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

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New Good Seed and Omake Rule Updates
Good Seed and Omake Spreadsheet Rules:

Firstly, if you have questions about Good Seeds and the like please read here. If that doesn't answer your question please ping me in thread, or on Discord.

If you write a new Good Seed, or write an omake, please update the spreadsheet if you have access.

If you do not have access, please ping a collaborator (Swordomatic, Alectai, Quest, TehChron, Insane-Not-Crazy, Humbaba, ReaderOfFate, Kaboomatic, no., BungieONI) letting them know what you want and they will update the spreadsheet here. To gain access, you will need a gmail account of some kind. Throwaway emails are fine (I'm using one for the spreadsheet), but to gain access it's as simple as sending me either your email via PM, via DM in Discord, or just in Discord's #spreadsheet-requests channel.

This is mandatory. If a Good Seed does not record their omake by pinging collabs (or just requesting access and editing things themselves - this is the preferred option), I won't give out awards. If a new Good Seed is not recorded here, they won't advance. By doing this it makes the whole thing manageable for me - it's gotten pretty unwieldy!

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Omake Writer Instructions:

There are four fields you need to fill out.

Omake Link, which is just a link to your first omake for the turn. This makes it easier for me to read them as I do the update - without this it's tough to know off the bat which omake were written this turn, and to properly

Requested Bonus, which is your requested bonus for your omake. You can leave it up to me if you like. You can see more info in the Good Seed infopost here.

Cultivation Aims. For those following unorthodox paths - higher than 9th Heavenstage or later than 7th Dao Pillar paths. Please put in what you are aiming for before you break through. I have left it as 'default'. If you do not edit it, I'll go with that.

Turn Notes - Do you want to do something specific? Enter a Secret Realm? Help the Clan out in some way? If you have something specific you want to accomplish on this turn, put it in turn notes so I can adjust your Fate around it.

All other fields are for QM use to record character information to properly run the flow of the game.
 
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Good Seed Interlude - To Rob From the Dynastic Dragon's Hoard
To rob from the dynastic dragon's hoard

The Underground Spirit Palace was a place of extravagance and luxury, where many true sons of Jingshen acted their part among the true hierarchy of the world with relish. Many a son or daughter sat for days on end, holding their own little courts, surrounded by their 'peers', and doing anything but ordering servants around. For every circlet seen atop a brow, hundreds of plain haired servants shuffle about in the background of lavishly decorated pagodas. Streams of silks, decorated with gold, jade and sometimes even spirit stones, to make sure everyone knows their place, line the old caverns. And each one of them is a potential customer to the Xi family and if they are not, they are in their pockets. At least that's the spiel Shi Xi gave his newest personal servant Wang Fen.

Full face mask and illusions sitting ready with his Spirit Emblem hanging around Wang's neck, we walk unopposed on the main cavern road of the Underground Spirit Palace. Thousands of sons and daughters of all families walk in their own tune and my Xi superiors head to their own cave, the wares covered only by a cloth. Many a lesser spirit stone array is used to give light in these dark rooms. Wang Fens own meagre cultivation a mere drop in the lake of these experts.

A deep chuckle pulls Wang out of his revery. "A magnificent sight, isn't it? The sheer array of colours really contrasts the tones of grey we saw from the town of bastards." Walking alongside the rounder man, whose mass encompasses more stomach than legs, yet seems to float along the well paved roads. The wealth displayed on his extremities seemingly managing to buyo the Elder of the Xi family along, towards their destination.

Whispering quietly, Wang replies. "It is… a bit much…" hasting to correct himself he adds. "…but not too much, Sir." The slip up only results in the eternal grin of his superior widening, as they trundle straight towards their cave, just a few doors away from the Patriarchs door.

As Wang is preparing the table, lord Shi explains their itinerary for the next few days. "Young boy, I have thought long and hard about the current situation and found the most productive course of action for us to do, do you understand?"

"Of course, sir." Is all the reply Wang can give before Elder Xi answers the unspoken question.

"The gauntlets and bangle you brought us from these abominable devils will be sold today, for more than its worth in fact!" His grin widens to both ears at the thought before returning to his previous placid smile.

Raising a heavenly iron tipped gauntlet Sun Xi says. "Selling these gauntlets will make the Bei scion very powerful for all the right and wrong reasons, you understand?" the exuberance in his voice slowing to show his expectance of the perfect answer from his personal servant.

That personal servant called Wang doesn't hesitate to answer as expected. "Hearing of a mere servant possessing such might in treasures, they assume me to be disfavoured by you, Sir. This in turn will make sure Prince Ren wishes to become my patron as fast as possible. It will allow you to spread the special array pebbles inside my cane and make him waste valuable time and favour on being allowed into the Patriarchs personal meeting room for a mere robe and a contract that doesn't exist. The Bei's arrogance at the bazaar tomorrow evening will do the rest."

"What…a wonderful understatement, young Wang! Ha!" A crocodile tear running down his blue powdered face as he gasps for air.

*Knock, Knock*

Loud and clear the sound echoes in the room for a short moment, before Wang Fen opens the door without hesitation, bidding the guests to take a seat on his master's table. Sitting in his cushioned upholstery all the while, the master of the Xi greets them jovially, making idle chit chat all the while. The Elder of the Bi family seemingly unamused since the beginning.

With the young Bei scion watching his prize with anticipation in his eyes, the Elder Bei comments with a dry tone. "That servant of yours must have done a tremendous service to the Clan for such an occasion."

Hiding his smile behind a covering hand the Xi Elder replies. "Oh, you know how the luck of juniors is. Even a ferret mother can't stop them, Ha!"

Finally warming up at the joke, a small smile graces the stoic Elders' lips, before the conversation returns to business at hand.

--

Naturally, Elders of two families meeting in such perilous times to talk about some trinket for a junior set the rumour mills ablaze. Before the deal was done and ink spilled the pages, everyone and their grandmother had their own take on what it could mean. Wang Fen himself only heard a few, as he walked to the desk of commerce a few days later. Some thought an old feud would soon be reignited, leading to civil war. Others openly wondered about finally finding the legendary sheep-that-got-away.

As is tradition for any servant, Wang Fen alone does not take the direct route, for he alone does not possess enough face to be allowed such privilege. Many a servant sought to impede him in his tasks, forcing young Wang to stand at attention to both 3rd​ and 6th​ pillar experts alike. Some just needed a few stones to be convinced of walking elsewhere, others Wang bargained for information on the greater Clans dealings.

Before much information could be gained, the ever-thick crowds seemingly melted away into the alleys of these glimmering halls. A lone stalk thin figure in the royal colours of Jingshen makes its way to the group, who still stand transfixed by their arrival.

Coming to a precise stop before the young servants the order spilling out of the most favoured head servant of the young Prince thunder in the courtyard of the market cavern. "Servant Fen, the Prince awaits your service."

With the same quickness of his arrival the head servant leaves, spilling Qi in an art behind him to allow young Wang the same pace. With their leave new wildfires start their blaze in the rumour mill.

Over the courtyard filled with various wares of every corner of Jingshen land, past the lands of pleasures and into one of the tallest of doors young Wang had ever seen. Not even the upper frames can he see, as he cranes his neck in unabashed awe at the sight of these massive doors, every li filled with thousands of formations. The splendid looking guards of the Jingshen at the doors, in defiance of every stereotype known to the flipper region, look through every satchel and every pocket. They even test the weight of the cane, letting it bounce on the stone road. After long searches an ever more annoyed looking servant rebukes their attempts at slacking off mid-task, some fines for back chatter are paid and they are on their way.

With the guards behind them, the two servants make haste to arrive at their young master's location. With the athletic ability of a foundation expert in their bodies and no other soul to impede their progress their strides et the li of caverns, more ostentatious and lined on the side lines with various half-finished contraptions of power of their realm. The last stretch is passed in silence.

As the ostentatious door to the second most important chamber of the Jingshen opens, sounds return to Wangs ears and with it he hears a slow lyre play from somewhere. Ignoring the strange sounds, the servant presents himself before the Prince, standing at attention right before the richly decorated feast.

No attention is spared his way as the young Prince glares at the letter in his hands, cursing out his lack of luck. The spilled cup, joining its brethren on the tablecloth.

The servant from before no longer nearby and lacking guidance, Wang greets the Prince. Only now noticing someone else is in the room, he burns the piece of paper in his hands and turns around in the same motion. A grin on his lips.

Slinging over an arm over Wang's shoulder he asks. "Ah, the new servant. Good. Good. How has your journey been? Good, I hope?"

"Err…Yes, it was well…" Spotting something familiar to do the servant asks. "May I bring you a new cup, Sir?"

As the servant slowly detaches himself from his master's grip, he rushes to the tea kitchen to bring a new beverage before the lord can begin to complain. The Prince watching him work from behind his back as he works. Humming and voicing his approval at every action.

Before long a new cup of spirit wine is served at the table and old cups are brought back to the tea kitchen on the far side of the room. The glitter of treasure, making the glasses shimmer in seven different colours.

As the Prince begins to sip at his drink, Wang tidies up the room some more. Some tablecloths are switched to new ones and the forgotten cane is quickly placed into the umbrella stand; behind all the paper umbrellas brimming with core expert qi, to not offend the face of any master.

Any tears of sweat at his work, vanishes behind the follicles of his hair and some wiping cloth before the lord can properly inspect him. Properly binding his billowing robes after doing this tedious work and adjusting the plain looking saber scabbard hanging from his waist, the servant presents himself once more before the master, bowing just so.

A small smile graces the face of Prince Ren as his eyes glaze over, looking over the room. "Good, you truly know your place, and judging by the way you…hick…served these drinks, also your allegiances."

After he burps lazily into his open palms the servant slowly guides him into a seat, which the Prince graciously allows. "Oh, thank you. So much better than any of the usual chaff I have attending me, t-truly."

"Is there anything else the Prince requires?" Seemingly ignored by the Prince for a moment, for his attention is intermittently divided between sipping at his cup and looking at the treasures lying at the far end of the room. Their only protection a blood seal, a staple in any seal craft among the Jingshen.

"Servant, what holds the Jingshen back?" a sombre voice interrupts the silence in the lavishly decorated room.

Before Wang can reply the Prince continues unabated, his fingers digging into the intricately carved wood. "For centuries our Clan has laboured under that dynastic fool and yet among the righteous factions we are the butt of every JOKE! No great fighter or general descended from our lines to sweep up the desert to let all bask in our glory!"

Seemingly not content with his own knowledge he demands from his attending servant. "Tell me, as an outsider servant. What truly differentiates the Jingshen from any other minor power in the flipper?"

Straightening his back Wang answers loud and clear for the first time. "The sheer wealth of your mines, sir! The Devils may boost discipline unequalled in all seas, but you alone control the Spirit Palace; it's the best spirit mine that even supports the efforts towards immortality in the farthest reaches of the great battlefield!"

A loud clang of the cup on wood comes with an answer. "Exactly! You get it…Our lines are mere parasites without, but t-that will change!

Taking a big gulp and leaning back into the strange wood seat adjusting for him, he continues. "Now, servant of another power. I have honed my skills in crafting to the point only the great Patriarch could be my equal. Any efforts of my craft I could bring these cretins would never find their true value here. The question remains who deserves my tools of war?"

Clearing his throat, Wang opens a small space seal on his servants' robes, allowing the intricate robes to spill out, qi control arrays stitched everywhere; the orange background contrasting clearly with the gold on the seams. "Well, sir. Scorpions chitter in every court of the desert. I am sure we can find a suitable spot for your skills."

Before the servant hands his Prince the strange robes with a stylised scorpion on its back for his inspection, both gazes fall clearly on the treasures in the back.

"Do they truly have so much saved up down south?" escapes the Prince under his breath.

With a smile on his lips the servant answers. "Of course, how else would they dare to dream? With the right superior, their ascent would be smoother of course."

Eyes widen, a glimmer of greed shining. "Constant surveillance by spies to ensure they can trace their heritage back." The true son mumbles under his breath.

Stopping to marvel at the craftsmanship in his hands, the Prince notes a contract role and a lead pencil lying beside his plate of finger food.

The Prince takes a long moment to look between the pile of treasure and the contract.

"Heir to…uh…Grand Elder position at least!" the Prince all demanded.

"Certainly, with the right treasures." was the slow reply.

A grin appeared on the nobles' face. "You are in luck then…it just happens that I learned of the Patriarchs wishes for more toys at his palace. You will help me deliver them!"

A subservient bow came as expected. "Certainly, through the darkest of caves I will follow!"

Filling another cup for the servant, they toast their new relationship. "To fulfil the true Patriarch's dreams!" The long drinking Prince swayed and fell with a wide grin into the chair. After another long look at his cups, he took another gulp and scribbled down his name on the dotted line.

Before long soft snores could be heard throughout the room.

For the moment Wang was alone and used the time to truly breath. Powering the illusion array of his silk robes up, laced with century ferret venom, while entertaining the young Prince was no mean feat of concentration. This was not helped by the silk robes not empowering his weaving for once. Or the treasures. Who could have guessed the tribulation treasures were being piled on the far end of a mere sitting room, for all to see? A mere blood detection array was its only true defence for crying out loud! Even if the Prince can't steal the treasures, just being able to place the disguised spike in the umbrella stand will make it almost impossible to detect it before its too late.

Suddenly, a high-pitched voice makes her amusement known. "Oh, what do we have here? Is such a young servant already allowed to serve father his toys?"

Noticing the now obvious presence of lady Jiao, Wang hastens to stand up and presents himself, ignoring the sudden addition of hair on the one nascent famous for baldness. Suddenly, his Spirit Emblem of Jingshen hanging from his neck feels like the rope of an executioner. The servant grasps it tight, like a lifeline to his brothers and sisters in a sandstorm.

"Err...yes, milady." Wang looks everywhere but ahead and only continues as no rebuke follows. "The Patriarch wishes to dream...of treasure no mortal could ever aspire to!" With many gasps for air, frantic gesticulations to the treasures in the room and a blush to rial the setting sun, he rushes to repeat the order he received. Lady Jiao declares with a visible amused expression. "I need to make sure these treasures are acceptable for my father's use then, its only right." With all the time in the world, assured of the "Yes ma'am" following her words, lady Jiao picked through the tribulation treasures, her eyes looking at each with glee.

This silence doesn't last however as a shout of "Lady Jiao, excusemebutimportantmessage!" rushes through the almost forgotten hallways into the sitting room. At the doorframe one man of the true family skids to a halt, the noise reverberating through the open room. A visibly radiating lady Jiao puts the treasure back into the pile, a small light confirming the security array to be back in action.

Once lady Jio turns to the messenger, his rushed speech quickly changes to something more coherent. "You may speak now, messenger." The boy straightens his back at these words and starts anew. "Lady Jiao, we suspect the Bei Elder is moving against your...special interest in the bazaar right now." Promptly, sight whirls all around Wang. Before he knows it he is outside the room with the young Prince again. The guards step back in confusion at their appearance.

Suddenly jolting wide awake and seemingly unruffled by the rough landing he slips a piece of paper into the hands of a guard and the Prince commands. "Boy, take this messenger servant with you to the place just outside the gates of reckoning and deliver it."

Hastening to take the chance, the eyes of the guards widen for a short moment, before the two of them quickly march away. Their wide grins quickly schooled into a look of bored professionalism as they leave.

Taking an unassuming stone pin with golden etchings out of his long blue billowed robes, the pricks his left pointer finger, letting a drop of blood vanish between the gutters before the doors. Only swaying slightly, despite his stomach making its displeasure known loudly.

Finally taking a moment to look back, after nursing his wound, he addresses the openly gaping servant. "With that said, give me a moment and we are on our way towards destiny."

*Burp*

"The old Monsters won't care to search for us there." Just as the Prince finished his speech the doors to the overdecorated meeting room opened once more, recognizing his true blood for all of one servant to see.

Before long the boy Prince and Wang make their way outside through old secret caverns few knew. The noble's satchel full of treasure securely fastened on the servants waist.

Through long and dark caves, the two walked. Some contained minor spirit beasts, both dispatched rather handily. Mighty ferrets, both big and small, swarm them for the fresh blood they could get out of these still walking corpses. Their hissing and howling echoing in small caverns, full of natural stone formations. While the young core expert engages the mother, the equal of any core expert in sheer ferociousness, the servant proves his worth by making sure the Prince can engage his enemy without lesser hurdles.

Many a clash rumbles through the caverns, with spittle searing the stalagmites and stalactites, while falling bodies render them unto dust mere moments later. Dozens of the mothers' kin die with her, but the journey hasn't ended yet and both know it.

Bidding his servant to attend to him, young Wang attends to his new masters' wounds with alacrity. The gashes and bite wounds on the arms of the Prince, rend by the ferret in their struggle, bleed even hours later. Noticing and informing his superior as they rest, the servant fusses over his lord as all servants do. Again, and again the unwounded servant insists on heading back to let a true healer look at these wounds, but the young Prince pays no mind to it.

The Prince drinks horn after horn of water, uncaring of anything but slaking his thirst. "With the treasure, your hidden treasures and the support of the Grand Scorpion Sect, these wounds will soon become nothing more than a memory." Is all the words spent upon such matters before Wang voices his worry for other ferret kin smelling and running for the warm corpse.

*Cough*

With blood running down his lips, the Prince whispers his demands. "I know, I know servant. Now give me my well-deserved silence and fetch me my water while you are at it." The servant does as the master bids.

After fetching his water, the Prince hugs his horn as they walk. With a conspiratory smile he asks. "What exactly happened to the idiot with those gauntlets, huh? Don't think I didn't notice your lack of detail in your answers!" The ensuing blush on Wang's face didn't help matters and before long they talked as old friends. Thankfully, no spirit beast impedes their path; the alcohol combined with his wounds already slowing the Prince down enough.

All the while they talked of adventures had and enemies humiliated. In any other circumstances something like friendship might have even bloomed between the two of them. They were dispatched to deliver toys for the pleasure palace of all things. Who would believe such a tale with a servant a true blooded Jingshen working together?

Hidden from the ravages of the desert beneath the boundary field, as a last stopping point, they stop to gather the necessary equipment out of a storage box hidden nearby. The track back to the viable roads is along the edge of the boundaries and impossible without good equipment. Using the time they gained with their fast ascent, they use the reprieve in their own way. The mouth of the cave letting in sorely needed warmth of the sun.

As Wangs travel companion admires the view, he sluggishly stretches his muscles with Wang at his back, filtering some qi through to relax them from the long walk.

"Man, that was a long walk, but the worst part is behind us." Wang muses in a sombre tone, as he too filters some qi through his hands. The Emblem hanging from the servants' neck radiating qi.

Multi-coloured smoke slowly filters out of his sleeves and forms into a ball hovering over his left arm -saber in hand- while golden qi radiates from him in a pattern of concentric rings spinning around his right hand to his arm.

"Exactly! Getting to the..." Turning around the boy Prince gasps.

[Strange Journey]

The smoke strikes the Prince from all sides, trapping them in a scintillating spacetime bubble. The servant of another power fires off a small blast of sword qi, disrupting the bubble and causing it to implode.

The world lurched and the Prince stumbled before finding his footing again. For a short moment all saw the world in myriad of colours, none truly shining with dominance. Then the world suddenly found its natural colours again. The enemies Dao asserted its own will once more and declared this ruined body to be its vessel. Blood pooled from the chunks of missing flesh.

Poison or no, the Prince was not done, and both knew it. Wisps of qi slowly emerged from the tattered robes of the Prince. A fist cast of blood rushes forward!

"Die you-! were the young nobles last words as a bronze hand through his chest stilled his heart and the last pieces of the Jingshen Spirit Emblem fell to the ground.

The servants' eyes widen for a fraction as the blood fist loses coherence before him, splashing harmlessly. The perpetrators survival instinct taking hold over any practiced technique to sustain life he finally loosened his grasp on his cultivation base, revealing four pillars.

The victims' eyes still glaring in petulant rage as Zeno's disguise finally falls. Legs and arms move on the ground, but no qi answers the boy for a long minute. Only horrid gurgles of rage remain. His shattered heart meridian making any retaliation futile.

Realising the uselessness of his actions, he gives up and allows Zeno to do his work. With the spirit robe soaking blood from the slowly draining corpse and getting ruined beyond use in the process, Zeno mused out loud. "I really wish you were a Clansmen right now." Taking the sword from his travel companion he begins to properly cut, leaving no remains behind. "At least then I could honour you properly. This doesn't do it for you, does it?" a sizzling sound beside him is his only answer.

Zeno leaps away in the same breath. The area enveloping smoke vanishing as fast as it came, leaving a purple crater in its wake and the corpse a boiling broth. Only the Prince's satchel on Zeno's waist remains whole on this turtle world.

A statue of a man, with broad shoulders and height only rivalled by the tallest legionnaires promptly joins Zeno in the clearing, his poise not outright hostile to the intrepid devil. The long tunic conceals most of his feet.

With the moment to breath gained, Zeno could not help but marvel at the irony of this situation. While poisoning his target, he himself almost got poisoned himself.

Preparing his peculiarly long Ji in a trained grip with a broad horse stance stance facing forward, the black-haired individual calls out to Zeno with a reverent voice under his heavy armour. "Having done my duty to my elders, this ignominious son of the Bei family is called Yi Huangwu. I follow the school of Han "The Stone Breaker" Bei. Would you introduce yourself, so we may spar, Senior?" The servant cultivator patiently awaits his Seniors decision.

Acknowledging the poisoning as necessary for an unworthy master, Zeno nods and readies his weapon for a friendly spar, the treasure peeking out but not emitting anything out of the carefully crafted satchel at his hips.

An amused grin frames Zeno's lips after he replies. "The name is Zeno of house Angelus. I am a Centurion of the 302nd, no title known to my enemies. Any worthy enemies die far too quickly for that to happen under my legate's attention. My teacher is Jin Muyi, also known as "The Undying Duellist". Prepare to take a seat, Junior."

Saber at the ready, a flick of the Ji makes a stone fly high, the sun glimmers with the light of dusk on the horizon of the rock into the mouth of the cave. On the peak of its ascent postures are corrected and qi cycled, but not emitted.

With a grin on their lips, blades clashed and the sound of stone falling onto the ground drowned out by their dance. Every cut by the Ji merely parried, but never truly hitting the enemy. For every swing of the sword Yi makes, he is forced one step back. Every improper cut punished with alacrity and even once the blades clash Yi's weapon does not find purchase on the enemy's flesh. Reach is no dominating force in the face of sheer experience.

It is clear to both. For all the power lost to the trades inside the underground Spirit Palace, Zeno was still a Centurion with the strength of the 4th​ Pillar. A sharp Ji can merely make the difference in sheer might between small realms bearable.

Impatience of youth quickly overtakes the young servants every motion and a foot land too far apart; the youth quickly falling consequently. A kick throws the Ji upwards, landing perfectly balanced on Zeno's head. The spearpoints glimmer and some dream qi, shining a halo towards the defeated junior in the evening light.

Silence reigns in the clearing. This close to the wastes, there is no chittering of scorpions to be heard.

Eyes wide, the junior answers, a curve on his lips. "This junior thanks Senior Angelus for the lesson."

A hand in friendship is given, and the Ji is handed back to its rightful wielder. There are many stories told on the way back. Some details they share with a blunt honesty someone of the plains would balk at and others they embellish for their amusement. At the end of their short adventure the wandering Ji and the dutiful saber vow to meet again; to truly determine who the junior is!

_

AN: It took 8 months of waiting, before I could publish the [Strange Journey] finisher technique. Finding an opponent to use it on was never the problem, but the timing was important. Where else could Zeno use the glorified qi battery that is the Jingshen spirit Emblem? You guys have no idea how happy I am "Defy the Heaven" actions are now a thing!
I also played with the idea of Yi Huangwu addressing Zeno with some kind of title at the end, for something he is known for, but that wouldn't be a true [Name], I think. That is something your enemies give you, not the other way around.

Special mention to @no. for the technique idea in his post Super Devil Wars (Hmmph... this junior is a good seed [Cultivation Management Quest] Original - Fantasy) and name idea of the Ji wielding servant cultivator called Yi Huangwu.

words: 4801 @occipitallobe, @ReaderOfFate
 
The weird moment that the brotherhood was more prepared to be awed that the Old Gold themselves. Because Zeno is not only a Scion of the Angelus. he is also Abel's elder brother. So the heaven defying action would got them less surprise^^.
 
