SakeTami
G. Tolley
G. Tolley

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Chapter 406 – Life 109, Age 32, Martial King 1

I stood on stage in the middle of the Palace’s Grand Auditorium, feet spread shoulder-width apart, hands clasped behind my back, chin held high. I wasn’t a large man—barely taller than Lau CoiHung, who stood a couple of places to my right—but I needed to give an impression of solidity.

This was a show—both for the hundreds of young alchemists in the stands around us, and for the elders who were watching from the shadows. I needed to convince everyone that I deserved my position as our team’s leader.

For most people, this wasn’t even a question. The quality of my pills was borderline legendary, and I had been able to train the Palace’s top young alchemists to concoct items of a similar caliber. I was able to use ‘my blessing’ to uncover new recipes through the study of herbal teas, and I had shared these recipes around, helping all of the Palace’s high-level alchemists gain enlightenments. If I wasn’t suitable for the position of our group’s leader, then who was?

There was just one small issue: I was a low-level Martial King, while Mandakh was already a mid-level Emperor.

The competition against the other two Palaces was only five years away. Several of the elders weren’t convinced that I would even be able to reach Martial Emperor before then, and even if I did, it was unlikely that I would have much time to study Rank 6 alchemy. So, there were rumblings that the position of leader should be handed over to Mandakh, while I assumed the role of our group’s trainer.

I could understand this sentiment, and under normal circumstances, I might have even considered stepping aside voluntarily. I didn’t need the validation that would come from leading our team to victory, and I would have been happy to delegate the task to someone else.

Considering that our group’s leader would be the one to face Jon in the upcoming competition, however, I couldn’t afford to stand on the sidelines.

So, I stood on the stage of the Palace’s Grand Auditorium, both feet firmly planted on my podium, and waited to hear how the elders would decide our team’s final roster. Though, from the way the auditorium had been arranged, I already had an idea of what to expect.

Five platforms sat atop the stage, with each of these platforms holding one of the alchemists who had placed in the top five during the competition that had happened 10 years earlier. Mandakh stood on the far left, and Lau CoiHung stood to his right. I had been placed on the fourth podium, denoting my previous rank.

Once everyone was in position, the voice of a hidden elder boomed throughout the auditorium. “10 years ago, the five youths in front of you proved that they were the best alchemists the Palace had to offer. Much has changed since then, but if you wish to claim one of their positions as your own, then you must prove yourself worthy of it.”

The platform to my left lit up, illuminating the young man who had placed fifth in the previous competition.

“Does anyone believe themselves more capable than Pill King Leung?”

Almost immediately, one of the young women I had been training jumped onto the stage. During the previous competition, she had only been a Martial Grandmaster, limiting her ability to compete against the older Martial Lords. Since then, however, she had been training diligently and was a shoo-in for a spot on our team.

“Demonstrate your abilities.”

That was it. That was all the guidance she was given.

The young woman took a moment to look around the stage, but other than the five of us who were standing on our podiums, there was nothing—no herbs, no pill furnace.

For a normal person, this would have been a problem. How was someone supposed to demonstrate their skills without the proper tools or resources? For a woman who had spent the last decade immersed in alchemy, however, the idea of going anywhere without herbs and a furnace was unthinkable.

Reaching into the storage bag at her waist, the young woman pulled out a work bench, a custom pill furnace, and a set of twelve herbs. Then, working carefully, she proceeded to concoct a five-patterned Rank 5 Chained Movements Pill.

“Pill King Leung, are you capable of rivaling this pill?”

On the fifth podium, Leung cupped his fists and bowed to the middle of the auditorium. “No, Elder.”

“Very well. Step down.”

After bowing once more—this time, to the young woman who had defeated him—Leung stepped off the stage and sat down in the audience.

The elder next gave everyone a chance to prove themselves more capable than this newest member of our group, but when no one showed any interest in stepping forward, the light beneath the woman’s podium faded to darkness. Then, my podium burst alight.

“Does anyone believe themselves more capable than Pill King Su?”

No one moved.

After a full minute of silence, the light of my podium faded, and the elder moved on.

Following this, the young man on the third podium was challenged by the Lord who had placed sixth in the previous competition. These two were more evenly matched, but this time, the challenger was defeated, allowing the young man to retain his place on the third podium.

When no new challengers stepped forward, the light of the third podium faded, and Lau CoiHung’s podium lit up. Unsurprisingly, though, no one was willing to step forward to challenge either her or Mandakh, so the rest of our team was left intact.

