The next morning comes with more problems in the face of new breakthroughs.
I stand at the edge of the training yard, watching the disciples run through their forms. The sun is just cresting the eastern peaks, painting the world in pale gold. It should be a peaceful morning. A good morning.
Instead, my eyes find Feng.
He came to the sect as a boy of eleven, angry at the world, determined to prove himself. I trained him personally; this body did, at least. Watched him grow from a bitter child into a bitter young man. Hoped, once, that he might be my successor. That hope died when I saw his potential with the Gaze. Will never reach Foundation Establishment without external assistance. But I still cared about him. Still do. Now I watch him with new eyes.
Morning practice proceeds as usual. The disciples run through their forms, a dozen bodies moving in rough synchronization. Mei Lin is precise and focused. Wei Chen is sluggish, still half-asleep. The younger ones struggle with stances they should have mastered months ago.
Ling'er participates, carefully maintaining her mortal disguise. She's positioned near the back, where fewer eyes fall on her. Her movements are deliberately clumsy. A stumble here, a hesitation there, a form held slightly wrong before she "corrects" it. Her concealment is flawless. No spiritual signature leaks. No golden flicker shows in her eyes. To anyone watching casually, she's just another beginner, struggling like all beginners struggle. No one suspects.
Except Feng.
I watch him watching her. Not obviously, he's too smart for that. He never stares, never lets his gaze linger. But I catch it. The flick of his eyes toward her during transitions, when others are looking away. The slight tightening of his jaw when she "accidentally" stumbles into a stance that's slightly too perfect before correcting herself.
He knows something. Not what—but something.
After practice, the disciples disperse. Some head to the dining hall for breakfast. Others return to their quarters to rest. Ling'er disappears toward the kitchen, where she'll eat her secret meal with Old Chen before joining the servants for their morning tasks. Feng approaches Mei Lin.
"The new girl." His voice is casual, unconcerned. A senior disciple making conversation. "She's picking things up fast."
Mei Lin shrugs, oblivious. "She tries hard. Works harder than anyone. I've trained worse disciples who'd been at it for years. Why?"
"No reason. Just... noticed."
He walks away. I follow—discreetly, at distance, activating the Gaze as I move.
Feng - Qi Condensation (Peak)
Current Emotional State: Suspicious, envious, calculating
Recent Activities: Has been asking other disciples about Ling'er, visiting the mine "out of curiosity," spending time near the sect archives
Hidden Thoughts: "Something's wrong with that girl. The Sect Leader's hiding something. If I find out what, maybe I can use it."
My blood runs cold.
Feng doesn't know about Ling'er's potential. He doesn't know about the tomb, the treasures, my secret training. He doesn't know about True Dragon Bloodlines or Sacred Cosmic Bones or any of it. But he suspects. And suspicion, in a cultivator with nothing to lose, is dangerous.
I watch him for the rest of the day. He visits the mine in the afternoon, claiming interest in the new vein. Old Zhao reports later that Feng asked "strange questions" about whether the Sect Leader had been spending much time underground recently. How often he came. How long he stayed. Whether he brought anyone with him. He lingers near my quarters during evening meditation, finding excuses to be in the area. Checking on the roof repair. Looking for a lost tool. Just passing through. But my new formations—crude as they are—alert me to his presence each time. He's subtle about it. Subtle enough that I wouldn't notice without the Gaze. Without the formations. Without the constant, paranoid vigilance that comes from hiding a reality-shaping child in my sect.
By nightfall, I have a clear picture:
Feng - Threat Assessment
Loyalty: Eroding. Once loyal, now bitter at his stagnation. Three years at peak Qi Condensation have poisoned whatever goodwill he once felt.
Suspicion Level: Moderate. Knows something is happening, doesn't know what. Smart enough to recognize that things have changed—the food, the cloaks, the sudden prosperity. Smart enough to connect it to Ling'er's appearance.
Potential Actions:
40%: Confront me directly, demand answers
30%: Investigate secretly, try to uncover the truth
20%: Report suspicions to outside powers (Violet Sky Sect) for favor/reward
10%: Do nothing, wait and watch
Danger Level: Moderate. He's not strong enough to threaten me directly—Foundation Establishment against Qi Condensation is no contest. But he could expose Ling'er to forces I can't control. A word in the wrong ear. A letter to the Violet Sky Sect. A rumor that reaches someone with power and curiosity.
Recommendation: Intervene before suspicion becomes action.
I sit in my quarters, considering options. The candle has burned low, replaced twice already. My tea has gone cold. Outside, the mountain is silent—the deep, profound silence of a winter night when even the crickets have stopped singing.
Feng.
Confront him directly? March up to him tomorrow, look him in the eye, and ask what he's doing. Demand answers. Assert my authority as Sect Leader. It might force his hand, push him toward open betrayal. It might also clear the air, if he's still loyal enough to respond to authority. If the boy I trained is still in there somewhere, beneath the bitterness.
