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Now reading: Volume 2—Chapter 38: A Solid Foundation and a Salt-Stained F from Records of Immortality, a Reincarnation novel by A.S. Storyteller.

Ashan's routine shifted once more.

For the days that followed, his world condensed to the disciplined rhythm of sadhana under Shikshak Yaren's exacting eye. The hours blurred together, marked only by the slow, asured cycles of breath and the deeper, more subtle cycles of energy that moved within him like tides responding to a moon he could not see. The instructor provided focused insights into regulating the flow of urja and maintaining the requisite state of ntal clarity, his advice sharp and pragmatic, stripped of the flourishes that accompanied his lectures.

"I can offer no specific techniques for your marga—Samyama is the guarded lineage of the seven royal houses." Yaren's voice was flat and matter-of-fact, the voice of a man who had accepted the limits of what he could give and was not going to apologize for them. "Yet, general principles of focus and energy containnt will strengthen your foundation."

When will that sly snake deliver the promised guide? Ashan let the thought surface, let it drift through the stillness of his mind. Not only that, but I still lack a proper mantra or kriya for the Path of Greed itself.

Across from him, Shikshak Yaren's own urja was a model of control, flowing with the deep, placid certainty of a calm river that had been flowing for centuries and would flow for centuries more. It was the flow of a man who had found his center and was not about to leave it.

"Attaining the Arohan rank represents a profound tamorphosis for a sadhaka." Yaren's voice was a low hum in the quiet room, the voice of a man who had seen the transformation he was describing and knew its cost. "Without a foundation of iron, the newly expanded power can easily turn inwards. The practitioner loses control." He let the statent hang, let it beco part of the silence that had settled between them. "You have witnessed the consequence firsthand."

'You are constantly fighting among yourselves!'

The old, cryptic warning from Instructor Inria echoed in the vault of Ashan's mory, a voice from another life, another ti, another version of himself who had not yet learned what the words ant.

"Why do you suppose only seven of you survived the Order's initial experint?" Yaren posed the question suddenly, his voice cutting through the silence like a blade through silk. Both continued their internal circulation of urja, the conversation woven seamlessly into their practice, the words becoming part of the rhythm of breath and energy that sustained them.

"Because we possessed potential." Ashan let the answer form, let it rise to the surface. "Or a specific talent, given our compatibility with the Samyama marga."

Shikshak Yaren gave a slight, negating shake of his head, the movent barely perceptible, the judgnt absolute. "A half-truth." His voice was soft, but it carried. "The sole, imdiate 'talent' the seven of you demonstrated was the sheer endurance to survive the initial exposure to corruption. Your potential is asured not by how high you might climb, but by how long you can withstand the corrosion on the way."

Ashan pondered this, the internal flow of his energy never ceasing, the rhythm of his breath never faltering. "Then..." He let the thought take shape, let it beco words. "A sadhaka's primary gift is not comprehension, nor rapid advancent, nor raw power. It is the fortitude to survive the corruption within and keep it shackled."

"True talent is a combination of all facets." Yaren's tone was placid and absolute, the tone of a man who had spent a lifeti asuring talent and had learned that it was never as simple as it seed. "But the paramount facet is survival. Control. You could be a prodigy in every other aspect, but if the corruption gains the faintest flicker of purchase, you are already dead." He paused, let the words settle. "Everything else is rendered null."

Quite the brutally demanding world I've been reborn into.

"This is why your foundation must be unassailable." Yaren's voice took on a grave seriousness, the voice of a man who had seen what happened to those who built on sand and was determined that his student would not share their fate. "Your advancent to formal sadhaka status took just over six months—half the estimated average. The Order's thod... applying the intense pressure of mortal terror and potent negative emotions to force awakening... is brutal." He paused, and when he spoke again, there was a note of grim pride in his voice. "Its success rate is vanishingly small. Yet, by the grace of the Lord of Greed and the other Asura Lords and Ladies, we produced seven Samyama practitioners on the first attempt."

Ashan nodded, the lesson settling heavily upon him, becoming part of the weight he carried. "I understand. The core of the Bodnir rank is consolidation. I will solidify my footing."

........

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Apart from the guidance in sadhana, Shikshak Yaren also advanced his instruction in charmcasting. The lessons were different now, more focused, more demanding, the training wheels removed.

"With continued practice on paper, you may graduate to other diums." Yaren held a smooth river stone in his palm, turning it over, letting the light catch its surface. "The principle remains: when you imprint your thread of urja upon the object, you must perceive it not as a separate thing. Treat it as an extension of your own body." He tossed the stone from hand to hand, caught it, held it still. "A third arm. A second set of eyes."

Treat it as an extension of your body. Ashan let the words settle, let them turn over, let them reveal their edges. Right, yes. The whole fucking universe is just an extension of my asshole. He felt the corners of his mouth twitch. More of these delightfully flimsy philosophical taphors.

