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Cultivation is Creation-Chapter 260: The Mountain Does Not Try To Touch The Sky, It Simply Rises As High As It Was Meant To
Bren Heart: The Warrior's Path
The transition was disorienting, even for someone of Bren's discipline. One moment he was stepping through the crystal archway, the next he stood in a circular chamber that seemed to be carved from a single massive piece of blue gemstone. The walls, floor, and ceiling formed a perfect sphere, with only a meditation cushion at the center and a small formation near what appeared to be a sealed door.
"Hmph," was Bren's only comment as he surveyed his surroundings. The Stone Haven monk had never been one for unnecessary words.
He approached the cushion with the measured stride of a warrior, his shaved head gleaming in the blue light that permeated the chamber. The tattoos visible at his collar and wrists, sacred geometries representing the Stone Haven meditation techniques, seemed to pulse slightly in response to the energy around him.
Unlike the other candidates, Bren did not immediately sit.
Instead, he began a series of slow, deliberate movements - the Opening Stance of the Stone Haven Eight Elements Form. His body flowed from one position to the next, each movement precisely calibrated to align his physical form with his spiritual essence.
Only after completing the entire sequence did he finally settle onto the meditation cushion, sitting with his back straight as a spear and his hands resting on his knees, palms upward.
As the blue light intensified and the first wave of energy entered the chamber, Bren's expression remained impassive. His Cerulean Vein, an angular, crystalline pattern reminiscent of mountain peaks, activated with a steady glow, spreading across his forehead and down his neck to connect with the tattoos on his chest and arms.
While most Lightweavers channeled through artistic media, the monks of Stone Haven used their own bodies as the conduit. Movement and stillness, tension and relaxation; these were their brushes and inks, their chisels and clay.
The physical form became both the canvas and the artwork itself.
Bren had come to the Selection not by choice but by duty. Stone Haven Monastery rarely participated in Blue Sun politics, preferring their isolated existence in the northern mountains. But every seven cycles, they sent a candidate as part of an ancient covenant with the Lightweaver Order.
As the monastery's most accomplished disciple, Bren had been the natural choice. He neither sought nor desired the position of Saint, but he would perform his duty with the same dedication he brought to all aspects of his training.
The blue energy continued to pour into the chamber, and Bren absorbed it methodically. Where Aric guided with gentle nudges and Amira channeled through song, Bren processed the energy through sheer disciplined will. Each spiritual pathway in his body had been systematically strengthened through years of harsh training, allowing him to absorb tremendous amounts of power without wavering.
His thoughts remained focused and clear as the energy filled him. There was no place for doubt or ambition in Stone Haven teaching, only the present moment, only the task at hand.
Time passed, meaningless in the blue-lit chamber. Bren's breathing remained steady, his posture perfect. But eventually, even his iron discipline met its natural limit. The energy flowing into him began to encounter resistance, backing up in his spiritual channels like water behind a dam.
The warning signs were subtle, a slight tremor in his left hand, a momentary fluctuation in his Cerulean Vein's glow. To most observers, he would have appeared unchanged, but to Bren's hyper-aware consciousness, these were alarm bells.
He had reached the threshold where continuing would no longer serve his purpose. The body was a temple to be maintained, not a fortress to be besieged. Destroying oneself to demonstrate strength was the height of foolishness, another teaching from Master Rohn that had been beaten into him through years of training.
With a single fluid motion, Bren rose from the meditation cushion. His movements betrayed none of the strain his system was under as he approached the exit formation. He placed his palm against the glowing panel without hesitation.
"The mountain does not try to touch the sky," he murmured, reciting an old Stone Haven proverb. "It simply rises as high as it was meant to."
As the formation activated, Bren knew he had fulfilled his duty. Stone Haven's covenant was honored for another seven cycles. Whether he became Saint or not was irrelevant, he had represented his order with integrity and discipline. That was all that had ever been asked of him.
***
Dorian Velaris: Pride and Ambition
The transition through the portal was more jarring than Dorian had expected, leaving him momentarily disoriented as he materialized in the crystal chamber. He quickly composed himself, adjusting his custom robes and surveying his surroundings with the critical eye of someone accustomed to judging the quality of his accommodations.
"Rather minimalist," he murmured, his voice echoing slightly in the enclosed space.