The composition of our team had been finalized after the concoction of only three pills.

Why had the elders gone to so much trouble—packing all the Palace’s young alchemists into this auditorium—for such an anemic competition? If their only goal had been to find out who the five best alchemists were, then this competition hadn’t even been necessary. I could have told them which five of us to select weeks ago.

No, like so many things, this competition was a show. Everyone was given an opportunity to challenge for a spot on our team, and they either chose not to compete, or they chose to compete and failed. This ensured that no one had any grounds to complain that this selection had been unfair.

Why not have a real competition, though? Why not have everyone concoct the best pills they could and compare the results?

Because the Palace was full of spies.

If such a competition were to take place, the moment it was over, news would quickly spread to the other Palaces. 10 years ago, this wasn’t much of a problem. At that point, the final contest between the three Palaces was still 15 years away, and anything our opponents learned would be out of date long before it was relevant. With that contest now rapidly approaching, however, allowing the other Palaces to know exactly what our alchemists were capable of would have been a mistake.

With the way this competition had been set up, no one had needed to do anything more than concoct a pill that was slightly more powerful than their opponent’s. This had made it so that no one could know the exact skill level of any of our alchemists.

So far, at least.

There was still one last thing that needed to be decided.

“During the previous competition,” boomed the elder, “Pill Emperor Mandakh proved himself the most capable of our Palace’s young alchemists. Therefore, the elders have decided that he will lead our team against the other two Palaces. Does anyone object to this decision?”

Several heads turned in my direction as I stepped off my podium, cupped my fists, and bowed to the center of the auditorium. “I wish to challenge for the position of our team’s leader.”

“Demonstrate your abilities.”

After nodding to the elder in the corner of the room, I reached into my storage bag and pulled out a workbench, several herbs, and an ugly, battered pill furnace.

There was a round of murmurs at this—both at my choice of herbs and at my choice of furnace—but I ignored them.

Could I concoct a more valuable pill than Mandakh? Yes. I had never seen Mandakh create anything better than a six-patterned Rank 5 pill. He could concoct Rank 6 pills, but his soul wasn’t strong enough to contain the energy of empowered Rank 6 herbs, so he struggled to imbue them with more than just a single pattern. I, meanwhile, had concocted a nine-patterned Rank 5 pill when I was still a mere Lord. Now that I was a King, making such pills was child’s play.

Did the Palace’s elders know all this? Yes. Yes, they did.

So, why had they decided to make Mandakh our leader? Wasn’t this just slapping themselves in the face?

The problem was that, in the final contest between the three Palaces, alchemists would only be allowed to concoct Rank 6 pills. It wouldn’t matter how nice a Rank 5 pill I was able to make. If I couldn’t concoct a Rank 6 pill, then I wouldn’t even be allowed to compete.

Typically, to control the energy of Rank 6 herbs, alchemists either needed an Emperor-level will-lock or peak three-star affinities in every type of energy the herbs contained. Without one of these, the moment the herbs’ medicinal energy was liberated from the surrounding toxins, it would dissipate into thin air.

I had only recently advanced to Martial King, so with only five years to go, whether or not I would be able to advance to Martial Emperor in time for the upcoming contest was still an open question. Also, I had already told Chan—and thus, all the Palace’s elders—that I didn’t have the affinities necessary to concoct a Rank 6 pill with an Emperor’s will-lock.

This was why the elders had felt it both necessary and safe to name Mandakh as our group’s leader. He could concoct better Rank 6 pills than anyone in our group.

This was what the elders believed, at least.

After taking a minute to compose myself, I picked up my nine Rank 6 herbs and tossed them all into my furnace at once.

While Ancestor Wong had been a top-notch refiner, he clearly wasn’t too skilled with formations, because this new furnace of mine lacked even the most basic of fire qi formations. In a way, this was good, because it meant that I would eventually be able to inscribe it with my own Rank 9 formations. This was bad, however, because without either a spirit fire or formations, I would need to purify these Rank 6 herbs using nothing but my Martial King 1 cultivation base.

No matter how much I might have wished otherwise, this simply wasn’t possible.

If necessary, I could have cleansed these herbs using one of the many spirit fires that were locked away in my inner world, but there was no need. During my recent seclusion, I had learned that imbuing a pill furnace with large chunks of one’s soul has some rather… interesting side effects.

After stabilizing the nine herbs, I injected a thread of pill qi into the uneven metal plate that served as the top of the furnace.

