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

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Eirene Micro-Omake 1 - a legend. a myth. an Aliki
Eirene of Nowhere micro-omake - a legend. a myth. an Aliki​

Eirene of Nowhere never harbored any delusions of being unique. She was a part of a generation - a multi-generation generation, truly the perception of time was different depending on one's cultivation level - of geniuses, singular stars blazing bright in a constellation. Among the Thirteen she was one of the people with lower cultivation, really.

But for that cute junior of hers to catch up with her so quickly, it was... it was... truly inspiring!

Eirene could not allow herself to stall, now could she! She was, of course, still ahead of young Aliki in skill and book smarts - in true wisdom, she could argue the eternally napping girl, who seemed to only awaken from her half-trance for food and sniffing out diseases with her odd constitution, was ahead of many senior Clan experts she'd met - but it was her job to make sure the gap narrowed as fast as possible, and that meant making sure to maintain it on her side at the same time!

What an enterprising junior, truly.
end omake​
(while Eirene hasn't been rolled yet, let me just quickly commemorate... THAT <3)
 
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Eirene of Nowhere 13 - Journeys of the mind
Eirene of Nowhere thirteenth omake - journeys of the mind​

Studies and research, teaching and learning.

This was the lifestyle Eirene of Nowhere had hoped for when she'd first gone to join the Clan, with so much trepidation and uncertainity if she was doing the right thing. Coming up with new healing methodics alongside the Clan's best, testing them and training in old ones. Managing the Clan's newest crop - this part was a surprise, truth be told, but a very much welcome one. Racking up Contribution Points for the Legion that had taken her in and never imposed much demand on her time, trusting her own judgement and discretion. Playing, singing and dancing in the time that was left free from that, forcing her qi into new patterns and mastering the peaceful techniques that her beautiful scarf made so much easier.

Yet still there were differences from the sedentary and reputable lifestyle she'd envisioned. Her cultivation had taken a step beyond the orthodoxy, her music providing benefits on entirely unexpected scale, with her long-dead cultivator teacher's aid. She was one of the Clan's hope and pride, and she was expected - she felt very much obligated to keep pushing herself beyond the limits of what was easy and ordinary and expected. The longer she spent in the capital, the more anxious she felt that she wasn't doing enough - oh, all the hours in her day were spent productively, but ultimately, a single Qi Condensation cultivator couldn't really do that much. The best aid she could be to her clan was work on her personal development, and that had - not stalled, exactly. It was proceeding at the expected pace... and nothing more than that.

That didn't feel like enough. Never had, if she told herself the truth; but now it was more than just a dreamer's whim.

At the very least, she owed her teacher a visit.

The Clan did not impose on its cultivators' time overmuch, preferring a system of incentives for steering them. She took a couple of missions on the way to where she was going, and off she went, traveling.

***​

The Clan was recovering.

It was visible everywhere in the lands she visited, frantic activity and reconstruction, high energy and novelty of the likes she had not seen before. Bright open future, people forging new destinies in the ruins of the old; it was reassuring and worrying both, because in a century's time - less, now - the Trials would come again, and what then? Would these waves of destruction and renewal spur their growth, or would they leave them diminished time after time, until they were finally wiped out completely?

Once upon a time, Eirene would have said that this wouldn't happen within her lifetime anyway; that this wasn't going to be her problem, no matter what the Heavens had in store. These days... these days, more and more things felt achievable. And more and more things felt like her responsibility, if not now, then one day. She wandered among mortals, her qi under tight control and light illusion making her bronze skin look lighter and with a more human texture. Cultivators could recognize her anyway - she didn't bother masking the illusion itself from qi senses - but in a crowd, she didn't draw a second look. Crowds weren't really her native place, though - Nowhere was, and so into nowhere she went, abandoning populated cities and well-traveled paths in favor of out of the way villages and nomadic settlements moving from oasis to oasis as they formed and dried out. Eirene of Nowhere, enjoying these people's lack of knowledge about specifics of anything that happened during the Trials, enjoying the practicality of her skills' application, enjoying asking for lessons in this craft or that in exchange for her aid. And every single person she talked to, thinking her a youngster yet most of them younger than her, patronizing and friendly, felt in their ignorance like they were hers to protect.

She encountered some bandits along the way; she avoided the more dangerous Foundation Building experts and smashed the Qi Condensation gaggles before legionaries had time to get to them. Fighting was not something she particularly enjoyed, not after Pleuron, but Blood Path was Blood Path. There was no coming back from that, and sometimes wanting peace meant needing the bigger stick.

It was her healing, though, that truly developed in the midst of this wasteland. A treasure received from a grateful ancestor; a handful of field medicine tricks picked up from people who've not had the luxury of access to tools and ingredients common in the capital; a deeper understanding of what health problems tended to plague mortals outside of the Clan's protective aegis. Her songs took on a more thoughtful tint, in these months, halfway towards learning how to express deeper truths and more profound patterns. She showed her teacher, when she reached her; the woman still sat in the same crack, playing the same melodies, and was amused and grateful for the visit, for all that she still avoided telling Eirene anything about herself. She listened to her tales - Eirene preferred the smaller, more mundane ones, avoiding the topic of Trials and the clan in general, for she was still not quite clear what the woman's relation to all that had been - offered some of her own, just as mundane and low key, yet still with no small insights. Her Dao wasn't quite Eirene's, Eirene understood, but there was enough in common that it felt like a single day spent in the woman's company helped consolidate her gains over the last... had it been forty years? It had.

Eirene left at dawn at the woman's bidding - apparently her apparition wasn't so stable as all that, and the magic that allowed her to persist, to hold memory and interact with others relied on long periods of inactivity, of existing as little more than a trembling shade playing the same memories over and over again. She left, leaving her teacher in her vulnerability, not promising to return - she was superstitious, she discovered, about promises she wasn't truly sure if she'd be able to back.

***​

Andronike. She missed Andronike so badly. Her first true friend, her mind immediately went to her after she parted with her teacher. She'd grown close to Andronike in pretty close succession after meeting the woman; learned and created, following the path dotted for her on the map with her own feet. The woman had been so earnest in her honor, in her devotion to the Clan, her family, in her protectiveness of her juniors. She'd encouraged Eirene's rise without seemingly even a single thought about Eirene overtaking her, about treating it as competition. Eirene gained a few insights into that, she felt, as she watched young Aliki - little Aliki, she'd say, but the girl was several heads taller than her - prance around, oblivious to the absurdity of her meteoric rise from, apparently, eating a single scorpion as a means of disposing of the body without wasting resources. One should not waste food; a lot of potential food for Aliki was being wasted every day as apparently their elders were electing to be cautious about the girl's unusual abilities. Eirene could understand that, considering that the girl's childishly detailed account did not so much as hint at any potential limits to her growth. Still, if her opinion was ever going to be asked on this, she knew she'd back allowing Aliki to develop to the hilt. The girl deserved every benefit of doubt, and threats had more of a tendency to develop out of those jilted and stifled, in her opinion, than those supported and nurtured and trusted.

