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Now reading: Chapter 501 495: Master & Disciple from Cultivation is Creation, a Action novel by Kynan.

Master Hong finished writing the last character of the sutra on the teaching board and set down his brush. The evening lesson had run longer than usual, but the students had been particularly engaged with today's discussion about the relationship between physical cultivation and spiritual enlightennt. A topic that was usually neglected, but Master Hong had felt it was more relevant after recent events.

"Rember," he said to the disciples, "martial arts without wisdom is rely violence. Wisdom without strength is rely philosophy. True cultivation requires both in balance."

The students bowed respectfully and began filing out of the hall, their voices carrying excited discussions about the lesson's implications. Master Hong smiled as he watched them go. This was what he lived for, these monts when young minds grasped concepts that would guide them for the rest of their lives.

"Master Hong?" Young Ken approached hesitantly, holding his practice manual. "I'm still confused about the ridian circulation patterns for the Iron Palm technique. Could you explain it again?"

"Of course," Master Hong replied patiently. He spent another ten minutes walking the boy through the proper energy flow, demonstrating with his own Qi to make the concepts clear. By the ti Ken bowed his thanks and hurried to catch up with his classmates, the hall was empty except for Master Hong and the lingering scent of incense.

He gathered his teaching materials slowly, taking his ti with the familiar routine. These quiet monts after lessons were precious to him, a chance to reflect on the day's progress and plan for tomorrow's instruction.

But as he organized his scrolls and manuals, his thoughts kept drifting to Cao Jinghui.

A month had passed since the spirit calling itself Ke Yin had departed, leaving behind a transford young man with Heaven-Breaking cultivation and a heart still burning with the need for revenge. Master Hong had tried to convince Jinghui to stay at the temple, to spend ti consolidating his sudden advancent and learning to control his new abilities.

Jinghui had listened politely, thanked him for his concern, then left three days later with nothing but his traveling clothes and a grim determination that made Master Hong's heart ache.

"I have to do this," Jinghui had said during their final conversation. "I've carried this burden for ten years. Now I finally have the power to set things right."

Master Hong had wanted to argue, to point out that revenge rarely brought the peace people expected it to. But what authority did he have? He'd failed to guide Jinghui away from his dark path for almost a decade. What made him think he could succeed now?

So, he'd let the boy go, and had spent the past month worrying about him like a father whose son had gone off to war.

The reports had started filtering in after the first week. A Heaven-Breaking cultivator was moving through the western provinces, seeking information about the Crimson Fist Clan. Forr mbers were being tracked down and questioned. So were released unhard after providing information. Others...

Master Hong preferred not to think about the others.

Two weeks ago, the reports had beco more specific. The mysterious cultivator had been identified as a young man matching Jinghui's description, traveling alone and asking pointed questions about soone nad Cao Mingshan. Several witnesses described his spiritual pressure as "cold as winter wind" and his eyes as "carrying the weight of old pain."

A week ago, the trail had gone quiet.

There had been no more sightings or reports.

The silence from the western provinces could an anything.

Three days ago, a traveling rchant had brought news that made Master Hong's blood run cold. A Heaven-Breaking expert had been seen pursuing a Half-Step cultivator through the Crimson Valley mountains. The chase had been witnessed from a distance, but no one knew how it had ended.

Master Hong finished gathering his materials and made his way to his private chambers, his shoulders heavy with worry. The boy he'd raised, the student he'd tried so hard to guide toward compassion and wisdom, was out there sowhere. Either dead, or forever changed by whatever had happened in those mountains.

He knelt before the small shrine in his room and lit a stick of incense, watching the smoke curl toward the ceiling. The faces of his spiritual ancestors looked down at him from painted scrolls.

"Guide him ho safely," Master Hong whispered. "Whatever darkness he's walked through, help him find his way back to the light."

The rain started as he finished his prayer, gentle drops pattering against the paper windows like tiny fingers. Master Hong found the sound soothing, a reminder that even in the darkest tis, the world continued its cycles of renewal and growth.

He decided to take a walk despite the weather. The temple gardens were particularly beautiful in the rain, and the exercise might help settle his troubled thoughts.

The covered walkways protected him from the worst of the downpour, but he could still feel the moisture in the air, cool and clean against his skin. Most of the disciples had retreated to their quarters for the evening, leaving the gardens peaceful and empty.

Master Hong was halfway around the main courtyard when his senses detected sothing that made him stop in his tracks. A spiritual signature, approaching from the main gate. Powerful but unstable, flickering like a candle in strong wind.

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He recognized that energy pattern imdiately.

"Jinghui," he breathed.

Master Hong turned and began walking quickly toward the gate, his heart racing with a mixture of relief and apprehension. The spiritual pressure he was sensing felt wrong sohow, weakened and erratic in ways that suggested serious injury or trauma.

He reached the gate just as a figure stumbled into view through the rain. The man was covered in blood from head to toe, his clothes torn and stained with substances Master Hong preferred not to identify. In his arms, he clutched a cloth sack with the desperate intensity of soone clinging to their most precious possession.

The spiritual aura radiating from the figure was definitely Heaven-Breaking Realm, but it felt thin, stretched, like a rope that had been pulled nearly to its breaking point. And the eyes...

Master Hong had seen many things in his sixty years of life. He'd tended to warriors returning from battlefields, comforted disciples who'd suffered devastating losses, guided students through the darkest periods of their cultivation. But he'd never seen eyes quite like these.

They were the eyes of soone who'd looked into an abyss and found it staring back.

"Jinghui," Master Hong called softly.

The bloody figure's head snapped up, and Master Hong saw recognition flicker across features that were barely recognizable beneath the gore. The young man's mouth opened as if to speak, but no words ca out.

