I wake in the inn as gray morning light filters through paper windows. A mid-tier inn. After last night's splurge at the restaurant, I opted for something modest. It wouldn't do to spend so recklessly, not when my disciples are still sleeping on thin mats and wooden beds. A sect leader should lead by example, even when no one's watching.
Ling'er is still asleep.
I turn to look at her, and I can't help but smile. She's sprawled across her bed in complete abandon. One arm dangling off the side, her hair a wild mess across the pillow, her mouth slightly open. Far from the dignified, controlled child she presents to the world. Just a kid, really. A kid who's been pushed harder than any child should be, who's earned this rest.
I rise quietly and move to the window. The city is already waking below—merchants opening stalls, laborers heading to work, the distant sound of carts on cobblestones. I stand there for a long moment, just watching, letting the morning settle around me.
After some time, I retrieve my notes from the storage ring. Pages and pages of observations, plans, questions. Written in a chaotic mix of English and modern Chinese—a private language that nobody in this world could decipher. If anyone found these, they'd think I was mad. A sect leader writing in nonsense symbols about cultivation theory and resource management.
Perfect.
I review my plans for the day while Ling'er sleeps. Information gathering. Market assessment. Cultivation supply prices. Perhaps a visit to the Violet Sky Sect's office, just to show my face and pay respects. Nothing too ambitious. Nothing that would draw attention.
When the sun has fully risen, I wake her.
She blinks groggily, then snaps to alertness with the discipline I've trained into her. The messy child vanishes, replaced by the perfect disciple.
"Morning, Master."
"Morning. Get ready. We eat downstairs, then we explore."
Breakfast at the inn is simple but adequate; rice porridge, pickled vegetables, tea. We eat quickly, then step out into the bustling streets.
The plan repeats in my head as we walk: For Ling'er, observe. This city is a treasure trove for someone of her talents. So many cultivators, so many techniques, so many unconscious lessons hidden in plain sight. Every moment here is training, whether she knows it or not.
Greenstone's main market sprawls across half a mile of packed earth and wooden stalls. Merchants shout their wares. Buyers haggle over prices. Animals bleat in pens. Cooks stir bubbling pots at food stalls. And everywhere, cultivators move through the crowd like islands in a river—ordinary people flowing around them without quite knowing why, giving them space instinctively.
Ling'er's gaze tracks them all.
I let her watch, saying nothing. Just walking, pausing occasionally, letting her absorb.
A Foundation Establishment cultivator in brown robes stops at a herb stall. He picks up roots, sniffs them, negotiates with the merchant. His movements are economical—no wasted energy, even in simple actions like picking and sniffing. Ling'er's eyes follow his hands, his posture, the way he breathes while bargaining.
"What do you see?" I ask quietly.
"His qi moves differently when he's bargaining." Her voice is soft, meant only for me. "Faster. Like he's preparing for something, even though he's just buying herbs. And his feet—they're always positioned to move, even when he's standing still. Like he expects to fight at any moment."
"Good. Keep watching."
We move on.
A commotion draws us to the central plaza.
A crowd has gathered. As we approach, I see the source: a public demonstration. The Iron Peak Sect, one of Greenstone's three minor sects, is showing off for the populace.
Three disciples in gray robes perform forms on a raised wooden platform. Their movements are solid, grounded—earth techniques, heavy stances, strikes meant to crush rather than cut. An elder stands to the side, lecturing about the sect's virtues, their history, their willingness to accept new disciples.
The crowd is polite but sparse. Minor sect demonstrations are common in a city this size; everyone's seen them before. A few parents with children watch. Some passing merchants pause briefly. Most people just walk by.
Ling'er hasn't.
She stands at the edge of the crowd, eyes fixed on the platform with an intensity that would be unsettling if anyone noticed. Her gaze tracks every movement of the three disciples. Every shift of weight, every flow of qi, every subtle adjustment in their forms. The forms are basic. Iron Peak specializes in earth techniques, and these are their most elementary displays; the kind of thing any disciple learns in their first year. Solid stances. Heavy strikes. Nothing special.
But to her, they're a library. Each movement contains information: muscle recruitment, qi pathways, balance principles, that she absorbs effortlessly.
After ten minutes, the demonstration ends. The elder invites questions from the crowd. No one asks any. The disciples bow and begin packing their equipment.
We drift away from the plaza, back into the market crowds.
"The tall one," Ling'er says quietly. "His form was wrong."
I glance at her. "Wrong how?"
"His weight distribution." She's frowning slightly, replaying the movements in her mind. "He's favoring his left leg. Probably an old injury that never healed properly. He's compensating, which means his strikes are weaker on that side. His whole form is built around protecting it."
She pauses, considering.
"If I fought him, I'd attack from his right—make him pivot left, force him to put weight on that leg. He'd hesitate. Just for a moment. But that moment would be enough. He’d leave an opening for his throat or other vitals."
‘Wah… scary.’
I stare at her. I didn't say anything about fighting them. I didn't suggest combat applications at all. I just told her to observe.
Is this her dragon nature? The instinct to dominate, to find weakness, to prepare for battle? Or is it the Sacred Cosmic Bone, analyzing every situation for optimal outcomes? Both? Neither?
She notices my expression and blushes. "Was that... too much? I was just thinking, I didn't mean—"
"That was perfect." I keep my voice calm, but internally I'm still reeling. "Keep watching. Keep thinking. That's exactly what you should be doing."
