Sen considered everything that had just happened, nodded to the patriarch, and turned to walk away.
âIs that it?â asked the patriarch. âNo questions? No demands?â
âYou donât have what I need, no way to give it to me, or no intention of giving it to me. Regardless of the reason, my business here is done,â said Sen. âI donât have the interest or the time to waste on figuring out which reason it is.â
âYouâre a core cultivator. You have nothing
but
time. Besides, simply because we donât have what you came for, it doesnât mean there is nothing here that you
need
.â
Sen hesitated at that, his eyes flickering to the spring. The longer heâd been there, the more certain heâd become that the spring was
alive
. Not merely in the sense that life pervaded all nature, but in the singular, self-aware sense. He was deeply, terribly curious about that spring, but heâd already wasted days learning about the water illusion. It had been a self-indulgence, although one with some practical applications, but he couldnât afford those kinds of distractions anymore. Sen shook his head.
âOther core cultivators may have nothing but time, but I do not.â
The patriarch gave Sen a searching look then. Then, the older cultivatorâs eyes went wide. âOh, I see. You donât just want the manual. You literally
need
the manual. I donât understand, though. How did you end up on the path of the Five-Fold Body Transformation without the manual in the first place? Itâs not the kind of thing that people stumble onto by accident.â
âI had an encounter with a divine turtle. He,â Sen considered how best to describe the encounter, ânudged me in that direction with some very specific advice about an elixir I was making. He gave me the name of the method, and not much else. I donât suppose you read the manual or know of anyone else in the sect that did?â
âI did not. Body cultivation wasnât an interest of mine when I was young enough for it to matter. By the time I really understood the advantages, well, it was too late to glean much benefit from it. Qi reinforcement helps me achieve
some
of the same results, if only temporarily. As for anyone else, itâs a body cultivation method with a very specific reputation for killing people. Not the sort of thing that piques most peopleâs interest.â
Sen sighed, nodded, and cast one last look at the spring. He so badly wanted to stay and examine that spring.
I wonder if I could talk to it
, thought Sen. The patriarchâs eyes tracked Senâs gaze.
âYou can feel it, canât you?â
âPatriarch?â
âYou can tell that the spring is alive and sentient. I can see it on your face. Take a day, just one day, and spend it here. You may discover something else that you need. Something to help with that anger I can see inside of you.â
Sen jerked at that. âIs it
so
obvious?â
âIâm a very old man who has spent most of his life dealing with younger cultivators. Youâre clearly working very, very hard to contain it. Still, itâs hard to keep things like that hidden from someone like me. After youâve seen a few hundred angry young cultivators, the signs arenât difficult to pick out.â
The part of Sen that was deeply mistrustful of sects narrowed his eyes at the patriarch. âWhy? Why encourage me to stay? You donât really want me here.â
âAn angry, sect-hating, core cultivator that very clearly punches above his cultivation level? Why in the world
wouldnât
I want someone like that hanging around in our most sacred place?â
Sen blinked a few times. âI think you just made my point for me.â
âNo. All of that is, believe it or not, besides the point. Iâve seen angry young cultivators before. More importantly, Iâve seen what angry young cultivators turn into when they donât find ways to cope with that anger. You possess a frankly frightening amount of power already. If you do succeed in finding a copy of that manual, and I strongly suspect youâll find a way to make it happen, youâll become even more powerful. That kind of anger and that kind of power are a recipe for terrible things.â
Sen hadnât thought about it in quite those terms before, but the patriarch had given voice to Senâs own deepest fears about his anger. Yet, that perceptiveness alone didnât account for the patriarch encouraging Sen to stay. Sure, he might become a danger someday, but it wasnât even close to a foregone conclusion that heâd come back to the Clear Spring sect looking for some long-delayed and nebulous payback. In fact, the odds were against it. With the way he accumulated problems and enemies, he'd likely have far more pressing problems down the road than making an example of a sect that had, in the end, not done anything to him.
âIt still doesnât explain why. Iâm not a disciple here. Youâll probably never even see me again.â
âIs it really so hard to imagine that I just see a young man who is struggling and wish to help? Itâs not as though itâs the first time that happened to you, is it?â
Sen opened his mouth to say something heâd probably regret, then forcibly made himself shut up and just think for a second. It
wouldnât
be the first time a nascent soul cultivator went out of their way to help him. He just didnât expect it from a sect patriarch. The patriarch clearly read the wariness on Senâs face, so he continued.
âThe other thing that being very old and very experienced teaches you is how to spot the people who will make it. While ascension is always a gamble, I can usually tell who will make it to core formation and who will break into the nascent soul stage. Assuming that you donât get yourself killed or your body cultivation method doesnât do you in, you
will
become a nascent soul cultivator. If youâre looking for a self-interested reason from me, perhaps Iâd prefer it if you had some reason to think kindly of us when you reach that threshold.â
That
was exactly the kind of pragmatic thinking that Sen expected from a sect, but he had the distinct impression that the patriarch had made it up on the spot.