With a normal furnace, this qi would have either been sucked into the inner chamber or dissipated into the aether. With this furnace, however, the qi was ripped from my control. Then, entirely independent of my will, it swirled around to form the shape of a basic Rank 5 Qi Gathering Formation, complete with a filter for pill qi.

This pseudo-formation wasn’t anywhere near as stable as a normal, carved formation, but it did what I needed it to do. It pulled in pill qi from the surrounding environment and funneled it into my furnace.

Taking hold of this energy, I directed it toward the herbs, melted their physical shells, and began burning away their toxins.

This should have caused the medical energies of the herbs to dissipate. I had chosen a pill that only required herbs of the basic five elements, but I still only had high three-star affinities with those elements. This was close, but it shouldn’t have been enough to keep the medicinal energies under control. I should have needed peak three-star affinities.

However, as I focused on keeping the medicinal energies under control, a power that resonated with my soul welled up within the walls of my furnace, locking the herbs in place.

On its own, the fragment of my soul that now resided in the furnace wasn’t powerful enough to completely control the energy of Rank 6 herbs. However, by combining the forces of both my affinities and my furnace, I was able to manipulate them freely.

Once all the herbs were perfectly cleansed, I worked together with my furnace to pull the energies together and meld them into the proper structure. Then, after imbuing this structure with a total of four patterns, I condensed it into a pill.

Could I have gone further? Possibly, but once the medicinal energies were empowered by the strength of four patterns, I was struggling to keep everything locked down. Going any further would have risked an explosion.

In any case, four was more than enough.

After scooping the pill into a jade bottle and placing the bottle down on my workbench, I gave a martial salute and bowed to a remote corner of the auditorium.

For several long moments, the room was entirely silent. Then, the elder’s voice boomed out once more. This time, however, it was somewhat strained. “Pill Emperor… Mandakh… are you… capable of rivaling this pill?”

Mandakh stepped forward and bowed–first to the center of the auditorium, then to me. “No, Elder. I am not.”

“Very well… The leader of our alchemy team will be Pill Emperor Su Fang. Does anyone object to this decision?”

The room, once more, returned to silence.

“Then, good luck, Emperor Su. May you do our Palace proud.”

Comments

Honestly, you talk with people on the Discord. The Patreon comment section isn't great for a lot of this. https://discord.gg/NruktWPh32

Greg Tolley

I would appreciate some feedback from anyone on my theorys. I know my spelling and grammar is bad. I know the comments are long, but I tried to keep them from sounding like crazy rambling. I'm a bit obsessed. This story really has me hooked.

Michael Ferguson

I think exploring each temple would start to make Fang's blessing obvious. Emperor Lie isn't the only person who's blessing can spot Fang. We don't know what Jon remembers yet. Chan nearly guessed what Fang's blessing is once already. Just going off of what Fang doesn't know. The trick will be making allies. So the 9 river sect is out. Jon is from there, and he basically picked a fight with Fang, because of his blessing. The 9 rivers will be sporting Jon through the loops. I can only hope Fang sticks around to see the fallout if Jon dies again.

Michael Ferguson

At this point I think Fang should consider the path of the temples. Body and soul is only soul for him. The Saints need body, spirit, and soul to cultivate. They need the laws drawn through Qi of the clans carma. But for Fang this is not important. He could cultivate one type of Qi each life, then enter each temple. His death would reset his blood essence, and Qi connection. His soul would still be bonded to each temple. But he can negotiate what type of oath he takes. As long as they don't force him to follow self destructive orders. Fang could walk away from there oaths or work around them with his inner world. It could be possible to cut oaths out of his soul. And the punishment for breaking them is death. Just make sure that death is the end of your oath when you take it.

Michael Ferguson

The easiest way for Fang to accomplish this is with the time loop. Lock 6 kids in at peak Sovereign then make one into a Spirit. After they are locked in at the start of the loop you can start giving them memories orbs. Rinse and repeat 5 times till you have an Ancestor. Saints probably don't need 5 Ancestors. Saints need to absorb laws. I think they need the carma of the hole clan to be one law. So the clan needs to be cultivating the same Qi. Obviously Fang should be the first Spirit, Ancestor, Saint. But the true gift of time loops is that Fang can train each group of 6 himself. Locking them in at peak Sovereign/Spirit means at the start of each loop they will still be fully loyal and Fang can choose what memories to share.

