沈清秋 | Shen Qingqiu (
peerlesscucumber) wrote in
prismatica2019-11-13 12:05 am
webnovel post | chapter one
[ Posted on a popular webnovel site for Lunatia, a new cultivation novel has appeared, titled "The Legend of the White Lotus Milu." It is entirely not fix-it fic for a certain someone's life. It's all original content, do not steal!!! It is driving this player mad!
The first chapter goes exactly like this... ]
In all of Prismatica, there was no sect of the Immortal Realm with greater prestige and honour in the modern age than that of White Cloud Sect, nestled high in reaches of the Black Fang Mountains. Between the three greatest sects, it was not the largest, but it had the oldest history, and the highest standards and expectations of its disciples, in the inner and outer circles. Being accepted as a disciple to White Cloud Sect was an honour in and of itself, and those with talent and the dedication necessary to pursue their cultivation with all their focus and heart would rise through their ranks, regardless of which individual cultivation path they followed within the sect. This was known to all those with any understanding of the Immortal Realm, and far and wide in the Mortal Realm, even into the more informed reaches of the Demon Realm. To say it was known to even the youngest of mortals and demons would be no exaggeration.
To the star bright eyes of the dirty, bruised young child scampering from shadow to shadow along the streets of a border town by the meandering banks of the Qing Crystal River, dividing the Northernmost reaches of the Demon Realm from the Southernmost reaches of the Mortal Realm.
The town was little more than a stop for trade, built up around the docks in the harbour tucked up next to the sheer cliff framing the Eastern side. Scraggly, determined trees reached skyward in the weak soil, their leaves turning into a profusion of bright colours every autumn that lined the top in living flame.
Xin Mo had little time to view the leaves that autumn day, his arms holding day-old bread to his chest in cloth barely cleaner than his dirt-smeared limbs. Black hair pulled back into a bun at the spilled out in unruly tendrils, evidence of the fighting scrap he'd emerged victorious from some half hour earlier. His vigilance as Sanguis waxed in the sky, turning the fading light of day into the red-tinged glow of early Sanguis cycle night.
Light filtered past poorly fit doors hanging heavy in their frames, stretches of fabric and woven mats weighed down by stone and bone to keep out the evening's chill as it flowed in off the river. He heard snatches of conversation, laughter, shouting, sounds that meant rutting, sounds that meant fighting, sounds that meant nothing at all. He was used to them all, and he only cared about the ones that meant his precious cargo might be threatened, and so he ignored most of them in the quick, darting progress he made from shadow to shadow, winding his way to a familiar, worn door and the warmth that slipped past the hanging door.
He waited across the way, listening to the sounds of the night around him, tense. With no indication of pursuit, he eventually exhaled, putting on a burst of more than childish speed to bound across the open road and slip into the door without so much as disturbing the hanging material for more than a heartbeat.
Coming home to this simple space of packed dirt floors and its single, open room left warmth spreading through his chest, warmth that blossomed further at the sight of the woman who sat next to the flickering fire, needle in hand, small spools of coloured threads collected in a careworn basket that looked as well loved as her robes.
She was older, more silver than black in her hair where it was pulled back and knotted at the base of her neck, kept out of her way as she worked. Her black, lupine ears hung down behind her shoulders, one missing most of its lower half in a long healed, ragged tear. Wrinkles touched the corners of her eyes, deep, just as the laugh lines around her mouth betrayed her willingness to smile over the smallest of joys in life and made her all the more beautiful in her young son's eyes.
"Mo'er, what happened to you?" Her brow knit in worry, he simply shook his head, sending more tendrils of hair escaping the bun she'd so carefully coaxed his hair into that morning. He trotted forward, holding out the cloth containing his hard fought for bread, attempting to look shamefaced and managing nothing of the sort. He was too proud in his way, and too worried in his childish manner, to present any properly apologetic face.
"The big kids had a disagreement with me," he said, bouncing the bread in his hands. He stared at her with such hope that she could do nothing but accept the offered bread, her half ear twitching forward as she chuckled helplessly. Her worry was written into her features, along with a hint of resignation in her eyes.
"Oh? Over this?" She accepted the bread nodding her head toward it.
