The air was thinner here. Tang Boming noticed it when he walked through the gates of Meadow Village. It was only his second time setting foot in the village, but the stillness of the place made it feel older than it was, as though it had endured simply by deciding not to move with the world.
There wasnât much qi in the surroundings. Nothing dense or worth meditating in. Just the natural kind that clung faintly to rocks, wood, and breath. Still, it was peaceful. Tang Boming inhaled once, held it, and then exhaled slowly.
If I were a mortal,
he thought,
Iâd probably want to retire somewhere like this.
But that peaceâit raised questions. Had this place not been devastated by beasts?
On his way here, he had passed two other villages. One was in ruins, roofs collapsed, blood dried into the dirt. The other had been quiet in that unnatural wayâabandoned, windows boarded up, livestock pens empty. The people had likely fled to the cities, somewhere the walls were higher and somewhere that cultivators kept the beasts at bay.
This region was always overlooked around this time of year. The Kalian Empire directed its forces to the borders, to places where threats could spark political instability or touch noble estates. Remote villages like this were often left to fend for themselvesâuntil the next census, until a noble heir remembered they had land out here, until someone important
cared.
And yetâŠ
Here, there were children.
He saw them as he walked down the main roadâthin-limbed, red-cheeked, shouting at one another through the cold as they kicked around a worn leather ball. But there were no signs of trauma. No eyes peeking out of boarded-up homes. Even the elders moved freely, sitting under awnings or sweeping porches.
The Divine Coin Sect had a hand in this, surely. Whatever Chen Ren was doing here, it was working.
But how?
From what Tang Boming knew, the man barely had enough cultivators to fill out a training circle. Baby sects like hisâbarely a few moons oldâstruggled to recruit even a single wandering cultivator, let alone retain one.
And yet here they were. He adjusted the scroll case at his side, his thoughts already moving ahead to the meeting. StillâŠ
still,
there were questions. How had he created peace here when stronger sects had fled or failed?
Tang Boming didnât have the answers. But in his young age of seventy-eight years of living, he had learned one simple truth: everyone had their secrets.
And unless those secrets clawed into his life, he had no reason to chase them. Not everyone liked revealing those truths. So, he kept walking on the path that led him to the gates of the Divine Coin Sect.
If one could even call them that.
To him, it looked more like a large residence than a sect. There were no ornate pillars or formation flags fluttering in the wind. No guardians at the door. But Tang Boming had long since learned that in this world, appearances meant little. Power and reputation werenât always carved in stone or goldâthey often grew in silence.
He approached the gate and gestured to a passing mortal boy. The child paused mid-step, eyes going wide in recognition, then bowed and scurried off to announce his presence.
Not long after, a figure emerged from the side building. Familiar. Though not in the way heâd ever imagined seeing her.
Tang Xiulan.
Dressed in dark green robes with the faint coin and dragon emblem of the sect stitched near her collar, she walked toward him. She stopped a few feet away and offered him a bow.
Tang Boming returned it with one of his own, a little more hesitant. Because for a moment, seeing her here, in this role, stirred something he couldnât name.
She straightened. âIâve sent a mortal to inform Sect Leader Chen of your arrival,â she said. âYou can wait in the reception room. Thereâs hot tea prepared.â
Tang Boming nodded, but his feet lingered for a breath too long before moving.
He followed her down a stone path, passing by a trimmed garden and a few mortals sweeping up fallen leaves. And then, just as the doorway to the waiting room came into view, the question slipped from his mouth.
ââŠAre you happy here?â
Tang Xiulan stopped.
Just like that.
She didnât turn around. Didnât answer right away. Her shoulders stiffened, and when she finally looked at him, her face had changed. The courteous calm had vanished, replaced with something harderâmore guarded.
âDo you really care?â she asked with a flat voice. Whatever caution she had in her voice before was gone.
Tang Boming met her gaze. âYes,â he said simply. âYouâre family.â
She let out a breath. Not a laughânot quite. More like a sigh tinged with something bitter. âThatâs just a name,â she muttered. âI was a servant in the Tang household, remember? Maybe people treated me kindly enough, maybe I had a place. But that never changed who I was. Not really.â
Tang Boming didnât argue. He couldnât. She was right. The way she had been treated in a place she could call her own home wasânot right. Something akin to shame bloomed in his chest, making him look away for a moment, then, back at her. âStill,â he quietly said. âI want to know, are you happy here?â
Tang Xiulan was silent.
