Log InRegister
    Read Free Web Novels Online
    Chapter Index

    Tian didn’t breathe. Digging the deepest hole he could was more important than breathing. He could hold his breath for a long time. Not as good as his brothers with a turtle breathing technique, but it would be enough for now. His rope dart couldn’t shift much dirt as it looped around him. He didn’t have the vital energy to muscle it around at high speed either. All he could do was keep the rope moving in a loop, shifting from side to side as it brought sand from under him and dumped it on top of him.

    It was slow going. Very slow. Still, every minute that he wasn’t ripped apart by tens of thousands of venomous Gu was another minute for something life saving to occur.

    So he kept digging, and reminding himself that even if he was buried alive, he wasn’t really trapped. Not like when he was little, and a trash heap slid over him and he nearly suffocated as the water started rising around where he was entombed. It cost him more than a layer of skin to escape. But he did escape. He survived the junkyard. He would survive this too.

    Even if he could hear the junkyard around him. Even if the dry desert sand started smelling like rotting food and stagnant water. He survived that for years. This? This was nothing.

    He felt like he was drowning. It wasn’t the sand- he realized with growing horror that his throat was slowly sealing up and his lungs were filling with liquid. The poison and the disease. It was working more slowly, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t working at all. He couldn’t keep digging without Snake Head Vine Body. But he was going to die if he didn’t use Advent of Spring. He had a feeling he wasn’t very deep. However deep it was, it would have to be enough.

    He dithered a moment- the point of burying himself was making sure no insects could crawl their way to him, which meant being completely sealed off from the surface. On the other hand, he hadn’t progressed so far in the art that he could breathe through his pores. He needed fresh air. With a little whine of frustration, he sent his rope dart burrowing upwards, twisting slowly through the loose sand until the tip just broke the surface. Five feet. He thought he was deeper.

    If he retracted his rope, the sand would cave in again. If he didn’t, he still couldn’t breathe. He whined again, even more sincerely. He flexed his dwindling vital energy, and made the barbs project out as far as they would stretch. It wasn’t very much air that could make its way past all those barbs and all that sand. It was more than none. It would be good enough. Better still, no bugs would make it to him either.

    Tian dropped into the cultivation art as easily as his own natural breath. It had almost become his natural breathing pattern, the flow of qi through his body had long since become effortless. Trapped alone, in the dark, with a Heavenly Person heretic on the prowl, there was nothing to do but sink into meditation. Slow breath in, then out again. Then in.

    He imagined he was a tree. Just like Brother Fu had told him, and like the author of the art wanted. He was like a seed buried in the soil. His roots stretched down, holding him in place despite the wind and rain. Then he grew. He was born with a wisp of prenatal qi, and that energy was enough to let him germinate, to drive his stretching limbs and push him to reach for the heavens. Taking the heavenly blessings and refining them into his body. Creating more energy within him. Letting his roots spread further, so that he could reach higher and withstand greater winds.

    Brother Wong had patiently taught him about yin and yang, and the five elements. Wood was powerfully yang, growing from yin water, but earth? Earth was the center. It was the point of balance between the five elements, between yin and yang. The earth accepts all things and nurtures seeds- yin. But it is also the soaring mountains and exploding volcanoes- yang. Tian liked that. He was planted in the Temple, but reaching upwards into the wide blue sky.

    Dull thuds came through the ground. He tried not to pay attention to them. He just breathed and let the vital energy pour through the strange statue in his lower dantian, then spread out through his body again. For the first time, he really paid attention to how the arts worked together to heal and repair his body.

    The flesh knitting together was obvious, but the way the energy moved through it and seemed to sink into the material of his body was… he didn’t have the language to describe it. The best he could come up with was when you stuck a stick into a pond. You knew you put it in straight up and down, but when you looked closely, it looked like it had gone crooked once it got to the other side of the surface. Then you pull the stick out, and it’s all straight.

    The poison was rapidly coming under control. The antidote did most of it, his body and Advent of Spring quickly handled the rest. The curse energy was long gone, as was the disease. All that remained was the gross damage. And that would take time.

    “Got you!”

    Tian froze for a moment, thinking he was discovered. Then there was a dreadful rumbling and shaking through the sand. The Heavenly Person Gu Master must have found whatever was buried under the caravan trail. A noise- a deep basso bellow at the low end and a sharp scream on the high end. An animals’ fury expressed across the entire audible range in a single voice.

    “Fight. Fight! The more you tire yourself out, the more easily you will break for me!” There was a thrashing, bellowing noise. He could hear a bell ringing, a mournful sound, muffled, as though it was coming from underwater. Whatever the heretic was wrestling with bellowed even louder.


    This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road. If you spot it on Amazon, please report it.

    “That’s it. That’s it. Ah, buried here for centuries, slowly growing in power- did you ever think that one day, you would become a Gu? Did you ever imagine that all that effort and accumulation would be for me? Does that infuriate you? Do you have enough consciousness to understand my words, to understand what your life will be from now on? You won’t even be a slave. I’ll wipe away that little bit of a mind you have formed. You will be my weapon. Used until you are discarded for something better.”

    The heretic’s voice spilled out, humiliating and taunting. The sound of him was disgusting. Tian felt an instinctive need to scrub his skin with the rough desert sand just to get the feeling of the voice off of him.

    “Better give it your all. Better fight with every scrap of strength you have. You will never have another chance to defy me. Fight. FIGHT!”

    Tian swore that if he was discovered by the senior, he would destroy his head before letting himself be captured. His brothers kept saying that in eighteen years, he would be a good man again and risking them being wrong sounded a lot better than whatever the heretic would do to him.

    The polytonal screams of the beast got more desperate. The thuds and thrums got louder.

    “Do you feel it, beast? Do you feel yourself teetering on the edge of despair? Your strength is weakening. This is it. Your very last chance. It all ends now if you don’t escape.”

    There was a hissing sound, like rain falling on sand that grew into a steady drumbeat of heavy monsoon rains on a tile roof. There was another scream, but this time it was the heretic.

    “WHO DARES?!”

    0 chapter views

    0 Comments

    Note
    0 online