AliNovel

Font: Big Medium Small
Dark Eye-protection
AliNovel > The Power Cycle [Vol 2: The Aether Sword] > [TAS] 36. Chian - Tribulations, Part 5

[TAS] 36. Chian - Tribulations, Part 5

    "Child."


    Da Chi-an was bare-ly a step in-side the Sealed Palace when the fa-mil-iar, bit-ing voice of her an-ces-tor emerged from the dark-ness. Al-though she knew, from speak-ing with the El-der in the past, that the room split be-fore the Guardian Deities, or her An-ces-tor, were al-lowed to reach to her... she still con-tin-ued a ways fur-ther, into the dark-ness, be-fore sit-ting and ac-knowled-ing the spir-it.


    That both-ered the old fox, and it was clear in the dis-tor-tions of his qi, in the way his pres-ence loomed clos-er and heav-ier, from the rank stench that she could feel on his spir-it waves. By the time she was ready, her ears and tail out and sta-ble, the spir-it--an ac-tu-al fox spir-it, who only took hu-man form if it suit-ed him--ap-peared quite cross.


    "Yes, An-ces-tor."


    "You haven''t learned your les-son from last time." The spir-i-tu-al en-er-gy seemed to melt re-al-i-ty around her, though for the mo-ment, the dark-ness re-mained only that.


    "My les-son from last time was to trust my in-stincts," Chi-an said, clos-ing her eyes and know-ing what was com-ing, her heart pound-ing. "And I do."


    The old man raised one clawed hand and bat-ted at her, and Chi-an had to force her spir-it en-er-gy into a bar-ri-er. Ki''el''s ad-vice helped great-ly here--or Kuli''s. Un-der-stand-ing her tail as a way to com-mu-ni-cate her will with the spir-it world, as a way to change the qi that she had al-ready de-ployed, al-lowed her to sim-ply vent her spir-it en-er-gy and then snap it into some sem-blance of a wall in time to stop the three curved slices.


    Slow slices, al-most dull. An-ces-tor was not se-ri-ous.


    "You don''t un-der-stand, and you nev-er will." The fox took a hu-man step for-ward, but his ''real'' pro-jec-tion, a fox, slunk away in the oth-er di-rec-tion. Chi-an warred with her in-stincts--it was only po-lite, if the hu-man pro-jec-tion con-tin-ued to watch her, not to di-rect her at-ten-tion away, even as she knew that she was be-ing test-ed, that the fox pro-jec-tion was the threat. "Your path will al-ways and only ever be my path. All of your strength comes from me. All of your in-stincts come from my side. I am your in-stincts."


    Chi-an bared her teeth back at the hu-man pro-ject, al-most be-com-ing too dis-tract-ed to split her fo-cus, but she kept the real threat in mind. She had been taught through her youth that what the old man was say-ing was true--that her pow-er and in-stincts came from her no-ble blood-line, in-her-it-ed from her an-ces-tor. But she had also been taught, by her fam-i-ly and by Bai Be-nai, that the spir-it in her tribu-la-tion would lie and at-tempt to con-sume her, con-trol her.


    It had been hard-er be-fore.


    "You are not my only source of strength," Chi-an said, "and even if you were, my in-sincts tell me not to trust you." That was only half true--they had said that, un-til the old fox wished oth-er-wise. Even now, with the fox it-self creep-ing clos-er, she sensed its in-tense fo-cus on her, how it con-ceived of this as a preda-tor stalk-ing its prey, lulling it to sleep, so that--


    When at last it was close enough, Chi-an''s tail flick-ered, and the spir-it en-er-gy she had kept around her lashed at the an-ces-tor''s fox body. It wasn''t enough to be dan-ger-ous--she knew it wasn''t--but the goal was nev-er to de-feat her an-ces-tor, but to catch it and claim the seed that would be-come her sec-ond tail. But, as she ex-pect-ed, her fox an-ces-tor leaped away spry-ly even be-fore her en-er-gy could prop-er-ly mo-bi-lize.


    The hu-man pro-jec-tion grinned a nasty smile, and his sev-en tails curled out be-hind him, his out-fit dark-en-ing into the one he used in fights. "You have no strength with-out me, child," the old man said. "And no need to lie. Your heart is open to me, as your an-ces-tor, but nev-er more than when you are to face a tribu-la-tion. Your ef-forts to con-trol qi are pa-thet-ic, your mis-un-der-stand-ings thick, and your at-tach-ments to those fool-ish hu-mans poi-son you from with-in."


