and their face. Angular and long haired, Lefteris' face was deeply bronze skinned and ambiguous in gender, seeming to hold a flame that burned from within.

It glimmered in their eyes as they turned to look at Cerina, arms still hammering away. "Polya girl! Timely, set it over there," they said, one hand holding a pair of tongs pointing to an open space near the stairs.

Relieved, she set it down, watching Five-Handed continue to work. They were constantly moving, each arm on their lopsided body always in motion, with a subtle rotation and rhythm seeming to guide them. She was tempted to tap her foot to it but stilled the urge as she noted the pile of scrolls on a rolling bench discarded to one side of the smith.

"There was a batch of messages I heard?" She prompted the Qi Condensation smith.

Their face twitched in annoyance, motions uninterrupted. They turned slightly to look at her, their golden eyes flickering past to the Ten-Year Bull-Headed Sandfish. She followed their gaze and winced when she saw their frown at the damaged horn. Lefteris sighed.

"Ach! Look at the horns… no, no I can critique your hunting methods later, more urgent things needed, " they complained, then reached over to the scrolls on the bench next to them. "Where was it? Ah! Here! You have a different problem; Urgent mission, some asshole went Blood Path and broke out of a mining camp a little ways from here. I'm busy making war material."

Her chest clenched as she caught the scroll and began to unfurl it. "Blood Path? Is it confirmed?"

Lefteris nodded. "I took a peek at those while I was setting up. The escapee is some dude named Feng Shen, and he broke free earlier this afternoon."

Cerina almost didn't hear the rest of what Lefteris said as her heart tried to climb out of her throat. She glanced down at the scroll and started to read.


URGENT



All Clan members in the vicinity of Five Lotus Quarry - alert

Damage to the camp and multiple murders, signs of Blood Path usage

Escapee and primary suspect is a man in his forties named Feng Shen.

Has killed at least one Clan member in the Qi Condensation Realm.

Current Realm unknown, expected to still be in Qi Condensation.

Heading west at last sighting.



URGENT

With the message came a quick but instantly recognizable sketch of the man who had assaulted her ten years before, as well as a map to the mine and the surrounding area. It was dotted with several small mortal communities, with the largest concentration to the west.

"I know this man… how did he…," she muttered.

There was a hiss of cooling metal as the sword was quenched, and then set aside. Lefteris paused, and sighed. "How doesn't matter right now, Aspirant," they said seriously. She met their tired and unhappy gaze. "Are you going?" They asked.

She nodded. The smith smiled, setting two of their hands on their hips. "Well, that staff I gave you should carry you through then. Hurry and come back," they tapped their chest with their hammer. "This Senior still needs to lecture you on proper hunting techniques!"

She nodded, and turned, sprinting out of the door. "I will!" she shouted over her shoulder. Rushing into the late evening twilight as the sun set, she ran back towards the roads.

In the distant gate house, Tao Zan noted the fantail of sand kicked up by something moving fast away from the direction of the workshop, heading across the horizon before him. After looking at it through the monocular for a moment he sighed and got up from his chair to lean down the trapdoor into the office and armory below. Cui Qing looked up at him from his paperwork crowded desk.

"I don't think she'll be at Wong's tonight Cui Qing. I think I just saw her heading southwest at a gallop," Tao Zan said sadly.

Cui Qing groaned, leaning back and scrubbing a hand down his face. "Blasted hells," he sighed.

***​

Cerina made her way as fast as possible in the general direction of Five Lotus Quarry, referring back to the map regularly. The quarry was several dozen li south west of Fourth-Green-Hill Town, and that town was too large and too well defended to be a tempting target, she thought. That left the many li of empty desert which separated the quarry from the closest western town, small and insignificant enough to likely not have cultivators and thus be easy pickings. Others were probably hunting the man, but that was every reason to go faster. She knew of no other good tracking cultivators in the immediate area. And she knew this man and how he thought, giving her a headstart she had to use.

She had a small number of Spirit Stones in her pack and taking one she started to burn it for Qi, pushing herself to go faster. As she ran she thought, trying to tease out what he might be thinking. He'd run to gather strength, with a very specific goal in mind. Something he wanted to do, though she had nothing to go on for that except 'get stronger by killing' at this juncture.

After another look at the map, tracking instinct quickly redirected her away from the camp itself, instead heading for its western side. Hopefully she could pick up a trail there and be on her way without delay. The run was quiet, the stars coming out to shimmer in the rapidly cooling night air. Her dantian thrummed with power to the beat of her leaping footsteps that sent her soaring from dune top to dune top.

It did not take very long to reach the region of the quarry, a dry stony land of gullies and ravines. Distantly she could see smoke and light rising against the stars from the direction of the camp. Her feet urged her towards the quarry, to seek out survivors and help, but to find Feng Shen had to be the priority according to her training. The Clan could not afford him to grow stronger. And she did not want to allow him to either. A weary weight settled on her mind, a weight that she wanted gone as quickly as possible.

Soon she came upon signs of battle west of the site, dried blood pooling into mud in the dunes. She slammed to a stop, kicking up a plume of sand as she landed hard. Looking over the scene she noted half a dozen distinct sources for the pooling morass. The bodies had already been recovered. Or consumed. From where she was the camp was only a half a li or so away, and the smoke seemed to be from a fire in some building sticking up from the side of the quarry. If she squinted she could see figures moving about fighting the flames.

