Chapter 70: Chapter 70

Morning came too early and too cold. Hunter woke to frost patterns on his window. Seven weeks until winter’s arrival. Seven weeks to prepare for cold that killed as efficiently as any enemy.

He pulled himself from bed, joints protesting yesterday’s mental exhaustion. The sect investigation had drained him. Like surviving execution left invisible scars that ached in cold weather.

The jade token hung around his neck on leather cord. Heavy. Permanent. Reminder that legitimacy came with chains attached.

Time to do what he did every morning now. What Han had taught them five weeks ago when they’d started this journey toward the waystation.

Actually cultivate properly instead of just existing with power.

Hunter made his way to the small courtyard outside his quarters. Found Han already there in meditation posture. The old soldier opened his eyes as Hunter approached.

"Early riser," Han observed. "Good habit for cultivation. Dawn qi is clearest."

"Couldn’t sleep," Hunter admitted. "Too much processing yesterday’s events."

"Understandable. Being investigated by sect while observer documented your every disaster would disturb anyone’s rest." Han gestured to spot beside him. "Might as well make productive use of insomnia. Cultivation meditation helps settle disturbed thoughts."

Hunter settled into lotus position. Pulled out the worn manual Han had been teaching from for five weeks. Iron Body Foundation Scripture. Yellowed pages. Water stained. The cultivation technique that had gotten them all this far.

He’d been following its instructions every morning. Breathing patterns. Meridian circulation. Spiritual energy refinement. The basics that Han had learned twenty years ago from a dead cultivator’s corpse.

Hunter closed his eyes. Began the circulation pattern described in the manual. Inhale through specific meridians. Hold the energy in the dantian. Exhale through different pathways. Standard foundation building technique. Dıscover more novels at nοvelfire.net

His spiritual energy responded. Flowed through the prescribed paths. Everything working as the manual described.

But something felt wrong. Like following a map that only showed main roads. The technique was correct but limited. Missing details. Missing depth. Like learning to write but only being taught half the alphabet.

Hunter pushed his circulation harder. Trying to break past the limitations he felt. His spiritual energy churned against invisible walls. The manual’s technique only went so far. After that, nothing. Just hitting ceiling.

His foundation trembled under the pressure. Not quite stable. Not quite solid. Power without proper structure supporting it.

"You’re forcing it," Han said quietly. "I can see your spiritual pressure fluctuating. The manual says to circulate gently. Pushing too hard damages meridians."

"I’m trying to go deeper," Hunter said through gritted teeth. "The technique feels incomplete. Like there should be more."

"There probably is more," Han agreed. Resignation in his voice. "This is common grade manual. Lowest tier. What poor outer sect disciples get. It teaches foundation building but nothing advanced. I’ve been stuck at its ceiling for twenty years."

Hunter opened his eyes. Looked at Han. Really looked. The old soldier’s expression carried two decades of frustration. Of hitting walls. Of thinking it was personal failure instead of limited tools.

"The manual got me to Peak Body Refining," Han continued. "But I can’t break through to Foundation Realm. Can’t figure out the next step. The technique just stops. Maybe I’m not talented enough. Maybe I’m too old. Maybe I’m just not meant for higher cultivation."

The words carried weight of accepted failure. Of someone who’d given up fighting limitations they couldn’t overcome.

Hunter wanted to say something. Opened his mouth.

Cold qi washed over the courtyard like winter storm arriving ahead of schedule.

Liu Mei appeared at the courtyard entrance. Ice blue eyes studying them both with professional assessment expression. She’d probably been watching for who knew how long. Permanent observer starting her official monitoring duties.

"Morning meditation," she observed. Walking closer. "Commendable discipline. Many cultivators neglect daily practice once they advance."

"We try to maintain routine," Han said. Standing respectfully. Peak Body Refining showing proper deference to Peak Core Formation. "Master Hunter and I practice together most mornings."

"Show me your circulation technique," Liu Mei commanded Hunter. Not requesting. Ordering. "Full demonstration."

Hunter settled back into position. Closed eyes. Began the Iron Body Foundation Scripture’s circulation pattern. Inhale. Hold. Exhale. Spiritual energy flowing through prescribed meridians exactly as manual instructed.

Thirty seconds of perfect circulation. Then hitting the ceiling. The limitations. The place where technique stopped teaching and left practitioners stranded.

Hunter opened his eyes. Found Liu Mei staring at him with expression of growing horror.

"What circulation method is that?" Her voice was carefully controlled. Too controlled. Like someone trying very hard not to explode. "Where did you learn that technique?"

"Han’s been teaching us," Hunter said. Confused by her reaction. "Every morning for five weeks. Basic foundation building from his manual."

"Show me this manual."

Han produced the Iron Body Foundation Scripture. Handed it over with visible nervousness. Liu Mei took it like someone accepting poisonous snake. Flipped through pages with increasing dismay.