    Chi-an bris-tled, even know-ing that it was a trick, the old man prod-ding at her weak-ness. "Don''t talk about my friends."


    "No?" The hu-man pro-jec-tion leaped for-ward, and Chi-an sprung to her feet and flick-ered out more en-er-gy, di-rect-ing it to move her back and lash out light-ly at the hu-man form--though she knew that the fox car-ried her prize. The old man wouldn''t be sat-is-fied hav-ing a con-ver-sa-tion with-out ex-er-cis-ing at the same time, which meant she had to let him waste pow-er, while she spent as lit-tle as pos-si-ble.


    But he did con-tin-ue to speak, and Chi-an felt her-self get-ting ang-i-er as he did. "What about the old-er girl--Xoi Xam? She fears your con-nec-tion to things she can-not com-pre-hend. She is jeal-ous that you will be hand-ed pow-er for the rest of your life, and knows that you will be-come ever more the preda-tor, ever less her peer." The hu-man pro-jec-tion stepped for-ward and slashed a few times, and each time, Chi-an moved her-self away, eye-ing both the hu-man and the fox. "She is ready to go to war with you for the small-est of-fense, and you de-serve that, be-cause you are not your peer--you are a preda-tor who feeds on peo-ple like her."


    "Stop it," Chi-an said with a snarl, but she knew that the man was speak-ing to her doubts--and he wasn''t wrong.


    "And that man--Xoi Mian? A liar, a mur-der-er, a craven cow-ard, pa-thet-ic and des-per-ate. Giv-en a sec-ond chance out of luck, he squan-ders it, though he is ea-ger to re-ceive his re-wards any-way." The el-der fox''s tails twitched, and Chi-an fo-cused in-tent-ly on the sense, but she couldn''t catch how he com-mand-ed the mas-sive well of spir-i-tu-al pow-er that he''d al-lowed for this tribu-la-tion. It sim-ply seemed to come in be-ing that a pair of mas-sive polearms, hal-berds this time, she thought, ap-peared from the air by his hands, and he caught one in each hand, jump-ing for-ward and cross-ing the blad-ed weapons in front of him like they were noth-ing more than an ex-tend-ed, hor-i-zon-tal jaw.


    Chi-an knew well enough that he un-der-stood the use of hu-man weapons far bet-ter than that, and stayed well clear of them.


    "If it came down to it, both of those ''friends'' of yours would be-tray you if not for dar-ling lit-tle friend Ki''el," the el-der said, his voice tak-ing a light tone that she was sure was heav-i-ly con-de-scend-ing, though he hid it, for the mo-ment. "And what a dear she is, so fo-cused on her tasks, so ea-ger to work hard, so blind to what''s around her." The lev-i-ty in his voice fad-ed. "In truth, child, you know far bet-ter than me that she is rav-en-ous-ly hun-gry for at-ten-tion. If you fail for even a mo-ment to be at the cen-ter of her world, you will fade away, be quick-ly and eter-nal-ly for-got-ten. I''ll give her this--the child is in-no-cent. But she is weak at heart, just like you."


    Chi-an was ex-pect-ing it, when the man reached the end of his speech and the two forms pre-sent both fad-ed, the fox form seam-less-ly tak-ing a hu-manoid form while re-tain-ing its true face and na-ture. The hal-berds hung be-hind it for a mo-ment be-fore leap-ing at her, and al-though Chi-an had to turn away from where the hu-man pro-jec-tion had been to see the an-ces-tor with her own eyes, she still dodged the at-tacks with lit-tle ef-fort. But now, the el-der''s spir-it en-er-gy be-gan to gath-er around the seed, and his ca-nine face had no ex-pres-sion that could be con-sid-ered friend-ly on it, the eyes leak-ing ha-tred and angst.


    "You cow-er be-hind your pro-tec-tors, be-hind that id-iot tor-toise, nev-er fac-ing the truth of the world, and you want to tell me that this is you trust-ing your in-stincts?" The pro-jec-tion flick-ered, and for just a mo-ment, Chi-an thought that above them both, like a child look-ing down on their toys, was a mas-sive fox spir-it per-haps twen-ty times her size, who only waved a hand through the dark-ness around them, and where it passed, the world changed.