Then she exhaled again, softer this time. âYes,â she said at last. Her gaze drifted to the hallway beyond the reception room. âI am.â She paused, the words catching on her tongue before she continued. âI have actual responsibilities here. I manage things. People come to me when something needs to be done. No one judges me for who I wasâbecause most of them donât know. And even if they do, it doesnât matter. Not really.â
She looked at him again.
âFor them, Iâm just the one who keeps things running. That much is enough for me.â
Tang Boming smiled faintly, a rare softness brushing the edges of his normally composed face.
âIâm happy for you,â he said and he meant every syllable.
Tang Xiulan didnât reply, but she gave a shallow nod and continued leading him to the reception room. The door was already open, and inside, a pot of tea sat on the low table, steam curling gently from the spout.
Tang Boming stepped inside, settled himself with a straight-backed posture, and let out a slow breath.
Tang Xiulan, standing at the threshold, gave him a formal bow. âI hope your conversation with Sect Leader Chen goes well.â
He returned the nod, watching as she turned to leave. Just before she stepped out, his voice caught her retreating form.
ââŠHope your life in the sect goes great too, sister.â
She pausedâbut didnât turn. Then, with silent steps, she left. The door clicked softly behind her.
Tang Bomingâs gaze lingered on it for a moment before he lowered his eyes to the tea in front of him. His hand hovered near the cup, but didnât touch it.
Too late?
The thought drifted uninvited into his mind.
He had neglected family for decades. Not out of cruelty, but convenience. A choice made quietly over time. His parents hadnât cared muchâthey were practical, indifferent as long as the clan name was upheld. But his siblings? He had no relationship with them.
He had sacrificed all of that in the name of advancement, chasing realms and stages, hoping that the next bottleneck would bring him closer to something meaningfulâimmortality, maybe.
Now, he wasnât so sure.
Maybe it was time to mend a few thingsâbefore it truly was too late.
The door creaked open again.
He straightened instinctively.
Chen Ren entered the room, his presence as grounded as ever. Simple robes, sharp eyes, and the aura of authority surrounded him easily. But what drew Bomingâs attention was the woman behind him.
An old lady with silver-streaked hair, walking with an elegance that made the air shift subtly around her. There was no overt show of powerâbut even from a glance, Tang Boming felt the pressure.
Qing He,
if he remembered correctly. Tang Yuqiu had mentioned her beforeâcalled her a master of cultivation, someone even her father gave respect to. That fact alone made Tang Bomingâs nerves stir. She didnât look like Chen Renâs master, but⊠who knew? Again, in this world, appearances often lied.
He stood and gave them both a respectful bowâdeeper when facing her. Chen Ren didnât waste time.
âLetâs skip the small talk,â he said, stepping forward and settling down across from him. âIâm interested in the information youâve brought.â
That was Chen Renâalways to the point.
Tang Boming smiled, the nerves fading beneath a layer of trained professionalism. His back straightened just a little more as he took the scroll outside.
âVery well,â he said. âLet me begin⊠though I donât know if youâre going to like what I have to say.â
***
As Chen Ren stepped into the room, he immediately sensed something hanging in the air.
It wasnât spiritual pressure, no, it canât beâit felt personal. Tang Boming sat at the table, his posture composed, but his gaze had been lost somewhere just a moment beforeâsome lingering thought he clearly hadnât shaken off yet. Chen Ren noted it, but didnât press.
Everyone had their ghosts.
âWhy wouldnât I?â
Chen Ren asked at his previous statement.
Tang Bomingâs smile didnât change. âBecause the situation is far worse than even I feared when I first started looking into it.â
That set the tone.
âAs you already know, most sects operate with internal sect economies. They refine pills, manuals and weapons and circulate them through their own disciplesâpart of their training and a source of control. But beyond that, the truly powerful sect donât stop there.