"This is incomplete," she said flatly. "Badly incomplete. This is fragment of proper cultivation manual. Maybe forty percent of full technique. You’ve been training with this?"

"For twenty years," Han admitted quietly. "It’s all I had."

"And you’ve been teaching everyone this limited technique for five weeks?"

Liu Mei closed her eyes. Took deep breath. Her spiritual pressure leaked slightly. Cold qi making frost form on nearby stones. When she opened her eyes again, her professional mask was back in place. Barely.

"This explains everything," she said. Voice tight. "Your foundation instability. The chaotic spiritual energy. The circulation problems. You built your Foundation Realm base using incomplete technique. Like constructing building with half a blueprint. The structure exists but it’s fundamentally flawed because instructions stopped halfway through."

She turned to Han. Expression softening slightly. "This isn’t your fault. You didn’t know. But this manual is disaster. It teaches correct basics but provides no advanced techniques. No refinement methods. No progression pathways. It’s designed to get outer disciples to Body Refining Level Five then stops. Everything after that is missing."

"I thought I wasn’t talented enough," Han said. Twenty years of failure suddenly recontextualized. "I thought I’d hit my ceiling."

"You hit the manual’s ceiling," Liu Mei corrected. "Not your personal ceiling. This technique can’t take anyone to Foundation Realm. The instructions literally don’t exist in this fragment. You got to Peak Body Refining through pure stubbornness and discipline despite having manual that was working against you. That’s impressive, not shameful."

Han stared at her. Processing. Two decades of self doubt cracking under new information.

"How bad is the damage?" Hunter asked. "From training with incomplete manual?"

"Not catastrophic but not good," Liu Mei said. Flipping through pages with professional assessment. "The basics are correct. Breathing techniques are sound. Initial circulation patterns are accurate. But you’ve built foundation using limited technique then tried to force advancement without proper methods. That’s created instability. Particularly problematic combined with your mysterious master’s rapid advancement."

She closed the manual. Handed it back to Han. "You need proper technique. Complete manual with full progression pathways. I can provide one."

"You can?" Han’s voice carried desperate hope. Twenty years of stagnation suddenly offering exit.

"Azure Cloud Sect outer disciples receive standard cultivation manual," Liu Mei explained. "Nothing special. Basic tier above what you have. But complete. Full technique from mortal to Core Formation with clear progression at every stage. I’m authorized to provide copies to affiliated territory members for training purposes."

She pulled jade slip from her robes. Identical to communication talisman she’d given Hunter yesterday. Pressed spiritual energy into it. Information flowed outward. Calling for something.

"I’m requesting manual delivery from nearest sect outpost," Liu Mei said. "Should arrive within three days. Until then, everyone stops using incomplete technique. You’re doing more harm than good continuing with limited instructions."

"What do we do instead?" Hunter asked.

"Basic breathing exercises only. No circulation. No refinement. Just breath work to calm spiritual energy and prevent further damage." Liu Mei’s expression was serious. "Your foundations are unstable. Han’s is limited. Everyone else who’s been training with incomplete manual is building on flawed base. We stop immediately. Wait for proper technique. Then rebuild correctly from stable foundation."

She looked at assembled group. More people had gathered during conversation. Drawn by cold spiritual pressure and raised voices. The twins. Mingzhu. Chen Lao. Teacher Bai. Even some refugees curious about commotion.

"How many people have been training with this manual?" Liu Mei asked.

"Everyone who swore to Shadow Legion," Han said. "Plus Master Hunter. About sixteen people total following incomplete technique for five weeks."

Liu Mei’s spiritual pressure spiked. Frost spreading across courtyard. "Sixteen people building foundations on incomplete instructions. This is worse than I thought. We’re not dealing with one unstable cultivator. We’re dealing with potential mass cultivation deviation if anyone tries to advance using flawed technique."

The words landed like death sentence. Mass cultivation deviation. Multiple people’s foundations shattering simultaneously. Crippling or killing everyone who’d been trying to improve themselves.

"How do we fix it?" Hunter asked. Trying to keep panic from voice. "Specifically. What’s the process?"

Liu Mei’s expression softened fractionally. Professional investment engaging. "First, stop using incomplete manual immediately. Second, wait for proper technique delivery. Third, I personally guide everyone through foundation stabilization using correct method. Fourth, once stable, we begin proper cultivation training with complete instructions."

"Depends on individual damage. Han’s been training wrong for twenty years. His foundation needs extensive rebuilding. Could take months." She looked at Hunter. "Your foundation is catastrophic combination of incomplete manual plus mysterious master’s forced advancement. Your rebuilding process will be longer. Possibly three months minimum."

"I don’t have three months before winter."