Heâs giving me a reason Iâll accept
, thought Sen. Sen found himself once again staring at the spring.
Itâs just a day
, Sen justified to himself.
Iâm in a hurry, but I can spare one day
.
Especially if it will help me get this anger even a little more under control
. Sen decided that the patriarchâs motives didnât matter. Maybe he was just someone trying to do something kind for Sen. Maybe he felt like the sect owed Sen something stopping the fighting or helping out after. Maybe it was just some kind of consolation prize since the manual Sen wanted was out of reach. Sen nodded.
âAll right. I suppose one day wonât hurt.â
The patriarch looked both pleased and a little relieved at Senâs words. The older cultivator gestured that Sen should join him. The two men walked along the edge of the spring in silence for a time. The patriarch looked over Sen and, after a moment of thought, he asked a question.
âYou cultivate more than one kind of qi?â
âI do.â
âWhat do you do with them? What kind of techniques do you use?â
Sen frowned at the question. He wasnât sure he even understood what the patriarch was getting at.
âI defend myself,â said Sen.
âSo, combat techniques?â
âYes.â
âNothing else?â
âWell, thereâs the alchemy. I use qi for that.â
âAh, of course. I meant techniques that you control directly.â
Sen thought it over. âI made a house once.â
The patriarch stumbled at that. âIâm sorry. Did you say you made a house?â
Sen nodded. âYeah, it took a lot of earth qi, but I made a house. It had rooms and furniture, even a well.â
âAnything else?â
Sen shook his head. âNot really.â
âSo, you never try to use your qi to create?â
âCreate what?â
âBeauty,â said the patriarch. âWe all learn to fight. We must, but thereâs more to life than violence. Qi has more than one use.â
With that, the patriarch gestured at the spring, and Sen felt the surge of water qi from the man. Sen braced himself for the attack, but it never came. Instead, water flowed out of the spring and floated over the patriarchâs hand. As Sen watched, the water swiftly reshaped itself into the shape of a blooming rose. Then, it changed into a tiny, translucent horse that appeared to gallop on the patriarchâs hand. Then, it was a falcon that swooped and dove around the patriarch. Sen was amazed that he could pick out individual feathers on the falconâs watery body. The patriarch made a gentle gesture and the water returned to the spring. Sen was stunned at the patriarchâs casual mastery over water, but equally stunned that it had never occurred to him to try to make anything other than that house with qi. Sen knew he wasnât particularly artistic, but it could have been a hobby, a way to give his mind a break. And heâd
never
thought of it. Sen offered the patriarch a bow.
âYour mastery is extraordinary,â said Sen, not knowing what else to say.
âYou can get good at anything if you practice it for a thousand years,â said the patriarch with a smile. âAlthough, that wasnât really the point.â
Sen nodded. âI think I understood.â
âGood. Here we are,â said the patriarch.
Sen looked around, but it was just a patch of ground more or less identical to all of the other ground theyâd walked over to get to the spot. He lifted an eyebrow at the patriarch, who just gave Sen an amused, benign smile.
âIâve found that contemplation in this spot has the best results,â offered the patriarch.
Sen sighed a little inside at the cryptic words, but he doubted the older cultivator had brought him to that exact spot as a joke. Sen settled on the ground. The patriarch looked out over the spring. The patriarch looked conflicted for a moment before he shook his head and turned his attention back to Sen.
âI hope your time here will be as beneficial for you as it has been for me over the years.â
With that, the patriarch walked away, leaving Sen alone with the crystal-clear water of the spring and his own thoughts. As eager as Sen had been to examine the spring, he found himself hesitating now that he was on the cusp of it. It was one thing to believe that the spring was sentient and capable of communicating. It was something else to actually try to do it. Rather than jump right in, Sen let his mind drift back to his time on the mountain. He recalled the days when he'd been trying to understand why different kinds of qi appeared in different places. There had been a moment when Sen had felt something, something just beyond his reach, a kind of active force at work in the world. Sen let himself breathe, slow, controlled breaths. He didnât look for the life in the water. Instead, he looked for that force heâd so briefly brushed against on the mountain. He couldnât even explain to himself why he was doing that, except that he had an intuition that he should, that heâd learn something if he did it in
this
place.
At first, he struggled to remember how heâd done it that first time. He tried to remember what heâd been thinking and how it had felt. Heâd come so far since then, learned so much, but all of that accumulated experience was of limited value. After all, he hadnât really been trying to do anything back then. Heâd just been looking and exploring. Heâd had a sense of wonder about the world then that had slowly been eaten away by killing, death, and fear. He searched inside himself, questing for that sense of wonder that heâd once had in such abundance. It was still there, still inside him, but buried deep, so much deeper than he would have expected. It was a miracle that it hadnât been snuffed out completely.
He let that sense of wonder breathe, let it draw strength from him, let it fill him as it once had. And then, as it had done once before, the world revealed itself to him.