Still, the naivete was a double-edged sword, and Eirene at least did her part in attempting to teach the girl to navigate the big, confusing, not-conductive-to-naps-all-the-time-at-all world without tripping over nasty surprises - to herself or to others. Do no harm, do as much good as you can - Aliki's straightforward simplicity was charming like few things Eirene had encountered. She simply did not draw much distinction between "good for me" and "good for others" - good was good and bad was bad, and that was that. She'd learn to, one day, Eirene knew, but when that day came... Hopefully she'd have enough of a foundation in caring for others that she'd stick to that anyway, as a conscious choice this time.

Eirene hoped that maybe one day Aliki would look back and think of her the same way she thought ever more frequently of Andronike Kairos, her teacher in that ever difficult art of meeting people.

And she hoped that she herself would live to make everyone who'd ever taught her anything proud.
end omake​
 
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Eirene of Nowhere 14 - Of mirrors and checkerboards
Eirene of Nowhere fourteenth omake - of mirrors and checkerboards​

Desert is commonly thought lifeless.

It is not. Scorpions prowl the sands; rare birds of prey circle overhead; snakes and small rodents dig their burrows, concealing themselves from the heat of the day and the cold of the night, coming out at the time that suits them best, hunting and scavenging, looking for what small drips of vegetation manage to survive in the harsh climate - and each other.

Their burrows aren't normally that easy to step in, though.

Nor do they commonly enlarge under one's feet, dropping you down through a suddenly gigantic tunnel of an entirely preposterous depth.

If Eirene were to hear this story from someone else, she would have assumed they were the one who shrank. But her control over and understanding of her own qi was superb, and her body was entirely hers to control - and so she knew for a fact that she stayed the same size. It was everything else that did... that.

Now she was falling with what should have been terminal velocity by now but was instead slow enough for her to see random furniture embedded in the walls of the tunnel - no, it was more like the tunnel was formed by furniture. She was inside of some carpenter's Dao, except also with random knickknacks in cupboards and on shelves that she could just - reach out and take? Experimentally she did just that, noting that it slowed down her fall and... warped? some of the furniture out of the way so she wouldn't hurt her hand. Convenient. So she was meant to do this?

Still, she snatched her arm away quickly with the loot - she wasn't sure she was meant to linger, and she was most definitely not meant to start examining, experimenting and scientifically documenting the phenomenon. Her every sense was telling her that she was inside a story, a dreamscape, working by its own rules, and those rules did not appear to be particularly friendly to reason, from the looks of it.

That was fine. Reason was, on occasion, quite boring; she did not entirely mind a vacation from it.

She had... a parasol? A parasol made of sturdy fabric that looked like it was meant to withstand liquids rather than sun's rays. A rain parasol? She was vaguely aware of the concept, little relevance though it had for desert dwellers.

She had a statuette of a cat with an unsettlingly monstrous, yet somehow friendly looking, smile full of sharp teeth. She spent several seconds attempting to estimate its size before realizing that it resized based on how she was looking at it. The biggest she managed to get it was... uh, bigger than herself, bigger than a house, for a moment, when she looked at the cat like it was a local benevolent deity looking down on her. That was nice, and especially nice how the tunnel resized even further, accomodating the space to this encounter - but she was more interested in making it... ah, pinkie finger sized. Eirene would have tried to make it smaller but after how the last one had gone - she didn't think she even hit the limit, she just urgently pulled the reins on trying - she wasn't sure she could find it if she did that.

She had a very nice looking silver spoon. This one wasn't resizing, but the more Eirene looked at it, the more she liked it - in fact, she didn't want anyone else to have her, she definitely wanted it for herself. It was just such a nice spoon.

Yeah, and Blood Path was a convenient way to quickly and reliably become stronger. She hooked the parasol over her elbow - it had a crook at the end that looked like it was meant specifically for that, and proved remarkably amenable to staying there, heedless of laws of inertia; hid the cat statuette in an inner pocket of her tunic; the spoon, though, she held out at a distance from herself, resisting the urge to claim it at all.

She fell some more, but as soon as she thought that the fall was starting to become a bit samey, and perhaps somewhat worn out and cliche - she was dropped into a pile of... dried out leaves? Was this an alchemist's stash? It certainly looked like an inside of a basement, or perhaps a burrow - walls of dark, dry soil with some bits of roots and stones sticking out of them... wait, where was the furniture? Eirene craned her head up, and there the tunnel she'd dropped through was - an... unpleasantly undefined height up, looking more like a warp in space than an actual tunnel, but it looked more like the tunnel she'd been in the more she looked at it, seeming to enlarge and come closer...

She looked away.

In front of her the burrow gave way to what looked like an ordinary corridor of an ordinary house. Actually when she considered the details she glimpsed out of the corner of her eye she was pretty sure she'd never seen a corridor or a house remotely like this, but what she was looking at with her eyes, her brain stubbornly insisted on evaluating as utterly regular, usual and not surprising whatsoever. At least this distracted her from the spoon. Ah, shit, now she remembered the spoon. Ugh.

There was little to do in the nook she was in, the leaves did not look like anything she knew to be useful, little to do but venture into this corridor; then proceed... right, why not? The corridor stretched into the distance, with some pleasingly round doors on it - Eirene wasn't sure why doors being round was supposed to be pleasing, but the place seemed really insistent on that, and sure, she was willing to go along with it. The doors were covered in variously colored paint, slightly darkened and peeling from age, with round handles in the exact middle of each; the corridor itself - Eirene was better able to discern it when she mentally conceded that yes, this was the very epitome of a very usual corridor, she was just establishing for herself what the most regular corridor in the world looked like - was covered in - some sort of texture? It didn't look like paint and it wasn't anything she was familiar with, and trying to figure out more didn't seem like a productive activity in this odd space. Either way, it was dark red and faded yellow and beige, and it looked rather pleasing to the eye, if a bit dull, and the doors would have been welcome splashes of color if they weren't quite so old. The floor was made of wood and also had a long rug, also dark red with faded yellow, rolled on it - Eirene was not considering the sheer wealth of this apparently extremely unconspicuous and utterly common corridor, no. She was just walking forward, like a very regular girl in a very regular corridor was wont to do.

She didn't mind playing by this space's rules, but she was keen on introducing her own, too, by this point. So she took out her flute - it seemed to shine brighter in this undefined, liminal space, as though its nature as an utterly ordinary yet personally dear object somehow made it an item of power in here - and started to play.

The walls listened. The doors, too, and the rug, and she was suddenly aware of the existence of the ceiling - which looked like a burrow wall trying to convince her that this was what a regular ceiling to a regular corridor looked like - and the space suddenly seemed to contain plenty of independent, odd entities each with their own interest in her song.

Some doorknobs were apparently sentient independent from their doors. Others weren't; she wasn't sure if there was a pattern to which was which.