Aretaphila Myia X7/Katha Theodoros 9 - Fist Things First

The homestead was quiet, and Tormenos ached within it. The heirs of his household had both been called to duty, one to war and the other to its preparation, and that left the ancient estate of the Theodoroi quiet indeed, a vast estate for two old men.

One old man, of late. Shu had left on a journey several months ago in search of healing herbs, buoyed by his childrens' example, but Tormenos had no such liberty to wander like he did. As Patriarch, he had a responsibility to the family, and that meant tending to its estates, the most important one of them being the spirit stone mine that was all they had left. A thousand years ago they had managed Waycastles and grand fields, overseen hundreds of li territory encompassing dozens of towns and cities, and boasted ten thousand servants to their name alone.

All of it, lost when Elder Nagaeon died and his heir faltered in Tribulation. After that the House splintered, every branch and member scattering to the corners of the Golden Devils' territories until all that remained was a dwindling main house that was never able to rise back to the heights it once stood at. It was all they could do to keep the ancestral estate and the ancient records.

The silence of the household was not an awful thing, though, far from it. It brought Tormenos peace and clarity, ample time to focus on his cultivation and on the affairs of the family. But the silence now was starker and harsher, and left Tormenos labouring beneath the gaze of his ancestors, venerable Elders every last one of them. And each of them seemed to be judging him for the way he managed the House and its standing, for his failures in restoring its glories.

Imperator, he tried so hard to change that, in his youth and in his dotage. But it was true, for he had failed and it was impossible to disagree. What was once a family famed as the Vanguard were now forgotten and destitute, left to rot in the sands even as other names began clawing their way back into the light. And ever since he rose to become Patriarch when his own father died, the family's fortunes have not changed. Even though his wife bore him two brilliant daughters, one of whom he had put all his hopes on. Who died, carrying all of his hopes for Clan and House alike. Riala was a genius, but she was not immortal. Perhaps he should have held tighter onto Saria after all.

Such were the thoughts he tried to keep at bay with a pot of Thrice-Boiled Century Jasmine Tea, spiced with medicinal herbs that aided the constitution of the body and firmed the resolve of the mind. He once sought these herbs in a bid to gather his resolve so he could face the lightning, before he found that his Dao pillars were simply too flawed to fuse, and he would die if he ever faced the lightning. Another failure, unable to form the Core.

Now, though, he just liked the taste. The tea one made from brewing such leaves tasted like death and bitterness, which suited him just well. Bitterness often soured into spite, which was half the reason he was even still alive at this point. Spite and ambition, a more iconic duo could not exist.

Ancestors, how unsightly.

Sighing, Tormenos' old bones creaked as he sat into a wooden couch carved five thousand years ago, trying to ignore the gazes of the ancestral portraits that lined the walls. Old and embittered by the thoughts of his failures, Tormenos's thoughts wandered briefly to his grandchildren as he picked up his cup of tea and considered the affairs he would manage today.

Until the door blew open and terror inexplicably filled his heart for perhaps the first time, but certainly not the last time, in many, many years.

----

The door to the Theodoroi Estate was a venerable one. An ancient construction which dated back to before the evacuation from the mountain territories, a miracle of storagecraft that enabled their home and crypt to be brought down into the newly-arisen desert.

Guarding the estate were Wrought-Iron Gates, strands of follicles woven into mighty banded cables lined with arrays that in better times had sparked with guarded intent. Now they stood inactive, an inherited legacy reduced to a mere historical bauble. At the very least, they were well-maintained - the two gates opening inward without a sound.

In comparison, the front door was simply that: A humble door, crafted of wood. Simple glyphs and characters lined it: These were far more recent, and at the very least active. The air rang with the tolling of a bell, and the faint light that filled those carved characters sputtered, blinking erratically.

A shrouded figure approached, great billowing clouds of fog emanating from beneath voluminous robes. And it was tall, taller than most Body Cultivators Tormenos had ever seen. The androgynous entity raised an armored limb, pushing it stiffly against the portal; it's locking mechanisms had long since been disabled.

Then, the door flew open before Tormenos' eyes. Not with speed or with violence, but with unhurried inevitability. Where the sun had once shone brightly, now came a dark and obscuring gray haze that choked out all light and hope.

Silently, the figure seemed to float forward into the sitting room where the Theodoroi Patriarch now drank his tea. Taking no steps, but moving inexorably forward as the chill of the grave seemed to wash over him. The sound of a bell tolled, ringing in Tormenos' ears. A sound heralding that the time had come.

"Tormenos Theodoros." The silver-armored figure intoned, their voice reverberating ominously, a clawed limb leveling upward to point it's bladed tip at him, "Your Angel of Death Awaits."

It was like something out of a play, or a sick comedy. Standing in his living room, beneath the gaze of his ancestors, Tormenos was being threatened with death by a ghost of some import, clad in silverine and brandishing a claw for a hand. With an upraised eyebrow, Tormenos sipped slowly on piping hot tea, sighed as he swallowed and savoured its aftertaste, and set the cup lightly down on a table of frosted glass. "I always knew this day would come," the old man sighed. "Well, get it over with, I'm sure you have others to haunt."

They looked at one another, locked at an impasse. Though Tormenos found himself incapable of fusing a Core, he still stood as an old Foundation Building expert, once a Centurion feared for the barbs of his tongue and the burning steel of his fists, though he had not been at war in a long time. The old man craned his head, watching the spectre closely. "Well? What are you waiting for? My sins? My final testament? Should I invite my heirs back and divvy up the estate first?"

"Nothing so dramatic." The figure intoned, "I have already taken the liberty of getting your affairs in order." A character etched into the underside of the outstretched claw glowed, producing a thick vellum scroll. With another ominous ringing of a bell, the mysterious figure glided forward once more, offering the document for Tormenos to take.

"Take your time," The metallic voice intoned patiently.

The old man received the sheet carefully but roughly, taking care not to crumple the papyrus, and the moment he saw what was actually written his eyes bulged. In his hands was a contract, written in triplicate and stamped with the sigil of the Clan. Official business, this was, with one copy destined for the archives at the Dawn Fortress.

And actually written on the contract was his entire household, grandson and granddaughter included, in exchange for… Actually, that was quite a substantial sum of stavraton. He could invest it, refurbish the household, and urge back distant relatives into the fold. Such a trade might even be worth considering, were it not for his grandchildren's names on the docket.

"I don't know which pit of Hell you came out of, ghost, but there is no way I'm going to agree to this!" Tormenos dearly, dearly wanted to ball the documents up into a ball and burn them to cinders, but with the seal of the Clan on them to do so would actually incur a fairly hefty fine, so instead he put them down on the table instead. "This is tantamount to extortion! Daylight robbery! There isn't a power in this Sea that could make me sign away this family!"

"Isn't there?" The phantasm intoned calmly, "Perhaps an ancient force, beyond the reckoning of you and your blood?" Another toll of the bell rang out, the fog thickening as a singular light beneath the hood began brightening ominously, "Someone who…"

The other armored limb raised up, the hand awkwardly grasping for the gray hood of the figure before lifting it back to reveal platinum hair and silver skin. An eyebrow arched in a yet unspoken question.

"You've never won against in your entire life, little Tormenos?" Aretaphila Myia asked, staring calmly at the Theodoroi Patriarch.

Almost immediately, bitterness gave way not to spite, but to terror unending. The memory of an immortal is long indeed, and those made in formative years can never truly be scrubbed away, even by the rigours of time. And unfortunately, Tormenos Theodoros had a particularly sharp memory, one that made him the envy of his peers when it came to memorising treatises and orders.

A fear, buried for nigh-on two hundred years, resurfaced as if it had never been forgotten. "Y-You… You! W-What do you want from me, y-you monster?!"

"Monster?" The soothing, bell-like voice of the Silver King rang out, an unseen fist bunching the cloth of the robe before casting it off theatrically, "What a rude thing to call a childhood friend, Little Tormenos." Beneath the layers of cloth were a cunning mechanism. A small, raised platform that had a great tread beneath it for locomotion, which further had two limbs connected to manipulators which leveraged the prosthetic limbs. Even now, heavy mist poured out from vents lined along the chassis, the arrays lining the construction seemingly powered by the Single Pillar Cultivators own Qi.

Effortlessly, Aretaphila Myia hopped off to stand before the Theodoroi Patriarch. Her diminutive height doing little to stop her from looming over the far taller individual.

"Just sign the paperwork, and it will all be over." A small, silver hand patted the Peak Expert consolingly, "It's all already taken care of, don't you worry about a thing." Silver skin stretched in a kind, matronly smile.

Trembling, his lips drawn into a long thin line, Tormenos sucked air between his teeth as he turned to Aretaphilla. "N-No… I can't! I won't! I will not surrender this family to you! You can defile me, Aretaphilla Myia, but you will not have my grandchildren!"

There was a knock on the door. Two pairs of eyes turned around, and saw a man with red and silver hair standing there, a sword slung from his waist as he hefted a large snake coiled around his torso. Blinking rapidly, Tormenos begged for his son in law to save him.

"...Right," the crippled father of two sighed, before turning right on his heels. "If you need me, I'll be draining this snake of its blood in the servant kitchen."

"SHU ENYA YOU INSOLENT FOOL, I NEED YOU RIGHT NOW!"

Such words fell on deaf ears as Tormenos' only hope of relief left the same way he came, and he was once again left in the tender mercies of the Silver King herself.

Single eye blinking in surprise, Aretaphila looked away from her intended victim as a hiss of static filled the air. The Silver King fished around in her pockets before withdrawing a faintly glowing token. She turns an apologetic look towards Tormenos before bringing the inscribed jade to her ear.

"Report, Pilum."

"Ah, Legatus! Apologies, but it looks like one of the targets extended family members is en route to return ahead of schedule!"

The Myia Expert sighed in apparent exasperation, "Thank you for the warning, Li Wei."

Sound crackles from the inscribed token before it shatters within the woman's silver grip.

"...Where were we-Right," Aretaphila muttered to herself before turning her baleful gaze once more upon Tormenos, "You can't sign over both your grandchildren to me." A hand pat the Theodoroi's knee consolingly, "I respect that, Little Tormenos." With her other hand, the Silver King gestures towards the machine behind her, which promptly places another roll of Papyrus within her grasp, "That's why I've prepared a compromise."

The unbroken wax seal is placed in the taller cultivators lap, "Give me your granddaughter, and you can keep everything else. I have need of her services in my revival of the 501st Legion, so that part is non-negotiable, but I'll even make it worth your while!"

"I'll never sign your - wait, that's it?" Tormenos blinked, his fear momentarily forgotten. "You broke into my house, scared me half to death, and tried to fleece me for all I owned and loved… All just so you could scout my granddaughter for your Legion?" He blinked again, twice this time. "Wait, when did you make Legatus? How did you make Legatus?"

The Silver King grinned, a frighteningly predatory thing. "Now now now, Little Tormenos. Are you trying to imply that your granddaughter isn't worth going to such ends to protect?" A silver head shakes in affected sadness, "Perhaps it would be more fair if I tried to recruit both of your grandchildren?" Aretaphila grasped her chin in faux-contemplation - notably ignoring the second question he had asked, "I'm sure that the Hero of Thousand Song and member of the Indomitable Thirteen might be able to receive special dispensation for recruiting a promising young Mechanikos for her Legion. Don't you?"

"N-No, mercy." The old man begged, white as a sheet. "Please continue."

Two small hands clap together with a chiming sound. "Great! Now, this may surprise you but it turns out that by total coincidence it turns out your darling little genius owes her success to my humble self, Tormenos'er." The old man's breath hitches. One palm presses against her flat chest. "By the hand of the Imperator, I had been the one to provide young Katha with a ticket into the Yuan Man-As-Mountain Array, and the Clan's collective efforts at Thousand Song City enabled a breakthrough so that the Noble Demon Alliance could not put her at further risk as their siege was broken."

Aretaphila locked her cyclopean gaze with the taller cultivator, "So in acknowledgement of that debt, I wish to have her serve as a senior officer within the Legion I have graciously negotiated with the Grand Elder for." The Single Pillar within her cultivation base rotated, churning the inner sea of her qi, releasing a mild pressure on the other Expert.

"Surely you can see that nothing but benefits exist for you here, should you be willing to take them."

Before such pressure, Tormenos could do little but nod. Ancestors preserve him, he might even delude himself into agreeing that this was to the mutual benefit of all parties involved, little Katha.

Bless her, the poor girl couldn't possibly know what manner of snake was coming to claim her, fangs and all.

----

Shu Enya heard his father in law scream as he sharpened a ritual knife against a whetstone. It was a real scream too, the high and powerful kind one could only gather from their lungs when they were feeling real terror. He shook his head, closed his senses, and returned to the whetstone.

"Riala, your father is such a glass cannon, just like you," he murmured and sighed. Then, Shu looked up. "Should I ever let him live it down?"

The wind slammed the door shut behind him abruptly and loudly. He promptly put his nose back to the grindstone and continued his work.

"...Duly noted, dear."

----

Katha sighed as she beheld the gates of her home once more. Years spent away from home, fighting on the outskirts of the Thousand Song Siege and ensuring that the evacuation proceeded as smoothly as possible took its toll even on the most spirited of Legionnaires, and she was definitely not a spirited Legionnaire. In fact she felt more like a pack mule than a Principales half the time, torn between patrols, training, and those damn lessons. Katha could probably count the number of hours of sleep she actually got on one hand.

Granted that was probably because her vision got blurry enough at times that one hand looked like one hundred after a while, but that really should be indicative of just what kind of fresh hell Yangchen put her through. Even if it did all pay off in the end; blooded by a campaign and proven in the crucible of war, she had graduated from the post of 'Principales', and with the exigencies of war in mind was likely to earn a Centurion's billet.

"In fact, don't be surprised if you have a line of Legates waiting in front of your house by the time you get back!" The old bird laughed as she saw Katha off; Centurion Yangchen had volunteered to stay behind and 'mind the camp' while the Legions were being drawn back, to be the literal last one out. Katha shuddered as she recalled those words. Almost a decade of learning to be a Centurion has taught her that being Centurion might actually be the most thankless job in the Legion.

Things were gruelling enough that, Imperator above, she might actually be looking forward to being surrounded by sand again.

...Actually, nevermind, she was already getting abrasions and heat rash. The desert still sucks. She missed the plains already, even if they are drowning with Blood Path cannibals and other assorted psychopaths. Eurgh.

Standing at the iron gates, however, Katha saw that the main door was already open. That was strange; the doors were usually closed. She could still remember grandfather nagging her about leaving it open when she and Rathos came back in after a day of play; she could even feel the cane lines on her wrist right now, though the cane would probably break if it hit her at this point. No one else should be home, so… Why did grandpa leave the door open?

The other thing, then, was when her father came out of the servant dorms - which was funny in its own way considering they didn't have servants - and, spotting her immediately, walked right up to the gate until he could wrap his hands around the bars. Shu Enya looked a lot better compared to the last time she'd seen him; in fact, her senses told her that…

"Ah, father. Good afternoon." Katha nodded furtively, bowing her head and averting her eyes. "I'm… I'm home."

"So you are," he replied, quietly proud of his little Legionnaire. "Rathos is out somewhere tending to a Fort Array but he should be back in a week or so. You've done well, I heard."

"...Yeah, I guess I did. You, ah, look better. Did you repair your meridians?"

"One or two of them," Shu replied with a nod. "With you and your brother doing so well, I decided dying at home wasn't a good look after all. Might even consider attempting Expert in thirty or forty years."

Katha nodded and smiled momentarily at that. It would be nice to have her father around just a bit longer. But the two of them got the small talk out of the way quickly, even though it was tradition on how to receive a daughter or son from war. There was something far more important at stake. "So, ah… Who's visiting grandfather, father?"

"A friend of your grandfather's, another Expert. You should go in and introduce yourself," Enya said, though his tone made it clear that he would prefer she do anything but. "Be careful when you do, though. Your grandfather screamed earlier."

This made Katha's eyes widen sharply. "W-Wait, scream? Grandfather screamed? You mean, like, out loud?"

"He screamed like Rathos, Katha."

"Like a girl?"

Enya's expression grew pained. "Katha, your brother does not scream like a girl, so stop saying he does. But yes, your grandfather made that kind of noise. Whoever he's entertaining is not someone to be trifled with. Be on your guard; you're not off the battlefield yet."

"Alright, thanks father." He was not offering to join her, which meant that she was on her own. That was fair; this is not his fight. Then, Katha clenched her jaw and reached in her travelling satchel, pulling out a shattered sword hilt. "Also… I broke it. Sorry."

"I heard the story already, Katha," Shu Enya replied. Then he reached through the bars and patted her on the head. "You did well fighting an Expert, and you did even better by not getting hurt while doing it. Now go save your grandfather from another, more frightening Expert."

"With your help?" Katha asked hopefully. Her father smiled wider, then returned to the servant quarters without another word. Drat. She still had one chance, though. Flee, go find a room in some nearby inn, maybe sound out Rathos or his girlfriend, and whatever horrible terrifying god-beast that had her ornery grandfather spooked will be gone before she got back.

But that would mean never acknowledging that Rathos does, in fact, scream like a terrified baby rattlesnake. So honour demanded she do the other thing, which promised certain death.

Bravely, foolishly, she pushed open the gates to her home and strode boldly through the front door.

Well, what kind of fresh nightmare was she about to walk into?

----

The atmosphere within Katha's childhood home was as still as a grave. A faint, cloying mist clung to the floor despite the sun's blazing heat. Drowned in shadow, an almost clammy chill assaulted the Principales as she entered the familiar place, now warped into uncanny strangeness.

As the pale granddaughter of Tormenos entered the building, the formerly opened door swung closed with an ominous creaking, plunging the domicile into darkness. As her eyes adjusted to the shadow, a familiar silhouette resolved itself in her vision - that of her family's patriarch.

Now hunched over a glass table, head staring blankly at a sheet of papyrus that faintly radiated Qi to her senses.

She stepped forward, her senses alert with her father's warning in mind. If there was something capable of reducing her stern grandfather to this, then…

A floorboard creaked beneath Katha's foot, drawing her attention all to a single point.

There is a muffled boom as a closet door slams open, a diminutive, yet imposing cloaked figure revealing itself as fog billowed out from around it.

"Hello, Junior." A familiar voice emanates from it, reminding Katha of a moment nearly twenty years past.

"I've come to collect on that favor you owe me."

For a moment, Katha wondered just who this strange figure was, even as she was struck with an ineffable sense of familiarity. They met twenty years ago, that was certain, but Katha met a lot of people twenty years ago; that was when her Path to Immortality even began. She put her mind to work, trying to link every detail she could. The cloak was familiar, the height was vaguely familiar, the fog was new, but the way she said Junior was--

"Holy shit you're the Silver Senior," Katha gasped. "I knew it. I knew you were testing me. You're a Centurion after all - wait, no, a Legatus! Definitely a Legatus!"

"She's Aretaphilla Myia," Tormenos said bitterly by his place at the table, scowling at the contract. "Head of the Myia Family and our Clan's second Single Pillar King. Imperator have mercy on us all…"

Katha blanched. Aretaphilla Myia? The Aretaphilla Myia? The one from the Miracle at Pleuron? The same person who single handedly held the Thousand Song Siege? "T-The Aretaphilla Myia? The Thousand Songstress?" Her gaze shifted back to the Silver King. "You gave me the Yuan token? You, of all people, gave it to me of all people?!"

"Hmph," Aretaphila exhaled smugly, before tearing off her disguising cloak flamboyantly once again, "The one and only!" Arms crossed over her chest, the Myia tilted her nose up and looked up at the Junior who she had drunkenly assisted two decades prior.

"Why are you surprised, Junior? Of course I knew you would use my gift to the utmost!"

"She definitely did not, it just happened to work out," the old man groused.

A blazing electric eye quickly glanced at Tormenos, daring him to contradict her again before turning back to the Theodoros scion, "I sensed your potential from the moment we met and I've looked into your service record since. Twelfth Heavenstage in a decade! Another decade of highly meritorious service at One-River, One-Town Pass! Killing a Foundation Establishment Blood Path in your very first battle!"

A swift ringing sound filled the air as she laughed, "I didn't even manage to kill the first Foundation Establishment bandit I encountered!" Almost nostalgic memories of the deep places of the desert, and a nearly fatal wound in the dark flit past her mind before returning to the present, "So I'd like to formally extend an invitation for you to join my 501st Legion!"

Silver cheeks were spread in a cherubic smile, all kindness and cheer and invitation, but the light within the building was dim. And Foundation Establishment move and think so very much more quickly than Qi Condensation. A single glance towards the girls grandfather reminds him to hold to his end of the deal.

"In recognition of your potential, I'm more than willing to sign you on as a proper Centurion from the start. And in recognition of my history with Little Tormenos, inducting you into my senior staff with appropriate pay is only natural." A silver hand raises to catch Katha's attention, fingers rubbing together to make very clear she could pay Katha well.

"How do you feel about meeting your future colleagues?" The shorter woman says conversationally, veering the discussion away from whether or not Katha would refuse to join.

Katha blinked. Then blinked again. Then, a noise not unlike a kettle boiling over steamed out between tightly drawn lips. This, ah, happened basically exactly like Yangchen said it would. Literally the moment she got back, someone was offering her a Centurion's billet.

"Ah… Do I have to be Centurion?" Katha shrugged numbly; the weight on her shoulders reminded her that she was actually, in fact, still in armour. Her helmet was even still dangling from her travelling satchel on her hip. "I mean… Do I get to choose?" Probably not, but it was worth asking.

"I'm very sorry," Aretaphila said consolingly, "You see, I know better than most how much it costs for us to fuel cultivation through the Olympian Keystones." A hand passed over herself, "And a regular Principales would never be able to afford the pace which you'd burn through resources." Her one eye winked, "But don't worry! You being a Centurion will be in name only! You won't even have to worry about any subordinates off the bat while you acclimate to your role, and I doubt you won't reach Expert level soon enough." Two hands place themselves on diminutive hips, and the Silver King lets out a cheerful laugh once again.

"So yes, you get to choose. But I'm afraid that I wouldn't be able to justify the cultivation budget you deserve unless you are a Centurion, Junior." Aretaphila holds her hands up, imitating the act of balancing a scale, "And I wouldn't want to do anything less than help you reach your full potential."

Ah, of course. That was the downside of rising so quickly, if it could even be called a downside at all; Katha had little idea as to the cost of maintaining her cultivation now, let alone advancing it. And even now, she was torn between preparing to face the lightning, or even taking the fourth Olympian Keystone and walking… Well, walking Aretaphilla Myia's path.

Sighing, Katha nodded. "Well, I didn't expect to have much of a choice either. Sure, I'll be your Centurion." Glancing at her grandfather, she noticed that his expression had become more resigned. "So… Who else have you scouted for the 501st?"

"Only the best," Aretaphila said, her lips twitching ever so slightly. Threatening to bloom into a full blown smirk as the Theodoros household became filled with what could only be described as white noise of unintelligible chanting.

The Theodoroi Patriarch looked up from his stupor, looking at the Silver King with a mix of amazement and disbelief. "The Old Tongue…?"

The Silver King glared at Tormenos once again. "Here," she said, before withdrawing from a storage ring a sheet of papyrus. "Once you confirm the transfer, we can get started."

With a grunt, Tormenos raised his hand over the parchment, ready to stamp it with the family's seal. For a moment he hesitated, his expression tense. But then he sighed, and the seal fell, the triple-brand of the Theodoroi searing into the contract and concluding the negotiations. Katha followed quickly, signing her own name as she confirmed her own acknowledgement.

And just like that, her fate was sealed. She would be Centurion of a new Legion under a hero of the Clan, likely destined for great battles and epic conflicts. It promised to be a greater struggle than her skirmishes at One-Boat, One-River Pass. And yet... Katha couldn't help but feel a little excited.

This would be how she would prove herself. This is how she would temper the Dao and answer the question of Judgement.

This would be how she would face the Heavens and denounce their excesses, in the pursuit of a fair world.

