Lin Zhen’s long sword recoiled from the asurent-cross and inverted. The blade dropped to a posture the practice yards of Skyedge had not seen in public use for seven years — point lowered, edge angled toward the wet stone at thirty degrees, body weighted on the rear leg. It was the opening stance of Awakening Dragon, the first form of the Seven Dragon Sword Art, and any cultivator from a sect older than two centuries would have recognised it before the patriarch finished sinking into it.
Cao Yan recognised it.
He stopped grinning.
"You are going to teach the catechism today, Patriarch?"
"You did not pay attention the first ti it was taught to you."
Cao Yan crossed the wet rock in three running steps. His sword ca down in a heavy diagonal — the brutalist’s opening of a Blood Fang ranking elder, a stroke that broke guards by weight before it bothered with technique.
The Awakening Dragon rose to et it.
The lower edge of the patriarch’s blade caught the falling stroke at the angle the form demanded — diagonal ascending, reading the rival’s intent without committing to the counter the geotry had already opened. Cao Yan’s sword skimd off the patriarch’s edge into open air. In the sa half-breath that the deflection happened, Lin Zhen had already unlocked the chest line the form promised.
He did not take the chest line.
Awakening Dragon was a reading form.
Cao Yan recovered faster than the form had budgeted for. He brought his sword back across the gap in his guard and stepped out of the engagent line, palm rotating up as he moved.
He cut into his own palm with the edge of his own sword. A transverse stroke across the at below the thumb. The blood ran out fast, hot, and refused to fall — it coiled above his palm in the shape of a small floating sigil that began to glow a dirty red, a red the body did not produce on Earth and produced once in a lifeti on this continent.
The first Blood Sigil.
Lin Zhen’s jaw set by a degree.
"You went after Blood Fang’s real arts after all."
"I went after everything that worked, Patriarch. You taught the lesson on a wet evening in White River. I have spent fifteen years studying it."
The sigil sank into Cao Yan’s chest. His robes darkened around the entry point and then lit faintly red from within. His next breath ca out in a thin crimson mist.
He moved again.
He had been a Foundation Establishnt cultivator on the rim of the pass thirty seconds ago. The body that ca at Lin Zhen now was carrying sothing half a stage above that, the second-grade speed of a Blood Sigil burning through its arteries.
Lin Zhen passed from Awakening Dragon into Coiling Dragon without an interdiate beat.
His blade began to draw small consecutive circles in front of his chest. The Qi violet-blue of the patriarch wrapped each circle in a faint trailing afterimage. Cao Yan’s enhanced charge slamd into the first circle and the circle ate it — the stroke redirected by the patriarch’s wrist into open air, Cao Yan’s sword carried half a pace past the line of its own attack. The opening in his guard yawned for half a second.
This ti Lin Zhen took the half-second.
The point of his sword left the second circle and entered Cao Yan’s shoulder along the seam where the plum-violet robe t the collarbone. The Blood Sigil sucked the wound closed in two heartbeats — Blood Drink working through Cao Yan’s own freshly spilled blood — but the cut had landed first, and the cut had been precise.
Cao Yan retreated three paces. The mist of his breath ca redder.
"That was Coiling Dragon. You do not pull out Coiling Dragon for amateurs, Patriarch. I am flattered."
"I am not finished."
—————————————————————
Elder Ren had been working the triangle for half a minute and the triangle had not yet been able to close on him.
Bao stood at the apex with the heavy long sword of a senior elder who had not been required to use it in nine years. Shan flanked left with twin daggers in the underhand grip of a man who had spent his cultivation on knife work and politics in equal asure. Wu hung back from the right with both palms raised at chest height — Wu had been an Open Palm practitioner since before any of the others had taken their first sect robe, and Wu did not need to draw a weapon to be in a fight.
Ren had no Qi to spend evenly. He had decided this in the first second of the engagent. He moved first. Always.
Three feints into Bao. Then a sharp pivot into Shan’s daggers. A cut along the right wrist that loosened the grip on the second blade. Shan dropped the dagger. Picked it up again before the rain could carry it off. The wrist bled. Ren did not pause.
He turned back into Bao before Bao had finished closing the distance. The point of his sword found the at of Bao’s left thigh — a sliding pierce that did not split the bone but opened the vastus from the outside down to the knee. Bao staggered.
Behind Ren now, Wu struck.
The Open Palm ca at Ren’s lower back at the angle a Foundation Establishnt Open Palm strike ca at a kidney when the practitioner had been doing it for forty years. Ren turned. Caught the palm against his own forearm. The impact rode up his shoulder and into the base of his skull. He did not collapse. He did not retreat.
But the cut Shan’s second dagger took out of Ren’s left side under the ribs as he turned to face Wu — that cut went deeper than the neck cut had been, and that cut was the price of facing the wrong man.
Ren’s robe had begun to redden across the entire left flank.
He drove forward into Bao again. Bao was the spine. Bao still had to fall first.
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