The spoon in her hand, held between her fingers in a complicated way so it would not interfere with her playing, had its own interests too. Music allowed Eirene to impose some of her own rules on this space, just as she'd expected, and her rules were figuring things out; her business was knowing stories, so what was this spoon's?

Images flickered around her and in front of her mind's eye, the spoon's history unspooling obediently into both the past and the future. Apparently the thing really wanted her to want it for herself, steal it, fight for it; about what she'd guessed, really. She had no interest in that though, and insisted on flipping the old book's pages towards where other people interested in the spoon were. There were some odd animals, human sized yet not monstrous in the way the desert's inhabitants touched with qi tended to become, wearing some bits of clothing and accessories of a fashion she didn't know but that felt like it was quite usual and regular, same as the interior decor. Some of them appeared to be plants; she didn't look too closely. What was interesting to her was which door this was through - that one.

She suspected which door it was was determined by which one was just the right distance from her when she reached this point in her investigation; it was just too dramatically conveniently placed some paces ahead of her, giving some room for buildup while she approached. Well, and she could appreciate some dramatic convenience! She felt properly trepidated as she approached, focusing on how there were certainly incredible adventures waiting for her on the other side.

The door did seem to like that; it opened for her without her even needing to touch the handle.

(Which was very convenient, between the flute and the spoon, and Eirene's readiness to resume playing as soon as she felt in need of requesting some more concessions from the local anomalies.)

On the other side there was a garden; there were roses, growing in the great amounts Eirene had seen in the gardens of wealthy cultivators and mortals out to brag that they could grow whatever they wanted in the desert, even if there was no practical use at all; they somehow looked more like they belonged here, though. The environment seemed rather not-desert-like, more like what the inside of the Golden Devils' cities was like, but outside.

(Well, it was rather a burrow making a great decoration of being this place, but this place it was trying to be was definitely outside, and definitely not a desert.)

Some of the roses were red, some were white, and some seemed dripping with paint. Some paint was white, some was red; all roses looked like they were just that color naturally, including the dripping ones. It looked like some gardeners had a strong disagreement about which color they should be and decided to give each other silent treatment over it while all insisting on their own vision - Eirene could feel the story of it from looking over it. There were also fallen ladders and some paint buckets and brushes that seemed to fade into existence as she considered that they would, perhaps, be here; quite neat exposition, she decided.

She was alone, at first; not for long.

"That's a really nice scarf!" someone squeaked behind her. Someone whose approach she had not sensed through qi; she could not sense qi outside herself at all, in this place, it just didn't like her looking at things that way. Eirene turned around and was utterly unsurprised to not discover a door; there was more garden behind her, and she was looking at a... mouse? A white mouse standing on its back paws, about half her height, dressed in... some manner of... jacket? It looked feminine, and quite admiring of her scarf.

Eirene took a step back, reflexively clutching her scarf protectively; quite a feat, with the flute and the spoon already in her hands, but she was great at not dropping things, yes, she really was, she convinced this space even as it tried to insist she drop something.

No, her story was that she didn't drop things, thankyouverymuch.

"Ah, I'm sorry, I startled you!" the mouse continued in what was at the same time entirely authentic mouse squeaks and a the voice of a young woman. Eirene took note of the effect; perhaps she could figure out how to replicate it with qi later.

"It's just such a nice scarf, such a nice scarf; ah, but I must be going! The Black Rabbit is looking for his spoon - wait, is that the spoon you're holding? Oh, I would hide if I were you, I would hide!"

Upon finishing her monologue, the mouse dove into the nearest rosebush - didn't those have thorns?! - and disappeared from sight.

It was Eirene's move, she guessed. Her move was to stay right where she was and wait for whatever happened next. She'd come here to return the spoon in the first place! Thank you very much!

The next was a wave of small animals - well not all small, ranging from the actual size of non-magical mice to the actual size of giant desert scorpions, although none of them were scorpions that she could see, which was quite heartening - rushing towards and past her. The story tried to make her drop something again; instead, she allowed herself to be spun around and thrown into a bush, in a manner she would normally be rather too well-trained and coordinated for.

(Yes, she confirmed, rose bushes had thorns. Ouch, ouch, ouch.)

That left her slightly trampled, but with all the treasures - the scarf, the flute and the spoon - still securely in her hands.

The rain parasol was also still hooked around her elbow, improbably. It didn't seem to mind that gravity was supposed to be pulling it in a different direction; it was being pulled in whatever direction would be down if she was upright with her elbow pressed to her side. She assumed just that position; the parasol seemed to like it.

"Oh, my spoon, my spoon, my wonderful silver spoon!" a male voice that was unmistakably also a rabbit's came from the same direction the mob was from. "Whoever took it, I will wreak eternal vengeance upon them! I will rend their flesh from their bones and feast on the marrow! Oh, my favorite spoon!" The voice was high, somewhat whiny and definitely ridiculous, but the fleeing mob gave some... credence to the threats.

Eirene knew she was meant to panic, try to flee or hide the spoon at this point; but she also knew a better story when she saw one.

She stepped forward, hiding her flute back where she kept it, and thrust her open palm forward with the spoon on it just as the black rabbit - slightly smaller than her, it looked like she could take it in a fight, but she wasn't going to try it - came from behind the bend some meters away.

"I found this lying on the ground, is it yours?" she asked, just as the rabbit ran up to her, jealously grabbed it from her hand - she had to forcibly suppress her fingers from closing and yanking the spoon away - and muttered something indecipherably threatening while he... polished it?

Eirene considered him for a couple of seconds, then decided where she was going with this.

"Rude," she stated, then flounced away, right into a rosebush hedge, which conveniently opened before her, allowing her a rather dramatic exit off the stage.

Excellent.

Now she was in a forest; she knew it was a forest, she wasn't ignorant, but she'd never actually been in a forest before. This one submitted itself to examination with quite a bit more readiness than the corridor before; it had gone through quite some effort to be a forest, it seemed, and was rather proud of it. Eirene made sure to pay it some complimets out loud - "how exquisite!" "fascinating!" "oh, I am learning so much, this is quite authentic" - as she stared at everything, touched everything and listened to sounds of birds and wind and small animals around her. It was wet and airy and so full of everything, it was like she was in the middle of a city, except the city was of wild things instead of people. Mostly small wild things, ones that preferred to not be seen by her; those and plants, utterly indifferent to her presence, looking like they were there hundreds of years before and were still going to be there when even a cultivator's lifespan ran out.

She liked forests, Eirene decided.

"Mm, it does so like praise," a purr that was also a voice came from... above her? Eirene looked up, and among the moss-coverred branches of a large old tree there was a... well, a cat, looking quite like the one the statuette was of. Actually it didn't look much like a cat, per se, considering it was purple and grinning, but it evoked a cat rather undeniably.

"Hello, Mr Cat," Eirene said, because manners cost nothing and were worth quite a bit.

"Ooh, you're a polite one," the monster cat purred as it... wound around the tree in a manner that Eirene was pretty sure cats generally didn't, but that was yet again somehow undeniably catlike. "Say, what's that you've got?"

