Dawnlight Stellar Academy - Professor Shaddad's Apartnt
"Whoa- absolutely incredible." Jabba opened his eyes slowly and finally allowed himself to relax his rigid posture, letting his back sink gently against the wall behind him. He closed his eyes for a mont, savoring the sensation, and then began massaging his temples carefully, feeling the tension of years gradually
ease away.
After fifteen years, Shaddad had finally ard his body up to the fourth chamber, and only then did he leave Jabba alone to go and do as he pleased. And the very first thing Jabba did wasn't to visit Morgana for guidance on properly strengthening his soul, but rather to study the three Master Laws!
This was entirely because he still felt lost, still uncertain which law he should select to build his pillars with. His limits were firmly capped at Level Ten in the inner energy system, and he knew he could never surpass that without first choosing a law suitable for him. Every ti he thought of it, his heart raced
with both anticipation and hesitation.
Among the three laws-Balance, Creation, and Space-Ti-the choice seed obvious in so ways, yet intimidating in others.
Balance had been completely off the table. The Master had outright forbidden its use, warning that if Jabba tried it, he would remain tethered to the Cosmic Elder indefinitely-and that would be the end of his freedom.
Creation was still a mystery. It seed beautiful, elegant, and unimaginably powerful, a law of endless possibilities-but it didn't seem to carry any inherent combat nature. And Jabba, a forr General who had lived for battle and thrived in conflict, could not imagine a life without the thrill of confrontation. Thus, the choice fell naturally to the law that the Master had used with remarkable skill to defeat countless enemies over the years: Space-Ti.
Yet... it was far from the simple, straightforward path he had imagined.
"Heh~" Jabba let out a long, weary sigh.
Step Step
"Should I say congratulations?" Shaddad's voice ca from nearby as he walked past, carrying a large pot brimming with raw materials. The faint tallic clink of the contents echoed softly through the apartnt.
"Say it today, say it everyday- After all these years, I've finally completed the reading of the first stage of Space-Ti-fully and completely!" Jabba's face broke into a wide, triumphant smile, his eyes shining with a mixture of pride and relief. "It's no wonder the Master handed those nearly full-length tal tablets for preservation. The sheer volu of information in just this one level surpasses everything I've learned from all the other laws combined!"
"Oh!" Shaddad stopped abruptly and turned to look at him, lifting his eyebrows in genuine surprise. "Congratulations, elder brother. I really wish I could finish the first one too!"
"Hm? Haven't you completed your study of Master Law of Creation yet?" Jabba asked slowly, stepping toward Shaddad, his eyes narrowing slightly as he examined the pot in Shaddad's hands. "...And what exactly is all of this?"
"Unfortunately, I haven't had the luxury to sit for fifteen uninterrupted years just to study a single law," Shaddad admitted, a sigh of nostalgia and quiet envy slipping through his tone. "Ah~ I truly envy you, elder brother. No responsibilities weighing on you, no burdens or duties. You are still free, still exploring your path in life, searching for your place." His gaze drifted to the window, eyes glazed with the soft haze of reminiscence. "As for ... I've been stuck in the sa stagnant mire for hundreds of thousands of years, unable to move forward."
"...Is that a personal attack or just envy talking?" Jabba let out a short, incredulous laugh, shaking his head slightly at his friend's dramatic self-reflection.
"Just words, nothing more. Don't pay them too much attention~" Shaddad waved dismissively, but his fingers lingered on the rim of the pot as he began carefully emptying its contents.
"What exactly is all of this?" Jabba leaned closer, curiosity brimming in his voice. "tals? Are you planning to craft so new artifact with these?" He peered into the pot, noting the faint gleam of raw minerals and strange alloys that glinted in the light, imagining the possibilities they might unlock in Shaddad's skilled hands.
"I intend to craft my dream..." Shaddad exhaled deeply, his chest rising and falling with the weight of his thoughts. The sound of his sigh echoed faintly in the quiet workshop, filled with scattered tals and tools reflecting the sunlight through the windows. "I hope the day cos when physical strength becos the Fifth Cultivation Path, not just so secondary option. But that will never happen unless I make entering a World Cataclysm through the weaponization system simpler, faster, and cheaper. Otherwise, physical cultivation will remain a re supplentary path, a luxury reserved only for those with endless ti and resources, never a true cornerstone of strength!" He slamd his hand hard on the wooden table, making the tal pots rattle and small scraps of ore clatter. "How in the world can physical strength be considered a supplentary path? Isn't the body supposed to be the primary biological machine? Those ancients... how could they train the soul so ticulously but never think to strengthen their bodies? By everything alive and furred, how could they ignore such an essential foundation?!" His voice rose, fueled by frustration and disbelief.
