That afternoon, Feng is gone.
I walk past the disciples' quarters and see it for myself—his area empty, his meager possessions vanished. The thin mattress rolled up. The single shelf cleared. The small wooden chest that held his entire life for twelve years, gone.
I tell the disciples he left to seek opportunities elsewhere. It's a common enough occurrence in minor sects, this slow attrition of hope. Disciples who realize they'll never advance, never break through, never become anything more than what they are. They leave to find better teachers, better sects, better luck. Most are never heard from again. It isn't the first occurrence. It happened throughout the years, in my generation and theirs. I was the only one left from my generation.
Disciples who gave up and moved on. Disciples who faded into obscurity. Disciples who, like Feng, let bitterness consume them until there was nothing left but the leaving. They accept it with varying degrees of surprise and indifference.
Mei Lin looks troubled but says nothing. She was always kind to Feng, always patient with his moods. Maybe she saw something the rest of us missed. Maybe she hoped, like I once did, that he would find his way. Wei Chen shrugs, already distracted by something else. Feng was never his friend, never his mentor. Just another senior disciple who occasionally corrected his forms. The others barely notice. A few murmur vague regrets. Most just go about their day. In a week, they'll barely remember he was here. I retreat to my quarters as the sun begins to set.
Ling'er comes to my quarters as darkness falls.
I'm sitting at my desk, staring at nothing. The candle isn't lit. The manual isn't open. I'm just... sitting.
Thinking.
Feng is gone because of me. His choices were his own, his bitterness his own… but I failed him. That's the truth I can't escape.
Perhaps I could have prevented this. Perhaps, if I'd used the Nascent Soul's treasures earlier, given him a pill, any pill, just to show I cared. Perhaps, if I'd been more open about the changes, let him in on the secret, trusted him with the truth. Perhaps, if I'd seen the rot sooner, addressed it sooner, reached out sooner—
'Perhaps. Perhaps. Perhaps.'
The word circles in my mind like a vulture, picking at the same wound. I knew he was struggling. I knew he was bitter. I had the Gaze. I could see exactly how close he was to breaking. And I did nothing. I focused on Ling'er, on the future, on the shining star that demanded all my attention. And Feng, the angry boy I'd raised for twelve years, withered in her shadow.
That's on me.
She stands in the doorway, uncertain. Her small form is silhouetted against the faint light from outside, her face hidden in shadow.
"Sect Leader?"
"I'm sorry."
She blinks, stepping inside. "For what?"
"For making you do that." My voice is rough. "For making you carry that burden. You're twelve years old. You shouldn't have to—shouldn't have to stop someone from killing me. Shouldn't have to see that side of people. Shouldn't have to—"
"Sect Leader." She moves closer, until she's standing before my desk. Her eyes are serious, older than her years. "You don't need to apologize."
I look at her.
"You gave me so much. Food. Training. A future. A name written on paper so I could see who I am." She touches her chest, where the jade pendant hangs beneath her robes. "I stopped him because I wanted to. Because I couldn't watch someone hurt you."
She pauses, choosing her words carefully.
"It was my decision. My choice. You didn't force me into anything. I saw him follow you. I chose to follow too. I saw him draw his sword. I chose to move." Her voice firms. "I would make that choice again. Every time."
I look at her. Really look.
Ling'er - Emotional State
Verdict: Genuine. Uncomplicated. She meant what she said. There is no hidden resentment, no buried fear, no suppressed trauma from the event. She processed it and made peace with it in the way that only the truly innocent—or the truly wise—can manage.
"You're not angry?"
A small smile crosses her face.
"I'm glad I could help."
She pauses, her expression shifting.
"He was wrong, what he tried to do. But he was also sad. I could feel it." She touches her chest again. "The bone showed me. Like threads, but... feelings. His were all tangled and dark."
The Sacred Cosmic Bone. Reading emotions like she reads techniques. Like she reads the world.
"Can you read me too?"
She hesitates, studying me with those too-sharp eyes. "A little. You're sad. Guilty. But also... determined? Like you're carrying something heavy and you won't put it down. Like it's yours to carry, even if it's too heavy."
"That's accurate."
She smiles. "I'm glad you're my sect leader."
I don't know what to say to that. The words stick in my throat, too big to speak, too important to dismiss. So I just nod.
After a long moment, I straightened in my chair. The weight is still there: Feng's absence, my failure, the choice I made… but it's settled now.
Part of me, not all of me.
"Meditate." I reach for the candle, lighting it with a flicker of qi. "We have work to do."
She nods, settling onto her mat without hesitation. The concealment wraps around her automatically as she closes her eyes.
I watch her for a moment—this impossible child who understands more than she should, who forgives more than she ought, who carries her own weight without complaint.
Then I open the manual and get back to work.
Three days later, the concealment array is complete.
A joint effort between me and her. I read the manual aloud while she sat beside me, eyes closed, seeing the formations through the Sacred Cosmic Bone's perception. She pointed out errors before I made them, suggested adjustments the manual never mentioned, understood the flow of spiritual energy in ways that shouldn't be possible for someone who'd been cultivating for less than a month.