Cerina watched, a few moments ticking by before she was able to force herself to turn away and start hunting again. They seemed to have it under control, or enough that she could at least hope it was. She turned away and with her eye roving over the path of the blood, headed out into the desert.

She did not run quickly, jogging instead as she tracked signs and faint shapes in the sand. Heading away from the battle site red speckled the dunes for at least a li, Feng Shen trailing faint droplets of blood across the sand until it probably dried. The sands were also disturbed by the tracks of small frightened creatures, quickly fading away with the wind. Animal dens too, hurriedly abandoned and collapsed, were dotted here and there as she circled wider and wider in her search.

Two hours of searching later, she found a cracked and broken plain crisscrossed with ravines. She spotted signs of a recent disturbance, rocks having fallen on top of an animal den near one such ravine. Sliding down into it she spotted the rest of the rockfall at the bottom. Strangely one of the rocks was cut, split in half by something very sharp. Sheltered from the wind she found the faded marks of boot prints mixed among the rocks, heading into the maze.

Overhead she imagined she could feel the burning of the Eye, watching over her as she gained on Feng Shen. She directed a small prayer towards her luck and carried on down the ravine. His gait was small, he seemed to have been walking around down here, probably trying to hide as he worked to lose pursuers.

The ravines were winding, and his path doubled back on itself many times, creating a confusing mess for anyone but her. Her eye was able to discern the real path after some effort, for a while anyway, until his trail seemed to vanish in the middle of a three way intersection. That discovery froze her in place, memories of that damned chase years ago crawling back up from where she had shoved them away. She listened intently, looking all around herself across the top and sides of the ravine as she readied a Spirit Stone to burn.

However, her bout of paranoia faded as nothing came of it, and she sighed.

So his tracks had disappeared, leaving blank sand like he had simply flown out of the ravine. But that wouldn't be the case here, unless she was truly and dreadfully unlucky. Slowly she paced near the place where the tracks disappeared, tracing the shape of the sand from multiple perspectives.

It did not take much longer for her to realize he had simply just swept at the sand with something long and thin. Maybe a branch or something similar, like the scrubby ones that littered the bottom of this ravine. Sweep once, twice, and there the tracks went, completely obliterated. Cerina huffed and turned aside from the trail, hard nailed fingers digging into the wall as she climbed up and out of the ravine to get a better view.

Looking over the map while keeping half of her attention on her surroundings just in case, she tried to figure out this puzzle. Fingers tapping over the map of the region in the message, she tracked her way from this knot of ravines, circling outward to find where he might be going.

She turned over her memories of the man that were simmering in the back of her mind. Why had he been so angry at her? Envy? No, jealousy. Guarding something he thought was his. Entitlement. Petty fury. A bully in a lot of ways. Her eye scanned slowly over the map. A place where he can hunt. A place where he can gain power. A place where he can feel powerful.

She had not visited many of the towns out in this direction yet, but the closest ones to the quarry were noted with population numbers. Somewhere where he did not have much opposition but could lord it over mortals… small would work. She focused on the smaller towns to the north west of this ravine; heading away from the hard target of Seven Heavens Trade City, and towards the mountains and into the hills. There was one that seemed to suit her idea of where he might go, tucked into a small valley formed by two ridges to the east and west.

Packing up her map, she started running again, burning Qi prodigiously enough her body started to steam. She sailed over the sands, the terrain rising as she moved deeper into the foothills of Hard Shell mountains. Sometimes she slowed to take in more Qi from a stone or to catch her breath, but she never stopped moving throughout the night.

When she finally reached the valley it was just after dawn. Standing on the eastern ridge the valley extended in a cut from north to south, a small stream passing through from the northwest and winding down the valley to pool in the south. Around the north shore of that small lake was the town she had come to save, a walled crescent of houses and market places with piers off into the lake. It looked like it probably had a hundred or so people, a tiny place not much bigger than her own home. Her eye flicked over it, looking for any sign of Feng Shen or battle anywhere.

Her hand tightened on her staff when she found none. Steeling herself, she started climbing down the ridge. If she saw no sign of him she'd just have to look closer, and maybe use herself as bait. The climb down was uninterrupted by any sudden ambushes and easy enough when she could just jam her fingers into the rock. Landing with a thud she marched towards the town, kicking up plant debris from recently harvested fields and scrublands she passed through.

She grew even more worried when no one challenged her as she approached the gate house. Slowing, she stopped in front of the flung open gate and saw no one there. But something bloody tickled at her nose and stepping through the open doors the scent led her through the gate. She turned right and saw a door leading into the wall, and the guard post. It was loose on its hinges when she pulled it open and stepped inside.

The room was empty, but not unmarked. She had perhaps expected an abattoir, but instead what she found was a room that looked like a storm of blades had passed through it. Great slash marks covered the walls and the table that had sat in the middle was split in half. The weapon racks, and weapons, were in no better shape either. The cord one would pull to sound the alarm was shredded and she'd bet the Blood Path alert bell upstairs in the tower wasn't any better.

