224 Cultivation of the Six Paths
224 Cultivation of the Six Paths
Hei Mao moved without hesitation. His palm struck Da Wei square in the chest, sending the latter tumbling backward across the cracked, shadowed tiles that marked the edge of Meng Poâs world. Before Da Wei could even rise, Hei Mao was already above him, slamming a heel down toward his shoulder. Da Wei twisted, barely evading, but still earned a new bruise for the effort. However, with the rules of Meng Po's world, the bruise soon vanished.
Da Wei rolled once, twice, then sprang up with surprising agility and launched a punch of his own. Hei Mao didnât dodge as he didnât need to. The punch landed, but it was like striking the trunk of an immortal tree.
âOh, come on,â complained Da Wei. âThis isnât funnyâŠâ
Hei Mao smiled at the effort. âMaster, I have suppressed my cultivation to your level, but why are you still so slow?â
Da Wei clicked his tongue, "Hey, arenât disciples supposed to respect their masters? Or is beating the crap out of me your way of saying you missed me?â
Hei Mao didnât answer. He simply struck again, this time with a sweeping kick that folded Da Wei into the air. Da Wei grunted as he slammed back-first into a boulder, which cracked slightly on impact. Da Wei groaned and slid to the ground, coughing out something that might have been dust⊠or a piece of lung.
âOw,â he muttered, sprawled on the floor like a rag doll, his hair frazzled and his robe in tatters. âThat was excessive. What kind of reunion starts with domestic abuse?â
Hei Mao approached, arms folded behind his back. His eyes, once the wide and bright curiosity of a naive ghost, now held the clarity and coldness of someone who had walked a long, lonely road of cultivation. âItâs to get to know you again, Master. Your habits. Your inclinations. Your reflexes, your reactions⊠everything. Itâs been a long time.â
Da Wei spat to the side, more for drama than anything else. âIâm flattered. Truly. Your love hurts in all the wrong places.â
Hei Mao didnât smile, but there was warmth in his voice. âBack then, I understood you through our travels. Through the choices you made. But now? Youâve walked through the wheel, dined with a goddess, and tricked the soup of forgetfulness. Youâve changed.â
âI still find dumb jokes funny, if that helps,â Da Wei wheezed. âAlso, I hate being punched.â
Hei Mao knelt beside him, this time offering a hand instead of a fist. Da Wei took it, and the young ghost helped him up without ceremony.
âFor me, it was easy,â Hei Mao continued. âThe Six Paths are tied to what we are. I am a ghost. I cultivate the Ghost Path. I refine desires and ambitions, temper them into something eternal. My method is called the Longevity Ghost Method. It aligns perfectly with what I am⊠and who Iâve become.â
Da Wei brushed the dirt off his shoulder and grimaced. âThatâs great and enlightening. Now, how does that help me stop you from turning me into a meat pancake?â
âWe have to figure out what path suits you, Master. Among the Six Paths⊠Heaven, Human, Asura, Animal, Ghost, Hell⊠what speaks to your core?â
âItâs pretty easy, isnât it?â Da Wei dusted off his robe and stood with his hands behind his head, eyes to the dull ceiling of stars. âIâm very human⊠so, obviously, Human Path.â
Hei Mao sighed and turned to Ox-Head without bothering to argue. âCan you tell him what you told me?â
The towering figure of Ox-Head, whoâd been silent for a while, gave a slow nod. âYou canât be human.â
Da Weiâs smile cracked. âWhat do you mean I canât be human? So what am I now? A ghost? Technically, Iâm not dead yet. Just⊠out-possessed by some perverted skeleton.â
Horse-Face snorted from the sidelines. âHah! If youâre a ghost, then Iâm a horse!â
Da Wei blinked. âArenât you alreadyâ?â
Both Hei Mao and Ox-Head gave Horse-Face a flat look. Horse-Face grumbled and turned his back. âWhat are you all staring at?! Never mindâŠâ
Ox-Head cleared his throat and stepped forward, drawing a large, black-bound tome from within his robe. It looked too large to have been hidden anywhere reasonable. Its surface shimmered with binding spells and writhing ink as though the book itself breathed.
âIf youâre a ghost, you need regrets. You need obsessions,â Ox-Head explained as he flipped open the tome. âSo what are yours?â
Da Wei scratched his cheek. âI have a lot⊠too many. But I canât cling to them forever, right? At some point, I need to move on.â
âThatâs a very human thing to say,â Ox-Head said mildly, not looking up from the pages. âBut letâs see what the record says.â
He ran a thick finger across the page, his eyes following the ink that rearranged itself with every breath.
âYou were sent from the stars by the hand of fate. That alone means you were aligned with the Heaven Path.â
Da Wei squinted. âHuh, sounds fancy.â
âYou built connections. Changed peopleâs fates. Each time you choose to act for someone elseâs good, consciously or not, you deepen your ties to the Human Path.â
Ox-Head continued flipping, the tome whispering like dry leaves in a breeze. âYou challenged Hellâs Gate and destroyed whatever stood in your way. Thatâs the Asura Path⊠the path of war, of those who trample over others to survive.â
Horse-Face let out a low whistle. âThatâs three already. You collecting these like trading cards?â
Ox-Head ignored him. âYou wandered ignorantly under a rulerâs will, surviving on instinct while remaining true to your principles. The Animal Path, governed by natureâs law of survival.â
Hei Mao glanced at Da Wei but said nothing.
