《Virtuous Sons》0.13
Advertisement
It is commonly known that there is a gap between birth and the first conscious thought. During this infancy one simply exists, entirely at the mercy of the elements. Then there is a singular event, a spark of true thought, that every man and woman can recall as the moment the veil was lifted and they could finally see. The moment they ascended from the realm of animal instinct and into humanity. The inception of a cultivator is much the same. A spark, a lifting of a veil, and pneuma is revealed.
I experienced both in the same moment. I was three years old when I first witnessed the initiation rites of the Rosy Dawn. My father was holding me in the crook of his right arm, calling down heaven’s wrath with his left. It was the impact that shook awake my sleeping soul. He held me in that arm as we descended alone into the depths of the Scarlet City’s eastern mountain range. He held me as he approached the bisected corpse of the fallen sun god.
My father held me as the corpse reached up and laid its palm over my face.
“This is justice,” he told me. “Remember its face.” But I never could.
I’d decided to show Sol the city. It was as good a time as any for it. The streets of Alikos were alive with citizens, metics, freedmen and slaves all bustling around in preparation for the games. Foreigners abounded, leading carts and waving cloth and ornaments enticingly to passing citizens. They were like a flood, streaming in from every no-name village within the geopolitical orbit of the Scarlet City.
Despite the press of bodies, Sol and I were given a comparatively respectful berth as we walked the street. I was well enough known among the citizenry that deference was a given, and Sol’s freshly issued mystiko attire caught the eye long before his slave manacles did.
Naturally, he found reason to criticize it anyway.
“This isn’t practical in the slightest,” he grunted, yanking the trailing edge of his tunic out from under the feet of a passing Alikon. We were given more space than most, but in the narrower streets at this time of year there was only so much that could be done. The female citizen fell to the street, already shrieking in outrage, only for it to die in her throat as she spotted the distinctive uniform of the Rosy Dawn.
“Wearing it properly is a skill,” I said airily. The furthest edges of my cloth were pristine, unmarred even by the dust of the roads. He scowled as I shifted just so, avoiding a passing metic with careless grace. “You’ll learn eventually.”
Advertisement
He shifted his next step just enough to catch the edge of my tunic. Unfortunately, I’d known him well enough to expect it and he missed by a finger’s width. His scowl deepened.
“You Greeks make everything more complicated than it needs to be.”
“Yes, because a toga is so much more practical,” I said, rolling my eyes. “It’s easy enough to criticize, but don’t act as if you’re any better. Half your city’s greatest cultural achievements are the product of Greeks that happened to be passing through, and that’s being generous.”
“The best parts of Rome have never been touched by Greek hands,” he said. It was likely a common saying among the legions. They had to tell themselves something to maintain morale, after all.
I sneered. “The best parts of Rome are salt and ash.”
His expression darkened. Luckily for the public order, we’d just reached our destination. I slipped into a thermopolium, and with nothing in his hands to throw, the slave initiate had no choice but to follow me. He entered with eyes blazing but was immediately distracted.
Thermopolia were commercial developments, glorified bars where work-weary metics and freedmen could gather to drink and gorge themselves on poorly made food. A well to-do citizen wouldn’t be caught dead in one, and for that reason they were ideal havens for scum and all manner of assorted criminals. If an elder were to discover a member of the Rosy Dawn had been patronizing such a venue, they’d be given a sublime lashing. It was that sort of place.
And this one, in particular, was even worse. It wasn’t just full of low class wretches and conniving thieves. It was also seething with foreign cultivators, come to challenge the mystery cults of the Scarlet City in the games.
“What are we doing here?” Sol asked in a low voice, assessing the room. More than a few unfriendly eyes were doing the same. Our attire was rather distinct.
“I told you. We’re here to eat.”
They were the usual suspects. Men from low-born villages on the edges of enlightened civilization, clothed in rags just a step above what our own slaves wore. Too far from the free city-states of the Mediterranean to regularly benefit from their patronage, but arrogant enough to think that they could challenge us in spite of that.
The hue of their skin tended towards leather more than bronze. Their hair was often worn in locks or shorn off entirely. They were the children of poor farmers and fishermen, uneducated in all but the most plainly apparent matters of natural philosophy. Their cultivation reflected this. And their pankration was invariably atrocious.