The destruction easily led her eye to the stains. Bloodstains that were drying on the walls, one below the table stretching towards the alarm. It painted a picture of a sudden ambush and death before those within could react, or even scream, if the lack of panic in the town behind her was any indication. There wasn't a lot of blood left. She shuddered, trying not to think about where the blood and bodies might have gone. She looked around, trying to pick up his trail again. The floor was a confused mess of boot prints and blood, resolving into one set that entered and then left, trailing blood from one heel.

She settled her breathing, thinking. He could be trying to kill people right now, and a bunch of mortals would be fodder for a Blood Path cultivator. But there were no screams, no panic, or cries of alarm in this small town so he was either laying low and preparing or had something to muffle the sound. She decided to hurry out in the open; if he saw her he'd almost certainly go for her over anyone else and she didn't want this asshole killing any more people.

Hefting her staff, she dashed out of the guard post, following Feng Shen's bloody footsteps. The streets of the town were quiet, people waking up and starting their daily morning routines. A wave of confusion followed her as people saw her, quickly transmuting into concern when her barked orders forced them back inside their homes.

The path of bloody steps led her into the town's alleys and neighborhoods, as they stayed close to the shadows. They did not go completely unnoticed by the populace however, some people gathering here and there before she directed them back inside. Force of will and authority blocked people's questions as she hurried.

After a few minutes she was led to a house. Peeking through the windows, she found it empty. Abandoned for a while too, not the empty of murder and consumption. She slipped in through the backdoor, peering around. It had no real furniture, though the wooden floor was littered with recently opened and drunk gourds of alcohol. The air was rank with the scent of liquor and blood. Some of the gourds were still very recent, wet from unevaporated drink, not even dry yet.

In the house it seemed he'd cleaned off his boots, or the blood had simply dried by that point. Another quick look told her there was nothing else to find here and she left. His steps led her four blocks away into a little cul-de-sac neighborhood near the bank of the lake. A series of houses circled a plaza near the city wall and the lake, with a four story tenement block near the coast being the largest building in the place. The trail meandered up behind the tenement, passing through a decorative rock garden, and then to the back door. She folded herself through the door, hunching down to fit as she hurried inside into a storage room full of boxes and spare cloths.

Beyond it was a small first floor common room. The ceilings in here were nearly brushing the top of her head. Stairs climbed the back of the room just to her left and as quietly as possible she moved up the stairs, listening and watching for any sign of the man. In the shadows of the stairway her eye tingled, a faint sense of disturbed Qi brushing against her mind if she paid attention. That sense, a hunch, more than any physical sign is what led her towards the second floor and down the hall. Cerina heard a voice as she reached the landing.

"I'll have to figure out what to do with all of you ants in here. Can't just kill you all in one go…" a familiar sneering voice drawled, someone else whimpering. Her gaze zeroed in on a door hanging slightly open just down the hall, lock cut free from the wood in one strike.

She dashed towards it, slamming through the door in a burst of shattered wood. A man screamed. "SHEN!" She roared, shaking the building.

In the room she saw a familiar tall and muscled man, his face drawn and livid with fury as he dodged splinters of the door. A straight jian hung loosely from one hand. His dark hair was longer than she remembered, and his muscles thicker, as were the scars on his hands. His nose had restored itself too, healed by Qi. To their right another man lay at Feng Shen's feet, curled up in terror.

Feng Shen's snarl twisted into a sneer and with a brutal kiai he swung.

"You, Polya?" He shouted as the wave of Sword Qi lanced above her head, slicing through the doorframe and shaving a few strands from her head. Cerina reached out, trained instinct wrapping her hand around the nearest thing she could throw.

A sitting chair was heaved at him and he stepped back, an upward strike slicing it into rough pieces. Cerina was right behind it, bringing her staff slamming in from the side. He parried her, twice or even thrice as fast as her, sending her weapon wide. She did not stop however, letting her body spin with the blow, tucking her head and shoulder tackling him. Her incredible momentum bent his arm and lifted him from his feet as they were both flung from the second story window behind him.

Cursing her as they fell, he grappled with her one handed before he got punched in the gut for his trouble, forcing them to separate. They both landed on their feet, kicking up a huge puff of dust in the midst of the rock garden. Debris and pieces of glass fell all around them. Screams rang out from the building and the few people out on the street.

The dust cleared, revealing Feng Shen, sword held before him aggressively. Immediately she could tell his stance was hodgepodge, put together from a half dozen influences, and not yet well practiced. He sighed.

"Of course the Heavens put you before me," he said, sounding both annoyed and anticipatory. "It's like they are blessing me!"

She sneered, bubbling hot fury rising, metal creaking as she squeezed her staff. "I sincerely doubt that Shen. You're a fucking insignificant stain on this Sea," she growled at him.

His face darkened and he cut again. She dodged aside, swinging her staff into the path of the Sword Qi to try and deflect it. The staff screamed, jerking in her hand and sparks flying as the wave was shunted to one side. But she was unharmed, losing a piece of her sleeve as the crimson-black Qi wave slammed into the ground.

She snorted. "A curse too on everyone who has the unpleasantness of meeting you."

