The day after the feast, now four days after Feng's departure, I gather the disciples in the training yard.
The twelve of them stand before me: young, uncertain, their ranks thinned by one they'll never ask about. Mei Lin at the front, now the most senior by default. Wei Chen shuffling his feet, still half-asleep despite the morning sun. Ling’er, standing behind them all, gaze steady. The others range from fourteen to twenty, all looking at me like I might announce more bad news. Another departure. Another failure. Another reason to lose hope.
Instead, I reach into my robe and produce twelve small porcelain bottles.
"Each of these contains a Qi Condensation pill," I say.
Murmurs ripple through them like wind through wheat. Qi Condensation pills were luxuries they couldn't have conceived of here. In the old days, the days before the tomb, before Ling'er, before everything changed, a single pill would have been hoarded for years, doled out only to the most promising, the most deserving. Most of these disciples have never even seen one.
"The heavens have blessed our sect." My voice carries across the yard, steady and sure. "We found a new vein in the mine. We have resources we didn't have before. And I'm using them to give you all an opportunity."
I walk down the line, placing a bottle in each pair of trembling hands. Some clutch them like lifelines. Others stare at them like they might disappear. A few—the youngest—look up at me with eyes that haven't learned to hide hope.
"Cultivate. Grow stronger. Prove that you deserve this chance. Winter is coming, but we'll face it warm, well-fed, and ready for whatever comes next."
Mei Lin's eyes shine. She's been here for years, worked hard every day, never complained, never asked for more than she was given. Now she holds a bottle that could change everything for her. Wei Chen clutches his bottle like it might vanish. Lazy, unmotivated Wei Chen, who's spent years coasting on minimal effort—even he looks moved. Even he understands that this is different. A boy named Jun—seventeen, cynical, always watching, always calculating—looks at his bottle, then at me. There's something in his eyes I recognize. The same wariness Feng had, before the bitterness consumed him. But also something else. Something like hope, fighting to survive.
Good. Let him hope. Let him see that this sect rewards loyalty, not just luck.
By noon, the entire sect is meditating. I walk through the training yard, watching them. Twelve disciples, scattered across the packed earth, each lost in their own cultivation. The air hums faintly with circulating qi—weak, untrained, but present. Growing. The training yard is silent but for breathing and that faint hum. Even the servants move quietly, not wanting to disturb. Old Chen peers out from the kitchen doorway, a proud smile on his weathered face. Li Hua pauses in her laundry, watching the disciples with something like maternal affection.
Let them grow. Let them become something more than mediocre. Let them build the foundation that will support Ling'er when she rises. Ling'er is still the core. Still the star. Still the reason any of this matters. But stars need skies to shine in. They need constellations around them, gravity to hold them, worlds to illuminate. These ordinary, struggling, mediocre disciples... they're the sky. Without them, Ling'er's light would have nothing to reflect against. Nothing to prove she's special. I watch them for a long moment. Then I turn and walk back to my quarters. There's work to do.
The next morning, departure. I gather the disciples again, this time in the main hall. Eleven faces look at me with varying degrees of curiosity and suspicion. Mei Lin stands at the front, a little straighter now, a little more confident after a day of successful meditation.
"I'm departing on a journey to the city," I announce. "Sect business. Arranging trade agreements, purchasing supplies, expanding our connections."
Their eyes glaze over almost immediately. Sect business. Procurement. Trade. The boring adult concerns that no young cultivator cares about. I can see them mentally checking out, already thinking about their pills, their training, their own pursuits.
"I'll need someone to accompany me." I let my gaze sweep across them, pretending to deliberate. "To learn the ropes. To help with... carrying supplies."
Their eyes light up for just a moment: curiosity, excitement, the chance to see something beyond Greenstone Town. Many of them have never traveled farther than the foraging missions I occasionally send them on. The city is a distant legend, a place of wonders they've only heard about in stories.
Then I add, almost as an afterthought: "I've packed quite a bit. Supplies for trade, samples from the mine, gifts for potential allies. The bags are heavy."
Interest dies instantly. I hide a smile. A little bit of psychology at work. The promise of adventure dies the moment it comes with a price. Carrying bags through a multi-day journey? That's work. That's servant's work. That's not what disciples sign up for. Mei Lin shuffles her feet. Wei Chen suddenly finds the ceiling fascinating. Jun's expression closes off entirely. The younger ones look anywhere but at me.
I let the silence stretch, just long enough to make them uncomfortable. Then:
"Ling'er. You'll come with me."
"Yes, Sect Leader."
The disciples exhale collectively, relieved. She's perfect for carrying bags. She's exactly who should be stuck with the menial work while they cultivate and grow stronger on their new pills. No one questions it. No one wonders why I'd choose a twelve-year-old girl for a multi-day journey. No one sees anything strange at all. Mei Lin catches my eye as I turn to leave. There's something in her expression. A flicker of concern? Curiosity? But she says nothing. She's learned not to question. I leave her in charge, with strict instructions to maintain the training schedule. Then Ling'er and I walk out through the sect gates. The sun has just risen when Ling'er and I slip out of the sect. She's wrapped in a plain traveler's cloak, her jade pendant hidden beneath her robes, her face carefully blank. A large pack sits on her shoulders; bulky, obviously heavy, filled with nothing but old rags and a few rocks for weight. I carry an even larger one myself, for verisimilitude.
We walk down the mountain path in silence. The sect disappears behind us, hidden by trees and distance. The morning birds sing. The stream murmurs below. It's peaceful. After a good distance, far enough that no one could see even with spiritual sense,I pause.
"Set that down."
She obeys, lowering the pack to the ground. I reach out, touch both packs, and transfer them to the storage ring. They vanish instantly, leaving only trampled grass behind.
