Chapter 154: Life 68, Age 25, Martial Master Peak
Words : 2003
Updated : Oct 11th, 2025
Yan and I arrived together at the meeting with the rest of our classmates. We were both agitated as we sat, and seeing this, JiaQi decided to break the ice.
“I’ve decided to leave the Academy,” she said while holding her small deer. “I want to give LuLu a chance to live outside as she grows up. I’ll come back for the first term as a Grandmaster, but I’ll skip next term. I know I’m not going to be a Sovereign anyway.”
I continued to hesitate, so YuLong announced his decision. “I’m going home too. I know my limits. I’ve tried to learn to make talismans, but I have no talent for it. I only know how to fight. The best I can do is join someone else’s retinue. I need to talk with my father about my future before making any decisions.”
LiTing was nervous as she spoke. “I am going to take the regular Grandmaster courses. I wasn’t given enough funds for anything else.”
I looked at Yan. He signaled for me to speak.
“We all need to stay in the Academy. I know you all have your own paths to follow, but we all need to remain in our classes.”
I reached into my storage space and pulled out all the letters they sent me last time. After sorting the pile into three stacks, I slid each stack to the person who wrote them.
“These were provided to me by a powerful cultivator. They are letters from a phantom future. I don’t know what they say, but they should contain hints about what will happen if you leave the Academy.”
This was the story Yan and I had created. If anyone was testing the truth of our words from hiding, it would all check out. I considered using another shield for this conversation, but neither of us liked the idea. It might draw too much attention, some things were better off not shared, and personally, I didn’t want to spend the credits it would take.
“Fang...” JiaQi looked at me with a worried expression.
“Please, trust me. Everyone needs to stay in the Academy, and we need to all stay in the same class. I can pay for everything. Don’t worry about that. My backer will make sure there are no issues.”
If Emperor Li was going to act as some cheap master in the shadows, I would use his shadow as best as I could to keep us as safe as possible.
Yan added his thoughts to back me up.
“I’ve read part of what Fang gave me. I agree that everyone needs to stay here. The information he provided has made me aware of dangers that our position in the Academy is protecting us from.” He looked at YuLong. “Remaining here is also protecting our families.”
No one was overly happy about the scant information Yan and I were willing to tell them, but they all agreed to read the letters.
When we met back up the next day, no one wanted to talk about what they had read, but they all agreed to stay in the Academy. JiaQi and LiTing weren’t exactly happy about the situation, but they accepted it well enough. YuLong, however, seemed especially torn up about being unable to return home.
It wasn’t something I was overly comfortable doing, but I knew I had to try and help him. After our meeting broke apart, I pulled YuLong off to the side for a private discussion.
“Hey, are you okay?”
His face twisted through a few emotions before he finally shook his head helplessly.
“Yeah, I’m fine. Don’t worry about it.” He put on a fake smile and snorted a small laugh. “Just means I get to practice some more, right?”
He turned to leave, but I put a hand on his shoulder. He froze at my touch.
“YuLong... I’m sorry... I just... I know this situation is hard, but we’ll get through it. We just have to keep walking forward.”
He didn’t turn around to face me. He just spoke into the empty air in front of him.
“I didn’t come here for myself. I didn’t come to the Academy to improve my own strength or cultivation. I came here to help my family, you know? We might be connected to an imperial clan, but we’re just an unimportant branch family. I thought... I thought that I could come here, do well, and improve the lives of my brothers and sisters.”
His voice started to choke up. “Now, because of who I was put in a class with, they are all destined to die, and the only way I might be able to save their lives is by never seeing them again. So, no. No, I am not okay.”
“YuLong... I...”
I didn’t know what to tell him to reassure him. I couldn’t tell him everything. It was too dangerous, but I had to tell him something.
“YuLong, we’ll get through this. If you trust what you’ve read, you can trust me when I tell you this. While you won’t be able to see your family again for a long time, decades, possibly longer, you will see them again. You will be able to improve their lives beyond anything you’ve ever dreamt possible. Your future... your family’s future... will be limitless.”
He didn’t speak. He only silently nodded his head and pulled away from me to return to his room. I could only hope I had said enough.
Return to classes was difficult for everyone, but it was something that needed to be done. We had to set our focus on doing our best at the Academy so that we would be able to excel in the sect and be able to avoid the schemes of powerful clans.
However, our first task in forging our way forward was to take several steps backward. Everyone had used suboptimal techniques when creating their meridians, so we needed to spend several weeks dispersing them and creating new ones.