He shook his head, the weight of his cultivation and intent pressing down on her. Her Qi senses were inexperienced but she could easily tell he was above her by the density of his Qi. "I can tell, girl. Your progress is pitiful. A waste of an Aspirant. And I stand above you in the Third stage, as I should," he sneered.

Ah, crap.

"I will kill you, and quite enjoy it I think," he said, face twisting into a wide smile as he readied his sword and leapt for her. Dust exploded in a wave behind him, his blade screaming through the air as it was swung.

She stumbled back, staff desperately being interposed between his blade and her. Wounds appeared on her steadily all the same, as Sword Qi scraped at her bronze hide, leaving thin gashes that bled bronze blood freely. Each cut was deeper than the last, and she watched with trepidation as her blood gravitated toward him, sinking into his hands and blade to be absorbed. Even worse, the invasive Qi within her fought against her own, slowing her regeneration and clotting. Cerina was forced back towards the lake as the people around them fled, cries of alarm filling the morning.

She swiped her staff at him as best she could, while she frantically glanced around for anything she could use. Behind her was a pier, to either side the street. In front, Feng Shen struck her iron staff relentlessly. Her focus narrowed in on the blade, trying to dodge it and parry, and she realized that it was being dulled. It was an entirely mundane steel blade, and so sections were being damaged by their strength as it carved divots into her staff. She pushed forward, trying to hit the sword more than Feng Shen. The man's smile flipped to a frown and he slapped her blows aside, pushing her onto the pier.

He yelled and attacked again in a blur of steel. Cerina screamed as blood spurted from her right arm, his sword carving away a section of flesh and muscle. Blood sprayed as her hand spasmed and she dropped her staff with a clang. Before she could retrieve it, Shen kicked it off into the water. He laughed. "Now then!"

One hand on the pommel and the other holding it securely, he thrust his jian at her throat. Half-formed plan crashed into terrified instinct and Cerina flung up her injured arm in a block. The sword, coated in Sword Qi, speared right through her bronze flesh, emerging bloodily as she tugged it aside. It sunk into her shoulder, pinning her as burning pain radiated through her body. Her idea crystalized as she pulled away, the dulled edge slowing it just enough to give her a fraction of a second. Under her stomping foot the pier collapsed, sending her tipping back into the water and she pulled the blade closer to her as she fell. The combination of her weight and strength caused it to bend, and yanked it from Feng Shen's hands. She grinned in elation, overwhelming the pain her entire arm was in as his Sword Qi cut at her muscles and bones.

She hit the water, blinded by the splash and foam. Fumbling in the murky darkness she found the sword handle and yanked it free once and then twice. It tore out messily, blood pouring from her shoulder and forearm, but now she wasn't being constantly injected with Sword Qi. Tossing it aside she cradled her arm and focused on what was happening above the water, feeling herself come to a stop on the rocky lake bottom.

She could hear Feng Shen's muffled yelling as he cursed her. Through the dark and muddy water of the lake she saw him looking around for her, unable to see her clearly. He started wading into the lake, so furious he was coming into her reach where he would be vulnerable. Good hand digging around she came up with a head sized stone and flung it at his knee with all her might.

It struck true, his leg collapsing under him as he screamed in pain. Lungs burning for air, she got her feet under her and leapt forward. Qi surged around her, shining in her eye as she burst out of the lake in a blast of spray. The force of the impact forced both of them back to the shore. Landing hard on top of him she wrapped her hand around his collar and rammed her skull into his face. Once, twice, she felt his nose and other bones fracture under her metal brow. He gurgled, blood pouring from the ruin of his face, hate sharpening in his eyes. Struggling like a beast he wrenched away her wounded hand, his other hand shooting for her eye wrapped in sputtering Blood Qi.

Yelping, she tore herself away from him. He took the opportunity to turn and flee from her as fast as he could towards the city wall that dipped into the lake a few dozen meters away, clutching at his face as he did. She lurched after him, steaming blood dripping from the dozens of deep flensing cuts all over her body, especially the enormous gash and stab wounds on her forearm and shoulder that she knew had gone into the bone. Blurry from pain and blood loss, she knew she wasn't fast enough to catch him, so she scrambled towards a large decorative stone from the rock garden behind the tenement and hefted it. Her arm flared painfully, but that didn't slow her down as she spun and flung it at him.

The foot wide stone careened through the air in a straight shot, striking him in the back with bone crushing force. His scream was bloodcurdling and he fell, legs tangling clumsily beneath him. Pressing her arm tight with her good hand, Cerina marched towards Feng Shen. He was groaning, arms struggling to pull him along as his legs failed to respond.

"My back! My back you monster!" He shouted at her as he looked over and saw her approach.

She kicked him in the head. "Monster my shiny ass," she growled at him. Reaching down with her good hand she wrapped it in his robes and with a heave lifted him and then slammed him down on the ground. More things cracked in him as he landed on his back, causing him to scream and flail at her. Seeing him in this state, broken on the ground before her had not mollified her in the slightest, to her surprise. Grabbing him by the wrist she began to drag him away towards the city wall.

Panting, he shouted up at her. "This isn't fair! I was stronger, more blessed, and then you come along and ruin everything!" His nasally voice rose as he yelled, becoming shrill at the end.

