Of course, it wasnât that simple. No sooner had the captain walked away than Lifen appeared. She smiled at him, clearly happy to see him up and about, but there was a line of worry between her eyes. Sen gave a quick, longing glance at the beach before giving Lifen his full attention.
âIâm glad to see that youâre awake, but should you be up and about? Lo Meifeng seemed,â Lifen frowned a little, âconcerned that you might have damaged yourself.â
Sen lifted an eyebrow at that. After a moment of consideration, though, he supposed that Lo Meifeng wouldnât have needed any kind of special knowledge to develop that concern. Bleeding from the eyes, ears, and nose, followed by unconsciousness rarely heralded
good
things for most people. She wasnât even wrong. Sen had damaged himself. It just wasnât the permanent kind of damage. At least, he didnât think it was. He supposed that you never knew for sure until you tried to heal from something. He did his best to give Lifen a reassuring smile.
âIâm fine,â he said.
The skepticism on her face was so profound that it almost looked like parody to Sen.
âFine? Really? So, if a giant wave came crashing into the cove, youâre all ready to protect us in another one of those bubbles?â
Sen coughed a little sheepishly. âNo. I wouldnât want to do that again. Not right now, at any rate.â
âMmmm hmmmm,â said Lifen.
Sen held up a hand. âBut, Iâm not hurt in a way that needs bed rest. Itâs nothing a bit of alchemy and a steady supply of qi wonât solve.â
Lifen looked dubious but relented. âFine. Itâs not like I could really stop you, anyway. How about you just try to not injure yourself any more for the next day or two.â
âI will do my utmost to avoid more injuries for at least a day or two,â said Sen, giving Lifen a little bow.
âYeah, right,â she sighed.
âWhat are you doing up on deck, anyway?â asked Sen. âI figured youâd be tucked away somewhere with your cultivation manuals.â
âIâm helping.â
She said the words slowly, as though she might be speaking to a particularly dense horse.
âAnd thatâs good, but why?â
Lifen rolled her eyes. âI might not be the cultivator Lo Meifeng is, or stack up against the might of Judgementâs Gale, but even my level of cultivation makes me stronger than most of the people on this ship. It gives me more endurance too.â
Sen blinked a couple of times in surprise. She wasnât wrong. Somehow, heâd fallen into the trap of thinking of her as physically weak. And in comparison to a core cultivator or an advanced body cultivator, she was. Relative to mortals, though, sheâd seem just as superhuman as Sen did. Just maybe a touch less flashy. Sen only had experience dealing with mortals as a foundation formation cultivator. He
knew
that even a casual blow from him could end a mortal life in a snap. He'd never dealt with mortals as a qi condensing cultivator. Heâd never had to consider their relative strength levels or relative durability. Yet, he supposed the gulf between mortals and qi condensing cultivators must look about as wide as the gulf between foundation formation cultivators and core cultivators. Right up until you were closing in on bridging that divide, the gulf was
vast
.
Sen nodded. âThat makes sense. I wasnât thinking about it in those terms.â
âThatâs because you, at times, are ridiculously bad at considering the practicalities.â
Sen laughed. âMy grandmother would agree with you.â
Lifen stiffened and then let out an exasperated breath. âHonestly, I hate that woman sometimes. I can feel her glaring at me.â
Sen looked over Lifenâs shoulder and saw Lo Meifeng standing there, tapping her foot impatiently. A familiar impish feeling swelled in Senâs chest. He was careful to keep it off his face as he leaned down and whispered in Lifenâs ear.
âWant to have a bit of fun at her expense?â
âSure,â said Lifen, suddenly enthused. âWhat will we do?â
âLetâs pretend that weâre going to head back to the cabin and do some of that pillow biting she recommended.â
A tiny giggle escaped from Lifenâs mouth before she pressed her lips together and nodded. Standing back up straight, Sen offered Lifen his arm. She slipped her arm through his and directed such a lust-filled stare up at him that Sen found it so distracting he nearly tripped. Theyâd made it all of three steps before Lo Meifeng appeared before them in a burst of speed and wind.
âOh no, you donât,â the woman declared.