----

It was near the end of the day that the carriage the two were riding arrived at the outskirts of Waycastle Myia.

A newly raised barracks, bronze gleaming brightly with the reflected light of the setting sun. Spacious by the standards that Katha was likely familiar with (Which was to say, not at all). Several laborers even took the time to wave at Aretaphila, Qi Condensation Juniors who were employed by the Myia to maintain and build infrastructure to keep the Waycastle running. Freshly hired by the material wealth brought by the Clan's eastern expansion.

"It's freshly renovated, in honor of my return from Thousand Song." The de facto Matriarch of the Myia declared proudly, still leading the largely oblivious Katha into the building. Aretaphila took a deep breath, her single eye closed, "Love that fresh paint smell." She declared with her voice filled with pride.

The barracks themselves were largely complete, workers still shuffling in and about carrying in furniture and provisions. It was a veritable hive of activity, but mysteriously none of it seemed to be from any Legionnaires. Still, Katha was given no room to consider any such rising doubts before the Silver King dragged her into a larger room in which two more Experts stood idly. Both appearing impatient and ill at ease with one another.

"Right," Aretaphila nodded, "Introductions are in order-" A silver hand gestured towards the first Foundation Establishment Cultivator. Towering over the other three, this man carried an impressive beard, and was well into the upper ranges of Foundation Establishment. Even as the Legatus' introduction began, sky-blue eyes merely turned to regard Katha and her commander as he meticulously groomed his beard with a white-bone comb.

"First, let me introduce one of our Pilus Priori: Lampo Vatatzes!" At the lack of recognition on Kathas features the man's eyes narrowed, lips beginning to open, "This happened a while before your mother was born, but his grandfather used to be the Protastor for the Clan some centuries back!" Aretaphila continued, seemingly obvious to cutting him off, "We were part of the same Contuburnium way back when, and it's why I recruited him as our Tactical Officer."

The taller figure shot a glare at the Silver King before turning to look once again at Katha, "A pleasure to meet you Centurion. As the Legatus stated, I am Vatatzes, though my technical rank is Primi Ordines Immunes."

"That's right," Aretaphila continued cheerfully, "Don't let his huge build fool you! He's basically useless on the front lines save as part of a Formation!"

"Damn you, Myia…" The larger man muttered balefully at the diminutive Single Pillar King.

"Ah…" Reflexively Katha bowed, bringing her palm and fist together. "A pleasure to meet you, senior."

Vatatzes sniffed, then crossed his arms. "The hell did you do to get wrapped up with her of all people? Your grandfather's scared shitless of the Myia."

"She's the reason I got into the Yuan Contest," the taller redhead replied sheepishly, which Vatatzes responded with a piteous grimace. "I don't see the problem, though?"

"Neither can she, half the time, but that doesn't mean you're not in the shit. Good luck, Theodoros."

Aretaphila clapped her hands together, releasing a calming ringing sound, "Right! And next we have our very own Auxilia! Let me introduce the other active member of Senior Staff," A free hand gestured to the shorter man, but only slightly. Pale of skin, but blond of hair. Wearing a massive hammer on his back easily, two pale blue eyes stared intently at Katha, evaluating. "This is Li Wei!"

"Charmed," The foreign man drawled, his voice arrogant in an easy way that Vatatzes simply wasn't, "I am the Auxilia Centurio Princeps as you desert devils like to refer to the position," A hand gestured towards his forehead, where a tiny three-pointed star was tattooed into the center of it, "Though more importantly, I am a Three-Star Blacksmith of the Sorrowful Blacksmiths, invited along by your Legatus in exchange for…" Two eyes roamed hungrily over Aretaphila's diminutive form, eliciting confusion from Katha, "Certain benefits of a physical nature, one might say."

"He just wants me for my body." Aretaphila whispers to Katha, giving her a surreptitious wink.

With a flash of movement Vatatzes moved to Katha's side.

"It's best to just get this out of the way immediately," He whispered directly into her ear, "But it's not actually what you think it is." Eyes shift from side to side suspiciously, "Despite all the evidence otherwise. Do you understand?"

Katha looked up at the Ordines Immunes with a start, her hands already hugged around herself. "Wuh? Oh, r-right… I knew that…"

"Good," Vatatzes nodded, clearly not believing her, "If you'll excuse me then." Just as swiftly, he retreated back to standing side by side with Wei.

"Now now, Lampo no creeping on the poor girl, she's only a few decades old!" Aretaphila giggled.

"I'm thirty six…"

"Practically a baby then," The Silver King tutted, "Would you get with someone older than your grandfather and myself, truly?" Aretaphila gestured towards the other man, "That beard of his predates your family by three generations!"

"...Only three?" Katha shook her head quickly. "T-That wasn't on the table to begin with! What even is this?!"

"An introduction, my dear."

She turned sharply to the Auxilia, lip pointedly not trembling. "...W-Well, I wouldn't! It's too soon!"

The Legatus merely cackled, while Vatatzes shook his head sadly. The Blacksmith, bemused, kept an eye on the young Centurion.

"Winter and Summer Romance aside, I hope you two can keep things professional for now." Aretaphila finally said after calming down, "But these are your two fellow senior staff for the moment." The Silver King paused, "Now I know you have some questions-" Aretaphila paused, as if waiting for Katha to speak up before abruptly bulldozing along, "But the most important one is likely "How did you get clearance to pay me with an Expert's Salary, Legatus?" And while the obvious answer is that I am simply amazing," Vatatzes snorted, "The longer answer is that because I am amazing, I found a way to have you declared as an Expert despite not actually being one."

With a slight bow, the Auxilia stepped forward, holding up a freshly polished bronze helm, complete even with horse-hair sprouting from above in a distinctive mohawk. Emblazoned on the side, cast in dark iron were the numerals XXI.

"Tell me, Theodoros," Aretaphila said with her eye on the piece of equipment, "Have you heard the legend of Centurion XXI?"

The Centurion reached out to touch the helm, fingers tracing the contours of its nose guard. Centurion XXI… She had heard nothing about this story, from the old bird or any of the other old timers. This was something new, or… Well, let it not be said that Katha lacked pattern recognition. "Is it another of your introductions, Legatus?"

"Of a sort," Said Legatus replied with a smirk, "Centurion XXI is a designation for a Legendary Expert of the times. Never someone specific, but rather a pseudonym used by exemplars of the Clan during times of great success, dating back to the Clan's own origins in the Third Sea. At times it was said to be multiple Experts acting in concert, sometimes it was given to a great hero of the clan before they nobly sacrificed themselves, and other times it was the name of individuals who would later go on to become venerated Elders of the Clan under their own true identities." Aretaphila motioned towards the helmet, "That mantle has been left abandoned for centuries before now, much like the Aquila of a lost Legion, the original Centurion XXI helmet has been lost since long before I was born."
Li Wei cleared his throat, "Though don't let the newness fool you, Centurion. My work would hardly lose to the craft worked by your Ancestors, and this helmet will not merely protect your fragile brain-meats but also your identity, allowing you to act without fear of censure or even identification."

"That is," Vatatzes added, resigned, "Until you break through to Foundation Establishment, and such games are no longer necessary to provide you your due stipend."

"Now then," Aretaphila spoke up, "For my first order to you, Katha Theodoro: You are to take up the mantle of Centurion XXI and do it justice, in a way that would make your ancestors proud."

The young Cultivator blinked as she looked into the eye sockets of the bronzed helmet, polished to a mirror shine in ways that dared one to give it their fullest attention. The fullness of the responsibility was impossibly weighty, precisely the thing she was not looking forward to in taking the mantle of Centurion. She was simply too young, too green, and too new to the matters of chasing Immortality.

Just twenty years ago she was still trying to figure out where her Meridians actually were, because she simply could not feel them. Just ten years ago she was still getting used to the idea that maybe, just maybe, she could not afford to assume she was slower and weaker than everyone on her level because that just made her sloppy in a world where sloppy meant dead.

But running away was beneath her at this point. Opportunity had fallen into her lap and what was once a hopeless dream was now in her grasp. If she was not ready to carry the hopes of a generation, how dare she have the temerity to judge the Heavens? So instead, Katha donned the helmet of Centurion XXI and turned to face her Legatus, the Silver King of Thousand Song City. "I'm not sure about making them proud. But I'll show them something. By your leave, Legatus."

"A pleasure to have you, Pilus Theodoros." Aretaphila said with a smirk, "Once more, I welcome you to the DI Legio!"

With this declaration, a great clamor filled the barracks. The ringing of many bells suffused the bodies of those who could hear, and waves of Qi and strength entered Katha's body, filling her with strength approaching the peak of the 13th Heavenstage. Something even headier than she had grasped upon leaving the Yuan Man-As-Mountain Array, a strength that was far beyond the limits she had felt at One-Boat, One River Pass.

After a few moments the Song died down, and the additional strength left Katha feeling refreshed.

"Now then my Primus Pilus," The Legatus rubbed her hands together eagerly, "For our first order of business!"

"Uh, before that!" Katha pulled the helmet off her head and ran a hand through her hair, untangling the knots that had already formed from just literally putting it on for a moment. "I know I need to do the whole Legendary Centurion thing when we are out on campaign or in battle, but do I need to keep up the act when I'm doing regular work? It was enough of a pain in the ass counting pay and writing treatises in half-plate, so I really don't think I should be doing that with this helmet on too!"

"Are you fucking serious," murmured Vatatvzes as he ran a palm down his face.

"You sure she's a Golden Devil?" Li Wei asked with an eyebrow raised. "Because she whines a lot for someone who should have near-infinite stamina."

"No, this is normal. We just usually beat the whining out of them by the time they turn fifty."

"I'm not whining!" Katha whined.

"We will begin recruiting to fill the spots of the other two Primus Pilus and from there begin filling out the ranks of our first five Centuries!" Aretaphila continued, ignoring the byplay for the moment of her dramatic declaration.

Hearing that, Katha broke from her sulking and turned to her Legate. "Oh, well, if you're looking for a potential Centurion, I actually know someone who might make the grade, I think. It was another Principales from my Legion at One-Boat, One-River Pass. Different Century, but I heard he broke through to Expert recently. His name's Aegus Sideros, if you've heard of him."

"Interesting, Pilus." The Silver King nodded, before walking towards a freshly installed Legion Contribution Board terminal, "Aegus Sideros, Sideros, Sideros…" She muttered to herself, "Hooo! This one is a very affordable pickup XXI!" Aretaphila nodded before inputting several commands in, "And with that, we've got Sideros lined up to become our fourth Pilus. For now we'll adjourn and meet back here at 0700 in order to meet the new recruit and induct him personally into the DI! Dismissed!"

"Ma'am!" The two taller men salute, before leaving the room to tend to their own projects. Katha did the same, reforged helmet of the Twenty-First Centurion under her armpit as she did so, before her thoughts caught up with her brain and a very, very important factoid lodged itself firmly in her thoughts.

"Wait, Legatus." Aretaphilla, halfway turned around, glanced back at her taller Centurion. "I missed something earlier, so forgive me if I'm repeating something, but… Is the 501st Legion only four people right now?"

The Silver King nodded firmly. "Yes, for the moment. But this is only the start, Pilus."

"...You scared my grandfather half to death to recruit me into an empty Legion."

Aretaphila stilled, now turning around fully to look her newest subordinate in the eye. "I'm sorry?" The ringing returned, now, once more joined by the ominous buzzing and susurrus of the Old Tongue, "Only half way to death?" The Silver King's head shook in confusion, "Fool girl, I am not so rusty as to leave a job half done. Your dear grandfather was nearly at death's door by the time I was through with him." She snorted, turning away from Katha to begin walking away.

It was difficult to resist the urge to cover her face. "Legatus, did I just get suckered into joining an empty Legion?"

The tension that had filled her diminutive frame melted away as Aretaphilla laughed. "With real pay, Pilus!"

Katha held up one finger. Then, she lowered it and nodded sharply. "Y'know what, Legatus? That's fair. I'll see you tomorrow."

----

It's bright and early the next day as the fully assembled 501st Legion assemble at their barracks. Thankfully, the briefing had been simplicity itself:

"Get in the carriage!"

The Legatus had commanded, and what a carriage it was: Sized and balanced to carry at least ten baseline humanoid Golden Devils easily, it was drawn by a quartet of Bronze Aurochs in the middle stages of Foundation Establishment explicitly for this task. The carriage itself was a slab of carved black granite, lined with weight-lowering and durability increasing Array Script. Emblazoned on the sides were an extremely tacky DI in bronzed lettering, standing out with their own freshness.

It was more than a little unnerving to have one's carriage be drawn by beasts who were technically seniors to Katha in the Cultivation Arts, but that was akin to a light unnerving buzz as compared to the searing, blinding nightmare of wasted stavraton and awful taste that was the bronze lettering on the side. It was one thing to be part of the 501st Legion; it was another thing to have to ride around with a giant bronze 'D' on the side of the Legatus' personal transport.

"Low profile today, Legatus?" Asked Li Wei in tones dryer than the desert as he got in, which was different from the usual dripping sarcasm because there was actually a note of sincerity in his voice. "What else do you have planned? Giant silver bell on the top that you can ring to broadcast our approach to all who would bask in the chimes of the Silver Bell King?"

That drew Legatus Aretaphilla Myia's attention, and her head turned slowly and revealed a rictus grin. "That sounds like a great idea, Principes! Tell you what, next time we have some lax in the budget, we'll do just that!"

Katha paled, and even Vatatzves had to suppress a shudder that shook him down to the wrists. Li Wei, who seemed verifiably dead inside, did not so much as crack a smile or beg for the sweet release of death. "If you're willing to afford my rates I'll make the damn bell myself."

"Sounds like a deal, Li Wei~"

"What do we do," Katha whispered to her snow-bearded senior. "There's no way I'm getting caught dead riding in this carriage as is; if there's a bell on top I might just bleed to death on the Dawn Fortress and get it over with!" For good measure she wore her Centurion's Helmet, its charms now masking her identity. "I mean seriously, it's just so weird!"

Lampo Vatatzves chortled. "There is nothing to be done, kid. Should've read the contract before you signed."

"It was a lot of contribution points, though…" Katha murmured as the two of them slid into the carriage.

Vatatzves nodded. "That's how they get you. Centurion pay isn't actually that high, by the way."

"Really? Because the number I got quoted was actually really generous!"

The older Expert scoffed. "Is it? Because it only ever seems like a lot."

----

"What the actual hell."

"Right?!"

Pinching the bridge of his nose, Lampo Vatatzves wondered if it was too late to request a transfer back to the Dawn Fortress. Opposite the two of them, Aretaphilla Myia chuckled.

"Yes, by the way," the Silver Bell said, her teeth shimmering as a ray of light past the curtains caught them. "But if you're good, I might consider a bonus."

"...Good at my job, or obedient to your whims?" Vatatzves asked.

Aretaphilla's smile grew wider. "Surprise me, Primi Ordines Immunes."

----

The trip itself was uneventful: As Katha had reported, Sideros had been returned from the frontlines upon his ascendence into Foundation Establishment, and was waiting in Waycastle Thrake for redeployment orders.

Orders which Aretaphila had just filed the previous day, at a premium cost in Legion points.

"So," Li Wei spoke up as they entered the Waycastle, "What exactly did you hear about the Centurion, Theodoros? I'm afraid he wasn't so exceptional that rumors of him reached our ears in Thousand Song City." Pale blue eyes twitched towards Katha, "Not like you, at least."

"Well…" Hemming, still wearing her helmet, Katha pinched her chin and let her gaze trail off into the distance. "I wasn't there when it happened, so I couldn't tell you the details either… But from what I heard, during one of the patrols along One-Boat, One-River Pass, he and his Conterbernum were caught in an ambush along a pass, with the mountains along one side and the river along the other. Behind him were five hundred refugees and in front of him were two hundred Blood Path."

"And he had just ten guys with him?" Li Wei asked, and Katha nodded. "Well, he obviously got out, so how'd he do it? Let me guess, he held the pass until reinforcements showed up and the cannibal bastards fled?"

"Ah, no. They ceded the pass almost immediately and spent the season leading his hunters along merry hell through the foothills of Turtlebone Mountain while he ordered his wounded Legionnaires to lead the refugees out in small groups and keep the rest alive and hidden. He almost died to a Core Formation Lion, too, if not for the Legatus who showed up in the nick of time to save him. Apparently the Legionnaire managed to pass word up the chain."

Looking up at Waycastle Thrake, Katha wondered if this was one of the territories that the Theodoroi once administered. Probably not, she never paid attention in those histories but from what she knew they controlled lands closer to Colossus Foot Pass. "Anyways, they only almost immediately ceded the pass. They held it for two days, breaking at dawn on the second day, but in that one day his Bronze Hoplite killed twenty Blood Path and crippled thirty-odd of them, which held them back until they finally bulled through on sheer numbers."

The Sorrowful Blacksmith whistled, though he was not overly impressed either, though Katha wasn't either. She'd grown up on stories of what a true Hoplite Formation was capable of, after all, and holding barely two days against ten times your number in enemies on extremely favourable terrain was not something for the annals of the clan. It was impressive, but not that impressive. Except for the fact that the ones who did it were all in Qi Condensation, that is. "That's not bad, not bad at all. Just goes to show what fancy bullshit your Clan Formations are."

Katha shrugged and waggled her hands. "I mean, yes and no? I'm pretty sure the two hundred he fought weren't a single group, and the number might have been inflated anyways. But from what I can tell, he spent most of his time punching down against Cultivators at least three small realms lower. Things got worse once they ran into actual peers, and when their Experts ran down the Hoplite that's when they broke for real. But saving five hundred people and making it out with his entire unit is pretty good, don't you think?"

"It's fine enough," Aretaphila drawled, "Though I guess I'm not surprised you'd look for stamina in a potential partner, XXI." A tinged blue eye turned to look at Katha, "Holding out for days on end? Multiple...sessions without becoming exhausted? Yes, he's certainly someone worth asking to be the tip of the spear."

Katha sputtered and was overcome by a coughing fit so strong she nearly fumbled her canteen out of her hands instead of into them. Vatatzes looked at his diminutive superior in abject disgust, "You're a few centuries too old to be speaking like an Aspirant freshly awakened, Legatus,"

"What's wrong with making a few jokes?" The Silver King harrumphed, "We're all adults here."

"Centurion XXI most certainly isn't."

"Hear that, Centurion?" Aretaphila said, staring challengingly at her Primi Ordines Immunes, "Your fellow officer thinks that you're a child."

Still drinking furiously the desert nectar that was water, Katha had little response besides an extended finger for her Legatus. A moment's consideration, and then that finger swept over to the Primi Ordines Immunes as well.

Aretaphila nodded, satisfied with that response before turning her gaze back towards the Waycastle itself, it's environment passing them by. "It's convenient isn't it, that even here so close to the border the citizens make way for traffic."

The last time the Silver King had been in Thrake had, unsurprisingly, been the most recent trials. Memories of fighting off Trial Hunters, all by her lonesome. Desperate attempts to evacuate the city even as it had fallen. The Fifth Sea citizens always seemingly on the hunt for her. Aware of her. Where before her Song had been a rallying point, a sign of strength and unity for the Legionnares...It had swiftly become call for death. Something familiar. And so once again, she had left on her own to draw away a stronger foe that had only ever been interested in her.

An electric blue eye gazed at her changed physique. Not even a slight tremble. It was the nature of the world to be cruel. To be unfair. But Aretaphila had struggled against it. Had saved lives, even if it had been a near thing. The sacrifice of her eye to shatter three dozen tokens in exchange for however many hundreds of lives would have been worthwhile.

"The place has rebuilt quickly, hasn't it?" The Myia mused aloud.

"Apparently, from what I heard," Katha said. Anything to move on from that topic, she thought, too caught up in her own thoughts to catch the sudden melancholy that had taken her Legatus. "Well, I haven't seen Aegus in a while - honestly I didn't see him that much at the Great Battlefield either - but if I were a muscle-headed idiot with more muscles than brains, where would I be…"

"You're describing everyone in your Legions," scoffed Li Wei. "By your logic, he could be everywhere."

"Fair, but Aegus is dumb by our standards, so you have to lower your standards even more. Let me try to kill some braincells--"

"Don't bother," said Lampo Vatatzves. He pointed to the distance, at one of the mustering grounds. The one with all the Legionnaires on the grass, either face-down or sitting and awaiting their turn on the wrestling mats. And the on-going match with the Expert fighting ten juniors at a time, barehanded, bare chested, muscles rippling and glistening with sweat.

Katha's hands were already covering the visor slits in her helmet.

"Hmm, I owe you an apology Centurion," Li Wei observed. "I did have to lower my standards even more. Significantly more." With a mix of consolation and appreciation, he clapped the Iron Devil on the back. "There there, Centurion. Your brain cells will be honoured, probably by being melted down into brain food for the next generation. Think of it as a noble sacrifice."

"Let's just go sucker him into the Legion already," Katha said in a small voice.

----

The carriage came to a halt upon the bare edges of the grassy field, where the fired sandstone ceased.

Aretaphila Myia glanced around, attempting to find some sign of a superior officer to greet and avoid offending anyone. But there were none in sight, and as much as the browbeating of the Thedoros family had been over the top, it was an interaction which the Legatus had felt positive of her ability to contain the negative blowback from.

Still, she needed to fill out her Senior Staff. And the Priori were still two short. At least Aegus had been cheap to get reassigned with Legion Points. She had seen an indication of a number of potential candidates going up in price, and while it was true that there had been a number of new Centuries being risen since her return from Thousand Song...The trend had still been worrisome.

Especially in the long term. Even if a war had been on the horizon, new and unproven Experts shouldn't be so highly in demand. What had been the cause there?

Aretaphila approached the training ring, beaten down by the thunderous footsteps of scores of Legionnaires refining their Pankration against her intended target. Ten to one, the various Aspirants were an eclectic mix of the fifth through the ninth Heavenstages, each eagerly attempting to take down the gregarious and brutally physical Expert before them.

Dispensing with fists, he seemed to favor broader sweeps of his limbs to cast his victims backward or as a precursor to entangling their own limbs in submission holds or throws. The man was glistening, not in sweat...But as the Silver King approached, her own senses realized he was covered in oil of all things.

And yet, still, through sheer force of muscle and despite the numerous handicaps the man had piled upon himself, he was utterly dominating the Legionnaires that surrounded him on all sides as he systematically drove them one by one to yield. Quickly replaced by a new face from the crowd; never exceeding nor going beneath ten in number.

Interesting.

Aretaphila elected to not show off too soon. With a hum her Qi was cast through the air as a wave, the Mountain Bell Song sinking into the flesh of her Juniors, suddenly empowering them to the absolute limits of Qi Condensation. Time to see what Centurion XXI's recommendation was capable of.

Where before the actions of the Conteburnium's worth of fighters had been a loose sort of coordination - born of long familiarity and training rather than unity of purpose and intent - as Qi filled their bodies and artificially raised their strength so too did the unique harmony that equalized their strength unite them. The air shifted just as the sparring did; where before stood ten mismatched Legionnaires who fought an Expert as little more than a coordinated mob, now there was a single unified individual in ten bodies, the ideals of the Bronze Hoplite if not the intent.

The next series of blows took Aegus off-guard with the sudden shift, the red-haired Expert's footwork stuttering under the abrupt change in tempo. Equivalent to the Ninth Heavenstage, ten limbs moved to interfere and tie him up, a flurry of blows that wasted no space and filled every gap that he could exploit. A breadth of bodies obscured the Centurion's vision as he simply reacted on instinct, lowered his center of gravity and brought his arms close in preparation for a great sweep of his legs.

His limb lashed out, a cord of bronzed muscle whipping towards the outermost Legionnaire. Aimed at his knee, it would let Aegus hook the back of it with his foot - knocking the Junior off balance and giving him leverage to side step past the obstruction in the second that it had been intended to be effective. It was textbook; when outnumbered against enemies who were each inferior in strength but most of all speed, one had to make that numerical advantage a millstone about their necks, and gravity worked the hardest on those who were not quick enough to keep up.