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
âAll of the Guardian Sects sell their pills externally,â Tang Boming continued. âIn cities with high cultivator populations. They dominate local markets, supply minor sects, wandering cultivators, and even the nobility. Especially the Emerald Sun Sectâyou know, the one focused almost entirely on alchemy.â
Chen Ren frowned. The name wasnât unfamiliar. The Emerald Sun Sect had always been mentioned whenever he had read about great alchemists in the empire. They were the richest Guardian sect for a reason. Competing with them wasnât just a bad ideaâit was suicidal
.
Not just for him, but for any sect.
âIâve ignored any region where their presence is dominant,â Tang Boming added, clearly sensing where Chen Renâs thoughts had gone.
Chen Ren gave a slow nod. âThatâs fine. I have no plans to run headfirst into a powerhouse.â
Tang Boming unrolled part of the scroll. âThatâs why I focused on regions tied to the Established Sects. Ones that still command presence, but donât completely control the flow of pills. I looked into details from seven citiesâplaces where the market is active, but not locked. Every single one has a healthy number of cultivators, Emerging sects, and at least one or two clans vying for influence. There you can get a foothold. Build a customer base among wandering cultivators and rogue ones. Then, once your name and supply line are stable, start supplying the smaller clans and Emerging sects. Thatâll open doorsâwithout drawing too much attention early on.â
Chen Ren gave a small nod.
He already knew what Tang Boming was saying was true. Selling pills to clans and sectsâespecially those trying to claw their way up the hierarchyâwould be nearly impossible for someone like him right now. They wouldnât see him as a threat or a supplier. Theyâd see him as a nobody trying to punch above his weight.
A baby sect with no foundation, offering pills they could get from anywhere else? Theyâd laugh. Or worse, theyâd crush the business before it even drew its first breath.
No,
he thought.
The smarter path is the rogue cultivators. Wanderers. Drifters. The new ones trying to rise, who don't have clan support or sect backing. Theyâd buy anything that gave them an edge. Especially if the price is right.
That was the plan.
Target the cities. Build slowly from the bottom.
âWhat are those seven cities?â
âLianhai, Tiandu, Golden Bell City, Cloudmere, Redwing Hold. Jiushan and Broken Ridge.
âAll seven have a decent cultivator population,â he continued. âSome more than others. A few have well-established clans that control portions of the pill market. None of them are completely dominated by a single sect, though all of them have multiple powers vying for control.â
He paused, letting the weight of that sentence settle for the next stretch of time that felt like thirty hours to Chen Ren as the man gave him all the information he had gathered on them.
Tang Boming broke down regional economics, trade flows, and black market routes. But most of his time was spent detailing the power structure of each city, which clans were influential, which sects had territory nearby, their known highest-level cultivators, the kinds of pills they produced and sold, andâmost criticallyâthe rivalries that existed between them.
Chen Ren absorbed everything.
Competition wasnât a problem in itself. It was expected. But the type of competition mattered. And in every city he heard about, the same pattern emerged, too many players.
In Golden Bell City alone, five mid-tier clans were battling for pill market control. In Redwing Hold, an Established sect had burned down two storefronts in the last year to maintain monopoly. Jiushan had a tangled mess of alliances that shifted with the seasonsâone deal too successful, and the other side would step in to crush it.
Even if Chen Ren could carve out a corner of the market, it wouldnât be long before heâd be forced into conflictânot with one power, but several. He didn't want that. Not now.
By the time the briefing ended, only one city remained in his mindâBroken Ridge.
Less tangled than the others. Not without risk but manageable. Not many clans had roots there, and the pill market was still fluid. Cultivators passed through often. Independent powers hadnât fully sunk their roots in.
It wasnât ideal. But it was viable. And right now, that was enough.
âYou said in Broken Ridge City, only the Darkmoon Sect holds the majority share in the pill market,â he said. âWhat about the rest? Surely there were other powers there before.â
âThere were. Over the past few years, several clans and minor sects have tried to gain a foothold. But one way or another, theyâve all been pushed out.â
Chen Ren frowned. âPushed out?â
âOutcompeted. Undermined. Disbanded,â Tang Boming said flatly. âWhatever leverage they hadâpill sales, supplier networks, even storefrontsâeventually vanished. The Darkmoon sect took over most of it. Theyâre the biggest player now by a large margin.â
There was a pause, and then Qing He spoke. âHow?â
Tang Boming gave a short exhale. âI didnât dig too deep into all the methods. But one of their known strategies is⊠recruitment. Specifically, they recruit the alchemists of their competitors.â
Chen Ren blinked.
