Book 3: Chapter 14: The Western Road

Name:Unintended Cultivator Author:
Book 3: Chapter 14: The Western Road

After their short break, during which Lifen slept almost non-stop, Sen had pushed hard for a few more days. Then, he started noticing the bodies. He didn’t point them out to Lifen because there was no benefit to that, but he’d formed a working theory about what was happening. He hoped that he was right. If he was, he’d be able to put away a vague, gnawing guilt that had been working on him since they’d decided to leave instead of going back to find Lo Meifeng. Unfortunately, he might also be wrong, which meant that he didn’t dare make it any easier to find them. Instead, he focused more on making sure that he found good places that were well off the road to set up camp. He took his time setting up the best formations he could to hide them.

While the repetition with the formations could prove tedious, Sen became increasingly adept with them. He even started having insights into how to make them better. He’d have to have a long discussion with Uncle Kho about formation theory when they next saw each other. While it had never been a particular focus of his education, Sen started working with offensive formations as well. He was almost certain that all those corpses meant that there were people searching for them. While he had a lot of faith in his obscuring formations, he didn’t see a good reason not to hedge his bets. If anyone managed to breach the obscuring formation, they’d get to enjoy a face full of fire and lightning.

He and Lifen also spent more time than necessary studying Sen’s map. While they poured over the map, and Sen started taking notes on the actual distances between locations he’d been, there weren’t really that many choices. The continent was vast, but poorly connected by a frustratingly small number of roads. Beyond those roads were the wilds, more often than not, and every so often there would be cities. Sen and Lifen were slowly, but surely, approaching the minor city of Heavens Virtue. Sen had no idea why it was named that, and his teachers had all shrugged at the question. Master Feng and Auntie Caihong had both been there in recent years and neither recalled anything particularly divine about the place.

“Try not to put too much stock in the names of cities,” Master Feng had said. “They tend to fall into two categories. Either they describe something specific about the city, like an event or a natural feature, or they reference something so obscure that even the people who live there don’t know why it’s called that. You can drive yourself half-mad trying to figure it out.”

Once they got to the city, though, there were only three things to do. They could stay for a while, which both of them agreed was a monumentally stupid plan. So, that was out. They could follow the road south, which was a possibility. Or they could take the road west toward the inner continent. Lifen was curious about everything, so she didn’t have a strong opinion one way or the other. Sen was increasingly convinced that they should go west.

“What’s to the west?” Lifen asked when told her as much.

The caravan eventually passed through a village and stopped to do a little light trading. Sen and Lifen took advantage of the added confusion the caravanners caused to do some basic shopping for food items. Sen was careful not to spend too much money at any one place. Better to leave the sellers with a hazy recollection of a boy buying enough for two or three meals than a clear memory of a young man who bought out their entire stock. It slowed things down a bit, but Sen managed to accumulate enough food in his storage ring to keep them going for a few weeks. By then, the traffic toward the city was heavy enough that it didn’t take any real effort to blend in. They just became two more bodies drifting toward the city for their own reasons.

Sen gave serious consideration to bypassing the city entirely and just walking around the outside of the wall, but he worried that would make them too conspicuous. So, they endured the long wait at the gate, the obligatory bribe to the guards, and then walked into the city. Sen had his hiding skill working as hard as possible to avoid any interest from unfriendly cultivators, but he worried about Lifen. He had started having her practice again once he’d slowed their pace, but she was nowhere near ready to face off against another cultivator. If it was just trading pointers, then she would no doubt survive with nothing injured but her pride. Unfortunately, there was no way to know that was how it would go until after everything was all but finished.

Sen felt himself tense several times when he felt a spiritual sense wash over their general vicinity, but no one bothered them. Either the sects were more restrained in this city, or the cultivators weren’t interested in bothering someone who was only a qi condensing cultivator. It was a minor bit of good fortune, but Sen was happy to take it. They didn’t linger in the city, only stopping at one market that was literally on the way to the western gate. It let Sen grab a few things that hadn’t been available in the village, like sesame oil, and a few spices. Lifen bought a few things, but Sen didn’t pry into what she’d gotten. He suspected it was a few small luxuries, and he could hardly begrudge her those. Luxury of any kind was scarce when traveling between the cities.

The passage out of the city was even less eventful than the passage into the city had been. The guards were almost wholly uninterested in people who were leaving the city of their own free will. Those people were fundamentally not the guards’ problem. The road west was almost identical to the road they had been traveling on to the south. Sen didn’t know exactly what was beneath, but the surface was made of stone blocks that looked to have been sealed together somehow. When he’d pushed his senses down into the earth a few times, he had sensed layers of other things, such as crushed stone and what felt like tamped earth. He couldn’t pretend to understand their construction, but they did seem to make for durable roads. He had yet to see any serious damage to any of the surface stones beyond some basic weathering. Even if they were fewer and farther between than he might have preferred, he was grateful that the roads existed at all. They made travel faster and easier.

As the miles between them and the city grew, Sen relaxed a bit. He wasn’t certain that they managed to avoid detection, but he hadn’t seen anything that gave him pause. Almost at the very moment that he was going to let out a relieved breath, someone stepped out from the trees and gave them a considering look.

“It looks like I won that bet,” said Lo Meifeng.