Impact, warmth radiated. The Centurion's foot caught the back of the knee, yet there was no yielding flesh. Instead, the oil applied to the limb caused the diffusion of force and grip and friction. What would have been a hook instead simply slid apart and contact was immediately broken. For an instant Aegus was off balance, and in that moment the other five Legionnaires dove at him in a coordinated tackle. Five bodies gripping his superior musculature, three fists went for his throat and two bronze-cast feet kicked at his shins, an attempt to turn gravity against him in ways only numbers and leverage could, lifting him into the air in preparation to carry the Foundation Establishment cultivator beyond the bounds of the ring.

In an instant, that singular moment when gravity lost its grip on Aegus Sideros, surprise had become a moment of contemplation. Then, it had become something else.

A feral grin.

Aegus Sideros retracted his extended leg before the momentum became too great and instead planted it. His grin turned into a mirthful groan of effort as muscles flexed and with core strength alone the tackle carry was halted. Ten bodies moved to overpower their Senior, locking rippling oiled and glistening muscle into a contest of weight and power, for surely even an Expert could not overcome ten who stood in sight of the Olympian Keystones, but a Foundation Expert is not merely stronger than Qi Condensation - he is faster.

Friction, the oil that had once given the ten an advantage, was now his friend. The gripped leg is snatched from the grip of four arms, slammed into the earth and scattering grass and loam. Aegus howled, a sharp wolfish cry, and knocked his head against that of the closest junior.

Contact, impact again. An arm breaks free of six limbs with a pump and flex, before sweeping across a glistening barrel chest, oily fingers tracing corded pectorals, and sending a body through the air into the arms of his brothers, their feet slipping as sudden force and weight throws their center of balance ajar. Aegus sucks in air in a great breath of exertion, his other arm outstretched in a solid bar of muscle and bone.

Then he launches himself, the limb slamming into the four that had been upon him, knocking them to the ground still carrying their fifth brother like a flower garland.

Silence. Aegus looked skyward, chest heaving, shoulders rippling with exertion, then back at his brothers on the edge of the ring, already pulling themselves back onto their feet, the ground slick with oil.

Then, a barked laugh.

He may not know the cause of this change in the game, but he's aware of it now. With an actual challenge being presented, it was time to finally exert himself.

Once again the impromptu Contubernium fell upon Aegus. Strikes into body slams into snaking attempts to grapple and impede his movement flowed endlessly around the Centurion. His Foundation Expert speed was finally forced to be exerted constantly, a true workout at last on the very limit of his newly earned physique. Even as punches still flowed out, about and around, Aegus did not meet them in kind. Instead his movements accelerated, putting to truth the natural gulf between he and his sparring partners. Against ten Cultivators of exceptional martial skill, this would be more than sufficient. The gap between Great Realms simply is not easily crossed.

But these were not merely ten Cultivators. These were Qi Condensation Juniors empowered - even slightly - by the Silver King, Aretaphila Myia. Strikes with the power of the very limits of their realm flew towards Aegus Sideros, rending the very air in their passage. Moving as one mind in many bodies, their forms boxed him into a single space, denying the man his advantages of speed. Glancing blows became fully bodied ones, even as the battle guided itself ever so slowly to the edges of the sparring ring.

The Legatus scoffed, wondering if the demonstration would end here.

A meaty thwack filled the air; a serious blow had finally landed upon one of the participants. Blood ran down a closed, bronze fist, shimmering and smelling of iron and bronze and scented oils.

Staring in confusion, two of the Qi Condensation Legionnaires were caught off-guard, looked about to their brothers skidding backwards. One who had been injured. Another who had inflicted the injury. The delay was not a fatal one, the arrangement of bodies still moving to hem and harry the Centurion towards their victory condition as one.

The sound of a strike echoed again, hearty and chesty like a gong.

One more Junior bent over and gagged; a fist buried in his guts courtesy of one of his fellows. He was pulled back in, yet the question remained: How?

The as match continued, the Centurion's eyes took on a savage and joyous gleam. He had not changed his approach at all, previous limitations remained. But where his sweeps and grapples before had been setups for his own debilitating strikes, now Aegus Sideros used his own bulk and speed to obscure his bodies movements, laughter punctuating every flowing strike and snaking fist. Subtly shepherding his sparring partners into position where their strikes would miss him and hit themselves.

It was the third such attempt which finally caused the Legionnares to adapt, insight lighting the path to blocking a misdirected strike, and aborting their own attack to do so. From there the fight shifted once more; the mass of bodies desperately attempting to regain control of the tempo against the superior foe as the Centurion gleefully continued to lord it over them, the struggle of the Golden Devils encapsulated to a single ring filled with sweaty men and oily muscle; the strength of many against the tyranny of one. Gradually and subtly, the ad hoc Conterbernum reshaped the impromptu cordon, struggling against an Expert on even footing even as Aegus got closer and closer to the edge of the ring.

Until at last, Aegus' unguarded back faced the border of the sparring ground.

And with a knowing smirk he swept out a leg once more, swiftly and with strength enough to flick droplets of oil across the grass.

United in purpose and in struggle, each and all of the Juniors fell for the bait, limbs locked as they attempted to mass tackle their Senior over the edge, a glorious strike that risked everything for everything.

For they lacked eyes, even when united in purpose and action, and the blindness of one would prove the blindness of all. As they stepped forward, so did Aegus to meet them.

Their bodies fell within the range of his vast arms, eleven men locked together in sweaty embrace, the Centurion's feet now firmly planted on the earth. Ten Qi Condensation Legionnaires had leapt upon the fulcrum that was Aegus Sideros, and so with weight and purpose he acquiesced to the tyranny of gravity, heeded the wisdom of nature, heaved with a great laugh and tossed them all behind him in a magnificent reverse over head throw.

As one, the ten-strong formation of Legionnaires, fighting with the unity and strength of a Hoplite if not with the true Formation, fell apart like pins, men falling upon one another and sliding onto the ground where their faces met the oil-stained glass.

And alone, standing and triumphant, Aegus Sideros laughed and hollered, pulling each and every one of those juniors to their feet to be met with a slap to the back and a shake of the hand.

"Holy shit." Li Wei muttered.

"That's about right." Aretaphila muttered, ending the Song now that the match was over.

Katha took a breath to calm herself, a hand over her chest as if she could squeeze her heart and force it to stop beating so quickly. Counting to ten and back again, she let out a held breath as if it were an exasperated sigh. "Yeah… Yeah that's definitely him. Now you wouldn't know it, but he actually likes getting the crap beaten out of him."

The Silver King approached the red haired Centurion, her diminutive form reflecting the sunlight from the sign of her own Physique.

"Centurion Aegus Sideros." She spoke to the taller man, every ounce the responsible Legatus. Her three existing Priori turned to stare at her like she was some stranger that had wandered into their midst, "Do you know who I am?"

Still slick with oil and sweat, and sending the last of his sparring partners packing with a smack to the biceps, the towering pillar of bronzed flesh and wild red hair looked down at the diminutive King with a wide grin. "Aye, you're the Silver King of Thousand Song! A true hero if there was ever one! I don't know how you did it, but I'm guessing you're responsible for all of these Juniors becoming a proper challenge!"

"Wrong," A silver hammer manifested behind Aretaphila, the weight of the [Heaven-Shaking Song] beginning the emanate over the sparring field, "I am your new commanding officer, Centurion." She smiled, handing over a papyrus scroll sealed with a waxen DI. "Your orders."

Face frozen, still wearing that genial grin but for the eyebrow that he raised, Aegus collected the scroll from her hands and swiftly broke the seal. He read through them quickly, a single sweep of the eyes catching all pertinent information in the fashion all Principales quickly learned in the field in the company of hungry and bold men. Then he quickly rolled the paper up again once more and saluted the Legatus smartly. "So they are! I find myself at your discretion, Legatus!"

"Indeed you are," Aretaphilla replied with an unreadable smirk. "I'll let you settle your affairs here, Centurion. Join us at dawn at the nearest inn with your things packed and your body washed."

"Of course, Legatus." Aegus looked down at himself, chest exposed and still wearing little more than small clothes, then suddenly realised that he stood in the presence of two of the fairer sex. "Though, if protocol allows, I would be happy to depart as I am, right now."

"Go wash up you shameless pervert!" Katha cried at him. Aegus looked back at her, then craned his head as the enchantment on the helmet kept her identity a secret, as designed. Katha sputtered, grasping for justifications. "What sort of Centurion struts about the Waycastle with his chest exposed? The dignity of the Legion rests on your shoulders, Aegus Sideros!"

Another laugh, barked to the heavens. "Quite right, fellow Centurion! Well then, I will beg my leave, Legatus."

Aretaphilla nodded and so did Aegus leave, joining the Juniors as they departed from the fields and towards the showers, clapping each of them on the small of their backs as they caroused and cheered for a match well fought. Finally out of range, both Li Wei and Vatatzves turned to their Centurion, quivering in her boots.

"Charming fellow," said Lampo Vatatzves.

"I'll be honest, I had not expected to need to adjust my expectations lower again so soon," said the Sorrowful Blacksmith, almost impressed in his disgust. "Keep up the carnival of idiots and I might have to praise you, Theoodoros."

Katha remained silent, too distraught to protest.

"Alright folks," Aretaphila stared at the other three, "Let's head to an inn and discuss our next move."

---

"Let's begin by settling a few issues," Aretaphila continued later at the dining area of said inn, "We have four of the required five Priori positions filled now." Gone were her normal affectations, deep in the demeanor of a Legatus as her cyclopean gaze roamed over her assembled subordinates. A silver finger jabbed first at the Blacksmith, "Research and Development, Covert Operations." A second finger extended, the hand moving to Vatatzes, "Overall Operations, Tactical Officer." A third finger pointed next at Katha, "Offensive operations. Frontline Commander." The Silver King paused, "I know you're not ready for the role quite yet XXI, but you're going to be getting there more quickly than most."

"No comment," said the enigmatic Centurion, drumming her fingers in place. She glanced, saw Vatatzves' disapproving stare, then stopped. "So… Who's left for what?"

Her arm curled up, a fourth finger joining the first three, "Aegus Sideros - I intend to have him handle defensive operations and act as XXI's second on the field." Aretaphila's second arm gestured towards herself, "Due to my own abilities, I'm most likely going to spend my time in a purely support capacity once the DI takes the field, handling the coordination of the Legion and suppression of enemy supercombatants."

The Thousand Songstress paused then, her extended hand wiggling its thumb, "That leaves us someone to handle Procurement as well as rearline operations. We need a dedicated Quartermaster or at least a talented medic who doesn't mind having to handle paperwork when the rest of us are in the field."

"I'm open to suggestions."

That would be easier said than done in such a time of expansion. Quartermasters and medics were a dime a dozen in the Clan, for the Legions were eternally ravenous for resources and ways to make more with less. The issue was finding talent; Silver King or not, despite the name she bore the 501st Legion was simply one amongst many, and one lead by a Legatus that had only just begun playing the grand game of bureaucracy.

'My brother against my family, my family against my clan, my clan against the world.' Such was the common refrain, and it was certainly the case in the Legions; the discovery and retention of talent was very much an internal affair, the sort of thing Legions went to war with one another for. Aretaphilla Myia had gotten lucky twice over already by ingratiating herself before one's star rose and discovering the other while he was still obscure.

But it simply would not do for a King to have anything less than the best. Which overall lead to a testy situation amongst her Priorii, excepting the fourth who was still scrubbing the oil out of his skin from a long day of working up a sweat in situations that rapidly became less than acceptable off the fields.

"I mean," Katha began, for the young officer had the most to prove, "We could narrow it down first? If it is a quartermaster we are looking for, then the offices of the Dawn Fortress should be the first place to look. Imperator knows there should be plenty of desk jockeys looking to join a Legion in a more senior position. As for healers, there were plenty that I saw at the Grand Battlefield, so we could just get a recommendation for a junior officer ready to reach the next realm--"

"Not a chance," said Lampo Vatatzves, with all the authority and irritation of a veteran of war. "By this point all the good desk monkeys have been bled loose from the Dawn Fortress. Everyone left will be jealously hoarded by department heads and clan Elders, or are incompetent. And the other Legions will never let someone as valuable as a junior healer with talent out of their grasp." War was not merely fought by two sides, as any seasoned campaigner would tell. It was a patchwork of internecine conflict, fought over supplies, treatment, glory, sleeping quarters and most of all, food. The only thing more valued than a good healer was a good cook. And the only thing a good cook valued more was good supplies.

All three needed a good logistician. Which lead them back to square one.

"...Can we seriously not rely on the recommendation of another Legion?" Katha asked bitterly. "We're supposed to be on the same side, aren't we?"

"Yangchen must have forgotten a lesson or two if you haven't learned that lesson by now," sighed Vatatzves.

Li Wei shrugged. "Mind you, this is still better than everywhere else. At least eventually you'll get someone. Though," he added, "Your Clan's love for procedure probably punishes perfectly competent officers for going against the grain. Why not find those?"

"Because all the ones with minor infractions have already been swept up by now, or soon will be," said Vatatzves. "We might be able to compete for either the Quartermaster or our Chirurgeon, but not both. And we will need both. Especially for the Quartermaster. Because Centurion XXI here is too young, Sideros is too dumb, and I categorically refuse."

Katha could not even protest, because her job as a Principales had been to issue pay to the Century, and she absolutely hated the job. Everyone kept moaning about their share and wanted to look for a bigger piece. Bring food and drink into the equation and she'd fall on the Hornsword right here and now.

Li Wei chuckled. "Am I not even up for consideration, Primi Ordines Immunes?"

"You're an outsider." It was not said with derision, simply a matter of fact. "You are fine enough and held in the confidence of our Legatus. But I am not giving you our money."

"Fair enough," said the blacksmith. "Besides, I'd rather die than be caught dead counting pay and crates."

"Exactly. No one wants the job. So whoever will want the job will need to either be the self-sacrificing sort or a numbers-obsessed sociopath. And all the ones that work well with the Legions will have been collected by now, leaving us the incompetents and the actual sociopaths. No doubt any other Legate's recommendation will only be done to rid themselves of the chaff," huffed the seasoned campaigner.Then, he slammed a jade slip onto the table, casting a name into the forefront of the minds of everyone present with a pulse of Qi.

"To that end," said the old Legionnaire, "I have a candidate in mind for the Legatus to consider."

"...Did you just lead us around by the nose, just so you could solve our problems in a more dramatic fashion?" Asked the Sorrowful Blacksmith.

Lampo Vatatzves looked straight at him, steel in his eyes. Then, the slightest ghost of a smirk. "Yes."

Li Wei laughed. Katha looked aghast. And Legate Aretaphilla, who remained silent thus far, did the most frightening thing a Legate could do.

She smiled.

"I see you've been working on this for some time, Vatatzes," The Legatus said, satisfied, "Holding out on us is certainly new."

"When dealing with the likes of you, Legatus Myia, I've come to realize that if I can not avoid being swept up in your nonsense then the only way to maintain my sanity is wrap you all up in my own."

"Well said, Primi Ordines Immunes." Aretaphila replied, her single eye turning back towards the jade token, "By this time tomorrow we'll be on our way to the Camp of the 353rd Legion, where our final Priorii awaits!."

---

The sound of creaking wheels played against the gentle blowing of wind as the DI Carriage traveled east, over fired and fused sand blocks. The near-white stone that comprised the most basic building blocks of the Scorpion Road. Three days after departing Waycastle Thrake, the great artery of the Clan had widened once again, the traffic of caravans finally growing enough to justify the change; the sign of increased trade as vehicles carrying the markings of the Jingshen and Golden Devils flew westward and eastward.

On the fourth day after departing Thrake, traffic swelled to where even the expanded width of the Scorpion Road found itself crowded, the path more congested than even the enriching flow of trade that had filled Waycastle Myia since the defeat of the Battle Blood Cannibals.

Like a trail of ants, caravans from all the Great Powers flowed from east and west to the North, heading to trade goods at Seven Heavens Trade City. What might have once, a long time ago, been Waycastle Theodoros, until the old fortress was shattered and Clan Theodoros with it.

Not that Katha really knew where Waycastle Theodoros ever was. All she knew was that it once overlooked the Colossus Footstep Pass, an indication of the high esteem her family was once held in. Frankly, it was all greek to her; looking at the sheer density of traffic, it occurred to her that maybe being born into a thriving clan instead of a withering one would have just made things worse for her.

...She should send a message to Constantine one of these days. He was definitely living out that nightmare right now.

"So!" Aegus suddenly and loudly declared, his eyes firmly shut. "I spy, with my little eye, something with too much money!"

Vatatzves and Li Wei both remained quiet; they had lost their patience with their fourth Priorii's attempts to break up the monotony before he even started this stupid game. Katha, who was at least nominally friends with Aegus, obliged him with a response. "You'll have to be more specific. We're surrounded by Jingshen caravans."

Aegus nodded, still smiling. Silence ensured. Then, he opened one eye. "Your turn, Theodoros."

"I spy with my little eye someone about to get decked in the face, Sideros."

"Someone who would oblige?" Aegus asked hopefully.

"Someone I'm becoming more obligated to hit," Katha said dangerously.

"Hoho! Then hit as hard as you'd like!"

"How old is he again?" Li Wei whispered.

"She's not even forty and he's not even seventy," sighed Vatatzves. Clever man and seasoned campaigner he is, he already had a shawl laid over his face, though his naps have long since been interrupted by internecine pop quizzes. "Basically, shut up I'm trying to sleep."

"Only old men sleep, Primi Ordines Immunes," Li Wei said.

"If only I was," the old man grumbled. "I only feel like it."

"That's the spirit," Aretaphila chuckled, "We're all still young yet."

---

It was another two days before the tall walls of the "Giant-Slayer's Bulwark" of the 353rd Legion came into view; one of the few deliberate deviations from the standardized arrangement of the Waycastles. Rising over a dozen meters tall, the numerous towers dotting its parapets presented a perpetually bristling profile to all comers. As the garrison intended to secure the continuity of trade along the Scorpion Road, it's ability to function as a continuous bulwark was prioritized by the clan above all else related to it.

Holding a hundred thousand mortals and twenty-thousand Legionnaires, the Bulwark was evacuated once a century in its entirety - and all Clansmen were forbidden from re-entry until the end of the Hundred Year Trials. That fact alone was why the "Encampment" had remained proud and standing even as its three sister Waycastles had been laid low over the past number of centuries.

Even the 353rd Legion was considered an elite posting - sent to reinforce other garrisons when it was dispersed every century, the demands on mobility and skill required in both filling the role of vital reinforcements as well as reliable guards against trespass into Clan territories meant the appellate of "Slayers of Giants" was as much an expectation as it was a sobriquet.

Truthfully, Aretaphila had been surprised at Vatatzes recommendation. The CCCLIII were notorious for being closed fisted - especially after the Trials over a hundred years ago when the Legions Legate had perished along with the majority of Core Formation Elders at the hands of Bhrigu. Yet, much like the Clan at large, a new Legatus had been found for them. A Foundation Establishment Expert rising to the challenge, and common rumor held that shockingly he had brought the Western Stretches of the Scorpion Road to heel even as Thrace, Acrocorinth, and even storied Pleuron had laid in ruins.

Out west, the Legatus could see the faint signs of the accompanying Shantytown to the Waycastle, but the DI were not there for that. Rather, they carried a heavy atmosphere of discipline and power, arriving at the front gates to the Bulwark itself.

Yet, despite the prestigious reputation for the Legion only staffing the best and most promising of the Clan's defensive Experts, something appeared off to the eyes of the Foundation Establishment Priorii and Legatus within that Carriage. Even the relatively inexperienced Theodoros could tell. But there was no point in being concerned. Whatever the cause of the oddity, it was one which enabled the DI to accomplish their objective, and so Aretaphila let her curiosity pass with only an unvoiced gratitude that she had managed to save enough Legion Points to afford the candidate they were presently there for.

Trundling through the Waycastle, a singular structure stood out: A jet black obsidian construction jutted into the air - weathered and ancient compared to everything else surrounding it, the Keep of the Bulwark rose high, casting a slender and deep shadow beyond the castle's walls. Streams of bronzed Cultivators moved back and forth from its many entrances, each of them gold-haired and blue-eyed, signs of their rich and thick Blood of Bronze.

The DI Carriage parked before one of the less trafficked entrances to the keep, the Aurochs pulling it snorting and pawing as they took a rest. With uncanny precision of timing, a Centurion stepped out from the shadowed portal, a simple leather jerkin emblazoned with fine bronzed filigree, depicting a great and massive foot with a smaller hand gripped at the ankle from beneath it.

"State your business," The Centurion stated, arms folded behind his back, posture ramrod straight.

"Legatus Aretaphila Myia, DI Legio." Aretaphila's voice rang out authoritatively, "I'm here to complete a transfer of personnel into my senior staff."

The Expert's eyes narrowed slightly before returning to their previous placid guardedness, "Apologies Legatus, but I'll need to see some proof of identity."

With a ringing sound the door to the onyx carriage slammed open, revealing the defiant stance of the Silver King, flecked blue eye staring the Centurion in the face.

"Proof enough?" She asked, eyebrow raised.

The taller man saluted smartly, "May I ask who you're here for, Ma'am?"

"Immunes Drakos." Aretaphila replied as the Expert twitched ever so slightly, "Can you take us to her?"

"Right away."

----

Passing through the threshold of the keep had been like stepping into a different world; not just the change in light - the atmosphere itself became thinner, colder. It reminded Aretaphila of the highest places in the world, the sensations of the air in the midst of her tribulation, or the underground grotto she had encountered in her youth. A place that was both hostile, yet all too healthy for a cultivator due to rich qi suffusing the air.

Two sets of torches lined the walls as far as the eye could see. Aretaphila's sense of distance is easily fooled by yet another aspect of the keep's odd construction.

But the Centurion does not lead her down the proverbial rabbit hole, instead guiding the Legatus through a series of side passages through which the number of strangely common Aspirants seem able to find their way casually, numbers of CCCLIII Legionnaires passing them by as they penetrate ever deeper into the facility.

"Is there anything…special" the Legatus says playfully, "About the Immunes by any chance?"

The taller soldier only walks forward, making no sign of having heard her.

"I saw you hesitate when I asked for her, Centurion." Aretaphila continues, "One of my Priorii said something interesting to me when we settled on requesting the Immunes for transfer," Her voice grows rich, flows more easily.

The Foundation Building Expert replies, almost in spite of himself, "What did he say, exactly.?

"That with the times being what they are, almost all good free Experts and potential subordinates have been snatched up by other enterprising Legatii." She turned a bright smile to the man, "No one wants the job that we intend to ask her to perform. So whoever winds up falling into it will want the job and will need to either be the self-sacrificing sort or a numbers-obsessed sociopath. And all the ones that work well with the Legions will have been collected by now, leaving us the incompetents and the actual sociopaths."

The pair continued walking, only the intermittent light of torches breaking up the illusion of depth, "So, which is the Immunes, Centurion?"

Silence met Aretaphila for a long time, before the scent of smoke and char began to fill the air. The orange-red of the keeps torches occasionally being joined by prismatic flashes of color. As they reached a single singed doorway, the Expert gestured into the room beyond before saluting.

"I wish I knew, but the Legate's made his decision clear."

Aretaphila turned to look at the Centurion before entering the chamber.

"She's your problem now, Legatus. Good luck."

With a huff and a shrug, Aretaphila Myia walked ahead.

---

Three colored flames roared in neatly arranged furnaces. Crackling, dancing, even singing as a figure moved between them with the ease of long practice. The head of the Myia family took a moment to look over her fifth and final Priorii:

Roughly shorter than Katha Theodoros, Immunes Alexandria Drakos wore a thick smock with heavy leather apron in front; an outfit which did nothing to obscure her prodigious figure. The realization caused the Silver King to turn her attention back to the woman's work. To her senses, Dracos was a whirlwind of activity even when apparently standing still - bands of Qi flowing in and out of the Pill Furnaces, each gossamer-thin and making constant, minute adjustments to the alchemical processes going on.

Time passed, Aretaphila unwilling to interrupt the woman's work. The Immunes engrossed in it. But eventually the flames within the furnaces died down, lids opening for limbs of Qi to lift out a trio of glittering pills, each one wildly different from the rest in appearance.

Golden eyes assessed their work critically, before nodding silently in apparent satisfaction.The work of a smith, and a job well done.

