Story 7 - To Kill Demonic Vines (Part 13 đ±) (Patreon)
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âAnd this will be a real cure.â
Her eyes wavered. âHeâs healthy. Itâs just that itâs taking time for his body to recover fully.â
âYour sonâs disease is a wasting affliction. Itâs one that accumulates impurities in his five organs and six bowels. Alsoââ
âThere isnât anything about his condition that I donât know.â
I ignored her interruption but skipped over the rest of the symptoms since she already knew. âA few years back, a physician in Golden Core was generous enough to take a look at him due to her friendship with the city lord. She wasnât able to find a solution to his illness. Also, she didnât believe that he would live much longer.â
âThis wouldnât be the first time a physician has been mistaken.â
âFor his wasting affliction to be this incurable, then the impurities that gather inside him accumulate and harden incredibly fast.â I held up a finger with a grin. âLuckily for you, I happen to be the one person on this continent who knows the cure for this disease.â
It helped that an alchemist in my past life developed a treatment for this disease. It wasnât difficult or expensive to make either, it was just that nobody had bothered to research it before that person.
Unfortunately, by her hardened jaw and firm expression, I doubted that she believed me.
âRight now, the demonic cultivator youâre working with is keeping him alive. If I had to guess, they come by often to infuse a small fraction of the life energy theyâve gathered into your son... Energy from plague victims.â
The maid didnât even flinch at the horror of my statement.
âDo you realize the kind of karma youâre building by helping him, then benefiting off hundreds of thousands of deaths? How that karma will affect you and your sonâs future?â
This was a universe where specialized Immortal Ascension cultivators could even create techniques based on karma, so I wasnât merely using her superstitions against her.
She swallowed. âYou donât understand! My son is going to become a great man. His dream is to become a successful official. Heâll earn merits and buy us a home where we can live comfortably.â She glared at us as if, just by existing, we were taking her future away.
I could figure out where she was coming from. I could. Barely. But I couldnât agree with her. âIf you give up the demonic cultivatorâs location, heâll live a long mortal life. Iâll make sure of it...â
Her lips thinned as if sheâd zipped them shut.
Fuck. I was never good at convincing strangers like this.
It would be so easy to just pressure her mind a bit with my divine sense. I could get her to talk so much easier.
Unfortunately, demonic cultivators often left nasty traps in the minds of their subordinates. These would either give a backlash to any cultivator that tried to influence their people, or it would straight up kill them.
Just before I could try a different tactic, Little Spring stepped up beside me and clutched my sleeve. He looked Hu Xiaofan right in her eyes. âDo you honestly think that someone who created a plague will keep your child alive once theyâre done with this city?â
Her eyes widened, and she shook her head. âH-he said heâd teach me, so I can treat him myself.â She smacked her mouth.
Goddamn it! This kidâs protagonist halo was too strong. He said one thing and got her to spill her secret. Whatever.
At least he was on my side.
Clear Eyes Mad Tongue scoffed. âAnd you believed someone who murdered thousands?â
âI didnât know that at the time!â
Little Spring stared up at her with his big eyes. âHow did you even meet him?â
He must have reminded her of her own son, because her face softened. Then she grimaced. âI noticed Old Man Tan wandering around the city. He looked like a poor grandfather whoâd lost everything because of the plague. His face appeared so kind. Like someone who often fell for those antique vase scams.â
Basically, he looked like someone who would fall for one of those Nigerian Prince scams from my past-past life. Unfortunately, he was the real con-artist.
âI was lonely. It has been a long time since my husband passed. So, I brought him to the kitchens, gave him a meal and talked with him.â
She bit her lip, then continued as if desperate to explain her actions. âWhen he noticed my sick son, he told me that he could cure him... And, in exchange, all I had to do was take some seeds that looked like rice grains and add them to various mundane and spiritual rice supplies throughout the city. It would be easy since, as a maid for the city lord, I often went to different locations to gather ingredients.â
âI didnât know at first, but eventually, I figured it out. I confronted him, but...â
âYou stayed silent, so your son would keep living, even at the cost of everyone in this city,â I said flatly.