âAnd here,â Ox-Head tapped the page, âyour obsession with protecting the people you care for⊠your inability to let go, to rest. Thatâs Ghost Path.â
Da Wei folded his arms and muttered under his breath. âCanât help it if I care too much.â
âAnd lastly,â Ox-Head said, closing the book with a faint thump, âyou slaughtered helpless cultivators.â
Da Weiâs head whipped around. âFor the record, they were from Summit Hall! And they were bad seeds! Rotten to the core!â
Horse-Face scoffed, âStill not your place to judge. That was supposed to be for the Afterlife to decide.â
Ox-Headâs expression didnât change, but his tone softened. âWeâre in no position to judge either. The Underworld hasnât upheld moral authority in a very long time. So don't mistake this for condemnation. Itâs just⊠facts.â
Da Wei took a step back and exhaled. âFine. So Iâve got pieces of all Six Paths in me. Now what?â
Hei Mao spoke gently. âNow you choose. We figure out which one of those paths resonates most with your nature. Not the one you think you belong to, but the one you are. Thatâs the one weâll cultivate.â
Da Wei looked at Ox-Head, curiosity briefly eclipsing his guilt. âHey⊠what is that book, really?â
Horse-Face interjected, arms crossed. âItâs the Book of Life and Death. Records⊠stuff.â
âStuff?â Da Wei asked, raising an eyebrow.
Ox-Head closed the book and held it close. âStuff.â
âI want to see it.â
âNo,â Horse-Face and Ox-Head said in perfect unison.
âFigures.â Da Wei threw up his hands. âSo what path should I follow then?â
Ox-Head didnât even bother lifting his head. âWe donât know. And until we beat the answer out of you, the punches are going to keep coming. For this to work, you must be truthful and not give an insincere answer. We will know.â
Hei Mao offered an apologetic shrug. âYeah, thatâs how itâs going to be, Master. SorryâŠâ
Da Wei lifted a single finger, eyes bright with mischief. âWait, wait. I have an idea. What if⊠I walk all Six Paths?â
The air quieted.
Hei Mao frowned, voice low with concern. âMaster, you only have one soul. You canât be a ghost and a human at the same time. While there are human-like ghosts or ghost-like humans, there canât be something thatâs truly both.â
Ox-Head nodded solemnly. âItâs not possible. Every Path requires different anchors to the soul. Conflicting attributes would tear it apart.â
âA bunch of idiotsâŠâ Horse-Face scoffed. âTsk. Thatâs actually possible.â
All eyes swiveled to him. Ox-Head blinked as if someone had slapped him in the face. âExplain.â
Horse-Face flexed his thick neck like this was common knowledge. âIs it just me, or are you lot truly idiots? Obviously, by going back and forth between the paths! Rotate them. Alternate! Itâs gonna take time and effort, but itâs not impossible.â
Ox-Head frowned deeply. âItâs not that simple. His soul will fracture under the pressure. The conflicting traits⊠desire versus virtue, instinct versus wisdom⊠theyâll grind each other into shards. One wrong step, and heâll lose his sense of self.â
Da Wei didnât hesitate. âHow powerful will I become if I succeed?â
Horse-Face grinned, a grin that looked far too satisfied for anyoneâs peace of mind. âIf you succeed, youâll be invincible. No realm could hold you. You could skip realms, tear through the chains of cause and effect, and stand outside the rules of the Six Paths. And honestly, it isnât as far-fetched as it sounds. Most cultivators nowadays donât even understand the Six Paths. They âfeelâ their way through the universe. But you? Youâve got us⊠immortals with actual brains.â
Hei Mao squinted at him. âThis is suspicious. Why are you suddenly being nice?â
Ox-Head narrowed his eyes. âDonât do it, Hei Maoâs Master.â
âI have a name, you know,â Da Wei muttered before nodding solemnly. âBut yeah, youâre probably right. Hei Mao, keep beating the shit out of me.â
Horse-Faceâs grin vanished. âTch. Your loss. And here I was looking forward to watching you explode from all that chaotic energyâŠâ
Da Wei snapped his fingers. âI changed my mind. Letâs do it.â
Now, Hei Mao was truly baffled. He didnât speak aloud, instead using Qi Speech, <Why, Master?>
Da Weiâs voice echoed softly in his mind, carrying that same calm certainty that made him both irritating and admirable. <Because Horse-Face was lying. He said he looked forward to my death, but it wasnât true. That means he actually wants me to succeed.>
Hei Mao couldnât argue with that. His masterâs instincts about people had always bordered on the supernatural. Even when clouded by self-doubt or pain, Da Wei could read intent like ink on a scroll.