And at that moment, Aretaphila finally revealed her presence, clapping encouragingly.

"That was quite the show, Immunes."

Alexandria Drakos turned about immediately, her apron rippling as she slips it off with a single sweep of her arm. For an instant there is a flash of fury, white hot and nearly so fierce it could be tasted. Then she saw the singular blue eye, the diminutive stature, and the scion of the Myia. As quick as it came, the anger left, and the Immunes bowed instead.

"Primo Centurios Aretaphilla. What brings you to my humble workshop?" She looked up with one eye, the other blinked and her lips lightly quirked. "Ah, my apologies. That would be Legatus Aretaphilla now, correct?"

"Indeed," said the Silver King, whose voice was soft and gentle like wind chimes. If the sudden psychotic rage concerned her at all, and it did not, the hope of the Myia did not show it. She presented a scroll, describing Alexandria's new orders. "Then you know why I'm here?"

"Of course," said Alexandria Drakos. She brushed aside a lock of rusty red hair, threading it around one of her ears. "I will gladly serve, of course. My skills and healing arts will be at your disposal, and your Legion will be at my mercy. I trust that will be acceptable?"

Now, Aretaphilla grinned. "Oh, more than fine. I think we will get along famously, Priorus Drakos." Her smile kept as Alexandria made to gather her tools and prepare a more fitting setting for this meeting, though a Pill Forge is more austere a setting than most for receiving transfer orders. "That aside, what's your Legatus' plan?"

Alexandria looked up at her new commander, face still impassive. "Plan, Legatus? Whatsoever do you mean?"

"Everything and nothing at all, Priorus, everything and nothing at all. What do you know about the current mass recruitment drive?"

Alexandria scoffed as she stood up straight, arms crossed and hip cocked. "I would say that my Legatus was holding onto a proven talent and that those who think I have problems should sooner reconsider their words before I rip out their guts on the sparring grounds and put them back in reverse in the operating theatre." The way she said it, with a kindly smile and not the slightest change in intonation, made her more frightening than a raging bull, and the Silver King's smile only grew and grew. "But I would also be the first to admit that, frankly, I have a problem managing my temper."

"All the better to keep the Legionnaires in line," Aretaphilla nodded. "Best for them to only find you for truly worthwhile maladies, as befits a proper soldier."

"Ah, a kindred soul," sighed Alexandria in relief. "I never thought to see the day. You seem like a wonderful girl, Legatus Aretaphilla, and as a true heir of the Myia you're sharper than most already, so I shall offer a word of advice: the Legatus does so enjoy the path of most resistance."

Aretaphilla was already far from the walls, having inched closer to Alexandria as their conversation continued. "I see my assessment was right on the mark then, Priorus."

"My, I do believe I will enjoy this next appointment, Legatus. My thanks again for receiving me, my appointment must surely have cost you."

"We spared no expense, Priorus Drakos," replied Aretaphilla, as the wall behind her rumbled. "Only the best for the DI Legion."

---

The next half hour passed amicably. Unlike with Aegus' recruitment, Drakos had had actual bureaucratic responsibilities to see through before she could depart. And based on the woman's words and Aretaphila's own suspicions, the Legatus had no intention of having to make a second trip to the Black Keep if she could help it.

Thankfully, in addition to the Myia storage ring she already possessed, Aretaphila now had the nearly-empty storage ring of the DI Legion - the items it formerly held now stored safely at their new barracks in Waycastle Myia.

"Anything else we should look for on our way out, Priorus?" The Silver King asked, "I imagine you're as eager to leave this place behind as I am."

"Oh?" A new voice joined in, gravelly, smooth. The quiet purr of a mountain cat, reverberating through the foothills and mountains. Words sink through into bone, even through the prodigious physique of the Single Pillar King.

"I hadn't thought that our facilities were so bad, Immunes!" It continued, domineering and honeyed, "If I'd known that you being dissatisfied with your lodgings motivated your…issues then maybe I wouldn't be out an officer of your skill!"

A flash of mad fury crossed Anastasia's face, her golden eyes flaring with heat as they burned at the shadowed entryway to the chamber.

Aretaphila turned, staring in confusion at the void in her senses as a rich presence of the Dao poured in from that absence.

Core Formation.

"Real shame. Really." The voice continued, almost a drawl, "Guess you can't…" A thick, burly arm swung out from the darkness. A leather arm guard, lined with gleaming filigree that stunk of power. Carelessly, it swung back, and a thick boot, dark as night, stepped heavily into the light of the chamber. Powerfully it flexed, revealing a darkened iron cuirass, similarly covered in shining bands of metal.

"Win 'em all."

With a threatening growl, an aged and lined face revealed itself. Lips bared in a fierce and threatening smile, shadows cast stark impressions on its craggy and imposing surface. Dark, bronzed hair flecked with bits of pale patina caught the light cunningly. Barrel chested, he stood taller than any member of the Clan Aretaphila had ever seen without obvious mutations to their body.

Now fully visible, the Silver King's eye widened in shock. The filigree!

"Oh? You've got good eyes, Centurion." The Core Formation Elder paused, a meat hand clapping softly against his forehead in exaggerated motion, "Oh! Sorry. How could I forget?"

His bared lips twitched, fierce bearing joined by a patronized simpering.

"Eye." He chuckled, "That was very insensitive of me." A hand extended, the taller Golden Devil bending his knees far more than necessary, "Let's let bygones be bygones. Whaddya say?"

The air of boiling rage further intensified, but Aretaphila heeded it none as she stared the Elder directly in the eye.

"Who the hells are you?"

This seemed to break the man's composure, his face slackening and eyes popping out in shock. Lips parted in a wide "oh" he silently looked around as if in surprise before settling on Anastasia Drakos. His free hand gesturing from Aretaphila to her in stunned disbelief.

Drakos' smouldering glare merely intensified.

"'Who the hells am I' she says," His voice returns, all too audibly muttering, "Young lady, I am the man who's been signing your paychecks for the past century and a half."

With one more shake of his head, both meaty hands pushed against his trunk-like legs and pushed, raising himself to his full height as the pressure of a Core Formation Elder flowed forth anew.

Arms spread, pure Spirit Bronze filigree flashing and sparking with Qi, "I am Legatus Augusti Pro Praetor Potiorus Rex! Commander of the Defiant Slayers of Giants, the 353rd Legion!" Head tilted back with a satisfied smile, his eyes languidly closed as the lightshow continued, accompanied by the air cracking and booming with the pressure of his Qi.

"Legatus Legionus Aretaphila Myia of the reconstituted Fist of Dawn, the 501st Legion." The Silver King gritted out, her own Single Pillar churning defiantly against the presence of her ostensible peer.

Two eyes snapped open, dark eyes the color of a summer storm glaring into her own cyclopean gaze with fervor.

"'Course I know who you are, Legatus." His expression twisted into a sneer, "Spent a lotta good Legion Contribution Points on you over the years, how could I not?" Nostrils flared as he turned back towards the newly reassigned Priorus.

"Got everything settled, Drakos?" He asked, voice low and dangerous.

"...Yeah." The red haired woman replied.

"Good," Legatus Rex said, lips pursed, "Now let's get you two the hell out of my building."

---

The three of them walked out into the curious hallway of the Black Keep, only for the large figure of Potiorus to glance at Alexandria Drakos.

"Immunes," He growled, "Your new Legion have parked themselves outside the Northern entrance." His head jerked, "You know the way out." With a final, hate-filled salute the red-haired woman departed.

"It's Pilus Prior Immunes now," Aretaphila replied authoritatively.

Storming eyes narrowed at the smaller figure before turning back to the shrinking figure of the Expert.

"I'm aware."

Aretaphila's own eye narrowed, and Potiorus continued, "What? Did you forget who approved that transfer?" The older man harrumphed derisively, "You're still green, Myia. Even if you're over two hundred years old. Even if you're a Single Pillar King."

"Then why act this way?" The Legatus of the DI asked, "I don't see the point."

His expression twisted into a disgusted sneer, "Because you pissed. Me. Off." Gesticulating at the dimly lit corridor they were in Potorius Rex elaborated, "Girl, when you returned from the Crags the first time, did you never think to see who posted those caravan missions you spent forty years doing?"

Aretaphila's mind cast to those memories of her youth as a Qi Condensation Cultivator, the peaceful mundanity painted over by the crushing despair and terror, "Sorry. I had a lot going through my mind those days."

The taller Legatus grunted, his sneer still in place, "Kid I used to be a damn Caravan Patroller. In those days my Century was assigned to the northern parts of the Scorpion Road. Heard what you put up with, and so I requested you specifically on a whim. At first." He sighed, "And then that stuff happened at Pleuron, and I found myself paying attention."

"How'd that turn into you finding yourself…here?" The Myia scion continued, turning slowly skeptical even as she kept her own eye facing ahead.

Potiorus snorted, "Old Lucaenus bit it against that Key using bastard. Since the Tripletrip was split around on Hunter-Killer duty, he didn't have an excuse not to." The sneer deepened, "Dumb bastard. Leaving all the work to the newbies like that."

She hummed noncommittally, "Wait." For the first time in the conversation Aretaphila tilted her head towards her conversation partner, "Tripletrip?"

The elder Legate rolled his eyes, "The old language!" A finger extended, tracing light through the air, forming a series of symbols. CCCLIII. "Trip-El-Trip!" The Silver King's lips tugged into a disgusted frown, causing the larger man's eyes to narrow in fury, "Don't gimme that look! It rolls off the damn tongue!"

"I'm not sure that's what matters." Aretaphila replied.

"Oh yeah?" Potiorus sneered, "Don't think I didn't see that fucking embarassment of a carriage with that tacky "DI" on both sides!" A meaty finger leveled towards the Thousand Songstresses face, "Don't talk to me about bad taste, woman!"

A silver hand waved through the air dismissively, "Whatever, so you were saying? Something about the previous Legate dying like an idiot?"

For a long moment there was no response, the Legatus of the 353rd glaring in silent fury. The air was silent save for the quiet guttering of torchlight, continuing before the Core Formation Elder took a deep breath, "Right.

"Old man died, and left the northern parts of the Scorpion Road a damn mess. If it hadn't been for Yao assisting in patrols I would've never been able to tie things back together within the decade."

Aretaphila's eye widened in shock as the older man continued, "You're lucky, brat. You only have a Legion on paper. Thanks to the shit you and your friends pulled at Pleuron and pure fucking luck the Tripletrips were able to maintain themselves as Legion-in-fact and resemble their patrols." His scowl deepened, "As none of the other damn Experts in our Legion had the brains or the strength to keep our patrols, our inspections, our garrisons in working order." Two hands raised, gesturing wildly around the two Legatii.

"All this you see here? Mine." His lowered into a furious, rasping growl, "It's mine. I made it! All being made Legatus at the time did was confirm what everyone in the Northern territories had already known!" The Legatus paused, taking a deep breath before continuing.

"And once that happened, I started requesting you on missions around the Region and to handle caravans into the new territories. Hell, I figured that when the time came for you to settle in on a Legion, the least you could do is remember the 'Ol Giant-Slayers, and sign up with the Tripletrip."

"But that never happened," Aretaphila observed.

"That never did, no." Potiorus snarled, "Almost two centuries of waiting for you to break through, so I could welcome you with open arms." The hallway filled with the pressure of his very existence, "Wasted."

The Silver King's gaze narrowed as her Pillar rotated in response..

"Why was Drakos' available for transfer, Legatus?"

A massive hand tugged at an armguard, meaty fingers adjusting the onyx leather with practiced ease, "Isn't that obvious?" Five digits flexed experimentally, nonchalantly.

"I knew you were looking."

"How?"

Storm-Blue eyes filled Aretaphila's vision, "Because you somehow, some way preempted me on getting the Theodoros girl!"

The Silver King stepped back in shock at the Core Formation Legate, "How did you even know to look?!" She paused, "Wait, you don't mean?!"

"That's right!" Potiorus Rex sneered, his voice booming with laughter and triumph, "Once I saw you were putting together your own damn ragtag Legion and had somehow snatched up the most promising Aspirant in a generation, I knew you'd put out the feelers to look out for someone like Drakos!" Aretaphila felt her expression grow stiff.

But she rallied, "So what?! There's thousands of Experts in the Legions! I could've easily found someone else that fit the requirements!"

Potiorus's sneer turned into a knowing smirk, "Ordinarily you might. But do you know why there's such a rush for picking up qualified personnel?" At Aretaphila's hesitation he continued, "Turns out, the Legions are reorganizing and expanding! Finding room to prepare to invade the Jingshen and wipe them out before the next Trials come around!"

"What?!"

"Yeah, the way I see it that's probably why the Old Man indulged in your request in the first place! After that freakshow you put up at Thousand Song, there was no chance in hell he would've allowed you to remain unaccompanied on the battlefield again! Especially with an invasion imminent!"

Two hands clasped the thick plate of dark iron forming the front of the cuirass, "You got lucky, Myia. Not just once! Not even twice! Three times these past two decades have you tripped over yourself to wind up where you were! Getting that damn Blacksmith! Picking up Vatatzes! Bet you thought you were just getting lucky again, didn't you?!" The older man's expression schooled itself into calm disdain.

"The thought crossed my mind." Aretaphila replied neutrally.

"Hmmph," The Core Formation Legate cracked his neck with a meaty pop before meeting the shorter woman's gaze, "So yeah. I saw the way the market was going. Did what I could to drive up demand-"

"Wait." She interrupted, "What the hell did you just say?"

"Didn't you notice, Legatus?" He gestured around, "You just picked up the last Foundation Building Expert in this building."

"What."

"I've had…" A hand buffed the dark surface of his cuirass, before idly blowing on the tips of those meaty fingers, "About a century or so to set up my stable of Legionnaires with the expectation of you joining them once I managed to wrangle having you assigned here. And now that it seems that ain't gonna happen...Well, I've got a lot of stocked favors and a Legion Contribution Points with nothing to spend 'em on!"

Potiorus smiled challengingly, "So I figure, why the hell not start from scratch? I don't need to worry about flawless teamwork with the assumption that gaps in cultivation won't matter! No, no! I've done the smart thing. Traded all my Experts and senior staff away! Did it ahead of the word coming down on the invasion too, so I got points at a premium, dammit!"

"What."

"Cost me a fair bit, but I made sure I got myself first pick of the best of the rest! If talent suddenly matters again, then I need talent, don't I? Just took some horse trading of promising Juniors, and once again my Trip-El-Trip is on the damn fast track to becoming the preeminent Legion of the Optimatoi!"

"How the hells?!" Aretaphila nearly gasped in disbelief. The absurdity of what was coming out of this madman's mouth!

The Legatus of the Giant-Slayers smirked back, "The Black Keep is the second most important fortification in our Core Territories Legatus. The Grand Mountainwall isn't a fortification at all, so it falls to us to be the stewards of the sole land route that our Clan fell back from to arrive in this desert thousands of years ago. We are the rearguard. Forever ensuring that all that enters into and departs from our lands will never come to harm it. Only the Dawn Fortress and the network of defenses facing the Great Rift down south are of greater strategic worth.

"Did you think that as the one who has risen its garrison to heights unseen in living memory that I wouldn't wield a proportionate amount of influence in turn?!"

Panic nearly overtook Aretaphila, sheer raw shock at the absurd scale of what had lead to this one conversation. Deliberately warping the economy of Experts in the Legions. Artificially raising the price for Legatii to purchase talented Experts to staff their Legions in the face of an immense reorganization of the Optimatoi at large through their own influence. Restructuring one of the most successful Legions right after the lightest Centennial Trials in thousands of years, leaving it with only a skeleton crew while new senior staff acclimated to the posting on the eve of the first offensive war of the Legions since their arrival in the desert.

Deliberately leaving only one officer in the North to fill the exact niche Aretaphila would be looking to fill amongst her own senior staff. Keeping the price affordable for her own budget while making sure no one else snatched up said officer.

All to ensure that Aretaphila Myia would come to the Black Keep in person, alone save her own Senior Staff.

"All this…" She finally said after regaining control over herself, "Just so you can have a one on one talk with me?!"

Potiorus smirked, "Of course!" He turned to face her fully, taking a step forward to stand all the more imposingly over the Silver King, his Dao Pillar overbearing in its raw presence against Aretaphila's own Single Pillar.

A single, meaty finger filled her vision, "You've made an enemy of me, Aretaphila Myia. Stealing away the talents I'd spent centuries preparing the best conditions for, and even denying me the runner up prize I'd intended to grab up as well."

He turned smartly on his heel, "Consider Drakos a gift, Legatus." His swaggering steps took him deeper into the darkened hallway, his imposing figure vanishing into the shadows.

"From here on out, I don't intend to lose again."

-----

"Oh, shit, that's the Dragon," said Aegus, and his words stirred the carriage from their impromptu nap, prompting a cavalcade of groans and grumbles. Still, they acknowledged this one for once, for it was not the volume of his voice or the energy in his words that drew their attentions, but the slight edge his words had been cut upon. Aegus Sideros, fearless fool, was finally expressing something close to it.

Vatatzves, upon hearing that, barked a laugh and promptly went back to sleep. Li Wei, not aware of the import of that title but seeing the senior most officer's reaction, did the same. Only Katha, who was young enough to be both curious and stupidly keen about it, remained awake and active enough to ask questions.

"Who's the Dragon?" the young Theodoros asked.

"I heard it from some friends on the way back from One-Boat, One-River Pass. One of their Immunes was a real tyrant, a true monster on and off the battlefield. They say that her words were so sharp, the blade of a Sword Cultivator could learn a lesson or two about cutting from her." Aegus looked back at her, shrugging. "I don't know who they were, but I think a passing Sword Cultivator heard that, flew into a rage, and challenged them to an honour duel."

Katha rolled her eyes and waved her hands for him to move on with it. Being a Sword Cultivator, she was well aware of their reputations for having hair-trigger tempers. It was even an encouraged stereotype; the path of the Sword was one not only paved by conflict, but charted with it. "Right, so she's real scary? Nasty temper, way with words?"

"Apparently she's also a really good healer, and you know what they say about good healers." Turning back to the windows, Aegus sighed in an almost… longing fashion. "The poisons she could craft… Why, she could murder us all in our sleep with a tasteless, odorless poison in our meals, and we wouldn't know it until our lungs began filling up with our own boiling blood."

Katha frowned, though not at his descriptions. Frightening poison Cultivators who doubled as doctors were almost a dime a dozen in the Clan. "Are you… looking forward to meeting her, Sideros?"

"What can I say, Theodoros?" Aegus looked back, a completely neutral and firm expression on his face. "I admire dangerous women. The better with which to test myself."

"...You just implied something about me and I'm not sure what to feel about that."

"Oh, certainly, on the field of battle you are very dangerous, and exceedingly admirable! But alas, you are still young and possessed of this little thing called shame, Theodoros, and that reduces your danger by a significant margin. But it is a simple matter to improve upon!" said Aegus reassuringly, or as reassuringly as he thought he was being. "One of these days, Theodoros, you will be as shameless as the rest of us, and then you will become truly powerful!"

Silence stretched into infinity as Katha's glare shot holes through Aegus who, being the proud owner of an empty head, felt nothing at all. Li Wei barked a laugh, which won him a share of that glare which he, too, shrugged off like it was nothing.

Then, Lampo Vatatzves rose from his nap and stretched his wrists as he got ready to disembark the carriage. "Alright, enough horsing around. You're Priorii now, and that means understanding basic manners. That means you greet new people outside of the carriage."

Katha, filled with rage that had no release, kicked the door on her side open and all but launched herself loose. Aegus, who saw it as a demonstration of her commitment to shed her shame, did his best to throw himself further from the door. Li Wei, who was thoroughly amused up until the young fools he rode with thought to literally rock the carriage he was sitting in, emerged with squinted eyes and a grouchy demeanour.

And greeting them was Alexandria Drakos, the Dragon that Aegus spoke off, who seemed more perturbed than anything, possibly by the violence with which Aegus and Katha had thrown themselves free. She regarded them with rapid blinks, then turned right to Lampo Vatatzves.

"I don't suppose you are one of the 501st's Pilus Priorii, then?" She asked.

"That would be all of us," Vatatzves replied. "That's Aegus Sideros, this is Li Wei, our Legatus' Auxilia, and that is the famed Katha Theodoros."

Katha, sensing that it was her turn, extended a hand to their new Priorus immediately. "H-Hello, Expert."

"Alexandria Drakos, soon to be your fifth, then." She received Katha's hand and shook it firmly, looking at the slightly taller redhead with a prospector's eye. "Our clan's newest and youngest genius has a Pilus appointment already? At this rate you might be the youngest Legate the Clan has seen in thousands of years."

Katha did not know how to respond to that. So instead she nodded and smiled while offering empty platitudes. Alexandria saw right through that, however, and she chuckled softly while the young scion sputtered.

"My, not even forty and already making such promises," said Alexandria with a light air of mischief. "You are either the next truly great talent of our age, Katha Theodoros, or you are simply blowing hot air like this senior sister wouldn't notice."

"...If I say it was the second do you promise not to get mad at me?" Katha asked in a small voice.

Alexandria laughed again, a musical thing, and pat her gently on the forearm. "I never will, my dear. Not as long as you keep that head on your shoulders and your feet firmly upon the ground."

Katha let out a small sigh, happy to know that she will have someone she can properly rely upon now, instead of a mentor as prickly as Lampo Vatatzves.

"...So." Aegus pointed at the gate while he looked back at the others, one hand running through ruddy red hair. "How long did the Legatus say we needed to wait for her, Drakos?"

Alexandria's sharp look snapped towards him immediately, a far cry from the gentleness with which she had regarded Katha. "I did not think we were in the business of abandoning our commanding officer, Pilus. Do you need a lesson in the minutiae of command?"

Aegus returned with a broad grin. "Yes please, Lady Drakos."

"...Hum. Someone who wants to fight. A curious prospect. Valuable, perhaps. Worth considering?" Muttering, Alexandria quickly nodded to herself. "Maybe. Pilus Priorus Aegus Sideros, fight me."

His grin grew wider. "Yes please, Lady Drakos."

"...Heel, Sideros," Vatatzves said, then louder. "Heel! I said HEEL!"

----

It was a scene of carnage that greeted Aretaphila Myia upon exiting the Black Keep. An impromptu sparring ring had been marked out in front of her carriage by smoke and flame as her most recently appointed Priorii circled one another with crazed expressions on both their faces.

"Damnable redheads," She muttered as the two clashed with burning alchemical flames and manifested Qi armaments.

"I was intending to determine who would receive the role of Praefectus amongst the five of you on the way back, but I see here that my job's just been made easier." Aretaphila said more aloud, before a great silver hammer appeared behind her, tapping her Silver Summer's Bell Constitution.

A Song rang from her body, a wave of visible Qi slamming into Li Wei. The Twinned Peak Mountain Song was based off the Great Mountain Bell Song. Rather than raising up a limitless number of Juniors to become closer to her in power at no cost, the Twinned Peak Mountain instead granted a target of her choice strength equivalent to her entire cultivation base.

And strictly speaking, Li Wei was already in possession of the second highest cultivation base of her Senior Staff.

With a long suffering ease a massive hammer lined with array characters appeared in Li Wei's hands.

"Auxillia, please clean up, won't you?"

"Of course, Legatus." The Blacksmith grinned eagerly, crimson armor unfolding across his body into a heavily customized hoplite.

He hefted and swung the massive, array-inscribed hammer experimentally, "I've been waiting for this."

----

It was a thing of beauty, the fight that followed. It was a sight that would not be quickly forgotten by those who were there, every action flawless and not a hair out of place. It would be a struggle to describe what followed as a fight, for it was more of a dance, where every step and every movement flowed into one another perfectly, a synchronisation that would be difficult to match even with ample practice and the higher arts of Qi guiding one's path.

But it would be done, this day and perhaps never again, as two redheads united under common cause did what their ancestors long ago wished they could do and kicked a Sorrowful Blacksmith off of their bloody fields together.

That Li Wei was then subsequently humiliated by his two Juniors despite having Cultivation beyond the peak of Foundation Establishment was proof of the old maxim of Cultivation Base not being everything in a fight. Even one so outlandishly boosted by a Single Pillar King.