Xin Mo scratched at his cheek, smudging the dirt there, and tried not to dig one bare, dirty toe into the ground. His tail twitched as he ducked his head and looked to the side, trying to hide his smile. He was smaller than all the other kids, but he was smarter, too, and fast. When the baker gave away their old bread to the town's needy, he was always quick enough to snatch at least a loaf for his mother. It was the least he could do for the woman who'd taken him in, an orphan left to the streets with the passing of his adoptive grandfather. She was the reason he didn't still sleep tucked up against buildings or in door-stoops out of the winds and weather, or even in the small temples with their small gods and offerings that he ferreted away in guilt and with prayers of gratitude for meals he suspected none of the Immortals being prayed to would ever come eat themselves.
"Yes," he said, admitting to the truth of it, "They said an Iris blessed shouldn't fight like I do. That I should play nice, and have one of the bigger Sanguis or Cordis blessed fight for me, but why would I do that?" He lifted his chin, expression fierce and derisive in the way any child confronted with an absurdity is. "I'm better than any of them, and the next best wrestler is an iris blessed anyway. It's dumb!"
His mother's helplessly concerned expression softened, her heart aching at a young and yet old complaint poured off his tongue. "It is," she said, setting the bread her son had won down on the small wooden plank that held her old tea pot and the two cracked mugs she retained for drinking their over-brewed, weak tea. "They're young, and don't understand the world half as well as they think they do. The moons bless all of us equally, and differently. Even the Dragons and the Foxes are influenced by the moons in their own ways." She patted the ground by her side, shifting the mass of cloth she'd been embroidering into her lap proper.
Xin Mo dutifully sat as indicated, looking up at her with a malcontent expression lingering in his eyes. There was a hurt there, too, buried under every other emotion that tugged at his too feeling heart. Not for the first time, she wished there was more she could do when facing this world for the sake of her son, but she also had chosen to have faith in what man he'd grow into in this world. For a woman who never had children of her own, only to adopted a foundling, faith informed much of her relationship with a world that has been equal parts cruel and uncaring with her, as well as achingly beautiful in times deeply surprising.
Like now, in her aging years, to be blessed with such a filial son, one who held close such beautiful dreams.
"I know. Everyone knows, but they say it doesn't matter." He wrinkled his nose, staring down at his hands in his lap, dirty fingernails pressing into marginally cleaner palms.
She reached out, running her hand over his head, smoothing back a few of those errant tendrils. "Mo'er, what is it I always tell you about the moons?"
He leaned into her touch, eyes lifting enough to glance toward their doorway. The red light of Sanquis was barely more than a suggestion around the frame, but he stared at it, looking older and wiser than his six years. "That Sanguis is red like the blood in our veins, and Cordis is blue like the waters that give us life, but only Iris is the blending of them both."
He turned his face toward her, the beauty of his features softened in the shadows of their fire-lit home. The delicate tips of his slightly elongated ears, the small swelling of the nubs of horns that had yet to break past skin, buried in the ink-black was of his hair, were part of the delicate, lovely whole of this child; in no small part, she suspected that his peers responded so poorly out of jealousy, a jealousy that would bloom into admiration as they aged. People worked in predictably ways, and her Mo'er was a beautiful child, who would grow into a beautiful man.
And who would, she hoped, follow his dreams far from this dusty town with its small goaled people, looking out for little more than how to fit into the roles their parents and grandparents and grandparents before them have filled, eking out a life here on the fringes of the Mortal Realm. He was too brilliant a star to stay earthbound, and much as she'd miss him, she wanted to see him soar away from her to the places she was certain he was destined for.
"That's right," she said, smiling and looking toward the bucket of clean water kept near the door. He should wash up before they ate, since there was no point holding onto the bread when food eaten now meant energy they'd both have for later. Especially him, a child growing in the fits and starts of all children. He was barely fitting into his trousers again, the hems creeping higher up his calves as the months flew by. "You're even more in tune with the life inside you, and inside the world around us. Just as any good cultivator needs to be, right?"
He nodded his head, expression firming into one of determination. She coaxed him into moving to clean himself up, using her strong hands aching from hours and hours of embroidering that day to tear into the loaf as if it were fresh, handing him a portion with a serving of thin gruel from the pot kept warm by the fire when he returned to her side, face and hands scrubbed free of dirt.