Distract him? Give him something else to focus on: a mission, a responsibility, a reason to feel valued. He's been stagnant for years. Peak Qi Condensation with no way forward. That's the real problem, isn't it? Not suspicion, not envy, but despair. The slow poison of watching others advance while you don't. The knowledge that you've peaked, that this is as far as you'll ever go.
If I gave him a Foundation Establishment pill, he'd break through. The Gaze said 45% chance. Good odds. Great odds, compared to zero. But then questions would follow. Where did the pill come from? Why now? Why him? And once he broke through, would he be grateful or would he want more?
Remove him?
The thought crosses my mind and I dismiss it immediately. I'm not that kind of sect leader. Not yet. Not ever, if I can help it. Feng is not an enemy to be eliminated. He's a disciple. My disciple. The angry boy who showed up at my gates twelve years ago and never left.
Or I could do nothing. Watch. Wait. See if his suspicion fades or grows. The concealment array will be done in two days—I've been working on it every night, carving the patterns into a jade disc, feeding it spirit stones. Once Ling'er's signature is fully masked, there'll be nothing for Feng to find. But Feng's not just looking for spiritual signatures. He's looking for secrets. And secrets, once suspected, have a way of being discovered. I glance at the hidden storage under my floorboards. Despite my best efforts, hiding our sudden wealth isn't possible when I'm trying to slowly trickle it in and make subtle improvements over time. New cloaks. Better food. Mine expansions. A repaired roof. Each one explainable on its own, but together...
I need to handle this. Carefully. Decisively. Without exposing Ling'er.
Ling'er arrives for her night training.
She slips through my door like a shadow, as always, her bare feet silent on the wooden floor. Her eyes find mine immediately, reading my mood with that unsettling perception. I push her tonight. Partly for her growth—every moment counts, every session builds on the last. Partly to clear my head, to focus on something other than the Feng problem. She responds like she always does: by exceeding every expectation. I teach her the basics of cultivation theory. The flow of qi through meridians. The function of the dantian. I teach her about the sect. How we run things. The hierarchy of disciples. The duties of servants. The relationships with Greenstone Town, with the Violet Sky Sect, with the Prefectural Lord. She listens carefully, filing everything away.
And I teach her how to write her name.
I take a brush and carefully draw the characters on a scrap of paper:
灵儿
"Ling'er," I say, pointing to each character. "This is your name. This is who you are."
She stares at them like they're magic. In a way, they are. She's never seen her own name written before. Never had a reason to.
"Can I try?"
I hand her the brush. Her first attempt is clumsy: the strokes too thick, the balance wrong. Her second is better. Her third is almost perfect. By the tenth try, her name flows from the brush with the same precision she brings to everything.
She looks at it with the simple pride of a child learning something new. She keeps writing it, over and over, filling the scrap paper with iterations. Each one slightly better than the last. She learns fast. Not as fast as with martial arts, that's clearly where her genius truly lies, but fast enough to see that her gifts translate across disciplines. The Sacred Cosmic Bone doesn't just help with cultivation; it helps with everything. Understanding. Pattern recognition. Learning.
By midnight, she's exhausted but satisfied. Her small hands are stained with ink. Her paper is covered in her name, a hundred versions of who she is. The concealment held through every exercise, through sparring, through meditation. It's becoming automatic now—as natural as breathing.
"Good work." I set down my brush. "Tomorrow, the array will be complete. After that, you'll be safe from detection."
She nods, then hesitates. Her eyes find mine, sharp and worried.
"Sect Leader... Feng-gege was watching me again today. Is he... does he know?"
Smart girl. Too smart.
"He suspects something. He doesn't know what. I'll handle it."
"Should I... be more careful?"
"You should be exactly what you appear to be. A hardworking new disciple with no talent. Can you maintain that?"
She nods firmly, her jaw setting with determination. "Yes, Sect Leader."
She leaves. I stare at the wall.
Twelve years I've known him. Trained him. Fed him. Gave him a home when he had none. And now his bitterness might destroy everything. That part, the twenty-year-old gamer, the strategist, the one who's spent a lifetime optimizing and competing, looks at Feng and sees a problem. A bad pawn. An enemy in waiting. An ungrateful disciple who should be removed before he can cause damage. But the other part, the sect leader who raised these children, who watched them grow, who gave them a home, that part refuses to think that way.
Feng isn't a pawn. He's not an enemy. He's a person. A bitter, stagnant, suspicious person but still a person. Still someone I promised to guide. Still the angry eleven-year-old who showed up at my gates with nothing but determination and rage.
The decision settles in my chest like a stone. The Earth part of me is right to be cautious, to see threats clearly, to act decisively. But I cannot just remove Feng without knowing the extent. Without understanding what he's become. Without giving him a chance. And I cannot ignore the sect leader's part either. The part that cares. The part that remembers twelve years of training, of meals, of quiet moments when Feng almost smiled. The part that knows that bitterness is a wound, not a choice.
I spend the night planning, not sleeping. By dawn, I know what I must do—not just to protect Ling'er, but to know, once and for all, what Feng has become.