However, the means that said Single Pillar King then employed as punishment for such insubordination were ones scarred into the heart of all who saw, both of the 353rd Legion and not, is something which is best left forgotten.

The agonies and humiliations brought about by the combination of Dao Emanations and the Myia family's most infamous debilitating Demonic Tune Art were ones that evoked phantom pains even in passerby. And thus firmly and finally established the proverbial pecking order in the DI Legion from then and henceforth into the future.

501st Legio - Dawn's Fist

Legatus Legionus - Aretaphila Myia

Tribunus Laticlavius, Pilum Prior - Lampo Vatatzes

Praefectus Castrorum, Pilum Prior Immunes - Alexandria Drakos

Pilum Prior Immunes Auxillia - Li Wei

Pilum Prior - Aegus Sideros


Pilum Prior - Centurion XXI (Katha Theodoros)

A.N.: Originally this was intended to be much shorter, and just cover the recruitment of Katha. But then this turn started to look super hype, and making like 20 different collabs for a single turn to introduce the principal members of the cast seemed super tedious. And then someone had the bright idea of making a Nineteen Thousand Word Collab omake of their own!

The audacity.

Well, naturally Swordo and I proceeded to rise to the challenge. And now we'd like to humbly introduce you to the DI Legion. Inheritors of the Will of DI.

The Team's assembled. Next up, the heist.

Let's see if we can't convince the dice to give us some cars to make this a proper Fast and Furious movie...
 
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Matthias Outi 8 - Maternity Ward
Maternity Ward

Guarding a bunch of pregnant women was honestly a pretty weird job, all things considered. It was pretty cushy, living right next to civilization rather than going out into the Desert to stomp on bugs or get stomped on, but still, weird. He didn't know how many weird things he had to fetch or help make, and then wait for them to actually enter the village because any traces of his residual Yang energy, much less the raucous mess of cursed residue within his meridians would have ruined everything.

Why they didn't get a female guard, he didn't know. The women of the Golden Devils were fucking terrifying, so honestly it would've been a better choice. But needs must, he supposed. This job suited his purposes, anyways. He just had to keep a good eye out, and he could do whatever he wanted.

Chewing some sand into glass, which oddly enough tasted like one of those spun-sugar confections Anastasia had bought him all those years ago, he once again got up and began walking, sweeping the surrounding area with his vision. There was an irritating amount of people who kept on trying to peek at the female-only village, which, to be honest, was kind of really weird.

Was it some kind of bizarre fetish, or something? In his experience, trying to interact with pregnant women when you weren't a loved one involved sandals to the face at a distance of one hundred meters, but well, by now, he knew well enough that it wasn't the logos that ruled many a man. Or women, for that matter, but they could go peek all they want since they had the proper Yin energy, or at least lack of significant Yang energy to mess with the arrays.

...most of them anyways, but someone who had the stones or the idiocy to cultivate that kind of technique, and--oh man, that would have a pretty big overlap with someone who would want to sneak into a village to peek on angry pregnant women, wouldn't it. Uh, well, best to prosecute with prejudice then.

He tagged and bagged five peekers today, and had them sent back to their villages with a kindly written note to not do this again, with the knowledge that they'd be back sooner or later.

It's almost like they were trying to sabotage things.




It had been two hundred and fifty days, 18 hours, 13 minutes, and 59 seconds since he had arrived here, and it was a hot mess, honestly.

… he was going to have to guard this village for two fucking decades, by Old Gold's balls.

People were getting pretty creative in trying to sneak into the village, he was honestly taking notes at this point. Some were building tunnels, some actually awakened their cultivation and were doing some pretty solid stealth work, and some were actually using these weird contraptions where they just got a kite and glided in from the bluffs. He was pretty sure that a solid half of them were saboteurs trying to mess with the colonization efforts, but well, they were Qi Condensation at best. This wasn't really the best-focused effort to mess with the Storks, it would just be to tie up some Golden Devil forces and make them look bad. Or maybe his faith in the common man would sink further.

… he really should take notes, actually. They'd be too fragile, but the concept of while not flying, that was restricted to Nascent Souls but just jumping really high and coming in on high from some place was worth listening to. And a backup option when backed to a cliff was always worth something, being stuck in a crater was singularly awful.




Cold iron, cruel iron, filled his mouth as he chewed on a stick of ore. It was a taste he was oddly familiar with, but at this point, what cultivator hadn't had a mouthful of blood at some point?

… Blood Path implications aside, of course.
He was getting pretty good practice on restraint, even as Qi Condensation hardly ever had to exercise it. The decades out in the Desert and the time in the Secret Realm had done well to temper him, much less the horror story of the Trials. But dealing with idiot perverts and not coring their hearts out or letting out a hint of the disintegrating curse he had in him was good.

That didn't mean it wasn't a pain in the ass, though, he thought, staring at teenaged brunet he had stumped in the dirt, because honestly tying up people with rope was a waste of his time and actual physical resources. So he just stomped pretty hard, used a bit of qi, and softened the ground enough to stick someone in there before he could send them back.

"Hey, kid. Why're you doing this? Like, I'm pretty sure I've seen you more this week than your own parents have?"

"...because I can. Because I must."

"You must what? Waste a lot of resources because you want to indulge your fetish for pregnant women…?"

"YE—"

Oh gods above, he wasn't going to deal with this, and swiftly kicked him--lightly on the side of the head, knocking him out instantly, if not painlessly.

It wasn't all bad, of course. He was getting a pretty cushy job in all regards--dealing with just mortals was a vacation. Just… tedium. He barely even saw anyone friendly, he was just… stuck here, making weird things, practicing his arts, and beating up mortals.

… that sounded pretty bad, when he thought about it.

Oh well.



He was at his wits end dealing with this kid.

Sixty-eight times he had to deal with this kid. Lectures did nothing. Talking to his parents did nothing--his parents seemed to be approving of all things because whatever "ambition" he had should be encouraged, right?

No, but they didn't care.

Physical violence didn't teach him either--and Matthaias was at this point pretty sure he had somehow broken through into the First Heavenstage at this point from pure stubbornness just to see… pregnant women.

No. He wasn't dealing with this anymore--this was now officially someone else's problem.

He stuffed the boy into a container, and marked it for a city a solid thousand kilometers away. Maybe some fucking labor would teach him something, to at least, he didn't know, gain some empathy for a guy who was stuck doing a job he didn't like for pay that he wouldn't get for a long time.

Fucking hell.




Relieved as all hell to finally be free of this place, he hurriedly thanked the matriarch of the village for their payment, and left.

He was going to give Polikseni a piece of his fucking mind.

A/N: uh, half-finished piece I'm not really proud of, so stowing that under a spoiler. I'm going to do my next set of omakes to have a coherent plot, I'm just going to close off the last thing I had.

1128 words, I guess. Wanted to get this out before exams hit me again. It'll be interesting to actually try to plot something out next time, rather than leave it in developmental hell.
 
Gaius Antonius 65 - Black Iron Crucible Part 1: An Unhappy Return
Gaius Antonius 65 - Black Iron Crucible Part 1: An Unhappy Return​

In the Stone Tiger Manor, ten miles east of Seven Tourneys City, a man was training. This was typical; someone was always training in a house like that. A blocky, almost Spartan affair, demonstrating economic power with its size but lacking in embellishment, this place was about what you'd expect of the estate of a Hong Xuan Elder.

In the basement, surrounded by incense sticks and lit only by a few torches, A large, dark-haired man with strong features and bushy eyebrows, clad only in a pair of simple black pants, pounded an automated dummy relentlessly. This Thousand Strike Incarnator, an elaborate but hardy mechanism carved of jade, steel and ironwood, attacked automatically in a wide variety of patterns. It was loaded with spirit stones, and each time it was struck it would "leak" a small amount of qi, allowing the practitioner to absorb that qi and continuously train their body at the edge of its limits.

Every strike was perfect, because it had to be. Every blow carried the maximum amount of strength it could without compromising accuracy or stability. How pathetic. The man wanted to yawn; he could do this routine in his sleep. Sure, he could increase the intensity, but that would not alter the complexity of the dummy's attacks. He needed something to engage him mentally prevent him from taking shortcuts.

With a powerful sidekick, the man blew the dummy into a wall, then turned it off with a wave of his hand, turning to acknowledge the man standing in the basement doorway before he could even say anything. "Is there a problem?" He asked with an impatient cock of his head.

"No problems, sir. Your father wishes to speak with you." Said a stoic servant clad in simple blue and yellow clothes.

Hong Xuan Fang Tai, heir to the Fang Branch, sighed under his breath. Well, no surprise there; he knew this talk was coming. It had just been a question of when his father would find the time to scold him. "Understood, I'll be right up." He told the servant, who nodded and swiftly departed.

Fang Tai quickly cleaned himself up with a bowl of fresh, clean water and a cloth. He didn't want keep his father waiting, so something quick and simple would have to do. He then threw on the rest of his clothes, a deep blue cheongsam with some small embellishments here and there. Finally, he braided his hair in under a minute, an impressive feat of speed and dexterity even for a Cultivator. All of that taken care of, he took the stairs up and headed toward his father's study.

Fang Tai was not what most would call an amicable person. By all accounts, the man was driven, distant and even a bit cold, but also possessing an uncommon degree of conviction and sense of conduct. He was the type to see his commitments through and hold fast to his principles and beliefs, no matter what others thought of him.

Coming up to the double doors leading to his father's office, Fang Tai stopped for a moment. He took a deep, slow breath, preparing himself for whatever was to come, and stepped forward. The doors opened to reveal an expansive office, albeit a sparsely furnished one. There was a single couch, a couple of chairs in the back corner, one window, two bamboo plants, and that was it; not even a painting.
It made the room feel fake, in a way, a cold space that was not truly lived in.

"Well, at least you come quickly when I call you." Said a man who closely resembled Fang Tai, albiet thinner and with grey hair. He sat at a desk, continuing to scrawl numbers and signatures into one document after another as he spoke. He wielded a fancy pen topped by a very long feather with impressive finesse, only needing a fraction of his attention to blast through the work. Core Formation mental techniques were a fearsome thing indeed.

So dad was going to drag things out, make him do some talking and ask some questions even though they both knew how this would go? How troublesome. Fang Tai wished Fang Wufei would just shout at him; at least the old man would look invested then. "Thank you, father. What do you need of me?" He asked in a carefully curated, neutral tone of voice, paired with a deep bow.

"Three weeks ago, in the Sword-Halberd Arena, you fought Yuan Ming of the Yuan Branch, correct? Can you tell me what happened on that day?" Fang Wufei asked, no doubt knowing all of this already.

"Yes father, I did fight him. We had a disagreement over a girl, and decided to resolve the issue with a martial contest." Fang Tai considered how to word this for a moment; if he softened the reality too much the old man would just get annoyed with him. "We had a sanctioned match with a proctor present to ensure protocol was followed. I won the match, and the dispute was formally settled."

Fang Wufei quirked up one eyebrow dispassionately, his pen swish-swish-swishing all the while. "And how did the match end?"

A few beads of sweat ran down the back of Fang Tai's neck. Why did it have to be so damn hot in this office? And so humid too! Did his father do this on purpose to make guests nervous? "After several attempts to knock Yuan Ming out with standard blows led him to get back up, I performed the Wing-Clipping Palm to incapacitate him. It was successful, and Yuan Ming was taken to a physician. I have heard his injuries are not permanent, and will heal within a year."

"And did you think that was a good idea, my son?" Fang Wufei pressed, finally looking up from the paperwork to shoot the aforementioned son a quiet glower. "To use a killing technique in a little game between Qi condensation children?"

Fang Tai's jaw clenched as he swallowed down the indignity. "I didn't use it at full power, it was just enough to shut down his limbs." He protested, careful not to let his tone of voice become too rebellious. "All I did was end the match. Yuan Ming wouldn't go down, so I made him go down. I didn't break a single rule!"

"That would be sufficient if you were a freelancer, boy." Fang Tai's father sighed wearily, pushing a page to the side and beginning his work on another one. "But you aren't a freelancer, are you? When you fight, you represent the Fang Branch, and the image of a major family must be maintained. Take care that such a controversial overstepping of boundaries does not become the norm."

Fang Tai bowed low again, defeated. He could at least be grateful that his father was not so petty as to make his own son kowtow. "Yes, father. I understand, and I apologize for shaming our branch as I have. I'll even pay for Yuan Ming's treatment out of my stipend, if you wish."

"The settlement's already paid." Fang Wufei muttered, not even looking at Fang Tai anymore. His pen moved with far more energy and animation than his face had through the whole conversation. "But you must be more mindful next time something like that happens. Return to your training."

Fang Tai, perhaps impetuously, waited in silence for a few seconds longer, hoping that his father would have anything more to say to him. Swish swish swish went the pen. No dice; that man wasn't even acknowledging his presence anymore. "Thank you, father." He muttered quietly, vowing to hide the tremor of frustration in his jaw. With nothing more to do or say, he turned and walked out.

Fang Wufei had not always been such a somber and bitter man, though Fang Tai had only ever known him as such. As his mother told him, his father had once held a fire and drive that burned like the sun, but if Fang Wufei was the sun, then everywhere he had gone he had always been eclipsed by the Hong Xuan's Silver Moon. Hong Xuan Liu Fei had never, ever relented, outcompeting Fang Wufei(and everyone else in his generation) at every stage of cultivation.

'If only I work even harder.', Fang Wufei had insisted. 'I know I can compete with him. I can surpass him, or at least stand as his equal.' But it was all for naught. Liu Fei was a man of such brilliance that he became a master of Demonic Tunes while still being a top-class Body Artist. Common sensestates that generalists cannot compete with specialists in their field, but evidently the Silver Moon did not care for common sense.

Liu Fei would become the next Patriarch. This was not speculation, it was fact. There was simply no one else in his cohort who could compete. There were a few other combatants of comparable potency, but they were not as skilled in the arts of diplomacy and bureaucracy. Even though he only was in Early Core Formation, he had few rivals, both in courtly matters and in the arena.

When Liu Fei was sent over to the Golden Devils to reinforce their numbers in the Seventh Cannibal War, it was seen by many as a smart political move. Gain some more of the only thing he lacked: experience. At the same time, open diplomatic inroads with the Devils. After all, he was one of the few Hong Xuan thought to have a genuine chance of attaining Nascent Soul - all the better to soothe Old Gold's worries a bit. If that green-skinned schemer suddenly had to negotiate with a peer, he might go a little easy on someone he already had good relations with.

But then Liu Fei didn't come back.

Hong Xuan Liu Fei left his bright future behind to marry a Golden Devil. Not even an Elder, but a Centurion. The political uproar was intense: outrage over Liu Fei's perceived betrayal, vicious rumors about what might have happened, fierce competition to see who would emerge as the new frontrunner for heir to the Patriarch. This fervor faded with time, as all things do. The court adjusted, and while the loss of Liu Fei was a tragic one, it was a bitter truth of the world that not every opportunity bore fruit.

Fang Wufei rose up in the ranks of the Elders, now that Liu Fei was no longer around to steal his thunder. Today, he was one of the top five most likely successors to the Patriarch. That knowledge didn't seem to comfort him at all. His fire was gone; he had been thoroughly broken by his own inadequacy, and now could find no joy in his accomplishments, knowing he had only got this far because that genius voluntarily left the stage.

Fang Tai couldn't understand how a person could achieve so much and yet be so fragile. Perhaps it came as one rose higher in cultivation, leaving more and more of the world's population behind them. Some kind of inkling of temptation, an urge to dream of the pinnacle. A thought that if one had gotten so far already, maybe they really had the potential to be #1.

Whatever, Fang Tai thought, as he returned to his dummy. If his father wanted to be cowed into submission so badly, he could do so. Many had already begun to suspect the terrible truth: that Fang Wufei had bottlenecked at the Solidifying Core stage. His shame would haunt him forever, never letting him reach Late Core, the minimum advancement needed to even be considered for Patriarch. Fang Tai would never allow himself to be so rattled. No matter what adversity he faced, he would forever climb higher, and brave whatever hardship put itself upon him.

-—

It was an odd thing, thought Gaius, to be swiftly given forgiveness that you don't think you deserve.

Lipita squirmed restlessly in the seat beside him. Her carriage seat had been specially modified to reduce bumps and other turbulence as much as possible, so as to not aggravate her raw and sensitive condition. These weeks of riding would have been unbearable for her otherwise. Gaius turned away before she could notice him looking, not wanting to look her in the eye right now.

Why couldn't she just hate him? That would be easier to understand, at least. How could she still respect him, after his own poor judgement had hurt her so badly. She at least wasn't comatose anymore, the surgeon having somehow closed up the tears to make the remaining pieces of her dantian into one smaller one. Still, this meant that while she could circulate enough qi to perform all of her bodily functions, her performance would be below that of a Fourth Heavenstage until the organ regenerated to its full size. She couldn't advance her cultivation in that time, only being able to cycle enough qi to keep herself from backsliding. The decrease in qi quantity compared to what she had grown used to was also a problem, leading to frequent aches and pains as her body tried to draw on more than she had.

But despite all that, didn't even seem that mad about it. As far as Lipita saw it, she would never have advanced this fast by herself, and so even if she lost a few years, it would be a massive net gain. True, her family's resources meant she could take risks with her safety like this, having the resources on hand to repair damage that might end the careers or others. But was that really okay? Gaius said he would keep her safe as best he could. He had done his best, and yet she had not been kept safe.

He turned and stared out the window, watching the smoke of the Weeping Children billow into the sky. She was ready to die for her conviction. She already said that to him. Perhaps it was Gaius who had been unprepared for hardship.

Soon enough, the vehicle stopped. Gaius and Lipita got off the carriage in unison, the sprawl of Seven Tourneys City rising up to greet them.

Obviously, the city hadn't changed; why would it? Still, even if they hadn't really been gone for that long, but it felt like it had been an eternity. The walk back to their domicile was similarly anticlimactic, with the two of them arriving in short order and unpacking their things in casual but strained fashion. Gaius should have said something, maybe, but he just couldn't muster up the nerve.

In the end, rather than try to reconnect, Gaius told Lipita that he was heading out, and left his junior to her own devices. In the back of his mind, he wondered what they were even doing on this mission anymore. Neither of them were in any shape for competition, though Lipita could at least do some crafting now. What did they have to offer the Hong Xuan in this cultural exchange anymore?

These were all questions for another day, because Gaius had someone he needed to visit. Setting off toward the Northern quarter of the city, Gaius found himself greeted by several familiar faces. There was Mo Shan, in garishly bright red robes. There was Song Liwei, sporting a hat so bizarre, he was sure she wore it out of spite. Even Big Shang, A mundane local bear who had learned to cultivate, ran into him and said hello. The most notable of these encounters, however, occurred near the end of his walk, as Gaius found himself cutting through a marketplace in the Northern quarter.

"Well, look who finally made it back!" A rough, jovial voice called out to him. It wasn't long before Gaius found himself embraced by the smothering grip of an unmistakable person. "I knew you'd make it back, Gaius! How've ya been?"

Gaius managed to put on a smile and hug his friend back. "Not the best, but I'm alive. That means it's not over."

Long An put Gaius down and smiled fondly."Not over indeed. But I won't let you off the hook with just that; I want to know what you saw in that place!"

Gaius didn't want to talk about Yuan right now, but Long An had a magnetic charisma to him, the kind which made people relax and be open with one another. He went on about the events of that trip; mostly the first half, still not wanting to get into the unpleasant parts too deeply.

"It's really too bad you couldn't come." Gaius sighed. If they'd had Long An's unbelievable strength with them, that Kai Meng would have been no threat at all. "At least you made a profit scalping that ticket, right?"

"Sure did. With that plus the loans, I could afford a real Lightning-Catching Parasol!" The bearded man bragged, flexing a boulder-like bicep as he raised his fist in triumph.

"It seems like your tribulation went off without a hitch, too. No easy feat." Gaius said, circling around Long An and scanning him from top to bottom. His friend didn't seem to have any injuries at all, even though the tribulation was just a few months prior.

Long An laughed, then pounded his chest with an open palm. "As if I'd fail, when you're going to take on one that's even harder. It'd be an embarrassment if I screwed up something as simple as that little firecracker!"

"You're right, why was I even worried?" Gaius commented with a facetious tilt of his head. "Only enough lightning to blow up a town. You do that every time you take a shit, oh mighty Immortal." He continued, giving an exaggerated bow.

"Bah, Shaddup!" Long An shot back, spitting on the ground off to the side. "Of course it was hard, but I was ready, that's all there was to it."

Gaius huffed at the big man's mild hypocrisy. "You ought to tell me more than that, Long An. Unorthodox tribulations are more special, more personal. Did you see anything interesting?"

"Nothing I'd speak to anyone other than family. It's special." Long An insisted, stubbornly crossing his arms. "So you didn't make it, I can see that." The giant nodded somberly and patted Gaius on the shoulder. "You'll have to settle for only becoming a King, not becoming one in less than a century of cultivation." He drawled out in a faux-despondent tone.

"It's not that that's the problem." Gaius scowled. "I made some more progress, I'm even closer to that stage than before. It's... " He trailed off, sighing and rubbing the fatigue out of his eyes. "It's complicated. I made some bad judgements as Lipita's tutor."

"Sounds like the kind of thing best spoken of somewhere other than a marketplace, then." Long An nodded in agreement. More than a few people had turned to glance at their noisy reunion over the past half-hour. "Tell you what; you get on your way and I'll bug you later over drinks. I'll even pay!"

"Sounds like a good plan, big man. I'll see you there." Gaius turned and waved goodbye as he went on his way, and Long An did the same.

——

Yuan Ming had no desire to live in the Yuan Branch's estate, or even anywhere close to it. Instead, he had purchased himself a nice, comfortable house on the other side of Seven Tourneys City, as a gesture of independence. Unfortunately for Gaius, who lived in the South Quarter, that meant he also was on the other side of the city, and had to make that trek each time he visited his friend - an irritating pitfall in his current physical state.

After knocking at Yuan Ming's door, it took nearly two minutes to get a response. With the sharpness of his hearing, Gaius could tell that someone was coming - just very slowly. The door soon slid open to reveal a short, brawny man with a shock of red hair - quite odd around there parts, and rumored to be a result of one of the Yuan Branch's secret techniques. He wore simple, comfortable clothes suitable for a man resting and recovering in his home, beneath and his posture was artificially stiff. Rather than holding himself strictly upright, the position was rigidly enforced by some apparatus embedded in his back, which bulged beneath his robe.

"Yuan Ming! You're okay!" Gaius stepped forth and embraced his friend, glad to see him in good enough health to be walking around. When he'd heard via letter about the injury the other man had received, he had assumed it was deeply devastating, the kind of thing that would keep him in a chair for decades. Perhaps he had, in his foul mood, overestimated the extent of Yuan Ming's misfortune.

"Course I am, what were you expecting?" Yuan Ming shot back, patting Gaius on the back before breaking off the hug and leading him through the house and onto an outdoor stone pathway on the other side. At the end of the pathway lay a wooden bodega, painted in tasteful whites, browns and reds, and stocked with all sorts of wines.

The two sat down and soon fell into a familiar rhythm of conversation, filling each other in on notable events which had befallen them both. No matter how old he got, Gaius always found it surprising how easy it was to fall back into comfortable habits with people he knew, even after years or decades of separation.

"I could hardly believe it when I heard, to be honest." Gaius sighed, shaking his head in disapproval. "It was just a minor dispute, and he broke your spine? How does that even happen?"

"He got me pretty damn good, didn't he?" Yuan Ming laughed, turning around and disrobing his upper body to display his back.

Gaius winced when he saw the scar. It was a gnarled, ugly strip of flesh, discolored and surrounded by an array circle seared into the skin to help the healing. Gaius would have healed from an attack like that in two months with perhaps some minor surgery. For someone without the Blood of Bronze, it was a more delicate affair. "You seem to be recovering well, at least; I'm grateful for that."

Indeed, Yuan Ming was bouncing back from his wounds with remarkable alacrity. Nothing about his movements seemed abnormal, and while there was a noticeable sluggishness to the movement of his legs, it was at least completely reliable movement, which boded quite well.