Michael Ferguson

“Before a sect can raise someone to Martial Ancestor, they must have 5 Martial Spirits and 25 Martial Sovereigns. This, along with the energy needed to raise a cultivator to Peak Ancestor, drains a Bloodline of its karmic potential for millennia, sending it into a Period of Decline. To join an Ancestor-level force is to join a faction that is already in its death throes.” Chapter 374

Michael Ferguson

Depending on how Fang develops he could dump his clan and just force blood essence on the Urgamal. In order to steal the laws their carma creates. I think that it would be better to experiment with body cultivation. And adding soul in the Ruler tiers.

Michael Ferguson

With blood essence it's definitely not necessary to breed a better clan. The Saints are just drawing in carma of the laws they represent through the Qi of there clan. So it's important to find any talent early and make them connected, body and soul, with blood essence.

Michael Ferguson

I think it just meant that spirits cant enter the 9 rivers continent

UnevenCornet341

Sovereign= Wu body, Spirit= Qi-body, Ancestors= soul  It was mentioned Spirit are not able to stay in this world. But a Saint can return. This is probably the flaw of no Wu body cultivation. Spirit are pure Qi-body with no body. So you need to absorb enough laws of Earth to recover a form of body.

Michael Ferguson

The way Wu and Qi can be added to both you spirit and body implies that this should also work on your soul. Essence can be cultivated into your soul making it permanent. In the bloodline tier carma is nessesary. Using your bloodline to mimic your own carma you are technically a true Sovereign/Spirit/Ancestor, but becomeing a Saint makes the flaws of your clan carma obvious. Your hole clan needs to be cultivating the same Qi, in order to support a saint. So it becomes necessary to use blood essence to bring in experts with the same Qi in order to use their carma. If you used your own carma through the Bloodline tiers then to become a Saint you would not need a clan to mimic your carma. To become a Saint you only need the spirit fire seeds that mach your own Qi and Wu. Laws of Earth are what make a Saint. As a true Saint you could draw on the carma of laws. As you advance through the Earthly tier your Qi and carma would tap into the laws they represent, drawing in the power of reality, With out the need of a clan. I assume the Heavenly Dao used bloodline carma as a crutch, but by being of Heaven they were able to change their cultivation fixing their foundation. This is why the Earthly Dao is unable to get further, without Fang. Heaven can't fix Earth's foundation for him. Earth's carma is still bound to Heaven, there isn't enough for Earth to rise.

Michael Ferguson

Bloodline Tier Sovereign= Wu body, Spirit= Qi-body, Ancestors= soul  In the bloodline tier you need a carma connection of body and soul.  But in the Ruler tier you can advance to false Ruler with Wu. This puts Wu and Qi in your energy body the missing piece is soul. You could then repeat this with body cultivation, becoming a false Ruler by putting Qi and Wu into your real body and add soul. Advancing to Sovereign would still need a type of Carma but not bloodline carma. Rather you need to draw in your own carma. Stealing the carma of your bloodline is just a way of mimicking your own carma. This is the true nature of essence. Temporary or permanent. You need to also cultivate essence of Wu and Qi, in your soul through the Ruler tiers, in order to be able to draw in your own carma in the bloodline tier.

Michael Ferguson

If Fang can buy Wu affinitys wouldn't it be better to buy the 9 element Wu affinitys before jumping to huff, skin, and tooth.

Michael Ferguson

Had a thought, Jon might be the answer to a higher cultivation realm. He can probably become a saint or whatever by taking the soul stuff, and on death he'd get completely reset. If Feng can earn the trust then the two might sneak something interesting out of a life.

Chris M

Seriously though why did Jon die when he lost?

Michael Ferguson

He's going to be an emperor in 5 years. I think it's good they start calling him emperor.

Michael Ferguson

Yeah... Only the Ancesters and Saints will be able to rival him in Age and Soul strength I thikn at least for now before he had his chance on a couple runs on this new continent... He'll become a spirit and ancester inevitably at some point after all and when he does... I wonder how much he'll push it here how insanely overpowered will he become on this continent compared to the top powers of it before he will be again presented with the next oppertunity to "move to the next level/tier of World" XD

Gopard

Tftc

Meir Banon

Thanks for the chapter! :-)

Stephen Pearson

"Then good luck King su"

AL

Nice! Good game Mandakh! I want to see that pill furnace in action some more. That was fun. Thanks for the chapter!

Michael Ferguson

I do enjoy the face slapping and proving his doubters wrong. Su Fang being absolutely ancient will never not be funny when you put it into context that he's facing children and even when he's competing agaisnt sovereigns he will still be incredibly ancient compared to them.

The Golem Crafter

wow

Irvinwop


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