"Then you’ll face winter with unstable foundation," Liu Mei said. "Better than facing winter with shattered foundation from attempted advancement. Your choice. Rush again and risk permanent crippling. Or train properly and have weak but stable base to build from."

Hunter knew the answer. Had known it the moment she explained the problem. He’d been flying on borrowed power and incomplete instructions. Time to actually learn properly.

"Teach us," Hunter said. "Properly. From beginning. We’ll do whatever it takes."

Liu Mei’s professional mask cracked enough to show approval. "Good answer. Shows wisdom your mysterious master apparently delayed teaching." She raised her voice to address everyone gathered. "Anyone who’s been training with Iron Body Foundation Scripture needs to hear this. Your technique is incomplete. You’re building foundations on flawed instructions. We’re stopping immediately and rebuilding correctly."

Movement from barracks. The panic trio emerged. Tao rubbing sleep from eyes. Xuan looking confused. Lex carrying the incomplete manual he’d been studying every morning.

"But we’ve been making progress," Tao protested. "I can feel my spiritual energy getting stronger."

"You can feel it getting more chaotic," Liu Mei corrected. "Incomplete technique creates power without stability. Short term gains. Long term disaster. I’m preventing the disaster before it cripples all of you."

Qiu appeared with his inevitable ledger. Already making notes. "This is significant development. We’ve been investing time and effort into flawed cultivation method. Classic sunk cost fallacy. Good thing we’re stopping before damage becomes permanent."

"How did you know the manual was incomplete?" Han asked Liu Mei.

"Two hundred years of cultivation experience," Liu Mei said. "I’ve seen hundreds of manuals. Can recognize quality and completeness at glance. Iron Body Foundation Scripture is well known as bottom tier technique. Cheap. Widely distributed. Deliberately incomplete so outer disciples can’t advance without paying for better manuals later."

She gestured at the worn pages in Han’s hands. "That manual represents exactly what it cost. Nothing. Dead cultivator with worthless technique died and you inherited his failure. Not your fault. Just bad luck in choice of corpse to loot twenty years ago."

The blunt assessment cut through decades of self doubt. Han stood straighter. Twenty years of thinking he was inadequate replaced with understanding he’d been using inadequate tools.

"The proper manual you’re providing," Teacher Bai said. Scholarly interest engaging. "What’s it called?"

"Azure Cloud Foundation Scripture," Liu Mei replied. "Standard outer disciple technique taught to anyone who joins sect. Nothing impressive. Basic tier cultivation from mortal through Core Formation. But complete. Every stage explained. Every progression pathway detailed. Exactly what you need to build stable foundation and advance properly."

"When does it arrive?" Hunter asked.

"Three days. Sect outpost is forty miles south. They’ll send runner with jade slip copy." Liu Mei pulled out her ice crystal notebook. Documentation never stopped. "Until then, we focus on damage control. Basic breathing exercises. Spiritual energy calming techniques. Foundation assessment to determine individual damage levels."

She flipped to blank page. Ice forming into fresh documentation surface. "Everyone who’s been training with incomplete manual needs evaluation. Line up. I’m checking cultivation bases one at a time. This will take hours. Be patient."

The Shadow Legion formed line. Some nervous. Some curious. All understanding that their cultivation journey had hit unexpected obstacle requiring professional intervention.

Hunter watched Liu Mei work. Assessing each person individually. Checking spiritual energy flow. Testing foundation stability. Making notes in her ice crystal notebook with clinical precision.

Her "professional investment" manifesting as actual teaching. Actual care. Actual effort to fix problems she’d inherited by recommending their affiliated status.

Maybe having permanent observer wasn’t purely punishment after all.

Maybe it was opportunity disguised as oversight.

Three days until proper manual arrived. Three days of breathing exercises and foundation assessment. Three days of accepting that shortcuts created problems and proper training required time.

Hunter could wait three days. Could accept that cultivation wasn’t instant power and system shortcuts. Was slow, methodical process requiring correct tools and patient instruction.

He’d spent five weeks building foundation on incomplete manual. Spent four months advancing through Luna’s forced progression. Time to actually learn cultivation properly.

From the beginning. With complete instructions. Under guidance of someone who actually knew what they were doing.

His first real teacher in cultivation world. Former observer turned official monitor turned reluctant instructor because professional investment required preventing mass cultivation deviation.

Could be worse, he supposed.

Could always be worse.

The morning sun rose over Shadow Rest. Frost melting slowly under dawn light. Forty eight people learning that sometimes starting over was better than continuing down wrong path.

Sometimes incomplete map was worse than no map. Sometimes limitations were in tools, not people. Sometimes help arrived disguised as criticism and proper manual disguised as professional obligation.

Hunter breathed. Simple exercise. No circulation. Just breath. Waiting for proper technique to arrive. Waiting to rebuild foundation correctly this time.

Three days. He could wait three days.

Then the real cultivation training would begin.