Ling'er stares at the empty space where they were. "Where did they—"
"Storage ring. From the tomb. It can hold a lot more than packs."
She nods, accepting this new wonder with the same quiet absorption she brings to everything. Then she looks up at me.
"What now, Sect Leader?"
I adjust my robes, making sure I look appropriately like a minor sect leader on routine business. She adjusts her cloak, making sure she looks appropriately like a servant girl on a boring errand. To anyone watching, that's exactly what we are. A sect leader and his servant, traveling to the city for supplies.
"Now," I say, "we walk. And we talk. And we plan. The city is two days away. We have time."
We walk down the mountain path, leaving the sect behind. The morning sun filters through the trees, casting dappled shadows on the dirt. Birds call overhead. It's peaceful—deceptively so, given what I have planned.
"Today we begin proper training," I tell her. "Not just meditation and forms. Real training. The kind that pushes your body to its limits. By the time we reach the city, you'll be stronger than when you started. Understood?"
"Yes, Sect Leader." Her voice is steady, but I catch the slight tension in her shoulders. Anticipation. Maybe a little fear.
"Good. First lesson: maintaining concealment under stress. We'll walk for an hour. During that hour, I want you to keep your spiritual signature masked completely. If I sense even a flicker, we stop and you run laps until you can't stand."
Her eyes widen slightly—she wasn't expecting that—but she nods. "Yes, Sect Leader."
We walk.
The path winds through forest, the trees thinning as we descend. Then along a ridge with views of the valley below. Then down into the foothills, where the terrain grows steeper and the walking becomes actual work.
I monitor her constantly. Gaze flickering at the edge of my vision, spiritual sense extended, tracking every nuance of her presence. For the first thirty minutes, her concealment is flawless. Not a flicker, not a hint. She could be a rock, a tree, a mortal with no cultivation at all.
Then the terrain steepens. Her breathing quickens. Sweat appears on her brow. And I feel it.
A flicker. Just a hint of dragon-heat, quickly smothered—but not quickly enough.
"Stop." I point to a flat clearing fifty feet across. "Laps. Run until I tell you to stop."
She doesn't argue. She just runs.
Ten laps. Twenty. Thirty. Her mortal-disguised body should be exhausted by now—should be collapsed on the grass, gasping for air. But the True Dragon Bloodline doesn't care about mortal limits. It flows through her veins, strengthening muscles, boosting endurance, refusing to let her fail.
She keeps going. Sweat pours down her face, soaks her clothes, but her stride doesn't waver. Forty laps. Fifty.
"Stop."
She halts immediately, chest heaving, legs trembling. I walk toward her.
"Concealment?"
She closes her eyes. Breathes in. Breathes out. When she opens them, her spiritual signature is gone—perfect masking, as if the last hour never happened.
"Good." I nod toward a cluster of trees ahead. "Let's stop here to train."
As we set up a small camp, I scour the area, thinking of body refinement.
We find a boulder.
It's large—maybe eight hundred pounds, half-buried in the hillside, covered in moss and centuries of dirt. The kind of rock that would take a dozen mortal men to even shift.
I point to a tree fifty feet away. "Move it. To that tree."
She stares at me. "Sect Leader... that's..."
"Too heavy? You lifted five hundred pounds in the tomb. That was a week ago. Your strength has grown since then. Move it."
She stares at the boulder for a long moment. Then she circles it, studying it like she studies everything—finding handholds, testing angles, planning her approach.
Then she crouches, grips the rough stone, and lifts.
The boulder shifts. Dirt falls away. Muscles cord in her thin arms, standing out in ways they shouldn't on a twelve-year-old girl. For just a moment, I see it—the faintest golden sheen beneath her skin. Dragon blood, responding to effort. Responding to strain.
She carries it ten feet before setting it down with a thud that shakes the ground. She's panting, arms trembling, but her eyes are fierce.
"Again." I point to the next tree. "To there."
Twenty feet. Then thirty. Then fifty.
Each time, the boulder travels further. Each time, she rests less between lifts. Each time, the golden sheen beneath her skin grows a little stronger, a little more visible.
By the time she's moved it a hundred feet, she's not even breathing hard.
"Good." I survey the clearing, then point to the forest edge. "Now find a tree. Uproot it."
She looks at the forest. At the trees. At me.
She’s never given me that look before. It's not defiance. Not exactly. It's more like... confusion. Uncertainty. The look of a child who's wondering if her elder has finally lost his mind.
I hesitate. Was this too much? Was this considered child abuse here? In the cultivation world, disciples train hard: everyone knows that. Body refinement often involves physical labor that would kill mortals. But Ling'er is twelve. She's been cultivating for less than a month. And she's looking at me like I just asked her to fly to the moon.
"... A small one, Sect Leader?" she ventures.
I acquiesce. "... A small one."
She scans the forest edge, then points to a tree maybe ten feet tall, its trunk about half as thick as her waist. Sapling, really, compared to the giants deeper in. She approaches it, circles it once, then wraps her arms around the trunk and pulls.
For a moment, nothing happens.
A wet, gritty rip echoes as fine roots tear through soil, like a giant piece of Velcro being pulled apart underground. Soil explodes outward. The tree groans and tilts slowly, majestically, before crashing to the ground with a thud that reverberates through the hills. Ling'er stands among the wreckage, covered in dirt and torn roots, chest heaving. A grin spreads across her face—genuine, unguarded, purely happy.
She looks at me, and for a moment she's not a secret monster or a cosmic anomaly. She's just a kid who did something amazing and wants approval.
"Good." I keep my voice calm, but inside something warm spreads through my chest. "Again. Bigger."
Her grin widens. She turns to the forest and picks out another tree.
And so, her first day of Body Refinement continued.