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Now reading: Chapter 236 - 235: Shadows in the Mist from Book 1 of Rebirth of the Technomage Saga: Earth's Awakening, a Fantasy novel by TracyDunwoodie.

Tiline: TC1853.07.02 (Late Morning)

Location: Seven Peaks – Sect Grounds → Raven’s Private Quarters

Raven turned toward the approaching presences and waited.

They arrived together, which surprised her.

The first aeroskiff bore the Long family crest—a coiled dragon in green and gold, elegant against polished hull plating. Patriarch Kaelith Long descended with the controlled grace of a military commander despite his one hundred and four years. Silver hair pulled back in warrior’s style. Jade-green eyes taking in the damage to the sect grounds with an expression that mixed concern and tactical assessnt.

The second aeroskiff carried the Zhao family’s griffin sigil. From it stepped a man Raven had never t in person but recognised from descriptions and the shape of eyes she saw in her mirror every morning.

Patriarch Zhao Chen.

He was older than Kaelith by more than fifty years—one hundred and fifty-eight, according to family records—though cultivation kept both n appearing vital despite advanced age. Where Kaelith’s presence radiated controlled military power, Zhao Chen projected sothing different. A quiet intensity. Depths of knowledge carefully maintained. Scholar’s mind sharp despite the centuries.

Lady Lian’s brother, Raven thought. My grandmother’s brother. My paternal great-uncle.

Both patriarchs wore formal robes, but not the elaborate ceremonial dress of official visits. These were practical garnts—expensive, certainly, but chosen for travel and serious conversation rather than political display.

And both of them were nervous.

She could see it in small ways. The way Kaelith’s hands kept almost-but-not-quite clenching. The slight hesitation in Zhao Chen’s steps as he approached. The careful attention both n paid to their expressions, clearly trying to project calm confidence while actually feeling sothing quite different.

They want to make a good impression, she realised with mild surprise. Two of the most powerful n in the Empire, and they’re worried about what their seventeen-year-old granddaughter thinks of them.

Sothing in that observation eased her own tension slightly.

"Patriarch Long," she acknowledged with a respectful bow—formal but not excessive. "Patriarch Zhao. I wasn’t expecting visitors today."

Kaelith returned the bow, deeper than protocol required. When he straightened, emotion flickered behind careful control. "Forgive the unannounced arrival. Recent events made waiting seem... unwise."

"We watched the broadcast," Zhao Chen added. His voice carried the asured cadence of soone accustod to lecturing, but warr than she’d expected. Silver eyes—the sa distinctive shade that marked Zhao bloodline, the sa eyes she’d inherited—studied her with sothing beyond scholarly interest. "All of it. Including the parts the imperial censors tried to suppress."

"I see." Raven considered them for a mont. "You’ve arrived during morning reconstruction. Half my sect is repairing battle damage, and I won’t abandon oversight to sit in a eting room."

Both patriarchs exchanged glances. Whatever they’d expected, this wasn’t it.

"However," she continued, "I could use company while I inspect the remaining work sites. If you’re willing to walk with , we can talk along the way. Then I’ll have refreshnts prepared in my quarters for more... detailed discussions."

Relief flickered across Kaelith’s weathered features. "That would be acceptable."

"More than acceptable," Zhao Chen agreed. "I confess I’m curious to see what you’ve built here. The reports from our observers were... inadequate."

Raven raised an eyebrow. "Observers?"

Zhao Chen had the grace to look slightly embarrassed. "The Zhao family maintains scholars in most major cities. When your sect was founded, we assigned a few to monitor developnts. Purely for academic purposes."

"And the Long family?" Raven asked, turning to Kaelith.

"Military intelligence," he admitted. "Old habits. We’ve been tracking your defensive preparations since you claid this territory."

"Mmm." Raven considered being offended, then decided it wasn’t worth the energy. "Did either of your observation networks warn you about the Federation attack?"

Silence. Both n shifted uncomfortably.

"We received intelligence of increased Federation activity along the border," Kaelith said finally. "But the scale of the assault—the cha deploynt, the nuclear capability—" He shook his head. "We had no warning of that magnitude."

"Then perhaps your observation networks need improvent." Raven started walking toward the nearest reconstruction site. "Co. I’ll show you what your reports apparently failed to ntion."

***

The tour beca sothing more than Raven had intended.

She’d planned a brief circuit—show them the reconstruction efforts, demonstrate that the sect was recovering, then retreat to private quarters for whatever serious conversation had brought two patriarchs across the Empire without warning.

Instead, both n kept asking questions. Intelligent questions. Questions that revealed depths of genuine interest beneath their political facades.

Zhao Chen practically vibrated with scholarly excitent when they passed through the Verdant Spire. He kept stopping to examine the living architecture, running careful fingers along walls that pulsed with organic warmth.