She looked down at me. âYou say it like that, but I had no choice.â
I really wanted to roll my eyes here. Because of course she didnât have a choice. She was a weak mortal facing a cultivator. But I doubted that she felt much remorse for the consequences of her actions.
Or she thought that, since it was already done, she couldnât undo it unless she preferred to lose her life.
I also couldnât forget that she directly fucking benefited from the lives of the plague victims.
This Hu Xiaofan had been desperate, with no bottom moral line.
She made the perfect target to become the disciple of one of those evil assholes.
Demonic cultivators always had a reason.
âIf I give Old Man Tan up... How would you cure my little Hu Huan?â
âIt will be a fairly short process. Iâd start with a combination of acupuncture and a very special tonic that can help unblock his meridians and purify his five organs and six bowels. This first step will allow you to see your son look healthy again instead of just appearing active. Then Iâll prepare a medicine to cure the underlying disease, but thatâs the easy part.â
She looked at me skeptically.
âIf my sister says she can cure him, then she can do it!â
âI call her Best-Alchemist-Under-The-Heavens Lin for a reason,â Clear Eyes spoke up. âShe created a cure within hours of seeing the plague.â
I wasnât surprised that Little Spring vouched for me, but I was a bit surprised to see the teen do so.
Maybe that long ass name was growing on me.
âFine. Iâll tell you.â The maidâs lips thinned then, as if she was walking towards her death. âHe could be in my rooms. Or there is this street where he often goes to beg for food.â More like where he gets the homeless population to help spread his plague. âThere is also a nearby cave to the west that he once brought me to.â
Salamander crossed his arms. âAre those the only locations youâve seen him?â
She looked thoughtful for a second, then hesitantly said, âI doubt heâll be there but, at one point, he was living in an abandoned shack right outside the city.â
She let out a cry and clutched her head. Suddenly, her knees gave out from under her. Just barely, I managed to catch her arm and help her lay down.
She gritted her teeth.âW-whatâs going on?â
I pressed my hand to her forehead. It burned. I didnât even need my divine sense to tell that Old Man Tan had cast a curse on her. One that would kill her if she betrayed him.
It was similar to the spell I had on Ghosty, but using the type of energy the demonic cultivator used as opposed to spiritual energy.
I grimaced. âYouâre dying from a curse.â
Little Spring crouched down beside the woman and took her hand. He bit his lip and looked up at me with worried eyes. âSister Lin, canât you stop it?â
âNot in my current realm.â
I glanced at Salamander. He shook his head in denial as well.
âThere is nothing we can do.â
She glared at me in desperation. âM-my Hu Huan? Tell me heâll be okay!â
âEven if youâre not here, Iâll keep my end of our deal. Iâll make sure your son is cured and is able to live a long mortal-length life.â Iâd already promised, and I didnât believe in bullshit like making children accountable for the mistakes of their parents. Unfortunately, this universe wasnât always so forgiving.
But fuck it.
Cultivators went against the heavens. And while kids could grow up to be assholes, they also had the chance to become someone half decent.
As Maid Hu Xiaofan let out her last breath, Little Spring blinked back tears.
He let go of her hand and stood up. His face did not look good.
Had this situation reminded him of his own mother, who had passed away almost two years ago?
Fuck. Traumatizing shit like this made me want to leave him in the sect. At least until he grew up more.
Making a hand gesture, I used the cleaning technique on the lot of us.
Sword Master Salamander coughed.
Clear Eyes Mad Tongue jumped and looked at me with exasperation.
Even Little Spring had been shocked so badly that his eyes stopped becoming watery.
âWas that really necessary, Best-Alchemist-Under-The-Heavens Lin?â
âYes. Absolutely. She was in contact with the creator of this plague. There is no telling whatâs on her body.â
A few horrified maids ran over to us, asking for explanations.
Then Hu Xiaofanâs son came running up to his fallen mother.
As soon as Hu Huan reached her, he collapsed. Tears ran down his cheeks.
Little Spring pulled him aside and started talking with him.
Well, maybe seeing someone experience the same thing he had and being able to help them was possibly cathartic for my little martial brother.
That would be better than the alternative.
