The Jade Moon Market, with its faint scent of blooming night-lotus and the low hum of cultivator chatter, felt a world away from the blood-soaked ravine they had left behind. The thirty-eight lustrous, top-grade Qi Refining Pellets nestled securely in Wang Jian’s newly acquired storage pouch pulsed with a promise of swift advancent.
"First things first, Lingshan," Wang Jian murmured as they navigated the market’s relatively clean, lantern-lit streets that evening. "We need a secure, quiet place to cultivate. Consuming these pellets requires uninterrupted ditation. An inn room is too... public, too easily disturbed."
Princess Yue Lingshan nodded, her veiled face turned towards him. "A cave dwelling? I heard so of the older disciples at Mystic Peak speak of renting them when they needed seclusion for breakthroughs."
"Exactly," Wang Jian confird. "Most cultivator markets of this size offer temporary cave dwellings for rent. They’re usually carved into nearby hillsides, imbued with basic silencing and protective arrays. More expensive than an inn, but worth it for our current needs."
They located the ’Jade Lotus Cave Rentals’ office, a surprisingly ornate little building tucked away near the market’s edge, its entrance flanked by two stern-faced cultivators who looked like they could handle trouble. Inside, a bored-looking clerk, a woman at the peak of Qi Condensation with sharp eyes, glanced up from her ledger.
"Seeking a dwelling, Fellow Daoists?" she asked, her tone professional but devoid of warmth.
"Indeed, Fairy," Wang Jian replied smoothly, adopting the polite cultivator address. "We require a standard grade cave dwelling, suitable for undisturbed cultivation, for a period of... two months."
The clerk consulted her ledger. "Standard grade, two months... that will be six low-grade spirit stones upfront. Includes basic silencing array and a simple spirit gathering formation to slightly enhance ambient Qi."
’Six spirit stones. Steep, but necessary. We’ll make it back.’ Wang Jian didn’t hesitate. He produced the stones from the storage pouch, ifang’s unexpected contribution already proving its worth.
The clerk accepted the stones, her expression unchanging. She handed him a carved wooden token. "Dwelling number seventeen, West Hill. Follow the jade-lit path. The token will grant you access. Do not cause disturbances, and vacate promptly when your term expires."
"Understood, Fairy. Our thanks."
Cave dwelling number seventeen was a modest affair, a cleanly carved opening in the rocky hillside, its entrance sealed by a heavy stone door that glowed faintly with the light of the embedded access array. Wang Jian pressed the token against it, and the door slid open silently.
Inside, it was surprisingly spacious, if spartan. A single large chamber, its stone walls smooth and cool to the touch. A faint, almost imperceptible hum indicated the active silencing array. In the center, a slightly raised circular platform glowed with the faint lines of a simple spirit gathering formation. It wasn’t luxurious, but it was private, secure, and the ambient Spiritual Energy, though still thin, felt marginally richer here than in the open market.
"This will do nicely," Wang Jian said, a hint of satisfaction in his voice. He tossed his pack onto a rough-hewn stone ledge that served as a shelf. Yue Lingshan did the sa, removing her outer cloak and veil, her beautiful face revealed in the dim glow of the spirit gathering formation.
"Two months, Jian?" she asked, looking around the cave. "Just... cultivating?"
He walked towards her, pulling her into his arms. "Primarily cultivating, yes," he murmured, his lips finding hers. "But," he added, his voice dropping to a husky whisper as the kiss deepened, "I’m sure we can find... other ways to pass the ti productively when we’re not ditating."
Princess Yue Lingshan giggled, her earlier weariness and the lingering shock of their recent battle lting away in his embrace. Here, with him, even a bare stone cave felt like a sanctuary.
And so began their period of intense, secluded cultivation.
They divided the thirty top-grade Qi Refining Pellets equally: fifteen for Wang Jian, fifteen for Yue Lingshan. Eight pellets remained in the storage pouch, reserved for future needs or trade.
Each day, they would each consu one pellet. The mont the top-grade Qi Refining Pellet dissolved on their tongue, a surge of pure, refined Spiritual Energy would flood their ridians. It was a sensation far more potent, far more direct, than slowly absorbing the thin ambient Qi of the sect.
Wang Jian, with his ’Bright Jade Art’, focused on channeling this potent energy swiftly, expanding his dantian, pushing through the subtle blockages between the stages of Qi Condensation. His progress was visibly accelerated. The slightly inferior density of Qi cultivated by his art was more than compensated for by the sheer purity and volu provided by the top-grade pellets.
Princess Yue Lingshan, with her ’Verdant Water Nourishing Art’ and superior dual spiritual roots, experienced an even more dramatic surge. The Wood and Water Qi from the pellets seed to sing to her, her ridians eagerly absorbing and integrating the power.
They would spend hours each day in deep ditation, their bodies glowing faintly with the light of their cultivated Qi. The simple spirit gathering formation in the cave, while weak, provided a constant, subtle trickle of ambient energy to supplent the pellets.
At night, after their cultivation sessions, their energies spent but their spirits strangely invigorated, they would turn to each other. Their nights were filled with a passion that seed to deepen with each passing day, their shared journey, their secrets, their recent brush with death, forging a bond that went beyond re physical desire. Wang Jian was a demanding lover, but also surprisingly tender at tis, and Yue Lingshan found herself surrendering to him more completely than she ever thought possible, discovering new depths of pleasure and intimacy.