"The building breathes," he murmured, pressing his palm flat against white stone that wasn’t quite stone. "I can feel circulation. Like blood moving through veins, but slower. More deliberate."

"The mycelial networks," Raven explained. "They run throughout the entire structure, connecting individual organisms into a collective system. The building doesn’t just house cultivators—it participates in cultivation. Absorbs excess energy. Redistributes it where needed. Grows stronger alongside the people who live here."

"Extraordinary." Zhao Chen’s silver eyes held sothing approaching reverence. "The formation principles alone must be incredibly complex."

"They are. But complexity serves a purpose. A dead building is just a shelter. A living building is a partner."

Kaelith focused on different concerns. He noted defensive positions, fields of fire, and evacuation routes. His military mind catalogued everything, and Raven could almost see him ntally redesigning certain sections for improved tactical efficiency.

"Your outer wall," he said as they walked the repaired periter. "The regeneration rate is remarkable. But yesterday’s breach—"

"Taught us where improvents were needed," Raven finished. "We’re already implenting changes. Denser organic lattice in the lower sections. Embedded formation arrays that can project ergency barriers. The next ti soone tries to breach that wall, they’ll find it significantly less cooperative."

"The Federation cha—the Protheus unit. It overwheld your initial defenses."

"It did. And then it died." Raven t his jade-green eyes steadily. "Every failure is data. Every breakthrough teaches us what to strengthen. I’d rather learn those lessons now, against enemies we can handle, than later against threats we can’t."

Kaelith’s expression shifted—sothing like respect settling into features that had probably intimidated entire armies. "A warrior’s philosophy."

"A survivor’s philosophy. There’s overlap."

They visited the training grounds, where disciples practiced Vessel Forging exercises under the supervision of senior students. Raven explained the thodology without going into excessive detail—the strengthening of ridians, the expansion of dantian capacity, the careful preparation of the body to serve as a proper vessel for cultivation.

"This stage," Zhao Chen said slowly, watching a young woman work through breathing patterns with obvious concentration, "I don’t recognise it. It’s not part of standard cultivation curricula."

"It should be. It’s the foundation everything else builds on." Raven let the implication hang.

Both patriarchs exchanged glances that suggested they’d caught the hint. Neither pushed further—not yet.

The dical pavilion ca next, where injured disciples rested under careful supervision. Elder Physician Wen bowed deeply when Raven entered, relief evident in her weathered features.

"Sect Leader. All patients are recovering well. No complications overnight."

"Good. These two—" Raven gestured to her grandfathers, "—are family. Patriarch Long and Patriarch Zhao."

Wen’s eyes widened, but she recovered quickly, offering appropriate bows to both n. "Honored patriarchs. Welco to Seven Peaks."

Kaelith studied the treatnt chambers with obvious interest. "Your healing techniques. They’re different from standard practice."

"We emphasise holistic recovery," Wen explained. "Not just treating the imdiate injury, but strengthening the underlying systems. Many of our patients will leave here with stronger cultivation foundations than they had before they were hurt."

"Turning setbacks into opportunities," Zhao Chen murmured. "A consistent the, it seems."

"Waste nothing," Raven said simply. "Not energy. Not experience. Not even failure."

By the ti they completed the circuit and approached the Crimson Spire, nearly two hours had passed. The sun had climbed well past its morning position, and the sounds of reconstruction had settled into steady rhythms across the sect grounds.

"Your quarters are here?" Zhao Chen asked, looking up at the spire’s elegant height.

"Top floor. The view is worth the climb."

***

Raven’s private quarters reflected her practical nature—clean lines, functional furniture, carefully chosen items that served purpose without ostentation. The main room offered multiple uses: ditation space near the windows, work area with desk and communication equipnt, and a comfortable seating arrangent around a low table.

She gestured for her grandfathers to settle onto cushions while she moved toward the small preparation area.

"Tea? Or coffee, if you prefer. One of my advisors has corrupted with Federation habits."

"Tea, please," Zhao Chen said, his scholarly attention already wandering across the room, noting details with obvious fascination.

"Tea," Kaelith agreed, lowering himself onto a cushion with the careful grace of a man whose body still rembered military training despite decades of administrative work.

Raven set water to heat using a small formation array that drew ambient thermal energy—efficient, elegant, and completely unnecessary for soone who could summon fire at will. But so rituals deserved respect regardless of capability.

"The view you ntioned," Zhao Chen said, looking toward the windows. "You can see all seven peaks from here."

"And the approaches. The training grounds. The periter defenses." Raven asured tea leaves into a ceramic pot—locally made, one of the first products of the sect’s artisan workshops. "I chose this location for practical reasons. Also, because I like the sunrise."