"I…need…help," Jinghui finally managed, his voice raw and broken. "Master Hong, help ..."

"Of course," Master Hong replied imdiately. "Co inside. Let's get you cleaned up."

He guided Jinghui through the gardens to his private quarters, avoiding the main halls where curious disciples might see them. The boy moved like a sleepwalker, responding to direction but showing no awareness of his surroundings.

In the privacy of his chambers, Master Hong helped Jinghui sit on a simple wooden chair and began the process of cleaning away the blood and filth. Most of it wasn't Jinghui's, he noted with relief. A few minor cuts and bruises, but nothing that suggested serious injury.

The real damage was clearly internal.

As Master Hong worked with warm water and clean cloths, Jinghui sat perfectly still and muttered under his breath in words too quiet to understand. His grip on the cloth sack never loosened, even when Master Hong had to work around it to clean his arms.

"Can you tell what happened?" Master Hong asked gently as he cleaned blood from Jinghui's face.

Jinghui's eyes focused on him for a mont. "I found him," he said simply. "I found my brother."

"And?"

"And I did what I had to do." Jinghui's voice was flat, emotionless. "He was guilty. Of everything. More than I even knew."

Master Hong nodded, his heart sinking. He'd hoped that when this mont ca, if it ca, Jinghui might find so other solution. So way to resolve the situation without bloodshed.

But looking at the traumatized young man sitting in his chamber, Master Hong realized that so wounds were too deep for anything but the most final of redies.

"Jinghui," he said carefully, "what's in the sack?"

For the first ti since arriving, Jinghui's grip on the bundle loosened slightly. He looked down at it as if surprised to find it in his hands.

"Evidence," he said after a long pause. "Proof that justice was done."

Master Hong gently pried the sack from Jinghui's fingers. The young man let it go without resistance, his hands falling limply to his sides. Master Hong opened the cloth bundle and imdiately understood why Jinghui was in such a state of shock.

Cao Mingshan's head stared back at him with empty eyes. Even in death, the face showed traces of the cruelty and selfishness that had marked his life. But there was also sothing else, sothing that looked almost like relief.

Master Hong closed the sack and set it aside. He'd seen death before, but family killing family always carried a particular weight of tragedy.

"He's at peace now," Master Hong said, not sure if he was talking about Mingshan or Jinghui. "The circle is closed."

Jinghui nodded slowly. "I told my parents they could rest. But now..." He looked down at his hands, which Master Hong had cleaned but which Jinghui still seed to see as blood-stained. "Now I don't know what I'm supposed to do."

"What do you an?"

"This is all I've thought about for ten years," Jinghui said, his voice growing smaller with each word. "Every day, every night, every mont. How to get strong enough. How to find him. How to make him pay. And now it's done, and I don't... I can't..."

He trailed off, staring at his clean hands with an expression of complete bewildernt.

Master Hong's heart ached for the young man. He'd seen this before, in warriors who'd spent years focused on a single goal only to find themselves adrift when that goal was finally achieved. The purpose that had driven them for so long was gone, leaving behind an emptiness that felt like death.

"Jinghui," Master Hong said gently, "do you rember what that spirit told you? About finding new purposes beyond revenge?"

Jinghui's eyes flickered with sothing that might have been mory. "He said power should be used for more than settling old scores."

"Wise words. You have incredible cultivation now, abilities that most martial artists can only dream of. That's a responsibility as much as a gift."

"But what am I supposed to do with it?" Jinghui asked, and for a mont he sounded like the lost child Master Hong had found at the temple gates ten years ago. "I don't know how to be anything other than angry."

Master Hong considered his words carefully. This was a crucial mont, perhaps the most important conversation of Jinghui's life. The young man was balanced on a knife's edge between healing and self-destruction.

"Would you like to stay here for a while?" Master Hong asked. "Help teach the younger students? You have knowledge and experiences that could benefit them greatly."

"I'm not qualified to be a teacher," Jinghui protested. "My power was all gifted to . I barely understand my own cultivation; how can I guide others?"

"Teaching isn't about being perfect," Master Hong replied. "It's about sharing what you've learned, even if that learning ca through hardship. Perhaps especially then."

He gestured toward the window, where the sound of rain continued to provide a peaceful backdrop to their conversation.

"Those children out there, so of them will face their own dark monts. Tis when they'll need guidance from soone who understands what it ans to carry hatred and still choose sothing better. You could be that guidance for them."

Jinghui was quiet for a long ti, his gaze distant. When he finally spoke, his voice carried a note of cautious hope.

"You think I could learn to be sothing other than a weapon?"

"I know you can," Master Hong said firmly. "Because despite everything you've been through, despite the darkness you've carried, you're still the sa boy who cared enough about his friend to risk his own safety during a descent. That compassion is still there, Jinghui. It just needs ti to heal and grow."

For the first ti since arriving, Jinghui smiled. It was a small, fragile thing, but it was genuine.

"I'd like that," he said. "To stay here. To try to be useful for sothing other than killing."

"Then you're welco for as long as you want to stay," Master Hong replied. "We'll start slowly. Observe so lessons, help with basic instruction. See how it feels."

"Thank you," Jinghui said, and this ti his voice carried real warmth. "For everything. For not giving up on when everyone else would have."

Master Hong smiled back, feeling the weight he'd carried for nearly a decade finally lifting from his shoulders. The boy he'd raised was still there, beneath the trauma and the blood and the terrible power. Still capable of growth, of becoming sothing more than his past had tried to make him.

Outside, the rain continued to fall, washing the world clean for another day's beginning.

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