Reaching the wall she hauled him up and wrapping her bloody injured hand around his belt she lifted and flung him over the ten foot high wall. He soared, tumbling, and then landing on the far side with a meaty thud and a whimper. She had to stop a moment to wince and hiss as her arm twitched painfully. Contorting painfully she reached into her pack and retrieved the last two Spirit Stones she had stockpiled from her missions in the past few months. Swallowing them, she relaxed slightly as she felt them settle in her stomach and she began burning them for Qi.

Cycling it through her was enough to expel the remnants of Shen's Qi and allow her regeneration to finally start working properly. Crouching slightly she leapt to the top of the wall, landing and then leaping again to sail the rest of the way to the ground. She landed with a thud next to Shen, who had fallen in a tangle, clutching at his body as he stared at the sky.

His hateful gaze fixed on her. "Why the fuck haven't you killed me already!?" He smirked. "Oh I know! Can't do it?" He accused through a broken leer.

She rolled her eye, shutting him up with another kick. Grabbing his hand she tugged him after her as she walked into the desert outside the town. "We're going to talk," she told the man.

He just laughed. "About what!?

She shrugged, pulling him along easily, her wounds starting to seal with coppery scars and seams as Qi surged through her system. She scanned around for a good landmark and quickly spotted a yellow-ish stone jutting up from the dunes near the river, a few hundred meters from the town. She could wait for reinforcements there and have some privacy.

Feng Shen spent his breath cursing her and her lineage to a thousand years of more and more colorful torments, telling her his spirit would haunt her forever if she killed him and recycled his corpse. She just fed the bullshit into the curdling sea of rage in her stomach. Reaching the stone she stepped up it and then flung Feng Shen down when they reached the peak.

Crouching down at him, she fixed him with a cold glare, the light of Qi glowing dimly in the depths of her eye. Feng Shen looked up at her with rage and fear and a burning disgusted hatred.

"Why did you choose Blood Path? Why not stick it out for the Clan?" She asked him.

He laughed. "That kind of question? Fine! Let me open your eye a bit. It was unfair!" He spat towards her, the glob of blood and teeth missing wildly. "They had it out for people who couldn't 'make the cut'. And that was me apparently! Bullshit!"

"Blood Path though! That's fair! Just kill and if you suck at killing well sucks to be you!" He ranted. "No room for bullshit at the edge of a knife!" He said, hand swinging wildly.

"There were definitely a few aggressive people who were kicked out for threatening the others or misconduct," she answered, morbidly curious to see where he would go.

"Yeah! Hah, 'misconduct', more like putting weaklings where they should be. I was trying to do the Clan a favor and they spat on what I gave them," he said, a cruel glimmer in his eyes.

She shook her head. "Nah. Why bother working with a real cunt when he's too egotistical for his talent? You made your own problems there."

She watched as his face went purple, her mind slowly parsing the details of his expression. Each twitch taken apart and analyzed by her subconscious, intuition and feel guiding her to recognize the intent in his eyes. A railing against her and she thought, the Clan as well.

"Fuck you, you pretentious bitch!" He shouted, and she watched his intent twitch this way and that as it withered. He knew he was dying. "This is all your fault! Ten fucking years in that pit because of you. Why must you get in my way! My ascension straight to the highest thrones! I deserved that you fucking bitch! There's nothing left, you've broken it all!"

As his rant petered out, his breathing becoming more labored, she shook her head again, frown becoming deeper and more… bored, almost. "The only thing you deserve Shen is the things you earned by not being an ass," she said tiredly. The more she heard this pitiful, petty man, the more she regretted trying to figure him out and the more her anger drained away. There was, in a way, nothing here. Just a bitter fire burning any who slighted it.

"Why you anyway! Why did you deserve anything I should have gotten! You're a freak who got there out of pity!" Feng Shen rudely interrupted her musings.

"What you tried to do to me Shen is certainly a motivation," Cerina said coldly as she punched him in the side. He groaned. She shook her head. "But no. My goal was to learn about those fascinating words from ten years ago," she told him. He didn't deserve the complete reason; that she sought cultivation for the beauty of the Eye in her dreams and the beauty she saw in every part of the world. Seeking to look upon something divine and sublime.

He looked up at her blankly. "That's it? That's your fire, your drive. Hell, is that your Dao? That's worthless!" He seemed to be beyond anger at this point, sinking into disgusted offence at her very existence.

She shrugged. "Better than the petty grudges you devoted yourself to," carefully, she leaned forward. She was sore as hell.

"Petty!? No!-" His new diatribe stopped as she reached down, wrapping a hand around her knife and set it against his throat. Fear surged in his gaze, that little flame guttering out.

"No! No please, I can-!" He tried to say desperately.

Shunk!

He died, finally falling silent.

Wiping her blade on his robe she sat down heavily and waited. After a moment of catching her breath, the stink got to her and she took the opportunity to wash off all the blood on her in the river.

Surprisingly, it only took about half an hour for her to notice someone running over the dunes towards the town. They had the glint of bronze flesh and she raised her arm and voice. She hadn't expected another hunter so quickly. Her bad arm she'd bound in her scarf in a makeshift bandage.