Sen and Lifen kept straight faces for about three seconds before a snort escaped Sen. Then, a giggle slipped through Lifenâs tightly compressed lips. Then, they were both laughing uproariously at the increasingly unamused Lo Meifeng. The woman glared at both of them before she realized that sheâd been the butt of their joke. Then, she just looked exasperated.
âChildren,â she muttered to herself. âLifen, go back to being helpful if you please. I need a word with the young
hero
.â
Lifen looked like she might protest, but the young woman just couldnât seem to sustain the annoyance through her mirth. She patted Senâs arm before she wandered off to find some way to put her more-than-human strength to good use. Sen watched her go, appreciating the young womanâs curves. An annoyed cough brought his attention back to Lo Meifeng. She was glaring at him again.
âWhat?â he demanded. âSheâs nice to look at.â
Lo Meifeng opened her mouth, thought for a moment, then sighed. âFine. I suppose she is. If youâre done leering, though, we do need to talk.â
Sen groaned out loud. âReally? Iâve been out of bed for all of half an hour. Is this something that we
need
to discuss right now? Or is this just something that youâve been chewing on for the last day or two that you want to unload on me now that Iâm back on two feet?â
Without missing a beat, Lo Meifeng said, âBoth.â
âAlright. Letâs have it.â
âDid you think that I was joking when I said that it was my job to keep you alive?â
Sen frowned at her. âNo.â
âOkay. So, at what point did you
decide
that youâd take on a core cultivator in a monsoon?â
Sen snorted. âWhat makes you think I had a chance to decide any such thing?â
That seemed to throw Lo Meifeng off. âWhat?â
âThe amount of time between when I realized that there was another cultivator out there and when there was a giant wave about to drive us to the bottom of the sea could be measured in seconds. I didnât decide anything. I just acted. What happened to that other cultivator anyway?â
Lo Meifeng processed his words in silence for a moment before her lips turned up into a smug little smile. âHe wonât be bothering us again.â
âWas it a demonic cultivator?â Sen asked in a hushed tone.
âNo,â said Lo Meifeng. âNot that I could tell anyway. Still, itâd be awfully coincidental if he was just out here whipping up storms and trying to sink ships for fun.â
âPossibly. Unless he was out here trying to sink ships for profit. Most ships carry cargo. Itâs easier to take if all those pesky crew members are dead.â
âThere are easier targets than a ship with three cultivators on it.â
Sen sighed. âSo, are we assuming they know where we are?â
Lo Meifeng paused then to consider her answer. Ultimately, she shook her head. âThey may have suspected we left by ship, but I imagine whatever orders they handed out were something along the lines of sink any ship you find with cultivators aboard.â
âWhat if he reported back?â
âUnlikely. There arenât that many long-distance communication treasures out there. Certainly not enough to hand them out to every would-be assassin. When he doesnât report back in, theyâll know something happened, but even thatâs not really proof it was us. Plus, weâll be long gone by the time anyone comes looking.â
Sen didnât really like it, but there also wasnât much to be done about it. He might feel comfortable about hopping off the ship right then and there and taking his chances in the wilds, where no one was likely to find him. Heâd only given Lo Meifeng even odds of surviving it. Lifen wouldnât make it. That meant that they were stuck with the ship until they at least reached some kind of civilization and roads. He didnât love the idea of traveling openly on the roads either, but theyâd come a very long way from Emperorâs Bay. The demonic cultivators might have a long reach, but they couldnât be everywhere, couldnât watch every mile of road, every stretch of river, every possible means of travel.
âVery well,â said Sen, not doing much to hide his lack of enthusiasm for the plan.
Lo Meifeng arched an eyebrow at him. âI suppose you have a better solution.â
âI donât. It doesnât mean I love the one we have. If thatâs all, I have some things I need to go and do.â
âGo?â
âTo the beach. I need access to a steadier supply of all the types of qi than I can get out here on the water. Otherwise, itâll take me five times as long to heal.â
âFine, Iâll get a boat ready.â
âNo need,â said Sen, and leapt over the side of the ship.
Even as he fell toward the water below, he could hear Lo Meifeng shouting after him.
âDamn it! I have to come with you!â
Feeling another surge of impishness, Sen shouted back a bunch of garbled nonsense with only one understandable phrase in the middle. âMoon cakes.â