"What can I say? I've always been tough. Sometimes a little too tough, as it turns out." Yuan Ming's face turned sour at that, as he recalled unpleasant memories of the match that had done this to him.

"That Fang Tai… he's a real piece of work, isn't he?" Gaius scowled. "How in the world did a sanctioned match with rules get that bad?"

"I just told you, I'm too tough for my own good." Yuan Ming boasted half-sarcastically. "I couldn't help but keep getting up - I was having too much fun! It seemed like victory was inches away, if I could only figure out the right choices."

"So then Fang Tai jammed his hand in your spine to make you stay down?" Gaius grimaced. "That's too excessive for an arena match - too excessive for both of you."

Yuan Ming waved a hand by his face in response, as if Gaius' concern was a fart on the wind that he was blowing away. "Yeah, well, that match is what it is. The annoying part is the timing. I'm going to miss the Black Iron Crucible."

The Black Iron Crucible Tournament was one of the largest the Hong Xuan held. Every ten years, the most promising of all their Qi Condensation disciples would congregate to display their prized Body Arts in an unarmed fighting competition. The only things officially barred were weapons, intentional murder, and any technique which was not a Body Art. Of course, that was just what was on the books. The competitors were displaying themselves and their abilities before the Hong Xuan Elders; to disgrace themselves here was unthinkable. Thus, a semblance of decency was implicitly enforced by way of the threat of disgrace.

To even be chosen as an entrant was an incredible honor to any Hong Xuan martial artist, as it gave them the chance to display their skills in front of all sorts of bigshots. Someone who showed great enough promise might be patronized or taken on as a disciple by a powerful and wealthy Senior, even if they didn't win the grand prize. And so, being unable to compete due to injury was more than just embarrassing; it was a major lost opportunity.

Yuan Ming had no shortage of patrons and teachers; he was nobility, after all. Still, for his family to not send anyone to represent them at the Black Iron Crucible would make them lose face.

"So that's quite a pain." Yuan Ming sighed, taking a long sip of tea. "As a chosen competitor I have the right to choose a substitute, but only if the tournament committee approves that person."

"So you wanted to pick me." Said Gaius, giving voice to the unspoken truth.

"That's right." Yuan Ming nodded. "But you're probably in worse shape than I am." He continued, looking Gaius over from head to toe and back. "I suppose you could fight better if you had to, but your health is so precarious that you'd better not."

Gaius sighed. "I would argue, but you're right. If I went out like this I don't know if I could give a good showing. I might embarrass you."

"No one in the world is going to look down on you for not entering. We all know how strong you are." Yuan Ming got up and patted Gaius on the shoulder. "Now stop moping. You survived, you advanced, and that calls for celebration by itself."

"You're not going to get carried away this time, are you?" Gaius chuckled. Yuan Ming, despite his parents' best attempts to mold him into a stern, dignified warrior, was a party animal down to the marrow of his bones. More than once, his family had pulled lots of strings to have compromising jade slips destroyed and encouraged expecting women to not look for the father.

Yuan Ming flashed a big, wide shit-eating grin. "Who knows? How can I promise anything when the sun's not even down yet?"

Gaius closed his eyes for a moment, contemplating whether it would be wise to entertain the Young Master for the evening. Ah, fuck it; he deserved to drown his sorrows a bit. "You bastard. Fine, you wanna go whoring? I'm in!"

"Whoring's just the start!" Yuan Ming laughed. "I'll send word to some friends!"

Gaius wondered immediately if perhaps this would get out of hand.

----

It got out of hand.

That should have been clear when Gaius stumbled out of the washroom, only to be grabbed by the back of the head and kissed by a nude woman covered in bodypaint. The frenzied music of the players hired for the occasion pounded in his ears, some technique having no doubt been applied to it. His shock fading, Gaius wrapped his arms around her and leaned into the kiss. The prostitute slipped her tongue into Gaius' mouth, passing some sort of pill to him which he swallowed reflexively.

Gaius broke off and pulled away, bumping into several partygoers and coughing off to the side. "Hey, come on! I have to be careful about what I take right now!"

The painted lady giggled coyly. "Not to worry, sir. It's only a little potency aid. You seem a bit anemic, I thought you might need the help."

Gaius couldn't bring himself to be mad; he just laughed. The alcohol was part of it, but it was also the crowd of gyrating dancers, the tantalizing, succulent smells of every recreational smoke under the sun, the aura of throngs of people filling a pavilion to bursting in their shared goal to have a good time. To raise any inhibitions in a place like this was an exercise in futility.

"You cheeky bitch, I'll show you potency!" Gaius growled playfully, picking the woman up over his shoulder and carrying her upstairs to the cheers of a few friends.

Entering the closest unoccupied room, Gaius unceremoniously dumped the prostitute onto the bed and slipped out of his robes, a stylish but light and loose-fitting affair in black and green.

Crawling atop the woman - Come on, he'd gotten her name, hadn't he? What was it again? - Gaius traced a line of kisses down her body, as if he were slowly eating a three-course meal. It was nice, sometimes, to forget about regrets and problems. But not the Dao of course, never the Dao.

Performatively moaning, Gaius' companion wrapped her legs around his waist and laughed as her hoisted her up into his lap. For the sake of his pride, Gaius assumed she was enjoying this for real, though the painted lady was skilled enough to make telling such things impossible.

Holding the woman by her hips and pressing his face into the crook of her neck, Gaius prepared to lose himself in eros for a time—

Only for any such passions to be rudely halted with all the bluntness of a brick to the head, as a broad-shouldered man with messy, shoulder-length hair barged in. "Hey! That room's ours, Devil. Get out." He growled, words slurring together in a drunken stupor.

"Didn't see your name on it, asshole! Ever heard of knocking?" Gaius rebuked the intruder as the prostitute getting off his lap and moving to the other side of the bed. Something in his memory was yelling at him, telling him he should know who this was, but nothing came to mind.

"Why should I knock, when everybody knows we were going to use that room?" The man tilted his head in confusion. "Sorry if you somehow missed it, but it is what it is. Please find a new one."

That face, that posture, that voice... hold on, wasn't that Hong Xuan Fang Tai? One of the top Qi Condensation in all of Hong Xuan, and the man who had hurt Yuan Ming? What the fuck? Why in the world would Yuan Ming invite the guy who beat him into the ground to a party? It was nice to not hold grudges, but wasn't that a little too much friendliness?

Gaius blinked himself back to the present - this was no time to space out. "What do you mean you were going to use it? This isn't your bodega, and you clearly weren't using the room."

Fang Tai's eye twitched and he ground his teeth, his drinking having robbed him of the inhibition to be diplomatic. "I said we were going to use that room, we called dibs on it. Do you not have that where you come from?"

"What do you mean dibs?" Gaius got up and brushed stray hairs out of his face, even managing to scrounge up enough focus to hide his raging erection under a sheet. "It's a public party, you're either using something or you're not."

Fang Tai's thick eyebrows furrowed in frustration. "I tied my ribbon around the bedpost, that means I was going to use it." Gaius turned to the side, and found that there was indeed a red ribbon, the type typically used to tie up one's hair, fastened tight around one of the bedposts. He must have made a dumb expression, because Fang Tai snorted in response. "Maybe if you were a real Hong Xuan you'd know that."

Gaius rolled his eyes and groaned, accepting that he really was in this argument for the long haul. "That's insane. You can't monopolize a space in a big event." He briefly glanced to the side hoping his companion - he really ought to learn the poor thing's name - would step in and take his side, only to remember that she had no reason to take sides. This wasn't a one-on-one session, she was being paid to attend the party and keep the guests happy. To take one customer's side against another would make the one she argued against lodge complaints to her handler; it was better for her wallet to be a non-entity when confrontation occurred. "It's stupid to try and hold onto privacy anyway. It's a big drunken party, everybody knows people are having sex. Just go do it out in the crowd."

Fang Tai wrinkled his nose in disgust. "You call me insane, then tell me to fuck in front of everyone? Why don't you go do it, if you think it's no big deal? Go spray your semen all over the other guests."

"All I'm saying is that it's weird you people don't accept doing it!" Gaius said, gesticulating as he tried to make his words clear through the mental fog. "If I go have sex downstairs, people will be disgusted, they'll make fun of me. Just find another room, we're already using this one."

"No." Fang Tai declared, planting his feet and crossing his arms. "You can't just trample on our traditions. I already reserved the room - you find another one."

"I'm not going anywhere, you son of a bitch." Gaius leaned in closer with a mocking grin. "You think you can emasculate me like that? You think you can come in here while I'm fucking and tell me to leave? Is your dick worth that much more than mine, Fang Tai?"

"It's not about worth, it's about agreement!" Fang Tai yelled, lowering his hands to his side and clenching them into fists. "That ribbon on the bedpost was an agreement: 'I'll be back very soon, please don't use this room.' And I was, I was only gone for fifteen minutes! You're breaking the deal!"

"You can't make a deal with someone who doesn't know about it!" Gaius yelled, a window behind him cracking ominously under the force of his qi, which thrashed around recklessly in his inebriated fury.

"If you go to a Hong Xuan party, you should already know about it! It's your fault for not knowing!"

"How is it my fault!? How would I even know to ask, huh!?"

"I don't fucking care! Do I look like your father!?"

By this point, both of the night ladies had shrunk back into the corner as the two Cultivators went at it with their words. It was all they could do to hope that the two of them wouldn't literally bring the house down.

"Don't you think I deserve a little courtesy, you bastard!? I risk my life, come back, and I can't even enjoy myself without some bullshit getting in my way!" Gaius exclaimed, backhanding the bedpost and snapping it in two. He tossed it to Fang Tai, just gently enough to not be interpreted as an attack. "Take your fucking ribbon back and get out!"

A vicious, volcanic tide of disdain boiled up in Fang Tai in response to that statement. The bedpost shattered into splinters in his hand. "You come in here, you disregard our traditions, you blame me for your own ignorance…" Veins bulged and throbbed in his neck and head. "And then you call me a bastard? You are LITERALLY A BASTARD, and you call me one!? What gives you the right to do any of that!?"

The sheer intensity emanating from Fang Tai cut through some of Gaius' belligerence and actually reached his higher functions. This was getting way too intense. Maybe it was smarter for Gaius to back off and lose a bit of face than to let this keep spiraling out of control. Just outside the room, he could hear other voices, as other party guests milled about and debated with each other whether to step in.

"Oh, but I've forgotten; you have the right to do anything, don't you?" Fang Tai jeered mockingly. "Because you're The Seeker, and The Seeker does whatever he wants, right? You're not special, Antonius!" He was outright screaming now,, face flushed with both alcohol and anger. "Everyone knows a person like you! Someone who makes everything, good or bad, about them, about their journey. It's not profound, it's just self-obsession, mental sickness."

Gaius' blood turned to ice, and then that ice froze a second time, becoming something colder than cold, more solid than solid. All thoughts of reason, civility and face were suddenly ten million light-years away. Some kind of mechanism seemed to slot right into place inside his head, clearing out the fog and replacing it with an inhuman focus. "What did you say, Fang Tai?"

"I said, you've discovered nothing! Your philosophy is empty, it's an excuse to be selfish! It's meaningless brain sickness!"

Oh. So it was like that? He'd have to kill him, then.

Gaius was startled by the suddenness with which that thought came to him… only to settle back into it. No, that was right. There was no consideration to be done here. The Dao of The Seeker, perfect and pure and meant to be forever approached, could not brook such insults.

He dropped the sheet, which pooled around his ankles, and stepped over it to advance even closer to Fang Tai. He would murder this man with his bare hands, in the middle of a party, and whatever the consequences, he would simply have to endure them. Blood dripped from Gaius' nose in a steady trickle, dribbling down his chin and falling to the floor one fat droplet at a time. He didn't even notice, let alone wipe it away.

Fang Tai took a few steps back, before letting out a shout and aggressively sinking into a deep, hard stance, both fists facing forward in front of his chest with one above the other. "You crazy bastard! You're going to attack me too? Fine!" He declared, his voice full of conviction and bloodstained steel.

"I'll kill you…" Gaius muttered. "I will not accept this. I will kill you!"

Fang Tai spat at Gaius' feet. "Kill me!? Go ahead and try, I'll kill you if you do! No one will blame me!"

"NEITHER OF YOU ARE KILLING ANYONE AT MY FUCKING PARTYYY!" Yuan Ming screamed at the top of his lungs, shocking some sense into both of them momentarily. "There are ways to settle things! Proper channels! Use them, you damned morons!"

The killing intent which filled the room dropped sharply, perhaps by half. Gaius tried to think a little bit, to find a way out where he didn't attack right now. Fang Tai didn't seem like he would attack first, so it was alright to let his mind wander just a bit. Gaius' heartbeat began to slow, little by little.

That's right, thought Gaius. There are proper channels, and he knew the perfect one; it was coming soon, and there were almost no rules. "…the Black Iron Crucible. I'll punish you there." He said without hesitation, drilling bloodshot eyes into Yuan Ming's own dark pools.

"Punish me? Fuck you, Antonius!" Yuan Ming spat venomously. "I've done nothing wrong here, you're the crazy one! You want to fight there, go ahead!"

----

Ignoring the protests of Yuan Ming, Gaius signed up for the Black Iron Crucible as the Yuan Branch's substitute. He assured his friend that he was feeling a lot better than before, and would perform more than well enough to maintain the Yuan branch's face.

The tournament's administration loved this, of course; adding in a foreigner was sure to spice things up, and the Yuan branch had significant enough sway in Seven Tourneys City that no one questioned them using an unusual substitute. No obstacles, bureaucratic or otherwise, placed themselves in The Seeker's way.

With place in the competition secured and with only one month to prepare, Gaius had a single concrete thing to focus on: detoxifying his body further.

In that Yuan Clan lodge, Gaius had been provided a constant stream of high-quality medicine by the Delphi family, no doubt the result of some dealings with the Quintia. The two families had apparently used Gaius' tutoring of Lipita to open up negotiations and tie themselves closer together, with the Delphi being greatly pleased by the chance to get a King into their good graces before his ascension.

Still, while that treatment had dramatically improved Gaius' health, a qi inversion, even one along the axis of one element, was a deeply complex affliction. Loose cultivators or those without someone of a higher Great Realm to support them typically faced the end of their careers if this happened to them. All he had done was stop the further physical decline of his body and put himself into a state where he would recover over time on his own.

What Gaius needed now was immediate functionality; improving his internal balance enough to fully exert himself for the duration of multiple violent matches and survive and backlash. This was not so easily done, but that didn't mean it was impossible.

And so Gaius found himself nude, in a secret basement, standing stock-still as he was pricked with acupuncture needles and prodded all over by a small, white-haired doctor with a gold false eye and a creepy laugh. The old man's hands seemed to wander quite a bit more than strictly necessary, but Gaius bit his tongue and dealt with it. This was a black market procedure, after all. And for all his faults, Doctor Wu(real name unknown) had not lost his license due to lack of skill.

"I must say, my boy, you've got a magnificent body." The doctor grinned, running a calloused palm up and down Gaius' thigh. "It's endured so much training and punishment in your short life so far. The Blood of Bronze is strong in you, but your own strength has just as big a part to play."

"And the coating?" Gaius asked impatiently as the doc trailed his fingers up Gaius' spine and along the controls of his back muscles. Gaius bit the inside of cheek until it bled to hold himself steady. He just knew that if he shivered under these touches, this pervert would get a kick out of it. "How much coating can my meridians take, and for how long?"

The gold eye spun up Doctor Wu's head, as some internal mechanism analyzed the Devil. "Hmm… to use informal terminology, I would say that if your body is S-class, then your meridians are A-class." He stroked his chin, pacing around Gaius and taking in said 'S-class body' for his own appreciation, "The fact that you've advanced so fast with only great meridians, as opposed to the kind of truly exceptional ones that only show up ten times per generation, is a testament to your hard work and the sturdiness of your Dao-Heart."

"I appreciate the flattery…" Gaius muttered. Now Wu was buttering him up? Talk about low. He clenched his jaw and restrained himself yet again - no need to turn this into a confrontation. The doctor was in Foundation, and in his current state Gaius couldn't afford to provoke an Expert. "But what does that mean for the procedure?"

"Oh my!" The doctor laughed, twirling a lock of Gaius' hair around two fingers and observing how the light dappled off the long, slightly metallic strands. "You're so driven, so focused. It's as if you were born to cultivate. I suppose you were, with the stock you come from…" He subtly licked his lips, trying to hide the gesture from view. "I predict that in your current state, you can withstand the Shimmer Coating for up to two months, though of course that estimate goes down if you take too much internal damage in your fights. More than enough to win that tournament."

The Shimmer Coating was one of Doctor Wu's specialties, and a very potent enhancer for a Cultivator's capabilities. Using a variety of rare regents, the dantian was suffused with a concoction that then spread through the circulatory system to the rest of the meridians, massively improving qi control and cycling speed. In this way could both make the weak strong and the strong even stronger; all that was needed was a robust and durable meridian network. For Gaius, whose qi control had been thrown so catastrophically off-balance, it would allow him to fight at full strength rather than reducing himself to a Ninth Heavenstage level. Though he would no doubt still take some backlash, it was a crucial difference that was likely to grant him victory.

There was, of course, a downside - the coating was toxic. Hence, it could only be used for a matter of weeks, after which it would need to be extracted or it would slowly kill the bearer. For these reasons, the coating was often used by warriors going on suicide missions, or in cases like this, where one needed to improve their abilities for the duration of a set event.

This was not to mention that even when properly extracted, potential complications could arrive from small remnants of the coating remaining in a person's bloodstream, potentially reducing their lifespan. Thankfully, that last part wouldn't matter to Gaius - he was soon to get a whole lot more life, and ascension generally fixed all health defects as well. No price was too great so long as he made it across the finish line.

Gaius forced a pleasant smile onto his face. "That's excellent, Doctor. And the price?"

"One hundred Mid-Grade Spirit Stones." Wu said without hesitation, grinning like the predator he was.

That was a bridge too far, causing Gaius to finally scowl down at the little man. "Bullshit. That's not your usual price - you'd get no customers if it was."

Doctor Wu chuckled. "If you're not satisfied, you're free to search the city for another physician with the skills, cultivation and resources to reliably perform the surgery. Or perhaps you'd like to travel to another city somewhere… though of course you'll miss the tournament."

An oppressive silence fell over the room, and Gaius knew that he had been well and truly tricked. There was no other way, but he simply had no way of paying - even if the Quintia financed such a big lump sum, it wouldn't arrive here in time. He furrowed his brow and clenched his fists, knowing exactly what was coming.

"Doctor… I have no other options, and I must fight in the Black Iron Crucible no matter what. But I don't have nearly enough stones." His voice caught in his throat, but he forced the remaining words out, venom beginning to seep into his words. "Is there… another… way I can pay?"

A savage brightness gleamed in Doctor Wu's natural eye, and he licked his lips far more openly now. "You know, I think there just might be. Why don't you come to my home so we can discuss things further?"

Gaius would have liked to think something profound about what happened after that. Perhaps that the worst part was not the event itself, but the walk to Doctor Wu's home. Or that the despair of what he had done did not truly set in until the night had finally ended and the sun was beginning to rise. Or perhaps that he felt nothing at all, because he was just so driven to claim victory at all costs.

None of that was true. It felt exactly the way Gaius had expected it would, but much, much worse in magnitude. He felt sick, as he walked back to his and Lipita's home the next day. More than that, he felt tainted. As if some black mark had been painted onto his body, and anyone who looked at him would instinctively know he had become less of a person. He threw up behind their lodging, and told Lipita it was a side-effect of the Coating taking hold.

Stil, at least it was over with. Gaius had gotten the Shimmer Coating with no further issues as soon as he and Doctor Wu returned from his home to his "office". He wondered how many other people had made that same exact walk. He wondered if any of them had seen him and the doctor and known what happened. He wondered if Wu would ask for a second night in exchange for removing the coating.

No, there was no point in thinking about such things now. All that mattered was to punish the slanderer and steady his Dao-Heart. Everything, absolutely everything, came second. A King must have a perfect Dao. The Seeker, much moreso, must be triply perfect. No doubt. No fear. Absolute confidence. Gaius could not falter when the crown was so close.

——

I didn't think the new Good Seed report would be coming this weekend, but I decided to post the first chapter of the Black Iron Crucible Arc today, just in case. The others are currently well underway as well.

I wanted an action-packed last hurrah to end Gaius' time in Qi Condensation, as well as a chance to explore the darker side of what it means to fully embrace the Dao, beyond all logic and decency. The intention was for Gaius and Fang Tai to both be unreasonable and angry, with neither being particularly likable in that argument. I hope I made it come across well.

The last ingredient that makes this arc tick is that it's one big love letter to MMA and other combat sports, warts and all. Thus, I intend to include all the worst, seediest parts of such sports alongside the thrills and the glory.

Because this chapter is so long, I'm worried I might have passed over a big error at some point. If you find anything like that please let me know.
 
Can we get someone to continue Yan's exploits or something?

I really like his power and I hope for him to reach foundation establishment as well.
Yan's still around. His player posts one omake per turn and iirc he's about to his Foundation as a King this turn. Some more content with him would be fun but it is what it is.
 
I wonder how the rest of the Sea is doing with regards to Kings given how many the Golden Devils seem like they'll have after this turn.
 
I wonder how the rest of the Sea is doing with regards to Kings given how many the Golden Devils seem like they'll have after this turn.
My guess is not terribly many - Blood Path has fundamental problems with pissing off the heavens too much and is really not so good at building strong dao. They also tend to be immediate gratification types, and the fact that their cultivation supplies are other cultivators means that requiring a whole bunch of resources while remaining comparatively underpowered for an extended period is... problematic.

On the flip side, Righteous Path tends not to go for the heretic options.

So... you're basically down tot he non-Blood Path demonics. There are a few of those out there, but not but so many.

I'm thinking... Noble Knowledge seem like the sorts who'd go in for that stuff. We might see one or two from Magic Oak, Simmering Soup, or the Cranes.

Really, what happened with the Devils is that Rina Callista made the jump, and a whole generation of ambitious Qi Cultivators looked at her and said "That. I want to be that." At that point, the Clan looked at them and said "Cheap knockoff core cultivators for Foundation Building prices? I'm in!

Also, the Clan is tight. Like, the Golden Devils beat every other major clan/sect/whatever there is on clan loyalty... which means that they beat basically everyone on willingness to (possibly) die on behalf of the Clan... and breaking through to Single-Pillar really does require that there be something that you're willing to seriously stake your life on, even moreso than normal tribulations.

So... I'm pretty sure we have the edge. I'm also pretty sure that Altar Lord is noticing the sudden surge of Single-Pillar types and getting kind of bemused.
 
Really, what happened with the Devils is that Rina Callista made the jump, and a whole generation of ambitious Qi Cultivators looked at her and said "That. I want to be that." At that point, the Clan looked at them and said "Cheap knockoff core cultivators for Foundation Building prices? I'm in!
Actually the Clan tried this earlier in the Olympian Keystone project which failed terribly to produce a single King. If I had anything to guess the Bronze needed a wedge which Rina provided with her talent and all the other ambitious & talented of the young generation followed up.
 
Actually the Clan tried this earlier in the Olympian Keystone project which failed terribly to produce a single King. If I had anything to guess the Bronze needed a wedge which Rina provided with her talent and all the other ambitious & talented of the young generation followed up.
...or it's the fact that we've finally thrown off enough of the curses of heaven that the tribulations aren't just straight-up murdering anymore, and we have a Great Era that we actually get to take advantage of.
 
Yan 13 - A Mortal's Perspective
Yan 13 - A Mortals Prespactive (1.4k words)

The group broke camp early in the morning and with the rays of the rising sun continued on their journey.

The cultivator walked at the front, eyes constantly scanning for threat, he would occasionally call them to a stop and either fight some terrible beast or change their course to avoid one.

The mortals walked several paces behind the cultivator, some had their crossbows ready and were lazily scanning their surroundings, trusting the cultivator to detect threats. All in all, the merry mood from the night before continued in the morning -if a little more tenses from knowing that they will soon see battle-

Except Yu Wang, of all the mortals she was the only one didn't spend her time in idle conversation and jokes. Preferring instead to shallow in her despair and terror from her most likely future death.