    Chi-an fell through the air be-fore she could muster enough spir-it en-er-gy to stop her-self, plung-ing into the storm-tossed sea. With-in the wa-ter, as she''d found last time, it was dif-fi-cult to find qi that res-onat-ed with her blood-line, but it was there--stormwa-ter and wind, even traces of light-ning qi that swirled through the ocean wa-ter. With ef-fort, she forced more pow-er into her tail, and lift-ed out of the wa-ter un-til she could stand atop it, and grasp the stormy air that was her birthright, forc-ing it to car-ry her into the sky.


    That had been enough, last time, for the an-ces-tor to choose not to de-stroy her, even though she failed to as-cend a tier. This time, she was not will-ing to fail.


    But see-ing her an-ces-tor, the mas-ter of her en-tire fam-i-ly, in his nat-ur-al el-e-ment, the Six Tailed Rag-ing Storm Spir-it Fox, dulled any ex-cite-ment she could have. He had not yet em-braced the full might of the storm that raged around him--per-haps he couldn''t, not at this lev-el of her as-cen-sion. But nei-ther did he have even a mo-ment''s fear for the lash-ing wind, the dri-ving rain, the flash-es of light-ning that seemed to trav-el miles.


    "Your in-stincts are those of a preda-tor in the rain," a voice whis-pered from near-by her. "Not those of a child hid-ing be-hind fa-ther''s legs, be-hind tur-tle shells. If you want to chase vic-to-ry, then chase."


    Chi-an hung there in the storm-tossed air and con-sid-ered that. She was still con-sid-er-ing it when a mas-sive skull made of storm-twist-ed rain ap-peared from nowhere, jaws open-ing in a sound-less show of teeth. But Chi-an was not there when the jaws closed, and she struck once at the pro-jec-tion, hop-ing to at least knock it away--but no such thing hap-pened. In-stead, the skull turned, mov-ing for-ward once more.


    Chi-an felt the rain soak-ing through her clothes, soak-ing into even her spir-it tail, soak-ing into her skin. She felt every buf-fet-ing wall of wind that ran into her, but she closed her eyes, ig-nor-ing all but the fanged skull be-fore her, the dis-tant pro-jec-tion of her an-ces-tor... and the les-son.


    Though the An-ces-tor might call Bai Be-nai an id-iot, the woman had cho-sen a ton-ic for her that matched her de-sires far bet-ter than the world that An-ces-tor was show-ing her.


    Royal Road is the home of this novel. Visit there to read the original and support the author.


    It took her a mo-ment to find the clar-i-ty, but when at last she could find the per-spec-tive, a slice of the sky opened--just a slice--and that sky wheeled over-head. She saw her an-ces-tor look up at it, felt him try-ing to will it closed--but in only a mo-ment, Chi-an was no longer be-neath the storm-clouds.


    The view from above was mag-nif-i-cent.


    The storm-clouds from above were white things, like the small-er puffy clouds you would see on a clear day, or even the tow-er-ing storm-clouds that you saw in the dis-tance--when they didn''t block the sun. What the Wheel of Light and Sky Ton-ic had shown her was that the storm only dark-ened the world be-neath it. Here, in the world above the storm, was a dif-fer-ent world. Even the dark-est, widest, wildest storms only con-cealed the blue sky, the sun-light.


    "Some small in-sight, I see." An-ces-tor stood atop his clouds, but his face and de-meanor were not ap-prov-ing. "But mean-ing-less in the face of true pow-er." His tails twist-ed, and the storm-clouds be-low whipped up-wards to-wards her, try-ing to form a shell around her, to re-turn her to dark-ness and rain.


    But Chi-an was will-ing to bet that his do-main was far weak-er here, even if he forced the im-age back to a fa-mil-iar form. It was one thing to ma-nip-u-late a nat-ur-al rag-ing storm, and an-oth-er to force a rag-ing storm into new forms, new places. But more than that... Chi-an pulled at her own spir-it en-er-gy, try-ing to find every scrap of it that she had and all that she had left be-hind, or-ga-niz-ing it, grow-ing it, col-lect-ing it--and or-der-ing it.