Eirene hesitated for a moment between the options, then went with the most visible one.

"This?" she took the parasol off her elbow and held it up. It sat in her hand, no longer showing any particular special opinions about which way was down.

"Ah yes!" the cat seemed to open its eyes wider in delight. They were green and yellow and rather monstrous, yet somehow undeniably aesthetically pleasing. Eirene took mental notes.

"My umbrella, you've found it! May I?"

Eirene handed the cat the rain parasol - the umbrella, out of courtesy refusing to question what exactly it would do with one. The courtesy was appreciated, as the cat held it up above itself in one... paw? The umbrella yet again seemed to have its own opinion about how it should move, using the paw more as a beacon for where it was supposed to be held than an actual support. It was also smaller than the cat's head - no, it wasn't that small, the head was just that big, appearing over half again the size of the body - but the picture did fit well, somehow.

Eirene stepped back and bowed, then took out the statuette.

"Ah well, my token," the cat purred as it wound back up around the tree, this time with the umbrella, which made the whole process even more ridiculous, yet rather perfectly aesthetic. Eirene continued taking mental notes.

The tree branches rustled, leaves swaying, as the oddly not-dry wind sighed between them. Birds were chirping only at a distance now, appreciating the presence of a predator, which looked quite self-satisfied as it settled on a branch definitely too small to hold its weight.

"You have quite nice taste for what you grab, yes you do, yes you do... Hmm, keep it, and I'll come to your rescue once; perhaps do me another favor sometime, and it'll be more than once, who knows?"

Eyes and teeth glistened, Eirene's entire perception suddenly narrowed to them.

"Now that's quite enough of you; this dream is about due to be dreamt somewhere else, back to your ridiculous desert you go..."

- the cat waved the umbrella parasol, and Eirene felt the forest shrink around her, somehow, as she moved... back and up, through the earth, between roots and stones and worms, up towards the sky and -

- - -

up was down and down was up and which way was what, and what even were directions?

- - -

- ah, there the sand was. She fell on it on her hands and knees, rather disoriented, hair in disarray and the scarf threatening to wound somewhere it wasn't supposed to go at all; took a few moments to recuperate, as her mind reaquainted itself with such fascinating concepts as staying in place and being the same shape several consecutive seconds in a row.

She could swear she'd lived like that for her entire life until now, yet the experience seemed entirely new. And fascinating!

There was no burrow, of course, as she checked around; that felt quite natural. She did seem to be in around the same place she'd been walking, which felt decidedly less so - but she did, she reminded herself, hope so. Getting lost in the desert was not one of her favorite pastimes.

She sat back, fixed her hair and scarf; took out the statuette. It was right where she put it, and the exact size she'd made it be; but now there was also a slip of paper attached to it, of the sort she'd seen some store owners put on displayed items. She checked it. It said:

"Mesmerizing Cat Summoning Token: £15.75
Let the cat bite your finger for a one-time miraculous survival!"

What the fuck even was that symbol?

At least it was clear how this was supposed to be used: the statuette's teeth looked wicked sharp, and quite ready for a finger to be stuck into them. She hid the statuette quickly, not wanting to examine that more closely.

"...Thanks, Mesmerizing Cat," she said out loud after some consideration.

Well, that... happened.
end omake​


Well, that... happened. Credit to Falconis#9484 on discord for the prompt, bless you and thanks. This was great ;u;
 
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Eirene of Nowhere 15/Rina Callista 24 joint omake - Rebuilding
Eirene of Nowhere and Rina Callista joint omake - rebuilding​

Pleuron was buzzing like an anthill, following the events of what was now a legendary battle, and as the Indomitable Thirteen both scattered and came together in the wake of it, Eirene of Nowhere stayed in the heart of it, where the future was overtaking the present and the past at an aggressive pace.

She did not keep herself idle after her recovery. It was as if there was a fear within her now, forbidding her inaction, making it impossible to let events pass her by. She worked herself raw healing, but when her concentration was overtaxed and she had to leave lest she start making mistakes, her mind would still not allow her to rest, or simply settle into cultivation without doing more, first. And so she took to putting together the story - the great story of Pleuron, of the Trials, of the recovery; everything she could get from the mortals, the cultivators of all levels, her fellow "geniuses" - it was still odd to think of herself that way.

And so, she made it her job to talk to everyone, everyone who was available at least, one by one.

As for Rina--well, there was always more work to be done--here in the aftermath of the Hundred Year Trials, in the aftermath of Pleuron. The damage was always great even in the best of times--and this was far from the best of times. Missions to aid in the reconstruction were all over the place--and while Rina Callista lacked the… greater capabilities expected of Foundation Establishment experts, she did have strength appropriate to that level--which meant she could take on reconstruction tasks that expected you to be in the second Great Realm of Cultivation!

Of course, this didn't mean such jobs were easy, and Rina was currently busy enjoying her break, a waterskin of infused water recently emptied at her side, and just kind of… Staring up into the sky.

Who would have thought, hauling White Sandstone all day would be harder than fighting an elder?

Apparently the people who expected this to be grunt work for experts. Damnit, was she being too arrogant here again? Letting the stress of the day get to her? Problems, problems.

Eirene of Nowhere was walking through the construction, looking around for every detail. This was history happening in front of her eyes - she would pass on these stories, many many stories that were being born right here, right now. For some this was an ending, for some this was the meat of them, for some a start. Menial tasks - the usual hierarchy of warriors staying above the day-to-day drudgery was broken and reversed, with bureaucrats and architects and civilian experts - even mortals, some - ordering around the Clan's best and brightest, leveraging carefully cultivated physiques for brute strength.

She did not come here without a plan. Rina Callista, the leader of the Indomitable Thirteen - for all that Ferenike had taken the command in effect, it was still Rina's name on everyone's lips, her face in everyone's thoughts, her call to action in everyone's minds - she was said to be here, helping. It made Eirene respect her even more, which opened new and unexpected room for respect actually.

The young prodigy of the Clan, everyone's pride and darling, not looking for the "fun" jobs of hunting down bandits and the like which most every legionary was hoping for these days - not like she of all people would be denied. It would even be somewhat reasonable from a resource allocation point of view, considering how it would probably serve her training more than hastening building by some fraction, and that would serve the Clan in the long-term, wouldn't it?

Eirene had been told these arguments about herself, so she knew them by heart. They stung, and she suspected they stung for the greatest prodigy of this - well, already previous - century, too.

She found the woman - girl, by sight - taking a break with a waterskin in the shade. Fortuitous.

"Senior sister," she bowed and clasped her hands as she approached, before gathering courage to lower herself to the ground next to her.

She wasn't quite sure what to say next - introduce herself? They'd talked little - Rina Callista did not talk a lot - but they had been together on all the strategy meetings of the Thirteen. Was it insulting to imply Rina should know her name? Was it insulting to imply her memory was bad enough she didn't?