"I'll be a cultivator, a good one," he said, "One of the best. Then I'll make sure you're taken care of and don't have to work on anything but what you like to ever again."
"Yes, yes," she said, smiling as she ate his hard won bread.
"I'll definitely pass the test when the White Cloud Sect takes new disciples in five years." He nodded his head, shoving his piece of bread into his bowl to punctuate his statement. He almost spilled, going immediately still with a look of horror crossing his features so quickly that she almost laughed, watching his shoulders relax when the gruel didn't spill after all.
"Yes, yes."
"You believe me, right?"
She looked up, meeting his starry gaze with her own dark eyes. "Yes," she said, giving him that regard and serious response that he so dearly wanted from time to time, "I do, and you will, Mo'er."
He held her gaze, the smile that blossomed on his face a slow, determined, beautiful event. "Yes," he said, "I will."
--
Five years later, dark eyes took in the gathering of people at the gates to the lower White Cloud Sect, where the testing grounds for the new disciple hopefuls opened once every five years. Hundreds of individuals of all walks of life and all different features milled in the open space, talking with others, stopping by stalls set up by vendors eager to make a sale under the sect's blessing, a riot of colours and scents and sounds that his gently pointed ears took in and tried to sort out, soon overwhelmed. It didn't matter.
Xin Mo stood at the top of the low hill coming in from the West, jet-black hair pulled into a ponytail, travel clothes dusty and wrinkled, surveying the site of his destiny.
Then he strode down the hill, a slight and straight back figured soon swallowed by the crowd, winding his way toward the registration tables and whatever the following days would bring.
--
The Author has something to say:
I'm so excited to be sharing this story with you! o(〃^▽^〃)o Please join me on this adventure with Xin Mo through the cultivation world of fantasy Prismatica! Please leave Crystal Bombs as encouragement if you feel so inclined, this author will be very thankful! Three cheers for Xin Mo! ヾ(〃^∇^)ノ♪ What will he face during his disciple trial?
[ Probably not digging. Probably he will not write the same fucking trial as actually is true in his own world, where digging shows your potential and you are just. Digging. A hole. For a day. ]
The first chapter goes exactly like this... ]
The Legend of the White Lotus Milu
by Peerless Cucumber
Chapter 01: By the shores of Qing Crystal River
In all of Prismatica, there was no sect of the Immortal Realm with greater prestige and honour in the modern age than that of White Cloud Sect, nestled high in reaches of the Black Fang Mountains. Between the three greatest sects, it was not the largest, but it had the oldest history, and the highest standards and expectations of its disciples, in the inner and outer circles. Being accepted as a disciple to White Cloud Sect was an honour in and of itself, and those with talent and the dedication necessary to pursue their cultivation with all their focus and heart would rise through their ranks, regardless of which individual cultivation path they followed within the sect. This was known to all those with any understanding of the Immortal Realm, and far and wide in the Mortal Realm, even into the more informed reaches of the Demon Realm. To say it was known to even the youngest of mortals and demons would be no exaggeration.
To the star bright eyes of the dirty, bruised young child scampering from shadow to shadow along the streets of a border town by the meandering banks of the Qing Crystal River, dividing the Northernmost reaches of the Demon Realm from the Southernmost reaches of the Mortal Realm.
The town was little more than a stop for trade, built up around the docks in the harbour tucked up next to the sheer cliff framing the Eastern side. Scraggly, determined trees reached skyward in the weak soil, their leaves turning into a profusion of bright colours every autumn that lined the top in living flame.
Xin Mo had little time to view the leaves that autumn day, his arms holding day-old bread to his chest in cloth barely cleaner than his dirt-smeared limbs. Black hair pulled back into a bun at the spilled out in unruly tendrils, evidence of the fighting scrap he'd emerged victorious from some half hour earlier. His vigilance as Sanguis waxed in the sky, turning the fading light of day into the red-tinged glow of early Sanguis cycle night.