    It was prob-a-bly the truth that An-ces-tor saw the at-tack com-ing. It was prob-a-bly true that a be-ing so wise wasn''t go-ing to fall for such a sim-ple am-bush. But the spir-it en-er-gy she''d left be-hind, in the rain-soaked sea, stalked up through the storm be-hind him while his at-ten-tion was di-vid-ed, and ap-peared as claws and fangs with-in his own pre-cious clouds, from with-in the storm that he stood upon look-ing up at her, snap-ping down on him from be-hind. She felt her en-er-gy force its way into the pro-jec-tion, seek-ing and find-ing that seed of spir-i-tu-al en-er-gy, that prize she was sup-posed to steal away.


    She felt it slip into her pos-ses-sion, de-spite some strug-gles from her an-ces-tor.


    "Bah." As the en-er-gy of the tribu-la-tion be-gan to dis-perse and swirl around her, at-tract-ed to the Rag-ing Storm Fox Spir-it Seed, her An-ces-tors will re-leased its grasp, let-ting her win--but also, she saw one of the an-ces-tor''s hal-berds slink into view from just be-hind her, and she didn''t know when or how it had slipped in so close. "An ac-cept-able hunt, lit-tle girl. Not quite wor-thy of a two-tailed spir-it fox... but I will ex-pect bet-ter of you next time." The vulpine face that the an-ces-tor showed her gave her an un-pleas-ant, sharp-toothed smile, but she thought she sensed real pride there. "Be sure not to dis-ap-point me."


    Da Chi-an re-turned from her spir-it trance to feel the world shak-ing.


    She leaped to her feet, half sur-prised that she was sim-ply in a dark room, and found her-self rush-ing out-side--but be-fore she could leave the Sealed Palace, she end-ed up find-ing Xam and Mian gath-ered around...


    ...Around what seemed to be the body of Ki''el.


    The girl wasn''t dead--that was the wrong word. But qi was turn-ing in bands around her--in many bands, each turn-ing through dif-fer-ent or-bits around the girl, each spin-ning at dif-fer-ent rates and in dif-fer-ent di-rec-tions, each with an as-so-ci-at-ed thorn--and each thorn was al-ready over-full of blind-ing-ly white qi. Chi-an paused, star-ing, but un-sure. What-ev-er was hap-pen-ing, she felt sure that it was too much.


    "Chi-an." Mian''s voice sound-ed re-lieved. "You were in there for a while."


    Had she been? Chi-an had not both-ered to find out how long her trance had been the last time, but this didn''t feel like it had been a long bat-tle. In-stead of an-swer-ing that, she looked at Ki''el. "Is she al-right?"


    "Only the El-der would know," Xam said, tired-ly, "but we can''t move her. And I don''t think the El-der wants us leav-ing while--"


    The world shook again.


    "--while Sis-ter Ai, we as-sume, rages out-side," Mian fin-ished, look-ing at his wife, who looked back at him, sourly.


    Chi-an stared at Ki''el for a long mo-ment, but couldn''t shake the feel-ing that the pow-er was too much, and turned to-wards the en-trance. "I will ask."


    "Chi-an--"


    But she was al-ready push-ing ahead, her qi and spir-it en-er-gy mixed. The feel of her sec-ond tail--no more than a sprout-ing seed, yet--felt good, and she felt in-cred-i-bly free, mov-ing through the space like it was noth-ing.


    Get-ting too close to the en-trance spat her out be-fore she was quite ready, and she felt her stom-ach drop at what she saw out-side.


    Djang Zen Ai had a lev-el of qi that Chi-an had nev-er seen be-fore, or not specif-i-cal-ly, but there could be no ques-tion that it was Di-a-mond--three phas-es above her, and mere steps be-neath the be-gin-ning of Flame Qi. Her qi was mer-ci-less-ly clear and dev-il-ish-ly hard, and Chi-an could sense with-out try-ing that there was some-thing buried with-in her qi--some blood-line trait that was wo-ven through her core and merid-i-ans, and right now, it was boil-ing over, vent-ing en-er-gy that seemed ea-ger to con-trol Sis-ter Ai from with-in, in ex-change for of-fer-ing her pow-er.