She elected to wait for her reaction, silencing the cacophony of her brain with a surge of willpower.

Rina blinked, looking down from her daydreaming at the… Very tiny, very harmless looking Eirene, head bowed and hands clasped, and then sitting down next to her.

"Um… Good… Afternoon?" Rina greeted her back after a moment's befuddlement. "Eirene? Is there anything I can help you with?"

Eirene paused, flustered for a moment. Rina did remember her!

"I wished to collect your account of events," she replied, collecting herself. "If you do not mind… I apologize for interrupting your rest… are you alright?"

There was something frazzled about the young woman. There was about everyone, these days, but… well, and everyone could use a listening ear.

"I'm…" Rina started to answer, pausing for a moment, and then frowned at that. "I've… Been better honestly?" She shook her head. "No, that's not right--I'm perfectly fine, I'm just feeling… Like a square peg in a round hole, you know?"

She clenched her hands, almost squeezing something. "Still, a little distraction would be more than welcome right now, you needed my recount of events? I can spare some time--I'm on break for a while anyway."

"Please," Eirene said, oddly feeling like she was in charge of the conversation, and even more oddly like she was the older one. Which was inaccurate multiple times over, but…

There was not accounting for personality, was there? She'd not remembered Rina acting like this before, but then she hadn't exactly looked. She was too busy freaking out about one thing or another herself, and who'd look twice at their… illustrous leader.

The symbol, the icon, the hope of Bronze; the exhausted young woman - no, young girl, resting after a day of doing work meant for people several times her senior. The leader of the indomitable; just as much a person as anyone else involved.

Would she feel better after tellilng her story? Maybe? A good first thing to try, at least.
end omake​
@Alectai
(this was actually ready a long time ago, but we kept wanting to write more, and it kept not happening, and yeah, here's all of it)
 
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Eirene of Nowhere 15: the teeth of the beast
Eirene of Nowhere fifteenth omake: the teeth of the beast​

The phantasmal cat was licking its disporportionately small paw as it sat in thin air next to Eirene, the only reason she wasn't dead yet. The serpent's venom should have killed her by now, Heavens' answer to her stubbornness... but her stubbornness had teeth.

Very many very sharp teeth that were all grinning, somehow visible despite the paw licking. Quite frankly, it was better to not think too deeply about the exact mechanic of that part.

"That's a fine predicament you've got yourself in," the Mesmerizing Cat murmured, the patterns on its fur shifting, somehow keeping at bay everything at once - the serpent frozen in the middle of closing its jaws around Eirene, the venom in the wound, the woman herself curled up and near-screaming from pain, only managing not to because of the need to purge the poison and suture herself shut as best she could in the brief respite the cat had given her. She was held, but not restrained, unlike the rest of the scene; it seemed to have something to do with the nature of time passing, and Eirene was getting excellent practice with not thinking about things. That wasn't normally a thing she did, but here was apparently at least one situation where that was the requirement for survival.

"Mind telling me why that thing's not dead yet?"

The serpent was enormous and mighty, and yet, it would have taken barely a move on Eirene's part to drive it to its death. She'd figured out the reason it was attacking quickly enough - well, comparatively quickly, it had been a year - but what it wasn't noticing was its precious young being oh so close to a vortex of qi that Eirene could easily sense would tear them apart. She'd need only to nudge the nest to send it spinning, and the serpent's only recourse to shield it would be with its own body, giving itself to be torn apart instead, sending the nest of hatchlings soaring away with only the barest hope of survival.

It would, she knew. She'd been playing the whole while, attempting to calm or reason with the serpent, and while her entire might was not enough to actually influence the mind, too primal and powerful for that, she came to understand it well enough.

It wasn't listening, because it was afraid. Its entire being was focused on its children, right now, no room for further thought.

Well, not right now right now. Right now, the world was frozen, but as Eirene slowly drifted further away from the serpent's maw, in the gentle embrace of the curling winds that seemed to defeat gravity entirely, leaving one only with their own Dao to help tell up from down - right now Eirene saw the serpent's eyes following her.

A second chance. And she shouldn't be wasting the cat's patience either.

"Because I'm not here to attack it," she told the both of them. "I was flung here by a wind; I've no intention of picking a fight. I'd have looked for a way out, but I was a bit too busy being chased; now that for the moment I'm not, by the way,"

(that was a lie. Even just looking at speaking was sapping concentration from suppressing the venom, allowing it a better grip on Eirene's meridians and acupoints, going from a momentary wound to something that would take a much longer time to recover from. She allowed it to; she'd been fighting for this for a year, and one did not become a cultivator without a particular brand of stubbornness that was near to foolishness)

"...now that for the moment I'm not, I'm fairly certain that that," she pointed at the nest, and after a moment realized that the serpent, frozen mid-lunge, could not see them from its angle; but the world itself distorted, and while nothing seemed to move, exactly, angles changed so that suddenly the serpent was facing not only her but the nest as well. Thank you, Mesmerizing Cat, for proper drama, she thought, and continued: "...fairly certain that that is not the exit and also no place for chicks to be..."

She trailed off. Now that she could see the whole layout clearly - give or take headache-inducing funhouse-mirror-like distortions - she realized that the serpent could not move the nest away easily, or at all. The qi vertext was too close; any wrong movement would send either the nest or the serpent itself spinning to its death. The parent was desperate and angry at an intruder for a reason; for a year she'd tried to persuade it of an absence of threat from her without realizing that she was not the source of the threat it feared at all.

"...now it just needs a tiny nudge," she murmured, changing the tack mid-thought. The vortex was too close for the serpent to be able to do anything... but the tooth that pierced her was alone the size of Eirene's entire body. She was, for it, a particularly large bug, and where even a single claw could not fit without touching something it shouldn't, Eirene could do a dance without fear; and actually she didn't even need to, for unlike the beast, whose qi was entirely confined to its body, she could just... affect things... at a distance.

The distance which shrunk, again without anything particularly moving from its location in space - but the nest was in front of Eirene now, the vertex just off to the side; she could feel the serpent's gaze on her, drowning in fear and desperation and an absurd, nearly dead hope; she focused on that hope to hold herself to it as she uncurled, fighting her own body's reaction. The venom was no longer spreading; she'd kept it from vital areas, but it was seeded deeply in her bones now; no matter. This wasn't about that.

She brought the flute to her lips, carefully, slowly, despite her trembling hands; she blew, and a precisely aimed nudge sent the nest spinning away through the Cat's distorted space, further and further from the vortex until it was safely outside of its gravity; Eirene was frankly surprised that she'd aimed precisely enough to hit it just right from the first time without further course corrections... but she'd take small victories where she could get them.

The flute slipped from her grasp, and the only reason it did not float away to be lost forever among the clouds was the cord connecting it to her belt - Eirene was no idiot. The space distorted again, the nest and the vortex growing ever further away, until the stage - seen somehow from everywhere at once, she was even seeing herself from the side, and oh by the way she looked like shit - was just her, the serpent and the cat, its size oddly unclear between barely bigger than her and barely bigger than the serpent.