Advertisement
“Grab us a few bowls of stew,” I bid my slave and junior brother, nodding towards the masonry counter at the far corner of the establishment. “I have a hunger.” He eyed me, still simmering over my comment, but nodded once and split away.
I walked up behind a seated cultivator and set both hands on the back of his chair. His fellows across the table glared murderously at me. They all wore wind-worn cloth, a faded yellow dye winding over their torsos in the symbol of whatever hovel they had sprung from. The two across the table wore their hair in locks. The one beneath my hands was shaved bald, with a powerful build and weathered skin that spoke to a life of hard labor.
“You’re in my seat,” I told him simply. He tilted his head back to look up at me.
“I don’t see your name on it.”
The audacity of these country dogs was something else. “What does that matter? You wouldn’t be able to read it if it was.”
The dog bared its teeth. “Go to the crows.”
I swept the chair back, spilling him from it and stomping him down when he tried to rise. His sworn brothers shouted and lunged across the table at me, one tossing a half-full bowl of fish stew at my face while the other pulled an obsidian dagger of all things and threw it at my chest.
I leaned away from the flying stew and flicked the broad side of the knife, embedding it in the far wall. With my other hand I caught the neck of the faster of the two and swung him viciously into his sworn brother, striking their skulls together hard enough to daze a bull. They both crashed through a nearby table and collapsed bonelessly. The residents of that table started shouting and drawing weapons over their spilled drinks. Off to my left, a group of what looked like regular patrons were eyeing me with vile intent.
My pneuma rose and everything stopped.
“I’ll spare your dog life this once,” I told the man beneath my foot pleasantly. The whites of his eyes were plainly apparent, filled with that wild fear of cornered prey. “Because even if you could read, you wouldn’t have been able to see my name from here. You’d have to climb the nearest mountain and look down to see it written across this whole city.”
It’s said that as a man progresses through the stages of his cultivation, it is only natural that his renown and his hubris grow in equal proportion. Tribulations are heaven’s way of reminding men that for all that they covet the stars, they will never stand among their number. Vice is as inherent to a cultivator’s lifestyle as his virtue, and attempting to avoid it outright often leads to even worse retribution than the norm.
I’ve lived what most would call a privileged lifestyle. I enjoyed a position of power and influence that the vast majority of even enlightened citizens would never experience in their entire lives, even with the longevity that cultivation provided. That I coveted more on top of that? That I had chosen to trawl through dive bars in the city and scope out challengers to harass rather than prepare for the Daylight Games the correct way, the virtuous way?
That was cause for correction.
A man in a hooded cloak lunged from a shadowed corner of the room, pneuma blazing as he lashed out with a technique that I didn’t recognize, could not predict the effects of. His cloak had obscured the color of his tunic underneath, the same faded yellow of the men I’d singled out. The intensity of his pneuma was such that his technique, many-times magnified, was far too dangerous to block. I shifted on my feet, only for the cultivator I’d stepped on to wrap himself around my leg with a vindictive grin.
I watched what might have been my death approach. It is the way of heaven to strike down those who revel in hubris. It is an inescapable truth that men were born mortal, and die mortal. The peak of Olympus Mons was nothing more than an ever-distant fantasy. The cultivator’s eyes were a cold grass green.
Sol appeared in the empty space behind the cultivator and slammed his head through the stone table. He spasmed once and went limp.
Of course, we defied the heavens anyway. It was what one did.
“Ho, took you long enough,” I said, stomping viciously on the bald cultivator’s throat. He gagged and heaved, scrabbling at his windpipe. I righted the chair and sat down. Sol sat across, setting down two bowls of stew that he’d balanced in his other arm.
I've lived my life by the terms of the cult. Where were the edges of those boundaries, my father's will and that of heaven? How far could I push them?
When would my tribulations come?
It was time to find out.