Qing He raised a brow. âAnd the alchemists just⊠leave?â
Tang Boming shrugged. âApparently so. The sect doesnât pressure the power itself. They just offer better resources to the talent. And from what I heard, most of those alchemists donât even look back. That alone breaks their rivals. If your alchemist leaves, your product vanishes. Your market collapses.â
Tang Boming continued, âBroken Ridge City is on the southern border. On the other side of the region lies the territory of a race of insectoids. Massive beasts with natural armors, glands, and unique internal organsâall of which are extremely valuable for cultivators. Some parts are used directly in pill refinement. Others can replace spiritual herbs altogether. On top of that, the insectoids are intelligent. They build nests over ancient ruins and treasure grounds. Human cultivators often cross the border to hunt, harvest, and scavenge.â
âAnd the Darkmoon Sect take advantage of it?â Chen Ren asked.
âThey have one of the most successful hunting teams in the region,â Tang Boming nodded. âThey bring back materials and relicsâtreasures others rarely get their hands on. They offer those directly to the alchemists they recruit. Not just spirit stones or empty promises.â
Qing He nodded slowly, a trace of wry amusement curling at the corner of her lips.
âIt makes sense,â she said. âCultivation is a pragmatic path. Loyalty doesnât mean much unless thereâs an equal return. Most people would sell their allegiance for a furnace full of rare cores and a stable cauldron.â She looked at Chen Ren. âIt wonât be easy.â
She was right.
For cultivatorsâany kind of cultivatorâtreasures held more sway than oaths or banners. Power came from resources, and no one walked the path of cultivation hoping to stay in the shadows. If the Darkmoon Sect truly offered rare ingredients and relics from the insectoid territories, it wasnât hard to imagine why alchemists abandoned their allegiances without looking back.
He didnât even know the full extent of the offers they were making. But whatever they were, they worked. His thoughts were pulled back by Tang Bomingâs voice.
âSo,â the man asked, his tone carefully neutral, âyouâre going to Broken Ridge?â
Chen Ren looked at him. He didnât speak immediately, but after a long breath, he gave a slow nod. âIt looks like the best option among all. Only one dominant player⊠and a lot of rogue and low-level cultivators cycling through. The types of pills Iâm aiming for wonât help those in the higher realms anyway.â
Tang Boming gave a slight nod in return. âThen Iâll collect more detailed information. The Darkmoon Sect, their structure, their key figures, and the local sect and clans.â
âDo that,â Chen Ren replied.
But even as he said it, he felt Qing Heâs eyes on him. He didnât need her to speak. Just in the quiet gaze she leveled at him, he understood the unspoken question.
You picked a city. But what exactly are you going to sell?
He had chosen the battlefield. But he hadnât yet forged the weapon.
And in truth, he still hadnât cracked the code of standardized pill-making. No method that didnât rely on personal skill. No array structure that mortals could operate with consistency. No reliable way to mass-produce anything that could stand against even second-rate mortal grade pills.
What he was trying to do was aiming to revolutionize pill making itself.
A madmanâs dream. And yet, what other choice did he have?
He couldnât compete with reputation. He didnât have ten alchemists on call or cauldrons forged in divine flame. If he was going to do thisâreally do thisâhe needed to make a new system. One no one else had. But was he really doing that?
That thought stirred something in his chest. He stood up abruptly, pushing back his chair.
Tang Boming blinked, surprised. âLeaving already?â
âIt was good meeting you,â Chen Ren said with a nod. âThank you for your helpâas always. Give Yuqiu my regards too.â
âI will,â Tang Boming replied and bowed again.
Then Qing He looked at him. âWhere are you going?â
Chen Ren looked over his shoulder. âI need to research pill making,â he said. âSo Iâm going to read.â
âRead what?â she called out.
âWeâve got dozens of old books now,â he said, already stepping toward the door. âAlchemy. Arrays. There should be something in there that can help me.â
He walked through it and was already on the way to the library theyâve created. Hope burned in his heart and he wished he was right.
***
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