(She supposed she could just go with "barely bigger" as the descriptor then. That seemed the intent.)

"A marvelous play," the Cat purred, "truly I am satisfied. You may call on me again, mosaic, and I'll be looking forward to what show you put on next. Try not to die before then!"

On that encouraging note, it vanished, and the space popped back to normal.

One unfortunate effect of that was that time was unfrozen as well, and the serpent continued its lunge; Eirene was actually just far enough to be out of the way of the initial movement - she could feel the serpent's fur brushing her feet as it whistled by - but she was in no shape to dodge in the way she had for a year. Her opponent only ever needed to land a single good hit; and, well, that had just happened. She'd remembered the cat, then, in her desperation, and called on it; and frankly she was fine with what that'd allowed her to do, even if it didn't make her any less dead.

Not all who went to the Qiguai Secret Realm emerged back out; one did not enter it without accepting that simple truth.

But the serpent did not attack. It wove itself around her in curl after curl until its long body formed what might as well have been a basket, and inside that basket a giant serpent face poked in and a long tongue extended in her direction and wrapped itself around her and then held her, as gently as in a hand.

"My greetings," Eirene managed, stunned by the pain and the general numbness spreading itself around her - exhaustion? Relief? Satisfaction? Apathy? She couldn't tell anymore.

"My greetings as well," the creature hissed, not seeming deterred from speech in the slightest by its tongue's activity. "And so too my apologies. I see you are in no state to talk; I will take you somewhere that's safe, then..."

It seemed to continue speaking for some time after; Eirene could not be sure. The world swam, and bit by bit she passed out.
end omake​

First of the series~

And guess what my omake reward is going to be! I know a Healing Treasure would make more sense, but this was just... narratively necessary.

Also I'm working on an illustration of that last scene, here's a WIP preview:

 
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Eirene of Nowhere 16 - Two Old Biddies Talk over Drinks
Eirene of Nowhere sixteenth omake: Two Old Biddies Talk over Drinks

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

Run your own Xianxia faction! Offend old monsters! Raise good seeds! Face heavenly tribulations! And remember, always support your Young Masters, no matter who they offend.
AN: 1250 words. Tribulation Treasure for omake bonus. Put Eirene on Secret of Underworld. Have Eirene drop to the 11th Heavenstage and break through to Foundation Establishment at Turn Start
 
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Eirene of Nowhere 17 - The Mirror of Truth
(mostly by Insane-Not-Crazy)​
Eirene of Nowhere seventeenth omake: The Mirror of Truth
The riot of colors painted across the sky as the sun set in the west never failed to amaze Eirene. She had spent her entire day climbing her way up into the peaks that marked the start of the Colossus Footsteps Path Foothills and only paused her ascent as evening dawned to admire the view from her height. Below her spread out the southwestern territory of the Golden Devil Clan, qi enhanced eyes letting her see far and wide. To her north loomed the steadfast portal of the Grand Mountainwall while just below she could spy the camp of the 353rd​ Legion, the forms of her clansfolk rendered into minuscule dots that were more imagination than fact. She cast her gaze further seeking out the landmarks she knew to be there. Seven Heavens Trade City was invisible to her despite her staring in the direction she knew it to be. The haze of air on the horizon might have been the peculiar atmosphere of Nascent's Fall or just a mirage of light. Closer though she glimpsed a hint of a verdant crown and tilted her up into the evening breeze, wondering if the ancient inhuman mind of the Whirlwind Tree would notice her tiny presence as the Exceptional Spirit Tree listened to the secrets of the wind. She had come far from her mortal beginnings but even with so lofty a vantage point her limits were starkly delimited. Tugging the iridescent scarf around her neck tighter, she resumed her climb relying only on the light of the moon and her own vision.

Her pace slowed in the darkness but she reached the peak of this minor sentinel among the fierce guardians of the range just before midnight. The top of the mountain was only distinguished by the fact that it was unusually flat, almost as though something had sliced off the barest tip to the summit and left a fairly broad platform. This oddity was why she's picked this destination for her purpose. Eyeing the position of the full moon and checking the timepiece she had brought along Eirene judged that she had no need to hurry and was in fact a little ahead of time. From the pack she had carried with her she retrieved three items: an old flute, lovingly painted and lacquered; a statuette of a cat with a paradoxically frightful yet amiable visage; a broad but shallow clay bowl, almost a tray really.

Eirene picked up the statuette and looked into its eyes for some spark but it remained still lifeless stone.

"Hello old friend," she whispered to the Mesmerizing Cat Summoning token, "I don't know if you can hear this but we've been on some incredible journeys together and it wouldn't feel right to leave you out of this moment. I can't call on you to assist me in this trial but I'd like a witness to whatever may come after this. We've not spoken in a while but when I come down I figure it's about time to get you powered up."

Whether the gleam in the feline's eyes were real or just her imagination, Eirene could not tell but she nonetheless set the statuette on the ground far enough away to hopefully avoid the worst of the upcoming excitement. Picking up the flute, she played a soulful melody on her oldest companion, letting the tune carry her into memory. She'd seen nearly two centuries of life and this instrument had been at her side through almost all of that time. As the notes piped out of the wind instrument, the world for the slightest moment seemed to settle easier upon her form. An observant watcher upon that rocky plateau looking beyond mortal perception would have noticed that Eirene's spirit seemed to be enlivened by the beat of her music, dancing to an unheard cosmic melody and becoming ever so slightly unified with the world. For several minutes she played and the spiritual energy around her responded, drawn in by her harmony. Eventually her performance slowed and finally the last notes echoed into the quiet of the midnight hour as she came to stop. Holding the flute in her right hand, she lifted it up in silent salute towards the distant horizon where in a small cave an old ghost stirred in its fading, smiling faintly as echoes of song played in its stilted thoughts. A memory drifted up to it, of teaching a curious junior the slightest secrets of the song of existence, to grasp the state of Cosmic Harmonic Enlightenment.

The pregnant moon hovered above, unconcealed by clouds and by its light Eirene hurried to complete her final preparations. She stood over the clay bowl and pricked her wrist with a long glittering needle with practiced ease. The flesh of a cultivator in the 12th​ Heavenstage was not as easily transgressed as that of mortal fare but the Qi Transferring Needle proved up to the task and soon a slow fall of blood fell into the bowl pushed out as much by intent as the beating of a heart. The clay bowl took more blood than seemed possible for its depth, enough that a mortal would have been faint when Eirene ceased her offering. Full to the brim with sanguine fluid the bowl looked like nothing more than an ordinary vessel with deceptive capacity.

Eirene closed her eyes and took in a deep breath as she ran her mind though her preparation checking that everything she needed was ready. Satisfied, she bent down and breathed out air and qi into the blood filled bowl. Primed for activation, the Heartsblood Mirror shed its mundane appearance as an ordinary bowl. The clay shattered and turned into dust that was absorbed into blood that rose up to head height with Eirene, a smooth perfect disc of red that seemed to drawn the moonlight into itself.