Light filtered past poorly fit doors hanging heavy in their frames, stretches of fabric and woven mats weighed down by stone and bone to keep out the evening's chill as it flowed in off the river. He heard snatches of conversation, laughter, shouting, sounds that meant rutting, sounds that meant fighting, sounds that meant nothing at all. He was used to them all, and he only cared about the ones that meant his precious cargo might be threatened, and so he ignored most of them in the quick, darting progress he made from shadow to shadow, winding his way to a familiar, worn door and the warmth that slipped past the hanging door.
He waited across the way, listening to the sounds of the night around him, tense. With no indication of pursuit, he eventually exhaled, putting on a burst of more than childish speed to bound across the open road and slip into the door without so much as disturbing the hanging material for more than a heartbeat.
Coming home to this simple space of packed dirt floors and its single, open room left warmth spreading through his chest, warmth that blossomed further at the sight of the woman who sat next to the flickering fire, needle in hand, small spools of coloured threads collected in a careworn basket that looked as well loved as her robes.
She was older, more silver than black in her hair where it was pulled back and knotted at the base of her neck, kept out of her way as she worked. Her black, lupine ears hung down behind her shoulders, one missing most of its lower half in a long healed, ragged tear. Wrinkles touched the corners of her eyes, deep, just as the laugh lines around her mouth betrayed her willingness to smile over the smallest of joys in life and made her all the more beautiful in her young son's eyes.
"Mo'er, what happened to you?" Her brow knit in worry, he simply shook his head, sending more tendrils of hair escaping the bun she'd so carefully coaxed his hair into that morning. He trotted forward, holding out the cloth containing his hard fought for bread, attempting to look shamefaced and managing nothing of the sort. He was too proud in his way, and too worried in his childish manner, to present any properly apologetic face.
"The big kids had a disagreement with me," he said, bouncing the bread in his hands. He stared at her with such hope that she could do nothing but accept the offered bread, her half ear twitching forward as she chuckled helplessly. Her worry was written into her features, along with a hint of resignation in her eyes.
"Oh? Over this?" She accepted the bread nodding her head toward it.
Xin Mo scratched at his cheek, smudging the dirt there, and tried not to dig one bare, dirty toe into the ground. His tail twitched as he ducked his head and looked to the side, trying to hide his smile. He was smaller than all the other kids, but he was smarter, too, and fast. When the baker gave away their old bread to the town's needy, he was always quick enough to snatch at least a loaf for his mother. It was the least he could do for the woman who'd taken him in, an orphan left to the streets with the passing of his adoptive grandfather. She was the reason he didn't still sleep tucked up against buildings or in door-stoops out of the winds and weather, or even in the small temples with their small gods and offerings that he ferreted away in guilt and with prayers of gratitude for meals he suspected none of the Immortals being prayed to would ever come eat themselves.
"Yes," he said, admitting to the truth of it, "They said an Iris blessed shouldn't fight like I do. That I should play nice, and have one of the bigger Sanguis or Cordis blessed fight for me, but why would I do that?" He lifted his chin, expression fierce and derisive in the way any child confronted with an absurdity is. "I'm better than any of them, and the next best wrestler is an iris blessed anyway. It's dumb!"
His mother's helplessly concerned expression softened, her heart aching at a young and yet old complaint poured off his tongue. "It is," she said, setting the bread her son had won down on the small wooden plank that held her old tea pot and the two cracked mugs she retained for drinking their over-brewed, weak tea. "They're young, and don't understand the world half as well as they think they do. The moons bless all of us equally, and differently. Even the Dragons and the Foxes are influenced by the moons in their own ways." She patted the ground by her side, shifting the mass of cloth she'd been embroidering into her lap proper.
Xin Mo dutifully sat as indicated, looking up at her with a malcontent expression lingering in his eyes. There was a hurt there, too, buried under every other emotion that tugged at his too feeling heart. Not for the first time, she wished there was more she could do when facing this world for the sake of her son, but she also had chosen to have faith in what man he'd grow into in this world. For a woman who never had children of her own, only to adopted a foundling, faith informed much of her relationship with a world that has been equal parts cruel and uncaring with her, as well as achingly beautiful in times deeply surprising.
Like now, in her aging years, to be blessed with such a filial son, one who held close such beautiful dreams.