"Over here!" She shouted from the top of the rock. The runner shifted course gracefully, coming to a stop at the base of her rock in a rush of sand and dust. Waving their hand in front of their face revealed a shorter man with dark hair and Turtle World eyes. He looked up at her. "Clansmate! This one is Xian Shuren. I am here on the Urgent alert, have you seen the escapee?" the man asked.

Looking at him closely she thought he might have been in the Third or Fourth stage, like Feng Shen. Certainly higher than her. She shook her head slightly, chuckling. "Clansmate. This one is Cerina Polya. Feng Shen's dead now," she cut to the chase. A wave of tiredness was starting to pull her down and she frankly wanted a bed that she could just cocoon herself in like a moth.

The man's face lit up. "Great! You killed him then?"

She nodded.

The man let out a relieved sigh. "Thank the Imperator. Commendations then!" He congratulated her. Then he considered her for a moment and nodded. "Would you like some help with all that?" He asked, gesturing at her injuries.

Twitching, she raised her injured arm and winced, the soreness becoming brighter as she paid attention to it again. The burst of Qi from her stones was also fading away. "Yeah, I think I would Xian, thank you."

The man smiled and quickly hopped up the rock. Between the two of them they had her and Feng Shen down on the ground in no time. Xian wanted to carry Feng Shen's corpse and while she was tempted to carry it, the sudden surge of revulsion she felt towards it made her allow it.

"Well! Lets see what these people can offer for your wounds and get you sorted out," he said with a bubbly enthusiasm of a bad day suddenly going well. She just nodded.

Together, they walked toward this little town whose name she didn't know. Xian chattered the whole way, asking her questions to which she gave terse, mostly empty answers, though he didn't seem to mind. There was just no enthusiasm left in her right now. She was sore, angry, tired and her conversation partner was carrying the corpse of her thrice met enemy.

She just wanted to go home and paint the Eye. That sounded really good right now.



[Word count: 8592]

And that's the last one today! If anyone wants to do Teaching Juniors with Polya, I'd love to collab!
 
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Cerina Polya Year 240-245, Turn 13, Side Story 1: The Run

Cerina Polya Year 240-245, Turn 13,
Side Story 1: The Run​


"This next task is simple enough even a dog could understand it!" Vasso called from her chaise lounge, snacking on a bundle of grapes. Even as winter and the final months of the year encroached, the desert sun was burning hot over their heads. The fifteen mortal trainees were all gathered on a track that had been laid down in the Tall Wheat Fields. "Run!" She shouted, and they all shot off.

The track they were supposed to run along was a loop of stone with a total circumference of a hundred meters. It had been built near the Bronzewall by their trainers in ten minutes, each golden stalk shorn to the root, the earth pounded perfectly flat, and each stone perfectly fit to the next. Cerina had taken mental notes of the process, as part of her new habit in regards to her instructors.

It had been a grueling ten months of training and abuse that Cerina hoped was meant to train and prepare their bodies. Running in the morning, fighting at noon, running in the evening, obstacle courses, exercise sessions, surprise barrack inspections, meditation sessions. Strange tests abounded. Her entire body felt like a throbbing and half starved pit, their rations filling out her muscles while her belly craved more.

A further… mixed blessing, of sorts, was that Instructor Vasso had been intrigued by her from the start. It meant she had both of her instructors' stringent attention upon her, more implicity being expected from her. They were not too obviously helpful to turn the other trainees against her out of misplaced envy, nor were they hard enough on Cerina to spare the others their wrath and thus create sympathy for her suffering. No, they did it just enough to tell her she was being singled out.

Or at least she felt like it. Some days she wasn't sure whether these thoughts were the result of some exhaustion spawned delusion or a frighteningly lucid grasp of her current predicament. The good part was the small bits of advice Vasso dropped were helping her excel in the combat training.

They were just finishing the first lap when Agatha spoke up from her own lounge chair. "The slowest ones among you spineless weaklings will be failed!" She shouted. The crowd surged around Cerina, frightened faces huffing and puffing all around her. She looked around frantically… there was Hana, right in the middle of the pack when she looked back. Sarkiadi was near the front with Cerina. Determination flashed across Hana's expression at Cerina's obvious concern, and she slowly pulled forward until she was just behind the leaders of the group, plateauing again there.

As Hana pulled forward, a lens clicked rapidly, spinning around Vasso's left eye and fixed on that Polya girl. The youngster was fast, no doubt about that. Strong too, for a mortal. "Agatha dear," Vasso mused. Her friend raised an eyebrow in her direction. "Do you think that girl will have talent with the soul arts?" She said, referencing one of the most fascinating projects Elder Destasia had given them in recent years: a cataloging of the talents each Aspirant manifested as the Blood of Bronze affected their unique constitutions.

Vasso had been needling her friend with the most inane and bloody obvious conversation openers for years now, when Agatha didn't want to bother with that kind of basic stuff. This was a slightly more pleasant change of pace. Agatha still sneered, false mockery lacing her tone. "At least you're starting with a better question this time."

"Sometimes I just want to spice things up and cut to the chase!" Vasso answered.

Agatha rolled her eyes, thinking, and popped a grape into her mouth. Then she shrugged. "Long range scout and all that is my bet. That big eye has to be for something. Qi enhancement of her brain's processing ability. Someone for the Glass Spear operators to make friends with," she popped another grape between her teeth. "On that note. Wanna make a bet?"