Looking up to the skies above, Eirene screamed out, the sudden noise shattering the quiet that had reigned for so long. "I am Eirene of Nowhere! Legionnaire of the Golden Devil Clan! This night I offer a challenge to the Heavens themselves! By my will and strength, I step forward! Against all opposition, against all curses! Who will stand in my way?!"

As she made her declaration, Eirene reached out to the link forged in lifeblood between her and the artifact hovering before her. She squeezed down on her dantian within her and pressed down on all sides, forcing it to become smaller and return to what it had been. Pain thrummed through her, emanating from beyond her physical form. That faint link between body and soul that she could faintly sense at her core quivered as she sundered her cultivation base and forced herself back to the 11th​ Heavenstage. She grimly held on through the pain, directing the sacrifice of so much to its planned purpose. She recoiled from the backlash of her self-mutilation and spat out dark blood onto the disc in front of her, channeling all the severed strength into the expulsion. The Heartsblood Mirror absorbed her offering and turned pitch black as its power heightened. It now appeared as a hole in the world, a gaping maw marked out by a ring of silver light around its circumference that was evidence of an inexorable consumption of moonlight.

Above the skies rumbled with the sound of thunder despite no cloud cover. From the cloudless skies, colored lightning fell straight for Eirene, striking true like a flung javelin. Heaven had heard her defiance and sent down its tribulation to punish her temerity. The fulmination struck with such dazzling speed that Eirene, still reeling from the pain of her oblation could barely react to its approach. She just saw a flash of approaching death before it bent sideways, struggling futilely as it was dragged into the maw of the abyss that the Heartsblood Mirror had become. The artifact rose above her head to stand sentinel over Eirene, warding off several follow up strikes with equal ease. The affinity she had forged with the Tribulation Treasure allowed Eirene to sense that the artifact was doing as intended. Her vital essence suffused the artifact allowing it to interpose itself between attacks intended for her. Once captured, the Tribulation Lightning was forced to expend its strength against the artifact and the weakened energies were then transferred to Eirene. Heaven's derision of the Blood of Bronze meant that Eirene like all her clansfolk received a tribulation that was four parts killing intent to one part nurturing essence. The intervention of the Heartsblood Mirror reduced that to a two to one ratio, a truly priceless effect that was worth every cost she'd paid to obtain the artifact.

The much reduced tribulation lightning was easily handled by Eirene's dantian, refined into renewed vigor that had her quickly recovered from her loss of cultivation. The Heavens had been quiet after the first probing strikes, measuring out their proper response while Eirene restored herself. She had not recovered fully when they sent down a second fusillade of lightning, striking with doubled potency and number. The Heartsblood Mirror valiantly stood against these attacks just as it had those prior but Eirene was painfully aware through her link to the artifact that its capacities were not endless. Too much more of this and the strength of the artifact would be expended faster than she had planned.

In the strobing illumination of the cacophonous descent of Heaven's testing, Eirene adjusted the fit of the Glimmering Star Scarf around her neck and prepared her answer to Heaven's questioning. Every bolt of Tribulation Lightning had been as much a demand for conviction and knowledge of the Dao she claimed for her own as it had been raw elemental fury. She closed her eyes for she did not need sight for this next part, after all her audience was as much within as without. Her feet began to move slowly as she wove her presentation in patterns of qi so familiar that it felt like her body knew them without thought. As her limbs moved through the motions of the Mesmerizing Dance Illusion Technique Eirene told a story through dance.

Short and fat, she danced with such verve that none would have believed that she had once stumbled through those steps with clumsy grace. The will of Heaven was not susceptible to the enthrallment of such a feeble technique, not even one enhanced by the renowned treasure of the Glimmering Star Scarf her motions were accompanied with but that was not necessary for Eirene's goals. All that was required was that Heaven look beyond just striking to kill and with its focus already on her that was not an impossible task. The assault against the Heartsblood Mirror slowed a hair as Heaven spared a fraction of attention to what she gave as answer. This was the story she told in the poetry of motion.

Once there was a maiden who traveled the world. It opened her secrets to her, and called to her with power and time - and so she set off on a greater journey, leaving behind the familiar. She sought knowledge she lacked, and experiences undreamed of. She found a world of variety, filled with beauty and terror in great measure, suffused with thrills and delights. The maiden wanted it all, diving into the fullness of everything and trying to go for everything at once. She was greedy for all the stories that had been, were and could be. Life was a mosaic, a stage for a Thousand Fragments.

The Heavens spat charges of electric accusation. They dug through her memory and her past, dredging out the lie they saw in her declaration. What variety had she sought in her pursuit of peace? Had she not forsaken the possibilities of other paths to tread the way of the pacifist? Liar, they declared her from their celestial thrones. Did she not turn away from war and bloodshed, blind to the grandeur of conquest and the sweet triumph of violent victory? Had she devoted herself to any craft beyond the superficial ease of a mortal's work? Hers was a hollow dream, the skies roared in denial, a belief founded in nothing more than infantile fancy. She sought to swallow the whole world, a stupid gluttonous failure, who could not even succeed in the meanest goal of advancement.

Each reply from the Heavens shook Eirene seeking to disrupt her rhythm and shake her with doubt. The bolts of recrimination and castigation hit as hard physically as they did spiritually. Seeing her falter, the Tribulation doubled down and sought to drown out her challenge, to obliterate it in scorching destruction. Against this offensive, Eirene fell back teetering on the edge of ruin. Sweat pouring out of her from maintaining her defense, she mustered up her resolve, holding on to the conviction that had brought her to this peak. She held up her hand and presented the Truce Talisman to the expanse above. As potent as the artifact was it had no purchase on the Celestial Machine but Eirene was not herself immune to its effects. She spoke to herself and demanded attention from her conflicted spirit, seizing a moment's quiet from the warring doubts and despair the Tribulation had planted within her.

"The Dao is one and many. I see the threads that are the stories of each life, connecting disparate comprehensions of a singular world," she whispered to herself, almost drowned out by unrelenting thunder, "Peace preserves the pattern of what is but conflict is the engine of change. Possibility and potential flow from both and I cannot deny either."

In the harsh truth of the Heavens' prosecution, Eirene admitted the truth that she had let one part of herself overshadow the other. Peace had its place in the mosaic but it was not the totality of it. At Pleuron she had danced and held back attackers because pacifism was not enough, not always. The strength to kill and destroy had placed as much part in the Miracle at Pleuron as anything she had contributed.

Laughing she lifted her head up and danced in frantic excitement. She was tired, still hurting from losing a Heavenstage and still under threat of death from the Heavens but she had found herself. What came next was nothing but a challenge of endurance and she had already proven to herself that that was a feat well within her means.