âFine by me, Master,â Hei Mao said, stepping forward. âBut if weâre doing this⊠we do it carefully and methodically. One path at a time, okay?â
Ox-Head looked horrified. âThis is suicidal.â
Horse-Face grinned wider. âNo, this is going to be fun.â
Hei Mao took a deep breath and raised his hand, gently pulsing with Qi. âThen letâs start with the first beating. Weâll find which Path sings loudest in your blood.â
Da Wei clenched his fists and smiled. âBring it on!â
So, they worked.
And to Hei Maoâs surprise⊠Da Wei transcended reason.
Hei Mao watched his master closely, carefully, and with growing astonishment.
When their training began, Hei Mao expected a long process of rebuilding. Da Wei had arrived only at the Soul Recognition Realm, the first step within the Three Cosmic Elements. Hei Mao assumed he would have to start from scratch, laying down foundational cultivations for each of the Six Paths. But after just a single bout⊠one in which Da Wei coughed blood, limped away, made five bad puns, and still managed to counter with a fistful of raw, unrefined martial intent, Hei Mao began to realize something unsettling.
His master had already tempered his body, mind, will, and spirit. Not only that, but he had done so within all Six Paths.
That shouldâve been impossible.
Each Path⊠Heaven, Human, Asura, Animal, Ghost, and Hell⊠demanded radically different approaches. The Ghost Path required obsession and emotional refinement; the Asura Path relied on martial fury and the sharpening of oneâs essence through endless conflict. Animal instincts, karmic merit, spiritual harmony with fate⊠these werenât just traits, they were entire systems of cultivation. Yet somehow, Da Wei had traversed each.
Hei Mao felt a chill. This wasnât just talent. It was something more. His master wasnât merely gifted⊠he was unclassifiable.
He looked closer.
Gone was the muddled spiritual root Da Wei once had. In its place was a Pure Yang Spiritual Root. No, not anymore. After the Essence Gathering, it had evolved again, becoming a Yin-Yang Mixed Spiritual Root. That kind of mutation required profound resonance between contradictory natures. It was said to be a root type that mirrored the universe itself, capable of harmony and destruction, creation and decay.
But that wasnât what troubled Hei Mao most.
What unsettled him was how Da Wei could even exist here like this. No soul in Meng Poâs world should be able to retain cultivation. Upon death, a cultivatorâs spiritual energy would erode, dissolving their power along with their flesh. The Underworld did not recognize corporeal cultivation⊠it was a realm of shadows, not essence.
Yet Da Wei had arrived with spiritual power intact.
When asked, Da Wei simply shrugged and explained: he had separated the cultivation of his soul from that of his body. It was a necessary strategy due to his reliance on Divine Possession, a technique that required him to abandon his physical form to inhabit others. Without this separation, he would be defenseless the moment he left his body behind.
In other words, Da Wei had cultivated like a ghost without ever dying.
With the assistance of Ox-Head and Horse-Face, two beings whose understanding of the Six Paths far surpassed Hei Maoâs, they began the long task of stabilizing Da Weiâs cultivation. The trio helped him sort through the tangled mass of energies he had collected across lifetimes of different people. They helped him recognize each Path, trace the imprint it left on his soul, and root it firmly within his cultivation framework.
Only then did true cultivation begin.
Soul Recognition was the first of the Three Cosmic Elements. Its requirement was simple but profound: identify the shape of oneâs soul in three dimensions. Most cultivators struggled to even reach the first. Da Wei had already begun with it, likely due to the aftereffects of merging with Jue Bu or tapping into the Destiny Seeking Eyes if what Da Wei had shared with him had all been true. Da Wei soon reached the Second Dimension. Then the Third.
But he did not stop.
Where others would proceed to the next stage, Da Wei pressed on. He recognized his soul in a First Dimension⊠and a Second⊠then a Third again, and then again. By the time he finished, six soul-constructs spun around the core of his being⊠an asterisk pattern gleaming inside his Dantian. Six Souls. Six anchors. Six reflections of the Six Paths.
None of them could believe it.
Essence Gathering came next. It required the cultivator to layer spiritual essence in the Dantian a hundred times over. Each layer would compress into the next until all essence fused into a single, refined nucleus. When Da Wei reached the end, his spiritual root mutated once again⊠transforming fully into a Yin-Yang Mixed Root, a balance of opposing forces neither rejecting nor overtaking the other.
And then came the most dangerous step in the Three Cosmic Elements: Bloodline Refinement.
This stage was brutal, even in the best circumstances. One had to burst their meridians, then forcibly reconnect them to the brain, heart, and Dantian. It was a reconstruction of self and redefining what the body was meant to be. Da Wei, though a spiritual body, accomplished the unthinkable. He conjured a physical form, refined from soul essence alone.
By the end, he stood not as a mere ghost or drifting soul⊠but as something new.
It took tens of thousands of years in Meng Poâs world, but finally, Da Wei completed the Three Cosmic Elements. Soul Recognition. Essence Gathering. Bloodline Refinement. All aligned with the Six Paths. All balanced upon a foundation not forged by tradition, but carved by madness, instinct, and terrifying ingenuity.
Hei Mao stared at his master in silence for a long time.
And then, with a tired chuckle, he whispered to himself:
ââŠHe really isnât human.â