"A commander’s instinct," Kaelith observed. "Maintain visibility. Know what’s happening in your territory."

"A survivor’s instinct," Raven corrected gently. "Know where threats might co from. Have escape routes planned. Never let yourself be cornered without options."

She let that settle while she retrieved a tray of refreshnts from the preservation cabinet. Fresh fruit sliced into elegant portions. Small pastries with honey glaze. A selection of preserved nuts and dried vegetables. Simple fare, but prepared with care—the kind of food that said "you are welco here" without overwhelming formality.

"Please." She set the tray on the low table, noting how both patriarchs waited for her to select first before reaching for anything themselves. Old habits. Still testing for poison, she thought. Or showing respect by letting eat first. Perhaps both.

The tea reached proper temperature. Raven poured with the graceful movents her grandmother—her other grandmother, the one who’d tried to use her—had insisted she learn. So skills proved useful regardless of the circumstances that taught them.

"Honey?" she asked Zhao Chen, rembering his earlier preference.

"Please. You rembered."

"I rember most things." She added a careful asure of honey to his cup, then passed plain tea to Kaelith. Finally, she settled onto her own cushion with her cup cradled in both hands.

For a mont, they simply drank. Let the ritual of shared refreshnt ease so of the tension that had been building since the two aeroskiffs appeared on the eastern horizon.

Then Kaelith set down his cup with the deliberate motion of soone preparing to discuss difficult matters.

"We ca to warn you," he said. "And to share information that may be relevant to your preparations."

"I assud as much. Two patriarchs don’t fly across the Empire for social calls." Raven selected a piece of fruit—starfruit, tart and sweet—and took a small bite. "What prompted the urgency?"

"Yesterday’s broadcast," Zhao Chen said quietly. "What you demonstrated. The power, yes, but also..." He hesitated, searching for words.

"Also, the knowledge," Kaelith finished. "Techniques that shouldn’t exist. Capabilities that exceed what our cultivation frawork allows. You showed the entire Empire sothing that challenges fundantal assumptions about what’s possible."

Raven ate another bite of starfruit, using the motion to organize her thoughts. "And you’re worried about who else noticed."

"We’re certain about who else noticed." Zhao Chen’s silver eyes held sothing between concern and fear. "The Sanctum."

The word landed in the room like a stone dropped into still water.

Sanctum. Raven had encountered the na in various records and histories—always oblique, always carefully vague. A presence that appeared at the edges of important events but never in the center. Power that influenced without being seen.

She’d suspected there was more to learn. Now, apparently, she was going to learn it.

"Tell ," she said. "Everything you think I need to know."

Both patriarchs exchanged glances. So silent communication passed between them—years of political alliance and shared family connection, enabling understanding without words.

Then Zhao Chen leaned forward slightly.

"How much do you know about the true geography of the Imperial Capital? The real structure, I an—not what they teach in schools?"

"Nine rings surrounding the Imperial Sanctum. Standard administrative hierarchy."

"And what does the First Ring surround?"

Raven paused. She’d never actually thought about it. The First Ring was the center of imperial power—the Emperor’s domain, the highest tier of civilization. But what was at the center? She’d assud more palaces, more administration, more concentration of authority.

"The Mists," Zhao Chen said, watching her expression. "Perpetual cloud cover that never lifts, never clears, regardless of weather conditions in surrounding areas. Most citizens believe it’s natural—so quirk of geography or atmospheric patterns."

"But it isn’t."

"No." Zhao Chen reached into his robes and withdrew a small jade slip. "May I?"

Raven nodded.

Spiritual energy flowed into the slip, and a projection ford above the table—a three-dinsional map of the Imperial Capital. Nine rings spread outward in concentric circles, each labelled and detailed. But at the very center, where she’d expected empty space or imperial gardens, the projection showed sothing else entirely.

A separate realm.

"Created through formations, arrays, artifacts, and blood sacrifice," Zhao Chen explained. "The Sanctum exists in a pocket dinsion that overlaps with our world at the center of the Capital. The Mists aren’t clouds—they’re the boundary between realities."

Raven studied the projection, mind already working through implications. "How old?"

"The realm itself? Ancient. Older than the current imperial system. Older than the Celestial Families as we know them. The Sanctum claims continuous existence since before the Cataclysm."

Since before magic died. The implications crystallized with cold clarity.

"They preserved cultivation," she said slowly. "When spiritual energy vanished from the world, they maintained it within their pocket realm."

Kaelith nodded grimly. "Their realm never lost magic. While the rest of Ascara descended into what the historians call the ’Age of Silence,’ the Sanctum continued cultivating at levels we can barely imagine."