From my space, I grabbed a cup filled with water from Fairy Lake, and handed it to Hu Huan to drink while he talked with Little Spring. Honestly, there was no safer way to clean out a system than spiritual spring water.
He wasnât going to die immediately, but I didnât want to forget about him or the promise I made. If I left to deal with the cultivator, I might come back to find the child dead.
Besides, this poor kid needed to be healthy to prepare for what was to come.
While Little Spring distracted him, I stealthily stuck a few spiritual spring soaked acupuncture needles into acupoints that would affect his worst blockages.
Hu Huan didnât even notice that heâd turned into a porcupine while my brother controlled his expression perfectly.
If I didnât see Little Spring stiffen a bit, I would have thought that he hadnât noticed.
Clear Eyes Mad Tongue looked both fascinated and horrified.
What? We didnât have a lot of time. And I needed to treat this child.
How could we ask little Hu Huan to go through the stages of grief if he was too sick to stand?
While I let my needles and the water do the work, I turned to Sword Master Salamander. âDo you have confidence of being able to find this... letâs call him Demon Thorny Devil Vine.â
Clear Eyes Mad Tongue managed to comment, âIs Old Man Tan too tame of a name for him?â
I shot him a warning look.
âConsidering that the curse only took effect when she mentioned that last location, I suspect that heâs currently at that abandoned shack.â The Sword Master looked grim.
âAnd heâll be waiting for us.â I stuck one more needle into the childâs leg.
âNo, just me.â Salamander said, then he rested his hand on Mad Tongueâs shoulder. âI canât risk bringing you into a fight against an enemy we know nothing about, so Iâll have to leave Clear Eyes Mad Tongue here to protect you. Please stay in the city, Little Senior Lin, so I know you and Little Spring are safe.â
At the thought of having our only Golden Core cultivator going that far away and being there all by himself, I grimaced. âYouâre right, there is no telling how strong he is. But you shouldnât go over there without backup.â
He smiled. âThen itâs a good thing you already informed Peak Elder Grass Sprout about this incident. Sheâs on her way.â
âOn her way or not, I expect you to run if heâs Nascent Soul or above.â
âFrom what weâve learned so far, I doubt that heâs at Nascent Soul. At least for now. Not if heâs going around pretending to be a beggar and a refugee.â
I briefly recalled the last nearly homeless looking Nascent Soul rogue cultivator Iâd seen, Daoist Black Jade, who was still in closed cultivation. The guy had looked like heâd been traveling for well over a year and hadnât had a lot of chances to take care of himself.
âYou really expect too much of Nascent Soul Cultivators.â I tilted my chin up and practically commanded. âI want you to be careful. That means that you better come back here alive and intact enough that a healing pill will get you up to one hundred percent.â
The corners of his eyes crinkled, and he smiled. âYes, Fairy Lin!â
Then he turned to Clear Eyes Mad Tongue. âMake sure Senior Lin and Little Spring are safe while Iâm gone.â
âIâll take care of them, whether you say something or not.â
âAnd stopâŠâ He trailed off. Knowing him, he likely wanted to tell Mad Tongue to stop saying shit that might get him killed. Of course, then he must have realized it was pointless because he sighed. âIâm off.â
Then my old friend pulled out a sword and flew away.
Honestly, I was more nervous than I was letting on.
This whole situation hadnât happened in my last life.
My friend had probably come here with some alchemists and found nothing. Thorny Devil Vine had likely gotten away with his plan for as long as the plague lasted... then he either left to go do something else just as heinous or had been killed randomly.
But Iâd never know for sure.
The most frustrating thing about time travel was that, despite knowing a significant amount of what happened in the past, there were even more pieces that I couldnât discover or hadnât understood.
Fuck. I just hoped I didnât just get my friend killed before his time.
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Authorâs Note: Thank you all for reading! You are the best readers a writer could ask for! This part started at around 1650 and ended up around 2500
The picture at the end is just something simple. I couldnât think of anything to draw for this part until like last night which didnât give me enough time to draw anything. Iâll have to make it over the weekend.
I also decided to delete chapters when they get posted to Royal Road. This is so I donât accidentally confuse anyone that I have more chapters available than I actually have. đ