"Oh that sounds fun. How about whoever wins takes the other's night shift?" Vasso proposed.

"I'll go for that," Agatha said, saluting her friend with a grape and then leaning forward, eyes fixed on a short tanned boy with curly black hair who was falling behind the rest.

"As I said, my guess is some kind of soul-artist, maybe even a soul flenser. That would be very fun!" Vasso exclaimed.

"There you go talking out your ass hun. Also she's doing the weird thing again," Agatha opined, still looking at the flagging boy.

Vasso had noticed it too. With each of the Polya girl's breaths, Vasso sensed the Qi in the air flexing towards the girl. Not enough to be properly grasped, or drawn in, but seemingly a side-effect of her unusual physique. It had happened every time they put her through serious physical exertion, like clockwork, like her body was trying to use Qi but didn't quite know how.

Back to business though… looks like that boy was too slow. Oh well. "Fail!" Vasso shouted faux gleefully and with a flick of her hand sent the tired boy flying off of the track to land in the dirt with a gentle gust of wind. All the trainees flinched and shot forward in panic, trying to squeeze out just a bit more speed as she cackled. Better they failed here and survived, than being killed on missions they were incapable of performing, or dying during Qi Awakening and Infusion, she thought. Ten Aspirants from this training course would be a good number, though five was most likely.

Cerina's breath was hot in her chest as she pondered her predicament, and tried not to hear the moans of the boy who had just failed. If she went as slow as that boy, she'd be failed too. She also had to go until they told her to stop. Two goals that seemed at odds… but she had an idea. Worth a try, anyway. She started to slow down, slipping into an almost instinctive marching pace. She looked around as she did and realized some of the other trainees had also started slowing down at around the same time as her, though Sarkiadi had started slowing a little earlier. Others followed their lead.

No one was immediately disqualified from the test for slowing down. Sliding next to Hana she nodded at her friend and whispered. "Can you handle this for a few hours?" She asked her, glancing at the impassive instructors. Hana frowned, showing teeth, and then shook her head.

"Okay, good news then. I think they have a set disqualification speed," Cerina whispered, tilting her head towards the trainee who was slowly crawling to his feet and stumbling away in shame.

"Thank the stars," Hana said near breathlessly and started drifting back herself as she slowed down to a more reasonable pace.

Cerina loped on, trying to keep her breath steady as she ran. Cerina had spent years running, because she enjoyed it. This was not enjoyable in the slightest. They had been running for about twenty minutes, she thought and after that first boy, the failures started to trickle in. Those who pushed themselves too hard were being removed left and right, the back of the pack seeming to almost dissolve as their bodies failed and they were tossed out by Vasso's wind blasts.

By the end of the first hour they were down to ten trainees, and everyone had settled at whatever speed they could sustain above the disqualification speed. Sweat dotted Cerina's face and her breath was hot in her guts as she tried not to overheat and succumb to the pressure of the sun above. Around her the others were haggard and sweat soaked, most worse off than she was.

How much more is there? She fretted, tinged by desperation and worry for her friends. They just told us to run… and neither of their instructors were seemingly paying all that much attention to them, bent over a board game they'd pulled out from somewhere. Agatha seemed to be losing.

A sharp twinge up her leg made Cerina yelp as her ankle almost rolled under her. She couldn't get distracted! Wiping stinging sweat from her eye she put her head down and tried to focus. One, two, one, two was the proper beat to stay in motion as her and everyone else struggled forward.

Midway through the second hour someone cried out in pain. Whipping her head back Cerina saw Hana collapsing, clutching at her spasming calf. The other trainees frantically dodged around her, their group splitting like chaotic waves around a rock. She nearly stopped, stumbling, almost bumping into someone before she dodged. Hana's angry glare stabbed through Cerina as she started to turn. Don't you dare, she seemed to say. With that rebuke, Cerina kept running, throwing glances back to see her friend slowly crawling away, holding her leg as her face twisted in pain.

She's not being tossed off the track. Cerina thought. The realization that Hana hadn't failed rang through her when she saw Vasso come and guide Hana to sit beside the track, helping her stretch and drink something. When they came around on the next lap the other trainees saw Hana sitting there and Cerina could feel the moment they realized the same thing she had. Like a collective sigh of relief she watched all the other trainees slow down.

"We didn't tell you you could slow down! Run till we say stop or you collapse, insects!" Agatha roared, suddenly appearing behind them in a flash of movement. Some of the trainees screamed and they all lurched forward like a panicked beast.

For several laps Agatha chased them, shouting blandishments about the promiscuity of their parents with increasingly bizarre animals and the complete failure of their existence the entire way. Blessedly though she was eventually satisfied, and then suddenly returned to her lounge chair. No one thought about slowing down after that.

Over the next half hour, more slipped and fell, succumbing to exhaustion. By the end of the second hour Hana was standing again and with hunched shoulders was sent back onto the field, followed slowly by the others who had fallen after her. For Cerina, it was becoming a run of slowly escalating agony, her joints and muscles begging her to just stop and rest.