"Eight Sovereign Houses," Zhao Chen continued. "Each one survived internal conflicts roughly eight hundred years ago that destroyed dozens of other lineages. The survivors erged united in purpose, if not always in thod."

"What purpose?"

"Control." Kaelith’s voice carried bitter certainty. "Eight centuries ago, the Sanctum made contact with the outside world. Specifically, with the families that would beco the Eight Celestial Clans. They offered a trade: cultivation knowledge in exchange for loyalty."

"And the Celestial Families agreed," Raven said. Not a question.

"Of course, we agreed. We had nothing—martial arts at best, folk traditions about spiritual energy that no one could actually access. And here were these beings of imnse power, offering to teach us secrets that could transform our bloodlines."

"But the knowledge they shared was incomplete."

Both patriarchs went very still.

Raven watched their faces carefully. Surprise, yes—but not the shock of complete revelation. Sothing else. Sothing that looked almost like relief.

"You suspected," she said softly. "Both of you. You’ve wondered for years whether the cultivation techniques you were taught were deliberately limited."

Zhao Chen’s shoulders sagged slightly. "We couldn’t confirm it. Couldn’t prove anything. The Sanctum’s techniques worked—they produced real power, real advancent. How do you prove that sothing is missing when you’ve never seen what the complete version looks like?"

"But the ceiling," Kaelith added. "Generation after generation hitting the sa wall. Core Crystallization as the absolute limit, no matter how talented the cultivator or how dedicated their practice. After centuries of that..." He shook his head. "Either human potential has a fixed limit that we happen to have discovered exactly, or soone designed our cultivation to stop at that point."

"The second option," Raven confird. "Soone designed it. Deliberately."

She rose and walked to the window, looking out at her sect—her disciples working, her buildings healing, her dreams taking shape one careful step at a ti.

"You’re telling the entire cultivation system practiced by the Eastern Empire—the techniques that have defined your society for eight centuries—was deliberately crippled. Designed to produce useful servants but never rivals."

"That’s our fear," Zhao Chen said. "Though ’fear’ may be too weak a word."

"And now you’re worried that what I’m doing here—teaching true cultivation to commoners, demonstrating power that exceeds what your frawork allows—has attracted the Sanctum’s attention."

"We’re certain it has." Kaelith’s voice carried the weight of military intelligence gathered over decades. "They’ve watched Seven Peaks since you claid this territory. Observers. Agents. Whatever monitoring systems they have access to. But they were content to observe. To wait and see what developed."

"And yesterday changed that calculation."

"Phoenix wings visible across the entire Empire. Power that shouldn’t be possible under their limited system. A direct demonstration that their cultivation frawork is incomplete." Zhao Chen’s silver eyes held genuine fear—not for himself, but for her. "The Sanctum cannot ignore that. They will respond."

Raven turned from the window, eting her grandfathers’ gazes steadily.

"What kind of response?"

"That’s what we ca to warn you about." Kaelith’s weathered hands clenched briefly. "Eight hundred years ago, there was another attempt to spread true cultivation knowledge beyond Sanctum control. Cultivators who had sohow learned or reconstructed complete techniques tried to teach them to the general population."

"The Sanctum ended it." Zhao Chen’s voice dropped to barely above a whisper. "Not just stopped it. Ended it. Erased entire bloodlines. Destroyed records. Manipulated mories across entire regions. By the ti they finished, most people had forgotten the movent ever existed."

"They have armies," Kaelith said. "Hidden weapons. Powers we can’t imagine—refined over centuries of uninterrupted cultivation while the rest of the world struggled with broken techniques. And they have this..." He paused, searching for words. "This cosmic law, they claim. ’Sanctum blood may not be spilled.’ Anyone who harms a mber of the Eight Sovereign Houses supposedly invokes divine retribution."

"Have you ever seen this retribution?"

"Twice." Kaelith’s face had gone pale with rembered horror. "Both tis, entire family lines were... erased. Not just killed—erased from history. Records destroyed. mories altered. It was as if they had never existed at all."

Raven absorbed this, mind working through implications and strategies even as she processed the emotional weight of what her grandfathers were sharing.

"You ca to warn that ancient powers might decide I’m a threat worth eliminating. That’s the ssage?"

"We ca because you’re family." Kaelith’s voice cracked slightly. "And because we’ve lost too many family mbers already. Lian died believing she’d failed. Darian discovered his real daughter too late. Seventeen years of chances we never got because of lies and manipulation."

His jade-green eyes held fierce intensity despite the tears gathering in them.

"We’re not losing you, either. Not to the Sanctum. Not to anything."

You are reading Book 1 of Rebirth of the Technomage Saga: Earth's Awakening Chapter 236 - 235: Shadows in the Mist on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
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