Advertisement
- In Serial99 Chapters
Chronicles of the last Leïn
This is the story of a child. One who should be dead, as nothing survives them. But the child fled and was rescued, through an act that broke prophecies and shattered Truth. Even though it was only an extended arm. Now, after excaping true horror, she faces the challenge of the grim reality. She needs to adapt; to survive, but also simply to live. Even though she was never meant to. This a world of fantasy. Magic exists, marvelous creatures roam the lands. But in no way is this reality fantastical, magical, or forgiving. It is one ruled by the Imperatrix. It takes place in an Empire that was created on the ashes of the War. And as it is true everywhere, its rules are made by the powerful, the rich and the mindless masses. [Release schedule is one chapter every two weeks on Fridays 8PM GMT+1 until I get myself in a good writing stride, and then I'll go back to one chapter per week.] (I am an aspiring author working full-time on my passion in the hope of one day being edited in either French or English, as I write in both languages.)
8 75 - In Serial17 Chapters
The Adventures of Rich Burton, Knight
This tale is an offshoot of my Misplaced Dungeon story. Rich Burton is Mary Silvestre’s agent on the heavily polluted world of Tarifax. The self styled New Gods had been entrusted with five worlds by three of the more adventurous minded Greater Gods. There had originally been five worlds, maybe not the most verdant or prosperous of worlds, but they had been perfectly adequate. Now only three remained and all three were suffering under the mismanagement of the New Gods. The Gods War, long prophesised had started on Parthia and the local single planet gods there had had some striking successes. Mary Silvestre one of the dungeons seeded by Azurea at the behest of the New Gods had Allied with Ocidon the local god of the seas and managed to ascend to demi-godhood. Now she has managed to gain access to Tarifax and they are in the process of expanding their power over other worlds. And the Gods War has come to Tarifax with them. Rich Burton, knight of the consort is Mary’s agent on Tarifax. She has given him a body both strong and hard to damage, skills equipment and money. Lots of money.
8 167 - In Serial10 Chapters
Star God
An ancient, ageless entity of magic intertwines with the essence of a tribal hero and a god is born. In a land where the worship of any entity is banned and punishable by mass-execution, the young and idealistic deity must come to terms with the ugliness of humanity, and find a way for his flock to survive, and maybe even thrive. A young man born into a mountain tribe treads the path of a hero, but he must learn the extent to which he would go to keep his people and their fledgling god safe and happy. Enemies are everywhere, and to defend their way of life, they must learn to harness the power of magic. Others are ahead of them in this regard, so they must act fast if they are to survive. A Xianxia-esque magic system, but with a focus on Western-style spellcasting and mysticism. This is more or less a deconstruction of classical fantasy and pantheons. The story focuses on two main characters; a God and a hero who serves him. Kingdom building themes are prevalent. If you like it, please remember to rate and review.
8 166 - In Serial22 Chapters
I maxed out my Stats, so why am I still a loser?
Ashner has no job, no girlfriend, and no good luck on his side. Until one drunken night, he finds a door to another world. And discovers monsters drop real gold. Not to mention a leveling system that's more detail orientated than he hoped for. With a tool that can bring him money beyond his wildest dreams, he decides to get as much as he can. Wealth, women, and status. But even with all that, why does his life always take the same unlucky turns?
8 103 - In Serial7 Chapters
Plays of Reality
Year 1330. The Age of Spirit Relics. This year marked the beginning of the magical journey of a young hopeful - Max Enderwood. An orphan filled with unyielding hope, relentless determination, and intense ambition, walked towards the path untrodden by many. Hope to despair. Dawn to dusk. Would he get destroyed by the ever-changing currents of reality? Or would he fight back with a ruined magic mirror to have a shot at altering the threads of destiny? Join Max as he encountered all plays of reality. Ignition of hope and sequence of despair. Stories of love and tragedies of hatred. Mystery of magic and cruelty of the field. And more!
8 59 - In Serial17 Chapters
Obito Hatake(Son of Kakashi x Mirai)
This is a request story from @Jodanse-Putos Obito is the son of Kakashi and was named after his friend. His mother was a member of the Uchiha clan but died shortly after he was born. When he was a kid he met Mirai and they've been friends ever since. Now the story takes place at the beginning of Boruto.I dont own Naruto or Boruto or any pictures in this story.
8 197