Ashan divided his focus entirely between deepening his sadhana and refining his charmcraft. He beca a ghost in his own dilapidated hut, scarcely visiting it, his existence absorbed by the rigorous tutelage. The days passed in a blur of energy and intent, of symbols drawn and redrawn, of the slow, patient work of making his hands do what his mind commanded.

........

"Loose the sails!"

"Drop anchor!"

"You drunken oaf, get those supplies to the warehouse! Now!"

The harbor port was a cacophony of shouts, curses, and creaking wood, saturated with the foul bouquet of stale alcohol, human sweat, and briny sea air that clung to the skin and the clothes and the lungs. Ships of every size ca and went, loading and disgorging their cargoes onto the bustling docks, their hulls painted in the colors of a dozen different factions, their flags snapping in the wind, their crews shouting in a dozen different languages. It was a scene of orchestrated chaos, of controlled frenzy, of the particular energy that ca from the eting of land and sea and the n who lived on both.

Hmm. Ashan observed the tumult as he followed in Shikshak Yaren's wake, his eyes moving across the ships, the docks, the faces of the n who worked them. The tranquil part of the island, I see.

Every laborer, rchant, and sailor they passed offered a shallow, hurried bow to the instructor, their deference automatic, their fear genuine. They cut a swift path through the throng, moving toward a less-frequented section of the waterfront where the crowds thinned and the noise faded and the ships that waited were smaller, quieter, less eager to announce their presence.

Is that my vessel? Ashan's eyes settled on a lone, modest ship resting at an isolated pier, its lines clean, its decks clear, its presence a quiet counterpoint to the chaos that surrounded it. The one to carry back to my 'ho'?

No crowd surrounded it. The area was undeveloped, the planks rough and uneven, the grit of coarse sand finding its way into his sandals with every step. The ship was seaworthy—that much was clear—but its history was written in the small scratches along its hull, the patched holes that had been filled with new wood and new tar, the faded paint that had once been bright and was now the color of sky at dusk.

"This will convey you to Ogefil Island." Shikshak Yaren's voice was flat and matter-of-fact, the voice of a man who had done what he had been asked to do and was ready to move on.

Ashan cleared his throat. "Is it... sound for the voyage?"

"Aye! Sound as a bell!"

A man descended the ship's ladder onto the dock, his movents quick, his voice bright, his face weathered by sun and salt and the particular kind of hard living that ca from a life spent on the water. "Praise the Lord of Greed!"

"Praise the Lord of Greed."

"Praise the Lord of Greed."

The triad of customary salutations was exchanged, the words falling into the space between them, becoming part of the rhythm of the harbor. Ashan's eyes flickered with assessnt, his gaze moving across the man's face, his hands, the way he carried himself. The sailor wore the standard cloak of an Order mber, but the drape of the dark golden fabric over his left shoulder marked a specific affiliation.

Rat Faction.

"She's taken her share of knocks." The sailor grinned, slapping the ship's hull with a fondness that spoke of long acquaintance and shared hardship. "But her heart's true. Ready to sail wherever the current and the Lord's will take us."

Ashan looked at the ship, at the sailor, at the horizon that stretched beyond them both. The water was grey-green today, the sky low and heavy, the promise of a storm that might co and might not. He could sll the salt on the air, the tar on the ropes, the particular sll of a vessel that had been places and would go again.

He thought of Ogefil, of the streets he had walked, the alleys he had slept in, the faces he had known and left behind. He thought of what he was being sent to do, of the pirates he would have to unify, of the banner he would have to raise that would not be the Order's banner, not the House's banner, not anything that had ever flown before.

He thought of the future that was rushing toward him, and he let the thought settle, let it beco part of the weight he carried.

"When do we sail?" His voice was steady, his face calm, his eyes fixed on the horizon.

"As soon as you're ready." The sailor's grin widened. "The sea waits for no one, but she'll wait for you. Just this once."

Ashan nodded, and in the silence that followed, the weight of the days to co pressed against his thoughts, and the future—uncertain, unknown, unford—waited in the darkness beyond the harbor, beyond the sea, beyond the horizon that stretched before him like a promise that had not yet been kept.

He turned to Shikshak Yaren, offered a shallow bow, and spoke the words that had been waiting to be spoken since the mont he had first entered his teacher's workshop, since the mont he had first picked up a quill, since the mont he had first understood that the path to immortality was not a road but a sea and he would have to learn to sail.

"Praise the Lord of Greed."

"Praise the Lord of Greed."

He turned and walked toward the ship, toward the sea, toward the future that was waiting for him in the place where his second life had begun.

Behind him, the harbor faded, and the island faded, and the life he had known faded into mory, and the future rushed toward him like a wave that would not break until it had reached the shore.

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