"I know. Everyone knows, but they say it doesn't matter." He wrinkled his nose, staring down at his hands in his lap, dirty fingernails pressing into marginally cleaner palms.
She reached out, running her hand over his head, smoothing back a few of those errant tendrils. "Mo'er, what is it I always tell you about the moons?"
He leaned into her touch, eyes lifting enough to glance toward their doorway. The red light of Sanquis was barely more than a suggestion around the frame, but he stared at it, looking older and wiser than his six years. "That Sanguis is red like the blood in our veins, and Cordis is blue like the waters that give us life, but only Iris is the blending of them both."
He turned his face toward her, the beauty of his features softened in the shadows of their fire-lit home. The delicate tips of his slightly elongated ears, the small swelling of the nubs of horns that had yet to break past skin, buried in the ink-black was of his hair, were part of the delicate, lovely whole of this child; in no small part, she suspected that his peers responded so poorly out of jealousy, a jealousy that would bloom into admiration as they aged. People worked in predictably ways, and her Mo'er was a beautiful child, who would grow into a beautiful man.
And who would, she hoped, follow his dreams far from this dusty town with its small goaled people, looking out for little more than how to fit into the roles their parents and grandparents and grandparents before them have filled, eking out a life here on the fringes of the Mortal Realm. He was too brilliant a star to stay earthbound, and much as she'd miss him, she wanted to see him soar away from her to the places she was certain he was destined for.
"That's right," she said, smiling and looking toward the bucket of clean water kept near the door. He should wash up before they ate, since there was no point holding onto the bread when food eaten now meant energy they'd both have for later. Especially him, a child growing in the fits and starts of all children. He was barely fitting into his trousers again, the hems creeping higher up his calves as the months flew by. "You're even more in tune with the life inside you, and inside the world around us. Just as any good cultivator needs to be, right?"
He nodded his head, expression firming into one of determination. She coaxed him into moving to clean himself up, using her strong hands aching from hours and hours of embroidering that day to tear into the loaf as if it were fresh, handing him a portion with a serving of thin gruel from the pot kept warm by the fire when he returned to her side, face and hands scrubbed free of dirt.
"I'll be a cultivator, a good one," he said, "One of the best. Then I'll make sure you're taken care of and don't have to work on anything but what you like to ever again."
"Yes, yes," she said, smiling as she ate his hard won bread.
"I'll definitely pass the test when the White Cloud Sect takes new disciples in five years." He nodded his head, shoving his piece of bread into his bowl to punctuate his statement. He almost spilled, going immediately still with a look of horror crossing his features so quickly that she almost laughed, watching his shoulders relax when the gruel didn't spill after all.
"Yes, yes."
"You believe me, right?"
She looked up, meeting his starry gaze with her own dark eyes. "Yes," she said, giving him that regard and serious response that he so dearly wanted from time to time, "I do, and you will, Mo'er."
He held her gaze, the smile that blossomed on his face a slow, determined, beautiful event. "Yes," he said, "I will."
Five years later, dark eyes took in the gathering of people at the gates to the lower White Cloud Sect, where the testing grounds for the new disciple hopefuls opened once every five years. Hundreds of individuals of all walks of life and all different features milled in the open space, talking with others, stopping by stalls set up by vendors eager to make a sale under the sect's blessing, a riot of colours and scents and sounds that his gently pointed ears took in and tried to sort out, soon overwhelmed. It didn't matter.
Xin Mo stood at the top of the low hill coming in from the West, jet-black hair pulled into a ponytail, travel clothes dusty and wrinkled, surveying the site of his destiny.
Then he strode down the hill, a slight and straight back figured soon swallowed by the crowd, winding his way toward the registration tables and whatever the following days would bring.
The Author has something to say:
I'm so excited to be sharing this story with you! o(〃^▽^〃)o Please join me on this adventure with Xin Mo through the cultivation world of fantasy Prismatica! Please leave Crystal Bombs as encouragement if you feel so inclined, this author will be very thankful! Three cheers for Xin Mo! ヾ(〃^∇^)ノ♪ What will he face during his disciple trial?
[ Probably not digging. Probably he will not write the same fucking trial as actually is true in his own world, where digging shows your potential and you are just. Digging. A hole. For a day. ]

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