Instructor Yuan passed along a technique to make the process of meridian dispersal much easier than what I had done in the past, and she ordered us to use it as we cultivated our true techniques through the Master realm. If we noticed even a hint of a problem with a meridian, we were to use the technique to disperse and reform it.
Aside from just making the process easier, it also allowed us to capture a portion of the dispersed qi and apply it to the new meridians we were forming. By using this technique, I was able to completely disperse my old meridians and form two new ones by the end of the term.
Now that I had returned to the school timeline, the 'real' timeline, I returned to using the Writ of True Earth so that I would be able to cultivate essence again in the future.
I handed one of these low-level manuals to both Yan and Instructor Yuan.
“Cultivate this.”
Instructor Yuan showed Yan what he should do. She created a false qi filter and vortex above her palm to simulate a Disciple trying to cultivate the technique. These false filters were nonfunctional and only served as a prop for the lesson.
I looked at Instructor Yuan’s faulty creation and frowned. How should I correct her?
“You will pull in a significant amount of impurities with this. You need to fix it.”
Instructor Yuan fumbled around, making a poor show of fixing her mistakes. What was I supposed to do here? I didn’t know an easy way to explain what she was doing wrong. The only thing I could think to do was repeat the same tactic I’d used in the past. It might not be what Yuan wanted, but it was the only plan I could come up with.
After a bit of hesitation, I looked at Instructor Yuan.
“One moment, please. I need to make a slight change.”
She nodded graciously.
At this point, the spirit flame in my body was the wood-based one I had used to complete the Earth Trial. Using my spatial bag as cover, I pulled an empty jade box out of my storage space, forced the wood flame out of my body, and stowed it in the box.
Returning this box to my storage space, I then retrieved a fire-based flame and absorbed it.
With this complete, I returned to Instructor Yuan’s ‘lesson,’ and she resumed her fumbling with the filter.
Using the spirit fire, I created a ghostly apparition and overlaid the correct form on top of what she was doing.
“It should look like this.”
She adjusted her qi to align it with my example.
“Here and here still need adjustments.” I pointed to the problem areas.
She quickly fixed them and began ‘cultivating’ properly.
I backed off and waited for her judgment silently, but she just continued acting out her role for several more minutes.
When it was clear to her that I would say nothing else, she stood, gestured for me to retake my seat, and moved back in front of us.
“That was an interesting technique to clarify the problems with the qi filter. Lord Ning mentioned something like this previously and wished for you to attempt to use it in your classes. I believe it may work.”
She turned to Yan. “What can he improve?”
He looked at me. “Don’t talk about impurities at this point. There isn't any value in it. Just tell them what they are doing wrong without the why. Adding in talk of impurities can muddy the explanation of what they are doing wrong and how to fix it.”
Instructor Yuan nodded. “I agree partially. Such details may benefit some students, but if you want to bring it up, you need to make it meaningful. Don’t just say ‘impurities.’ If you want to talk about them, talk about them. If you don’t, then don’t mention them.”
She kept her focus on me. “What else could you improve?”
“I’m not sure... You corrected the filter quickly and would have been cultivating well. I don’t know what more could have been done.”
“What did I tell you? Show the students how much they have left to learn. You didn’t do this at all. You had me make a few minor alterations and were satisfied with the result.”
I didn’t understand. “Because it was correct. Wasn’t it?”
“Yes, it was. That is the problem. Cultivating correctly so easily doesn’t teach them the lessons they need. They need to cultivate poorly. The worse they do, the better. Don’t start them with Low-Yellow techniques. If they already have a Peak-Earth technique, make them use it. If not, provide the ones in that bag you found. Then you can use your little trick. Even with its help, they will still fail without sufficient practice. Being able to clearly see what they are doing wrong and not be able to fix it will be far more helpful at this stage.”
She looked at Yan. “What was his biggest mistake?”
He turned to me. “She said to teach ‘us.’ You didn’t teach me.”
My jaw dropped slightly at that. Yan hadn’t tried to do the false cultivation even after the instructor showed him how. Why would I...
Instructor Yuan gave Yan a look of approval and then looked at me to explain.
“Try to involve the whole class. I am focused on your actions right now, but I have been making an effort to include Zhuge Yan during the process. This will be difficult, especially when there are large differences in abilities between your students. However, as you will both be teaching a full class of Disciples, it is a skill you must work to improve.”
Comments (0)