When the first rays of dawn touched upon the summit of that nameless peak, they fell upon the face of a slumbering woman lying on her back. Her clothes were loose on her, hanging off a lean frame. Scattered all around the flat mountain top was a strange black dust that hung heavy against the wind. In her dreams, the woman had transformed into a laughing maiden seeking always a new story with a tune on her lips.
end omake​
 
Eirene of Nowhere 18 - Rest & Relaxation
(mostly by Insane-Not-Crazy)​
Eirene of Nowhere eighteenth omake: Rest & Relaxation​

Eirene of Nowhere let out a soft belch, really more of a ladylike burp, and patted her stomach. She exhaled gratefully as she looked down at the evidence of her expanded pocketbook. The empty interior of a deep and broad white porcelain bowl reflected the gleam of the afternoon light, spotlessly clean with nary a drop left behind. Just to her left on the table, three similar bowls were stacked in a pile, previous challengers Eirene had overcome with much gusto.

"That was an excellent meal," she said to herself, closing her eyes to relive the mouthwatering fragrance and sublime taste of the noodle soups she had just relished. The cost of partaking of such incredible delight matched the grandeur of the meal itself but Eirene had gladly shelled out the contribution points without hesitation. Sure, it had been a sum that would have beggared her as a Junior and even now was a significant expense to her means as an Expert. However it was well worth it not just for the gourmet experience but the strength it would add to her physical frame when she finally finished processing the meal.

Eirene opened her eyes and looked around the room. All about her were fellow diners caught in their own moments of bliss as they supped within the Twelve Zodiac Restaurant. Her gaze found the master of the establishment, the bald and gaunt Gong Wen, standing in the doorway to the kitchen surveying his dining area. She bowed her head deeply to express her appreciation of his handiwork to which he gave a curt nod in reply and ignored her afterwards. Eirene didn't mind the brusque nature of her host. His skill in the culinary arts had earned him more than enough grace with her to cover over any rudeness.

A cultivator hailing from the Simmering Soup Sect, Gong Wen was a wandering chef that had set out on the road with nothing but the clothes on his back, seeking inspiration and experience for his advancement as a prodigy of his sect who had reached Foundation Establishment at the age of one hundred. He had traveled across the Organ Meat Desert, the Hard Shell Mountains and the Green Scale Plains, searching out ingredients, recipes and techniques to elevate his practice of Spirit Cooking. Nearly four centuries later he had proven himself successful, not just by surviving his many expeditions but thriving off them.

The traveling cook normally spent at most a decade in one area but for the last two decades he had settled in the heartland of the Golden Devil Clan territory near the border of his old sect but never crossing into it. Rumor had it that prior to his departure Gong Wen had sworn to return as a Core Formation cultivator or never at all. Apparently he had been of the opinion that the Recipe Books of the Simmering Soup Sect were hidebound institutions that had lost their drive for discovery and merely contented themselves with reiterating old formulas. Gong Wen aspired to claim the rank of Soup Lord and found a Recipe Book out of the harvest of his experiences tasting, cooking and serving the many meals of the Virtuous Flipper Region. His prolonged stay near the border had produced whispers that at last the prodigal son was readying himself to attempt the leap to the next supreme realm.

Eirene cared little for Gong Wen's plans though she wished him success if it would allow him to continue crafting his wonderful meals or even better ones. Her interest was in the special menu he was offering. The harvest of Volcano Wheat from the Wheat Clan in the Peng Kingdoms had come early and more potent than any in living memory. It was not just them but the Fields of Rain in the Hua Empire, the floating islands of the Hong Xuan Isles and even the Tall Wheat Fields of her clan were all reporting record bounties of crops these last few years. It most likely had to do with the influx of spirit qi from the dawning of the Great Era, boosting the fertility of the relatively starved desert. As though to spite the masters of his old sect, Gong Wen had taken advantage of the sudden surplus of quality ingredients on the market and began producing a flood of affordable but incredibly fortifying meals for cultivators, that normally only the higher experts of the Simmering Soup Sect would produce at considerable cost to customers.

Eirene pinched the skin of her stomach and smiled happily on noticing that she was well on the way back to her preferred figure. She had successfully overcome Heavenly Tribulation to become an Expert but the experience had been grueling and taxing. She had sacrificed part of her cultivation to allow herself to advance, permanently wounding her soul in such a way that the benefits of purifying her soul in reaching the 12th​ Heavenstage had been lost to her. Even that painful surrender had not been the end of what she had needed to give up. Surviving that night of offering response to Heaven's challenges had wrung her body dry, her ceaseless dancing burning through her body's reserves until she and Gong Wen were not too far in appearance. Call her vain but she had loved her plump figure and had committed herself to restoring what she'd lost.

Her motivation wasn't entirely rooted in vanity though. She was not a mortal who accumulated fat from an inability to match consumption with exertion. In her wandering as an itinerant diplomat and bard, she had picked up a body tempering manual that caught her eye in of all places the land of the Goatmen Tribes. Given the paucity of cultivation prospects among the residents of the area, she had gotten the manual for cheap. The Laughing Monk's Belly was a collection of cultivation exercises that built up qi within the fatty deposits of the body, transforming them into quite effective physical protection with continued use. In a pinch the qi stored in the fat could also be depleted as alternative energy reserves like she had done during the Heavenly Tribulation. The manual also taught a very useful set of qigong movement techniques that claimed to allow an elephant to balance on a bamboo stem with sufficient comprehension and practice. Despite that vague qualification, the exercises were immensely helpful in polishing her movements, teaching her grace and subtlety in movement.

Two decades after breaking free from the rank of Junior, Eirene was feeling ready to make a long awaited trip, her dantian happily sending out qi to break down her meal and circulate its benefits throughout her body. She hadn't accomplished as much as some old acquaintances in the mission to secure the remaining Light Qi – how did Minervina get away with it all the time, she wondered – but there had been enough reward to handily strengthen her cultivation. The Beast Core of the Clawed Furious Light Wolf – the naming scheme among the scouts still had her shaking her head – had been valuable enough to earn her enough contribution points to purchase the cultivation resources she needed to align her singular Dao-Pillar and fortify it. Within her spirit a solo string was strummed as she sung a tale of a girl and her pursuit of [A Thousand Fragments]. It was a lonely string, plucked from the sinews of her heart and formed of [Integrity]. In time it would be joined by other chords and tunes, woven into a tapestry of hopes and dreams, lifted high into a chorus to encompass the whole world. But that was for later, now was the time to set out on the journey to meet an old teacher.

Rising to her feet, Eirene delighted in the fullness of her health. Being free of the lingering wounds she had taken from the Jingshen war was a blessed feeling. She walked out master Gong Wen's establishment after giving him one last bow and breathed in the afternoon air, her head tilted up towards the sun's warmth. There was nothing like a good meal and a sound body to make a woman want to break into spontaneous song. There was no time for an impromptu performance but as Eirene hurried on her way through the streets, she hummed a melody that lingered in the ears of those nearby long after she was gone.
end omake​
 
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Eirene of Nowhere 19 – Meeting Old Teachers and Impossible Sights, Pt 1.
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