She nods, relieved, and turns her attention back to the crowd. I follow, but my mind lingers on her words. A twelve-year-old girl, analyzing a trained disciple's weakness in seconds. Finding the optimal combat strategy against someone twice her age and experience.
Scary. Truly, genuinely scary.
We're eating at a noodle stall for lunch when the fight breaks out. The stall is small, just a wooden counter with stools, steam rising from massive pots of broth. We're halfway through our bowls when the shouting starts. Two Qi Condensation cultivators: young, arrogant, wearing the distinct robes of different sects, get into an argument over a parking spot for their donkeys.
Not even good donkeys. Scruffy, ill-tempered beasts that look like they bite. Not like the two Zhao’s in my sect.
"I saw it first!" the first one yells, his face reddening.
"Your donkey has three legs, your sect has no future, and your mother wears shoes that don't match!" the second one retorts with the kind of intricate insult that only comes from practice.
"I'll have you know my mother's shoes are the envy of—wait, are you insulting my mother?"
"Your mother, your donkey, and your questionable taste in belt colors!"
Words escalate. Shoves escalate. Suddenly they're fighting in the street, qi flaring, techniques flying. The crowd scatters with impressive speed. Merchants grab their wares. Children are pulled to safety. Within seconds, the street is empty except for the two idiots trying to kill each other.
I pull Ling'er back against the wall, hand on my sword, ready to intervene if necessary. Foundation Establishment against Qi Condensation is no contest—I could stop this easily if it threatens us.
But she doesn't need protection. She's studying.
The fire cultivator; first one, the one with the terrible taste in belt colors, attacks aggressively. Flames coat his fists, and he throws quick, explosive punches that force his opponent back. His technique is flashy but inefficient; I can see qi leaking from his forms with every strike. The wind cultivator, the one with strong opinions about mismatched shoes, is smarter. He deflects rather than blocks, using sharp blades of air to counter and retreat. His movements are more economical, but he's too cautious, missing opportunities to press his advantage. They're evenly matched, both at Qi Condensation 5th or 6th Stage, both too angry to be clever.
It lasts three minutes.
The fire cultivator finally lands a burning palm square on his opponent's chest. The wind cultivator goes down hard, gasping, his robes smoking. He tries to rise, fails, collapses back to the cobblestones.
City guards arrive moments later—four of them, Foundation Establishment each, moving with practiced coordination. They break up the fight, drag both cultivators to their feet, and haul them away. The loser is still coughing smoke. The winner is still yelling insults about donkey breeding habits.
The crowd slowly reforms, stepping around the scorch marks and scattered belongings. Within minutes, it's as if nothing happened.
Ling'er is silent for a long moment, her eyes distant.
"Master Lu..." She speaks slowly, processing. "The fire technique. I could feel how it worked. The qi gathers here"—she touches her lower dantian—"then flows up through these meridians"—she traces a path along her arm, from elbow to palm—"and releases through the hand. But he was doing it wrong."
"Wrong how?"
"Too much qi wasted on the approach, not enough on the strike. He was releasing too early, trying to look impressive instead of being effective. If he'd held it longer, compressed it more, the hit would have been decisive. One strike instead of twenty."
I stare at her. She just reverse-engineered a combat technique from watching a three-minute street brawl.
"You could replicate it?"
She considers, brow furrowing. "Maybe. Not perfectly—I don't have the meridian pathways for fire yet. My bloodline is fire-aspected, but the pathways aren't fully open. But I could adapt it. Make it work with what I have. The principles are the same—gather, compress, release. The element doesn't matter as much as the flow."
The Sacred Cosmic Bone. Learning techniques by observation. In a single street fight.
"Good," I manage. "Keep thinking about it. We'll practice later."
Afternoon - The Tournament Announcement
We're wandering through the market district when we notice the posters.
They're everywhere—on walls, on posts, on boards outside taverns. People cluster around them, reading and murmuring. I push through to grab one, and feel my eyebrows rise as I scan the contents.
GREENSTONE CITY YOUTH TOURNAMENT
Open to cultivators under 25, Qi Condensation only
*Prizes: 500 low-grade stones to winner, 200 to runner-up, 50 to semifinalists*
Plus: Opportunity to join Violet Sky Sect as inner disciple
Registration: Three days from now at the Arena
Five hundred low-grade stones. That's more than my sect's entire annual income from the old mine. More than enough to fund Ling'er's training for months, to buy techniques and pills, to strengthen the sect further.
And the Violet Sky Sect—the regional power, the ones who could crush us without effort—is offering inner discipleship to the winner. A path to resources, protection, advancement.
I show it to Ling'er.
Her eyes light up immediately. "Master... could I—"
"No." I cut her off firmly. There's no room for negotiation here. "Too dangerous. Too visible. If you revealed even a fraction of your power, every major sect in the region would know about you within a week. The Violet Sky Sect wouldn't just invite you—they'd take you. And I couldn't stop them."
She deflates slightly, her shoulders slumping. But she nods. "I understand. It's too risky."
"Watch, though. Learn." I fold the poster and tuck it away. "The fighters will be the best young cultivators in the region. Talented geniuses from major sects, trained from childhood. Their techniques, their strategies, their weaknesses. You can learn more from watching three days of tournament fights than from months of normal training."
She brightens again, the disappointment fading. "Yes, Master! I'll watch everything. Every move, every breath, every mistake."
"That's my disciple."
We continue through the market, but I'm already planning. Three days until the tournament. Three days of preparation, information gathering, and making sure Ling'er stays invisible.
And then three days of watching the future unfold.