    And right now, she didn''t seem par-tic-u-lar-ly keen to stop it.


    It wasn''t as though no one was try-ing to stop her. At least a dozen In-ner Sect dis-ci-ples were around her, and it seemed like Sis-ter Ai kept enough sense to not try to se-ri-ous-ly hurt any of them. But even as Chi-an watched, she lashed out, seem-ing-ly be-cause she couldn''t con-tain the en-er-gy, and it vent-ed into the side of the Sealed Palace--mov-ing the en-tire is-land by sev-er-al feet and knock-ing her down, but seem-ing to do no harm to the build-ing it-self.


    "Stay in-side." El-der Aji spoke qui-et-ly, but even so, Chi-an could tell that the de-mon-ic Sis-ter above heard her, no-ticed them.


    "What is this?" The woman moved with a flash of in-tent, and al-though it was in-tense-ly pow-er-ful, her use was im-per-fect, bru-tal. She crashed into the ground be-fore them, and the is-land dropped by feet, enough that Chi-an could ma-neu-ver in the air to be back on her feet be-fore she land-ed.


    She... didn''t re-mem-ber in time, what it meant to dis-play her pow-er. She was too fo-cused on the dan-ger in front of her, dan-ger that she didn''t imag-ine she could es-cape one way or the oth-er--but she should have known that she could still make things worse.


    "A com-pan-ion of that bitch... and a spir-it beast. Per-fect." The woman''s eyes were too in-tense for Chi-an to look at, and her voice all but com-pelled her to obey, but some part of her re-sist-ed, even be-fore she un-der-stood what she was fight-ing against. "You will serve me for the rest of your life. Or I will kill you and your pa-thet-ic friends."


    Chi-an heard the words, felt them sink-ing into her like teeth, but stopped them from catch-ing on any-thing in-side of her, any-thing that would have forced them to be-come true. She all but for-got about the El-der be-side her, all but for-got about every-thing ex-cept the im-pe-ri-ous gaze of the woman in front of her, but--


    "You will not." The steps that the El-der took to place her-self be-tween Chi-an and Sis-ter Ai didn''t res-onate with the world, didn''t ex-ude enor-mous strength or shake the is-land. Her strength was in the shad-ow that she cast, a shad-ow that blocked Chi-an from the sun ahead of her ef-fort-less-ly. "You have been told this be-fore, Sis-ter Zen Ai. You may be a ge-nius, but your sta-tus here is not un-lim-it-ed. And harm-ing your ju-niors, es-pe-cial-ly prodi-gies, is nev-er ac-cept-able."


    Sis-ter Ai twitched like she want-ed to at-tack the El-der, but clear-ly thought bet-ter of it. "I de-mand sat-is-fac-tion."


    "You can-not de-mand of some-one so be-neath your sta-tion." The El-der''s voice wasn''t smug, sim-ply mat-ter of fact.


    "My re-tain-er was mur-dered!"


    "The facts of the case have been record-ed." The El-der''s voice re-mained per-fect-ly mea-sured. "This case, and sev-er-al oth-ers in the past of Broth-er Kem Jee Sai. And sev-er-al oth-ers in your past. The eyes of this Moon-stone Is-land Sect are not blind."


    "As though I care about what some pa-thet-ic Moon-stone sect thinks," Sis-ter Ai spat. "I am from one of the Em-per-or''s vaunt-ed lin-eages, and you shall not stand in my way."


    "This is not your Em-pire," the El-der said, her calm-ness not yet seem-ing to be test-ed.


    But Sis-ter Ai looked past her, to Chi-an, who swal-lowed. "You, girl. If you wish to save your mas-ter, you will swear your life, and your de-scen-dents, to me, to serve my house for-ev-er. If you do not, there will be no sav-ing you."


    Chi-an felt like she was be-ing swal-lowed up by a do-main more per-ilous than that of her an-ces-tor, felt qi more in-tense and more blood-thirsty than any-thing she had yet ex-pe-ri-enced--and she un-der-stood that it was real blood-thirst, and not train-ing, not even of the most bru-tal kind.


    Parts of her were scream-ing to say what-ev-er she need-ed to say to save her-self. An-oth-er part of her want-ed her to say what-ev-er she need-ed to say to save Ki''el. But she also had strength, and pride, and stub-born-ness. And all of that de-layed her for a mo-ment, when the El-der turned back to look at her.