There was none to be had, however, and they were still running after the third hour. The scent of vomit and exertion hung over the field, some simply too overwhelmed to keep control of their stomachs. Cerina hadn't fallen once yet, nor had Sarkiadi. A few others were hanging on behind the two of them after coming back from a break. But that group of trainees was rapidly dwindling as more and more people simply could not continue at all under the baking hatred of the sun and their own bodies rebelling.

Everyone looked like they were sweating away the blood right out of their bodies, their hearts hammering in their chests as their legs wobbled. Cerina did not feel far off from that state herself. Stubbornness, her orders, and dread of her instructors' displeasure were what drove Cerina to keep running when she felt so badly the urge to stop.

By the middle of the fourth hour it was just Cerina and Sarkiadi still running. They didn't look at each other or exchange words or do anything besides focus on the run, so it was a surprise when Cerina had to suddenly jerk and dodge out of the way of the girl when she collapsed. The girl was quickly scooped up by Vasso to be deposited next to the rest of the still semi-conscious.

When Cerina next passed the gathering of trainees and the instructors, Vasso shouted at her. "Stop!"

Cerina almost kept running, locked into the rhythm of her thudding feet on the stone. But she did as ordered, panting and shaking, looking at her instructor with a faint hope. Am I done? She wondered.

Vasso looked at her, then nodded. "Trainee Polya. Carry Trainee Sarkiadi and keep running."

Cerina's heart dropped into her guts and her feet responded on autopilot to carry her towards her instructor. The other trainees' faces were pale, and Sarkiadi looked at her in commiseration as she tried to stand up. Hana was red in the face and shaking so hard Cerina thought she might explode. Cerina reached down with shaking arms and together the both of them managed to get Sarkiadi up onto Cerina's back. Vasso raised her hands once they were ready. "Prepare yourself Trainee," she ordered, and Cerina tensed.

There was a flash of light and then bands of dark and heavy bronze formed around her limbs and abdomen. They forced her to bend and almost collapse as the weight tried to plant her in the dirt. She groaned sharply, shoulders stretched painfully as she straightened. "Go," Vasso said, gesturing back to the track.

Breathing hard, Cerina turned around and marched slowly back to the track. With an effort of will she started running again. She quickly found that before, running had been possible. She could have kept going for another hour or two, and she could easily carry this girl's weight even as exhausted as she was. Together though they were killing her, each footstep had a pounding impact of pain. But she kept running out of sheer bullheadedness.

Everything narrowed down to the run, each exhausted stride fighting to lift the weight and then slamming down heavily. The pain rapidly pounded her grasp of time out of her skull. Soon her struggling breaths and slapping feet and the pounding sun all mixed to create a trance like state of suffering. Her entire world became a mirage of throbbing pulses of pain and flashes of her surroundings.

Distantly through the haze she heard an angry voice and a smug, "If you wish, girl," from someone in response.

Then a moment later she heard footsteps joining her. "Cerina!" Someone called from beside her, causing Sarkiadi to look up at Hana from where she was draped on Cerina's back. Cerina did not respond.

Hana called again, and this one caused Cerina to twitch. Her big eye blinked and she looked over at Hana, a confused daze hanging on her features. Then the big idiot smiled, a wan and sickly thing and Hana shouted at her again. That seemed to snap Cerina out of it a little, finally.

Blinking, Cerina looked around, and then shuddered. Everything hurt so much, all of her joints screaming at her, but Hana was right here again, somehow. She'd missed what had happened, but that didn't matter. What did was that she was aware again, and she used this reprieve to adjust her technique. Crudely she managed to readjust and restabilize her gait and regain control of her breathing, which started helping beat back the pain immediately. The anger she saw in Hana's gaze pushed her on as she tried to stay ahead of the pain.

There was a groan from her back as Sarkiadi started trying to lift herself up. "I can run. I can. Let me down," she said weakly, tapping on Cerina's shoulders. She had to repeat this a few times before either girl heard it, and then Cerina nodded. With a heave, Sarkiadi dropped to the track, barely catching herself upright, and started to run again as well, a few steps behind the other two girls.

The other conscious trainees were muttering and watching the three girls. After another lap, one trainee boy with a shock of reddish-black hair slowly staggered to his feet and then back towards the track. The others watched him go, many of them reddening in shame, but slowly the rest managed to struggle to their feet and join him in a slow jog behind the girls. Cerina only dimly noted this peripherally. Too busy trying to cling to consciousness with ragged fingernails.

Vasso watched from the sidelines. A handful of trainees finding the will to keep going, she shook her head with a bemused smile. Agatha had her arms crossed, her frown missing, quietly pleased. After another lap Vasso raised her hands and clapped. "That's enough! Stop!" Her voice rang out over the runners. Jerkily, they lurched to a stop in ones and twos, many falling to their knees.

Cerina was one of the ones that flopped completely to the ground, panting as the weights were dispelled. Weakly she shielded her eye from the sun and focused on staying awake. Footsteps approached her and glancing over she saw Instructor Agatha looking down at them. "Good job trainees. The ten of you will be rewarded for your efforts, but for now, rest," she said. Cerina took that as permission and collapsed into unconsciousness.



[Word Count: 2884]
[Word Count total for turn: 30k]

Last one I think for this turn, before the fate's start being written. @ReaderOfFate @Kaboomatic heyo, one more.
 
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