Their body tempering practices continued as well, the influx of refined Qi subtly enhancing the effects of their grueling exercises, making their mortal fras even more resilient, their movents more powerful.
The results were swift.
Within the first three weeks, Yue Lingshan, her dantian overflowing, felt the familiar surge. A radiant green and blue light enveloped her as she broke through to the Fifth Stage of Qi Condensation.
Wang Jian, a few days later, also felt the shift, his own dantian expanding, his Qi becoming denser, more potent. Fifth Stage.
The pellets were working wonders.
Another month of diligent cultivation, fueled by the daily intake of top-grade Qi Refining Pellets and their shared nocturnal ’energy exchanges’, saw them both advance again.
Princess Yue Lingshan, with her superior talent, was the first to break through once more, reaching the Sixth Stage of Qi Condensation. Her aura beca noticeably stronger, her control over her Wood and Water Qi more refined. She could now easily conjure shimring water shields and whip-like verdant vines with a re thought.
A week later, Wang Jian also achieved his breakthrough to the Sixth Stage. His progress, while a step behind Lingshan’s, was still astonishingly fast by any normal standard for a triple-root cultivator. The ’Bright Jade Art’ was living up to its na, especially when supercharged by top-grade elixirs.
By the ti their two months in the rented cave dwelling were nearing an end, they had consud all thirty of their initial pellets. Eight precious top-grade Qi Refining Pellets remained. Their cultivation had soared.
Wang Jian, however, knew that relying solely on consuming pellets was not a sustainable long-term strategy. They needed more resources, more knowledge, and a way to convert their existing assets into further opportunities.
The remaining eigh top-grade Qi Refining Pellets beca his trading capital.
During their two months of secluded cultivation, Wang Jian and Princess Yue Lingshan hadn’t been complete hermits. They made regular, brief excursions into the Jade Moon Market, always separately, always with Lingshan heavily veiled and cloaked. Wang Jian would observe, listen, and occasionally engage in discreet inquiries.
He learned that top-grade Qi Refining Pellets, while not exceedingly rare, were highly sought after, especially by Qi Condensation disciples nearing breakthroughs or those with ambitions to enter more prestigious sects. They fetched a good price, either in spirit stones or, more valuably, in trade for other resources.
Wang Jian, with his usual shrewdness, didn’t sell all eight pellets at once or to a single buyer. He drip-fed them into the market through various interdiaries he subtly cultivated – a struggling independent alchemist here, a desperate rogue cultivator there. He exchanged so for a significant quantity of raw herbal ingredients for more Qi Refining Pellets (enough for several dozen batches, if his future refinents were successful). He traded others for a decent sum of low-grade spirit stones, replenishing their depleted funds. And a few, he bartered for information and specific, low-grade spell techniques.
The cultivators in the Jade Moon Market who learned of Wang Jian’s ability to consistently produce or acquire top-grade Qi Refining Pellets were suitably impressed. While the pellet itself was foundational, achieving top-grade quality consistently, especially for a seemingly young Fourth, then Fifth, then Sixth Stage cultivator, hinted at either exceptional alchemical talent or significant backing.
Wang Jian, of course, cultivated an air of quiet mystery, letting them speculate.
His primary goal in acquiring more spirit stones was to learn more spells. His Night Fang was a good weapon, and his physical prowess formidable for his realm, but true cultivators fought with techniques, with spells that manipulated the elents and spiritual energy.
Through careful bartering and discreet purchases of jade slips from information brokers in the market, Wang Jian managed to acquire several useful Qi Condensation level spells.
He learned the ’Azure Serpent Strike’, a Water-elental spell that conjured a fast, whip-like serpent of water to lash at opponents. He also acquired the ’Crimson Sparrow Dart’, a Fire-elental spell that launched multiple small, homing fire projectiles.
For defense, he found the ’Earthen Wall Barrier’, a solid, if temporary, shield of condensed earth Qi. And for his sword, he finally obtained a basic sword Qi technique: ’Flowing tal Slash’, which allowed him to infuse his blade with a thin layer of sharpened tallic Qi, significantly increasing its cutting power.
These were all low-grade, foundational spells, but for a Sixth Stage Qi Condensation cultivator, they represented a significant boost in combat capability. His Qi reserves were still limited – he could perhaps cast each spell a handful of tis before being depleted – but it was a start. He now had ranged attacks, better defenses, and a way to make his Night Fang truly bite.
Princess Yue Lingshan also benefited. While her admirers in the Mystic Peak Sect had gifted her basic spells, Wang Jian ensured she learned these new ones as well, often ’teaching’ her himself in the privacy of their cave, using the jade slips as a guide, but adding his own profound insights into Qi circulation and intent, making her learning process remarkably swift.
Their two months in the Jade Moon Market were transformative. They had arrived as exhausted Fourth Stage disciples with a handful of stolen goods. They were leaving as significantly more powerful Sixth Stage cultivators, ard with new spells, a deeper understanding of the cultivator world, and a fresh batch of resources and potential.
As they prepared to vacate their cave dwelling, their ’official’ sect missions almost forgotten (though still technically active), Wang Jian looked at Yue Lingshan. Her veiled face was turned towards the entrance of the cave, towards the world outside.
"Ready for the next adventure, Princess?" he asked, a familiar, predatory glint in his eyes.
Yue Lingshan turned to him, and even through the veil, he could sense the excitent, the confidence that now radiated from her.
"With you, Jian," she replied, her voice clear and steady, "always."
He smirked. The Jade Moon Market had been a profitable interlude.
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