    "Why did you come out?" The El-der''s voice was clear and even de-spite the cir-cum-stances, but it also car-ried with it an in-tent, one Chi-an didn''t re-sist.


    "Sis-ter Ki''el has come out of her Tribu-la-tion, un-con-scious," she said.


    The words caused sev-er-al near-by to flick-ered their qi, un-cer-tain, wor-ried. "Did she fail?" The El-der asked, though with her calm voice, Chi-an thought that the woman must have known. In truth, Chi-an did not know, not for cer-tain, but it would have made no sense.


    "No," she said. "She sur-vived--but she has ab-sorbed so much of the Tribu-la-tion Qi that she can-not re-gain con-scious-ness."


    Chi-an... did not un-der-stand, gen-uine-ly; she didn''t un-der-stand that at her words, that ha-tred, and the un-remit-ting blood-lust of Sis-ter Ai... hes-i-tat-ed. It be-gan to shift, away from her. It backed away, as though in awe... or in fear.


    "Is that the truth?" El-der Sang, the spec-ta-cled el-der from the Gale Pavil-lion, ap-peared next to her as though from nowhere. Chi-an shied back from him, but looked up and nod-ded, and the man moved past her like a flash, she as-sumed into the sealed Palace. And mo-ments lat-er, he walkd out of the Palace, hold-ing Ki''el limp in his arms, the bands of pure white pow-er turn-ing around her undimmed by be-ing in the pres-ence of greater pow-ers.


    El-der Aji re-mained where she was, so that Chi-an re-mained in her shad-ow, but Sis-ter Ai''s tu-moltuous qi was re-ced-ing, its cor-ro-sive blood-lust reigned in. Al-ready, it felt as though Sis-ter Ai was no longer the cen-ter of every-one''s at-ten-tion, as many of the In-ner Sect dis-ci-ples who stood near ma-neu-vered to get a bet-ter look.


    "It seems to be true," El-der Sang said, his voice eas-i-ly car-ry-ing, "that Sis-ter Ki''el has cap-tured and is ab-sorb-ing the ma-jor-i-ty of the tribu-la-tion en-er-gy that was sent to her. Her qi and life force are be-ing used to re-fine as much of it as pos-si-ble, and the process is tem-per-ing her spir-it, but she re-mains in dan-ger. If she sur-vives the process-es, she may ad-vance straight to mid-Bis-muth, or even low-Dam-as-cus Qi."


    "Im-pos-si-ble." The voice that ut-tered that was Sis-ter Ai''s, though her voice had lost some of the tim-bre of ha-tred that it had. "To ad-vance half of an en-tire Phase sim-ply from a sin-gle tribu-la-tion...?"


    "I knew our Ju-nior Sis-ter wouldn''t dis-ap-point us." That voice came from Broth-er Yang, who ap-peared near to Sis-ter Ai, his clothes torn and his face and hands bruised--from a bat-tle, she guessed, with Sis-ter Ai. He glanced over at Ai with a smug grin. "If you''re not care-ful, Se-nior Sis-ter, she''ll sur-pass even you in time!"


    Sis-ter Ai clenched her fists, and Chi-an could feel the world''s qi tense as the words got to her, but she willed away the ha-tred for now. "Fine," she said, af-ter a mo-ment. "I will... grudg-ing-ly ac-cept the Ju-nior Sis-ter''s of-fer to have my... per-son-al items re-turned."


    A voice from some-where Chi-an could not see, clear-ly of El-der Gol, rung out. "Your points and pos-ses-sions will also be used to sat-is-fy the for-fei-ture owed due to your ram-page."


    "Ugh." Sis-ter Ai curled a lip in dis-gust, but not anger or fear. "What-ev-er. This non-sense is be-neath me." She turned, and in a flash, was else-where, the in-tense qi that she had been emit-ting van-ish-ing as though to noth-ing.


    And Chi-an fi-nal-ly let her-self fall to her knees and gasp for air.
『Add To Library for easy reading』
Popular recommendations
Shadow Slave Beyond the Divorce My Substitute CEO Bride Disregard Fantasy, Acquire Currency The Untouchable Ex-Wife Mirrored Soul