Much of the work was too delicate for a Qi Condensation disciple to do, no matter how talented. The carving required steady hands and precise qi control; Foundation Establishment work. So I handled the actual inscription while she guided me, a partnership of ancient knowledge and impossible intuition.
A small disc of spiritual jade now hangs around her neck, carved with formations from the Azure Frost manual, keyed to Ling'er's specific spiritual signature. She wears it beneath her robes, warm against her skin, and now her dragon-blooded potential is invisible to all but the Gaze.
I tested it myself. Even with the Gaze, I have to focus to see her true nature. To any cultivator with spiritual sensitivity, she appears as what she pretends to be: a mortal girl with no cultivation, no potential, nothing worth noticing.
Safe. For now.
And with it, the new mine vein breaks through.
I stand at the tunnel entrance as the laborers cheer, watching as the first real harvest emerges; spirit stones gleaming faintly even in the dim light. Twenty-three low-grade stones in the first week.
Twenty-three stones a month. Enough to sustain the sect. Enough to explain my sudden wealth, to answer questions before they're asked. Enough to build on.
I ordered a small celebration that evening.
The disciples gather in the main hall, confused but pleased by the unexpected feast. Spirit rice steams in bowls. Meat, not the thin scraps they're used to—fills platters. Vegetables glisten with oil and seasoning. Old Chen outdoes himself, moving between tables with a smile I've seen more this past month than in the years before combined. Mei Lin laughs at something Wei Chen says. The younger disciples chase each other between tables. Even the servants sit among us tonight, just people sharing a meal. I watch them all from my seat at the head of the hall. Ling'er is at the center of it all, somehow: floating between the disciples' table and the servants' table, laughing with Mei Lin one moment, helping Old Chen carry dishes the next. She's careful, always careful, to be exactly what she appears: a kitchen girl who got lucky, who works hard, who's grateful for every scrap. But I see more. I see the way she includes everyone. The way she draws out the shyest disciples, the quietest servants. The way she makes people feel seen.
Of course, Ling'er is the core. The star that will raise the Coiling Dragon Sect into the heavens. That truth hasn't changed. But everybody else, Mei Lin, Wei Chen, Old Chen, Li Hua, all of them—they're valuable too. They're the ones who make a "sect" a sect. An empty hall with a single genius isn't a sect. It's a monument. A target. A lonely peak with nothing below. A sect is people. Disciples who struggle and grow. Servants who cook and clean and care. Mortals who work the mine and tend the garden and make everything function. They're not pieces on a board. They're not distractions from the main quest.
They're the foundation. Without them, Ling'er's peak has nothing to stand on.
And I won't let them grow embittered. I won't let another Feng happen on my watch.
I clench my fist in my robes, hidden beneath the table. Watching them all eat. Watching Ling'er enjoy herself, truly enjoy herself, for what might be the first time in her life. Watching the disciples who've struggled for years finally taste something better than gruel and hope.
This is what I'm building.
A place where people belong.
The sect settles into a new rhythm.
Disciples train. Mortals work. The mine produces steady income. The herb garden shows its first sprouts. Winter cloaks keep everyone warm. Full bellies keep everyone satisfied. Ling'er grows stronger every day, her secret safe behind jade and formation and her own perfect concealment. Redundancies that ensure nobody would think to look twice at her. She trains with the disciples in the morning, learning nothing. She trains with me at night, learning everything. Her cultivation deepens. Her control sharpens. Her understanding expands. And I sit in my quarters at night, reading the Nascent Soul's journals, learning about the world beyond my backwater mountain.
Nine volumes. Nine centuries of knowledge. Elder Frostheart wrote about everything—cultivation techniques, political intrigues, ancient histories, pickled vegetable recipes, and personal reflections. I read about the Upper Realm, a place I'd only known from xianxia novels. I read about cultivation paths I never dreamed of; paths that lead to immortality, to godhood, to something beyond the heavens themselves. I read about the nature of bloodlines and bones and the fundamental laws that govern existence.
One entry, written nine hundred years ago, catches my eye.
"I have spent my life studying the ancient records. In all that time, I have found only three confirmed cases of the Sacred Cosmic Bone in recorded history. Each one reshaped the era they lived in. Each one ascended beyond the known realms. Each one was hunted, exploited, or destroyed by those who feared their potential.
The heavens send such gifts rarely. We who receive them must be worthy."
I close the journal. Outside, the mountain is quiet. The sect sleeps; disciples in their crowded rooms, servants in their drafty hall, Ling'er somewhere among them, dreaming of dragons and cosmic threads and doors that keep opening. I have a sect to build. A child to protect. A legacy to create. And for the first time in forty years, for the first time in either of my lives, I think I might actually be worthy of the chance I've been given.
Coiling Dragon Sect Status - Week 3
Sect Leader: Lu Chen (Foundation Establishment, Middle)
Secret Disciple: Ling'er (Qi Condensation 1st, accelerating)
Disciples: 11 (Feng departed)
Mortals: 21 (including 7 new laborers)
Goals:
Stabilize sect finances
Establish Ling'er's cultivation foundation
Expand sect influence
Locate compatible fire techniques for Ling'er's bloodline
Investigate ancient maps for resources/allies
Prepare for eventual discovery by greater powers