"I think many tried, but failed..." Jabba muttered, rubbing his chin as his eyes scanned the rough tal pieces scattered across the workbench. "Even my predecessors had their own experints with the body and failed miserably." "...Perhaps," Shaddad said, a quiet determination creeping into his tone. He picked up the largest, roughest piece of tal from the pot, holding it up to the sunlight filtering through the window. "This... is Black Plague excrent. They've spread uncontrollably in recent years across multiple sectors. And honestly... I think this is an opportunity. This single piece cost 25,000 Pearls... maybe, just maybe, the answer lies hidden inside it!"
"Dude," Jabba said, lifting his gaze toward Shaddad, his hand firm on Shaddad's broad shoulder. "Even if the answer is hidden in there, I'm not letting you shove excrent into my bones. Absolutely not."
"It's research! Research!!" Shaddad snapped back, voice sharp but passionate. He gestured toward the scattered tals and ores as if their potential answers could be unlocked through sheer will. "...Hey, why don't you help ? The Master said you had your own research into physical strength before, that you even built so kind of array or device, and that you might have ideas I could use. This is the perfect ti for your insight!"
"And why not help yourself first?" Jabba countered, his hand pointing toward the stack of tallic tablets on the shelf. "If you kept reading the first level of the Creation Law and actually understood it, wouldn't that give you the foundation you need for all of this?" He clicked his fingers lightly, a mischievous smirk forming on his lips. "Maybe that alone would produce the results you want without spending thousands of Pearls on... excrent."
Shaddad raised a single, sharp eyebrow. "You said you read Space-Ti to the very end. Did you understand any of it?"
"...No," Jabba admitted, scratching the back of his head, a small embarrassed
laugh escaping.
It was a strange sensation, almost frustratingly alien. He hadn't just read the material over and over-he had imprinted it on his mind, walked through it step by step repeatedly, tried to absorb every nuance-but it was useless. Even though his Master had written everything in clear, structured language, it felt like magic: each word could be understood in isolation, yet it could never be connected to the next. Every attempt left him baffled, like staring at a puzzle with missing pieces.
"Then why in the world do you want to waste my ti on it?!" Shaddad
shook his head violently, his long hair swaying. "I gave up after the first three years. I realized that even understanding a single word from that law is nearly impossible. Heaven has already blessed with the Eye of Truth, and I can spend the rest of my life proudly claiming that I am a user of a Master Law and a disciple of the Great Truth Chosen of this generation... as for Creation? I am not the protagonist. I am not the main character ant to wield two master laws. That is the truth. Heroic matters... I will leave them to those who are destined for them."
"And why not help yourself first?" Jabba countered, his hand pointing toward the stack of tallic tablets on the shelf. "If you kept reading the first level of the Creation Law and actually understood it, wouldn't that give you the foundation you need for all of this?" He clicked his fingers lightly, a mischievous smirk forming on his lips. "Maybe that alone would produce the results you want without spending thousands of Pearls on... excrent."
Shaddad raised a single, sharp eyebrow. "You said you read Space-Ti to the very end. Did you understand any of it?"
"...No," Jabba admitted, scratching the back of his head, a small embarrassed
laugh escaping.
It was a strange sensation, almost frustratingly alien. He hadn't just read the material over and over-he had imprinted it on his mind, walked through it step by step repeatedly, tried to absorb every nuance-but it was useless. Even though his Master had written everything in clear, structured language, it felt like magic: each word could be understood in isolation, yet it could never be connected to the next. Every attempt left him baffled, like staring at a puzzle with missing pieces.
"Then why in the world do you want to waste my ti on it?!" Shaddad
shook his head violently, his long hair swaying. "I gave up after the first three years. I realized that even understanding a single word from that law is nearly impossible. Heaven has already blessed with the Eye of Truth, and I can spend the rest of my life proudly claiming that I am a user of a Master Law and a disciple of the Great Truth Chosen of this generation... as for Creation? I am not the protagonist. I am not the main character ant to wield two master laws. That is the truth. Heroic matters... I will leave them to those who are
destined for them."
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