After Yu Wang conversation with the cultivator she decided that fleeing was far too dangerous.

And without other options, she kept quiet and continued like normal, though far more tense and alert.

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\​

It was early after-noon when the group reached their destination and Yu Wang nerves have quieted down. sometime Earlier the cultivator shared their part in his plan and thankfully it didn't involve being used as fodder as she suspected.

Before them stood a huge dune at least ten Li high, the sand composing it was glistening by the after-noon sun making it uncomfortable to look at.

And at its base a huge gate was located, it seemed as it was constructed into the dune itself and a small shimmering field kept the blowing sand away.

In front of the gate stood an eight-foot man, without a single heir espoused on his golden skin. The man's apparel looked simple from afar, a yellow robe with no decoration visible to her eyes.

The cultivator signaled the group to stop well before reaching the gate and the man guarding it.

Coming to a stop Yu Wang made sure that the bolt nocked in her crossbow was secure and the fletching was still tense, as the cultivator broke from the group and continued up to the gate.

Yu Wang kept her eyes firmly on the cultivator, just before the gate came into view has finely reveled the groups part in his plan and she didn't want to miss the signal because of her nerves.

And so she kept her eyes on the cultivator as he reached the guardian, as they conversed and as fast as lightning the cultivator struck the guardian and dashed to the side. Signaling the group to release their bolts on the guardian.

Yu Wang bolt was the first to fly, courtesy of her great focus and the years of training to wiled her family's treasure that she undertook.

And before long the guardian was like a hedgehog a dozen bolts sticking out of its body with Yu Wang bolt sticking from one of his eyes.


\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\​


"so, once more you have come" said the deep voice of the golem.

And despites it high quality lifelike look, a golem it was. The masterfully hidden artificial Qi veins marring its immaculate golden skin in a slight purple tint, betrays its true nature to the world.

"yes, I have"

"and it seems that you are done skulking around, are you here to finely challenge me?" the golem impassive expression turned into glee at its mention of the coming battle.

"yes" for the last two weeks Yan has been studying the golem, finding its weaknesses, its attack patterns and anything more that could help in defeating him. Normally, Yan would have just fought the golem, it strength standing at the 9th​ havenstage –far below Yan's- but he has already seen draw on the Qi stores of the tomb to kill foundation establishment experts.

"good and its seems you brought company, they will all help quench my thirst for blood" a short laugh escaped the golems golden lips.

Yan looked back at the group of mortals he hired for a pittance, he will need to sell this next part or there won't be a chance for the plan to succeed and will to disengage and come up with another plan.

He morphed his expression into one of anger and turned back to the golem "Them? You DARE insult me such? They are clearly my mortal encourage, they are here so that I won't need to sully my blade with the blood of lowly beasts. And I'm ten times more then will be needed to defeat you!"

"defeat me? someone like you can't even hope to scratch a masterpiece such as I!" the golem boasted

"oh? those are big words, yet words are dust in the wind, let's see if there is any truth to your words." Yan said "three times shell I strike you and should I not wound you, my life is forfeit… or perhaps, you do not trust your master craftsmanship?"

A flash of anger appeared on the golem face before it returned to impassivity "You insolent cur, you shell have your three strikes and when you inevitably fail, I will take great delight in your slow and painful death"

Spending Qi like water, Yan uses several techniques to enhance his speed and fast as lightning his hand lashes at the golem. He strikes him twice, each strike harmlessly bouncing off the golems metallic skin.

Before Yan can land his third strike the golem realizes the true purpose of Yan's attacks and moves to doge the final attack. Drawing heavily on his connection to the tomb in order to enhance his speed and escape the closing jaws of defeat.

Unfortunately for it, he detected the trap far too late and as he moves to doge probability and fate bend against him. the sand between his leg destabilizes and he trips allowing Yan to land his final strike.

Immediately Yan could feel the dream Qi he gathered level his body and connect to the small amount he left in the artificial meridians of the golem body. as the dream Qi began to flow between them and Yan felt his power leave him he knew that the technique took hold.

With all of his remaining strength Yan threw himself to the side and the ground in order to doge several crossbow bolts. When Yan was sure all the bolts found their target he raised his looked back at the golem.

The sight that greeted him was a welcome one, the golem was kneeling on the ground, all the bolts in its body made the golem look like a hedgehog then a man, its once immaculate golden skin marred by the blue "blood" leaking from a dozen different wounds.

Carefully approaching the golem, Yan watched for any sign that it wasn't dead and when he confirmed that it was dead beyond any doubt, he reached for the necklace around the golems neck –the one that allowed it to draw Qi from the tomb- and tore it from its now dead owner.

The sudden action caused the golem inert body to topple over.

With one last look at the golems body, Yan turned away and walked back to the group of waiting mortals with the necklace in hand. Leaving the golems body behind.

Normally, Yan would have taken the golems body, at the worst case he could recoup some of the cast from selling its scrap. But the technique he used to triumph over the golem destroyed that opportunity.

Unfortunately, it couldn't have been avoided, with the golems ability to draw on the tomb Qi stores and its inherent immunity to poison, Yan couldn't have defeated the golem normally and he most certainty didn't have the funds to hire and a core formation elder to kill it for him.

So he used the dreams of a mortal technique to make both himself and the golem effectively mortal for the day, cutting them both from the usage of Qi and weakening their body's, allowing for the golem to be killed by mortal weapons.

Reaching the mortal group, Yan started directing them in building the camp they will use until the side effects of the technique were off. As the mortals were putting the finishing touches on the camp itself, Yan used on of his pre-built arrays to hide the camp from most senses.

The next day when Yan regained his strength, the group started their journey back, their job done.
 
I'm going to be doing the Good Seed Reports as part of the war updates this turn! They'll start come out relatively soon, and they'll be interwoven with main story updates as they come. We're over a month into the turn so I feel as though we're at the 'fair game to get writing' soon stage.

What We Have, We Hold will come first, followed by Underworld Spirit Palace, followed by A Great Clamour
 
Abel Angelus 37 - The uselessness of Time Travel

The uselessness of Time Travel


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Time Travel: Quick making thousand year exilars
By Athanasios Scafeas updated by Tisamenos

Time manipulation is a field of extremely limited usefulness on any sort of long scale in general. Lifting a pebble in the present is barely any effort at all, but try and lift that same pebble a few seconds in the past and it will take more power then lifting a mountain. It is a bit like the difference between lifting a pebble on the ground and a pebble a mile underground. There are some high level combat techniques that consider this to be a valid tactic, but practically affecting anything more then a few seconds into the past is impossible. Just about anything that you might wish to accomplish by changing the past can be more easily done by changing the present.

There is, however, a way to get around this. What if you changed something in the past that had no effect on anything around it? Taking a loose pebble out of a cave under the ground. That can be done without having to move all the earth above the pebble. The analogy holds for time.

So if you can find a place that you can verify has not affected anything or been affected by anything for a thousand years you can place a exilar into it a thousand years ago and effectively age an elixir a thousand years in an instant. This method is very limited due to how hard it is to find such isolated spots and how hard these spots almost always are to access.

Still I hope that you in the future find this method useful. As soon as I proved my technique I set up ten thousand places where it should be possible to practice it in the future and encouraged others to do the same. You in the future should have a better idea of how well that has worked out then I do. This article was written in year 10 of the reign of Alexio. I am not sure how expensive these spots will be to purchase. They should become more valuable the older they are, but no matter how expensive they are I assure you that they are still easier to access then an air pocket in a thousand year old volcano which I had to use to prove my theory.

-Editors note: This article has updated for easier readability many of the phases and idioms of the original article were archaic and did not make for easy reading -Tisamenos Second Chronicler Year 210 of the reign of Manuel Konstantinos one thousand years after this article's first publication.

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If you found this article helpful we recommend

The thousand year auction

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@Alectai, @TehChron, @Humbaba, @ReaderOfFate, @Kaboomatic threadmark please.
 
Last edited:
Antonius Emmanuel Eleanora 70 [Turn 12] [Antonius The King]
Not sure if I'll have time to upload what I wrote, but putting this up just in case. Meet Antonius in the current turn. He has more of a prince look then he used to.

Antonius Emmanuel Eleanora 70
[Turn 12]
[Antonius The King]





 
Pleuron 2 - Thoughts on War and History
Pleuron - Thoughts on War and History​


War.

I was familiar with War.

As I -no, the people inside me, need to remember that- repaired my physical form and my battered spirit rested inside said form, I ruminated on the info I the cultivators inside me had received. That War with the Jingshen was to begin soon.

I wasn't surprised. The mission to the Bandit Lands (I still didn't know who was responsible for that bureaucratic error) was a pretty clear warning sign. But I worried.

The Golden Devils would win the fighting and conquer the Jingshens territory. I had no doubt about that. But I worried about whether that would lead to them losing, long-term.

I remembered the SCA, sort of. I wasn't Pleuron, then, and only fragments of those times remain. I wonder if that city could even be called me, truthfully, or if it was better considered an ancestor. Either way, I remembered how the Sea-Conquering Army had arrived, and how the city-that-was-maybe-me had burned. How it/me had been emptied/the population slaughtered. I remembered the millennia of disuse, of being abandoned, before the SCA returned to use the ruins/me/it as a minor base. How they eventually left, only for people to inhabit the abandoned base, establishing a minor sect.

Then the SCA's descendants, though not yet the Golden Devils of today, wiped them out as well and once more inhabited the me-place. At least until the world went mad, the land wrenched and what once had been a place of life died slowly and screaming into a barren wasteland, causing them to abandon their holdings in it.

The chaos that followed still stands sharp and vivid, the constant changes in ownership and population that only stopped when the Golden Devils came once more. And throughout there were the Trials every century. In the last 1000 years alone I've been completely rebuilt twice, and not a single part of my structure-being has not been replaced thrice. How much was I, Pleuron, actu-

The bell is ringing. 2 months already? Gah, how do they do it? I'd barely gotten any actual time to relax and think. Why-

And there's the second bell, indicating a day has passed, so into my avatar I slowly and gently pour myself, lest I agitate my bruised spirit. Done, I rise up from where it was resting and promptly tip over, smacking my face into the ground. As the third bell rings, I groan, finally understanding why so many humans have trouble getting up in the morning.

AN: Words: 421. Life-saving Treasure. I suck. 🤕 @Alectai.
 
Xiao Yingzi 37 - [Turn 12] [Little Shadow]
Xiao Yingzi 37
[Turn 12]
[Little Shadow]


Little Shadow, Little Shadow
You're over a hundred years old
Why are you still little shadow
And why aren't you Old Gold?

Well first of all
Let's not be mistaken
No matter how old I get
That last name's taken

But back to my name
I admit it's a bit of a boast
No matter how strong I get
I'll still be younger than most​
 
Kakos Alexikeravno 4
Kakos Alexikeravno 4

Kakos had gotten lucky. He wasn't going to call it providence, because that was a matter of the Heavens, and they hated him and all his kind. Providence was one thing that people like him just weren't allowed to have. Still... sometimes he could still get lucky, in the ordinary, mundane sense, and he'd gotten lucky here. One of his fellow-passengers on the scorpion-wagon to the Heavenly Bandit Kingdoms (that was just the official name, apparently - before he signed on he'd gotten assurances that these kingdoms were not particularly more heavenly than any other) was actually from there. She'd grown up in the Heavenly Bandit Kingdoms, and had made her own way across the desert to sign up when she'd heard about the Flood Dragons recruiting. She apparently had a major heroine-worship thing going on for Lady Yao, and was trying to emulate her idol as best she could. The smell was... impressive, at least to Kakos's untrained nose. He admitted the same, and she thanked him for the complement. Still, habits of personal hygiene aside, she was a desperately needed source of information on the place, and Kakos took the opportunity for all he could. Shi Qian, in turn, apparently decided that having a cultivator with a technically higher cultivation paying her a great deal of attention and "humbly beseeching her for her precious gift of knowledge" was sufficiently gratifying, and let him. It was her phrasing, not his, but he didn't dispute it.

Anyway, his understanding of the Heavenly Bandit Kingdoms advanced significantly over the course of the extended wagon ride. It turned out that the Bandit Kingdoms weren't entirely poor, but they certainly had plenty of poor parts, and also that hunting beasts was the predominant method of cultivation there, which all worked quite nicely with his hope of being able to source his ink locally. As for the other side of it, "Didn't often get visits from competent array-crafters" was apparently a bit of an understatement, really. He wasn't convinced that there were any competent array-crafters in the Heavenly Bandit Kingdoms, and the poorer places tended not to get visits by any sort of array-crafters at all. So... he had his strategy. He'd scavenge ink from wherever he could find it, he'd travel around the poorer parts of the kingdoms, and he'd build these poor people some actual bloody infrastructure and try to sell them on the idea that the Golden Devils were good friends to have and also that if the Golden Devils happened to move in and became their overlords their lives were likely to improve dramatically. Wait, wait... no. Not bloody infrastructure. Normal infrastructure. Okay, maybe a bit sub-par, depending on what kind of ink he could manage to scrounge up, but not bloody. Public works arrays were generally not the sort that would be improved by lightning strikes. He supposed if he ran into some rare exception to that rule, he had options. He'd rendered down the lightning-infused blood to Tribulation Blood Paste (losing about 30% total efficacy, but concentrating it down to a tenth the volume, and getting it a lot closer to shelf-stable) and he'd bring it along just in case (it was too dangerous to just leave lying around, anyway) but he had no real expectation of using it.

Once he arrived at the distant destination, the first thing he did was buy a mediocre map. Of course he would have preferred a good map, but those weren't for sale, and he wouldn't have had the money to buy one anyway. Admittedly, he also didn't have the money to buy a mediocre map, but he'd found some frostspined cactus at one of the rest stops on the journey in, and after properly fermenting the pulp, he'd managed an ink that let him put together a barely adequate room-cooling array. He thought it was barely adequate, at least, and he'd only managed it because the ink and the array itself were so well-aligned. Anyway, it was heading into the hotter part of the year, and the mapmaker allowed as how an array that would keep him comfortable at his work for that period (and encourage people to visit his shop) was worth a hand-copied map or two of the local region, and maybe a little bit of spending money. Good enough. The guy sure had seemed tense, though.

The map wasn't great, but it was enough to get him to a nearby small settlement, and then the next, and then the next. Along the way, he executed on his plan. "I'm from the Golden Devils, and I'm here to help." It... didn't get the kind of reaction that he'd expected. In the first town he went to, the people were terrified. He didn't know why. He didn't even know what they were terrified of. Was it the bandits? From Shi Qian's explanations he understood that not everyone in the Heavenly Bandit Kingdoms was a bandit, and perhaps sometimes the ones that were practiced on the ones that were not? No. No, they assured him, there were no bandits here. They were being kind of over-the-top polite about it too. It was odd. Still, they were talking with him, and answering his questions, and so he could ask them what they needed. Even that took a bizarrely long time, but eventually he managed to get them to admit that they had problems getting enough water. Well, he might not understand what their other issues were, but he could do something about water. It was one of the most fundamental public works arrays there was. It still wasn't trivial. He could whip up a legion-standard water-generation array for a village this size in less than a day, but those things ran on spirit stones, and this bunch of turnip-farmers didn't have spare spirit stones just lying around any more than he did. He'd have to improvise. Switching to cores would have been the easy answer, but they didn't exactly have a readily available supply of those, either. On the other hand, they did have a bit of a blood mole problem, and blood moles he could use. They basically never had cores, but they did have enough qi in their blood-soaked flesh that he could adjust the water-generation array so that it could be powered off of the sacrifice of blood moles. Of course, that wasn't going to work as a long-term solution unless he left them with some way to catch the bloody things once he was gone - once caught, they were weak enough that a reasonably capable mortal could keep control of them, but they were annoyingly fast, and tended to burrow at the first sign of trouble. Well...? Okay, yeah, he had a solution for that one, too. A standard vermin-stunning barrier array, wrapped around a like-calls-to-like animal attraction array would do the trick. The first could be given enough juice for a zortch or two by basically anyone who could channel qi, and the second just needed a few chunks of the last blood mole. That... oh. Yeah, that required that they have at least one first heavenstage cultivator in the village. That was... wow. Okay. Still... not insurmountable. Blood Mole meat did have qi in it, after all, and he had at least theoretical knowledge of a pretty bare-bones cooking recipe that could draw the energies out well enough to serve as emergency qi rations for low-heavenstage cultivators who couldn't afford the spirit stones. That meant... if you could get enough of it, that should let someone break through, right? Getting it all to work right took him three months, but by the end of it, the setup worked. The village had two first heavenstage cultivators and one more that was getting there. He'd taught the three arrays he'd used to a couple of kids who thought that this was the Best Thing Ever and who could now duplicate them to... a workable standard. They basically worked. It was enough. He was going to be okay as long as he kept telling himself that and didn't spend too much time actually looking at the things. Anyway, it had taken three full months, but at the end of it, he moved on, and the people of the town were clearly more in favor of Flood Dragons and Golden Devils than they had been when he arrived. So that was good.

The next town was... basically the same thing. Okay, this time the problem that needed solving was protection of the settlement against the efforts of roof-eating wombats, and the cultivation resources were the aforementioned wombats. (Their meat was completely inedible, but they occasionally had rudimentary cores, and a mixture of gall bladder and ground bone allowed for a passable ink for reinforcing the arrays.) Still, that time it only took him one and a half months, in part because he knew that core cultivation worked just fine, so he didn't have to stick around long enough to see it through in person. In the third it was harvesting venom-spitting box turtles in order to power a body-cleansing array that they needed for the poor people who'd gotten spat on by box turtles. That one took five months, because he wasn't particularly good with poisons, and figuring out how to use arrays to handle the turtles was tricky. The fourth only took two weeks, because they just needed water again, there were a few local herbs that could be collected by hand that would do the trick and that town actually had a second heavenstage cultivator. That was nice. So it went - town after town of leaving things a little better than he found them... while his cultivation slowly leeched away.

He hadn't really thought about that aspect of the problem of being away from the supply lines, until he was deep in it. If he'd been able to perfect his lightning-drinking arrays? Well, he hadn't, and he wasn't likely to perfect them any time soon. In the meantime, he was doing good work, and he was sure that the Clan would acknowledge that. Two and a half years in, he managed to bend his cycle back around to a legion outpost, and draw pay. It was not what he might have hoped. Still, it was enough. It was enough to get him the spirit stones he needed to stabilize his cultivation. It was enough to let him get a somewhat better set of robes, and get them kitted out with the level of Hiding of the Blood arrays he'd been wanting for years. It was a profound relief on multiple levels to not have his shoulder itch so much. It was enough for... well, lunch. It basically got him the stones, and the robes, and lunch. On top of that, the outpost leader was kind enough to offer him room and board and protection for a few weeks in return for a bit of light work maintaining the outpost arrays, so he actually had time to set the protective arrays into his new robes properly. Sadly, it wasn't enough to get him a replacement staff, or any real array-making supplies for the road, but he'd take it. It was salvation from the two greatest threats looming over him. Compared to that, having to keep making do with poor materials wasn't that big a deal. Indeed - having to constantly improvise from whatever was available at hand was actually being really good for his comprehension of the fundamentals, both conscious and intuitive. He might not be making headway on cultivation directly, but the improvements to his core skills were pretty clear in retrospect. The next town after the outpost needed protection from sandstorms, and had wild packs of screaming fire chickens... and so it went. He was doing good work. Even better, over time word did get around, and so he was greeted with a bit more welcome, and a bit less suspicion. That was nice too.

Then, three years after the outpost? It finally happened. He ran into a town where the problem was... bandits. At first he was confused. The problem was never bandits. All of the proper bandits were busy applying their banditry to the Jingshen. Anyway, this town was as miserably poor as the next. They had nothing to steal!

Except... that wasn't quite true. They had people, after all - and it seemed that one band of enterprising young men had stumbled across some sort of cannibal inheritance, and had decided to start their new career on the Blood Path by eating mortals from a middle-of-nowhere village. The only bright side for the poor village was that the process was slow. Apparently the newly-fledged cannibals had some sort of variant art that involved cooking their victims into soup, and then sharing them around, and the entire process took about a week each time. The village had lost five people to their depredations thus far. Most of those had gone missing out in the fields, but the last time, the bandits had strolled into town without the need to hide, flush with stolen cultivation, more powerful than the town could handle. They'd just grabbed someone off the street. There were five of them, and "more powerful than the town could handle" was probably something like second heavenstage, but still... Kakos had a problem. Five guys in second heavenstage was probably enough to kill him at this point, and he really didn't want to let them feast on the poor villagers and grow stronger. It was an ugly, ugly business.

Well, he had a mission. His mission was to travel around to the little villages and solve their little problems... and this village had a problem. That kind of simplified things. He had four days before they'd come again. That simplified things more. Time to prepare. After some thought, he called for hides. They did have hides, right? Of some sort?

The morning of the fourth day saw Kakos waiting at the gate of the village, standing barefoot in the dust, wearing his robes, carrying a badly beaten staff. That was apparently premature, as the afternoon of the fourth day also saw him waiting thus. Finally in the evening of the fourth day, the bandits showed up. There were five of them, and while they might have been second heavenstage he was near-certain that none of them were above third. They hollered from a distance.

"Who in the name of Soup Chef's mighty bowel movements are you, fresh meat?"

"I am Kakos Alexikeravno of the Golden devils, coward. Eat me if you can."

This led to some hurried discussion among the bandits. Then they started walking closer, and called out again.

"You're that array-crafter, that's been going around, right? The one putting in the water? So... you're here to play hero? Is that it? Think you can take all five of us?" They were grinning now.

Kakos remained still, gripping his staff, feet solidly beneath him. "Perhaps."

They spread out to encircle him. Of course they did, why would they not? Too far out of reach to interfere without shifting position. One of the ones in his rear lunged in with a sword. The form was honestly better than what Kakos himself could manage, but it was so slow. He twisted at the waist, blocked, and laid a blow on the side of the man's head. His staff bent alarmingly. The man was dazed but did not fall... and at that moment, when he was awkwardly off-balance, the other four attacked at once.

He was in no position to dodge, and could not possibly block them all. He was faster, stronger, and tougher, but they were more skilled and better equipped, and there were four of them - five in a few moments, once their friend recovered. In a fight, he'd lose. This wasn't really a fight, though, as much as the cannibals might have thought it was. In truth, this was a test of cultivation, and of the ability to endure lightning. Kakos poured qi down through his feet into the Evocation of the Ink's Essence array hidden under the dust beneath him, marked out in tribulation blood paste, backed and covered by ratskin. The lightning surged forth eagerly.

Kakos gritted his teeth, and fought back this new reminder of a most excruciating month. Into the body, through the meridians, down to the wrists, pour it back out again. If you can hit a bandit with the blood, so much the better, but not really all that important. It was hellish, and there was no gain to be had this time, but his blood sang the song of redirected lightning even in his sleep, and Kakos knew it was coming, and his cultivation was higher, and he'd had practice. He managed to weather the storm without inflicting too much additional damage on himself, and come out the other side. He was breathing hard, but could still fight... assuming you counted him as able to fight to begin with.

The bandits... fared not as well. Four cooked corpses, and one guy who'd caught enough warning to try to throw himself clear... and thus lost only an arm and a leg. Kakos took a moment more to catch his breath, and then waked over to the shuddering, whimpering wreck of a man. He reached back and thrust, putting his staff through the cannibal's skull, and that was the end of that problem. Sadly, it was also the end of his staff. The poor thing finally broke from the strain. Hopefully the bandits would have enough pocket change to pay for another. Maybe the gear? If he was lucky, someone in town might be willing to trade him a decent staff for some of the dead men's gear. He could hope, anyway.

/****************/

3005 words. If anyone wants to steal Shi Qian (the Qi Condensation Lady Yao fangirl from the Bandit Kingdoms) for any purpose feel free. She is, of course, a Flood Dragon. Also, as noted, the Evocation of the Ink's Essence is available for a very reasonable price in contribution points to anyone who wants to buy it off the contributions board, and Kakos would have included an addendum of his more recent experience with it. @ReaderOfFate? Would you please do the honors?

I've honestly had most of this written for over a week, but getting the bit with the bandits to work took a lot of finagling.
 
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