The chamber was undeniably beautiful, with its perfect circular form and luminous blue crystal walls, but it lacked the grandeur Dorian associated with truly important occasions.
The meditation cushion in the center seemed almost insultingly plain. Dorian approached it with a slight frown, using the toe of his boot to nudge it, as if checking for dust.
"I suppose it will have to do," he sighed, settling down onto the cushion. His posture was impeccable: back straight, shoulders squared, chin slightly elevated. House Velaris had trained its children in proper deportment since before they could walk.
As the blue light in the chamber intensified, signaling the beginning of the test, Dorian closed his eyes and activated his Cerulean Vein.
The pattern, an elaborate, almost baroque design resembling a stylized eye surrounded by radiating lines, glowed through his skin with impressive brightness. It was the same pattern his ancestors had used for seventeen generations, refined and perfected through centuries of selective breeding and specialized training.
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The first wave of blue sun energy poured into the chamber, and Dorian absorbed it easily. His spiritual channels, meticulously cultivated since childhood, processed the energy smoothly, distributing it throughout his system.
As the energy flowed through him, Dorian's thoughts turned to what winning the Selection would mean. House Velaris had produced three Saints in their long and distinguished history, but the last had been over sixteen hundred years ago. His father had made it abundantly clear that ending this drought was not merely expected, it was required.
"The current political landscape demands a Velaris as Saint," his father had explained during their final strategy session before Dorian's departure for the Academy. "With the eastern borders becoming increasingly unstable and House Vareyn's influence waning, there's a power vacuum that must be filled by a family with proper lineage and resources."
The implication was clear: failure was not an option.
House Velaris had invested too much in his preparation, secured too many political alliances predicated on his success, to accept anything less than victory.
More energy flowed into the chamber, and Dorian increased his absorption rate accordingly. He employed the specialized techniques developed by generations of Velaris painters, visualizing the energy as streams of blue pigment that he could direct and blend with perfect control.
Unlike some of the other candidates, Dorian had no qualms about pushing his limits. His instructors had subjected him to increasingly intense energy exposures throughout his training, deliberately expanding his capacity beyond what would be considered safe for most practitioners.
"A Velaris does not yield to discomfort," his father would say. "Greatness requires sacrifice."
Time passed in the strange, fluid manner unique to the testing chambers. Dorian maintained his focus, systematically channeling the blue energy through his expanded spiritual pathways. The glow of his Cerulean Vein intensified, spreading to cover most of his face and neck in an impressive display of power.
Eventually, even his enhanced capacity began to approach its limits. Warning sensations, sharp pains in his chest, a burning along his spiritual meridians, signaled that he was nearing the threshold of what his body could safely contain.
Dorian gritted his teeth and pushed onward. House Velaris did not produce Saints by playing it safe.
The pain increased, becoming a constant, throbbing presence throughout his body. His Cerulean Vein's glow flickered slightly, the first indication that his control was slipping.
Despite his determination, Dorian was not foolish. He had been thoroughly briefed on the dangers of spiritual immolation. Just two years ago, a cousin from a cadet branch of House Velaris had pushed too far in training, resulting in permanent damage to his cultivation base.
Such an outcome would be unacceptable.
When the blue energy began to feel like molten glass flowing through his veins, Dorian finally acknowledged his limit. With a reluctant sigh, he opened his eyes and rose from the meditation cushion. The chamber around him was now so bright with blue light that the walls seemed almost transparent.
He approached the exit formation slowly, maintaining his dignified bearing despite the pain coursing through his system.
"House Velaris has done its part," he stated firmly, placing his palm against the glowing panel. "The Saint's mantle awaits its rightful bearer."
As the formation activated, Dorian felt absolute confidence. No other candidate could possibly have absorbed more energy than he had. His family's centuries of selective breeding, specialized training, and political maneuvering were about to pay dividends.
The position of Saint, and all the power and influence that came with it, would finally return to House Velaris.
***
Laelyn Vareyn: Grace in Decline
The transition through the portal was gentle for Laelyn, like stepping through a waterfall of light. She found herself in the crystal chamber with its simple meditation cushion and exit formation, the blue light already beginning to intensify around her.
"So, this is where it happens," she murmured, taking in the sacred space.
Unlike Dorian with his dismissive assessment or Aric with his calm acceptance, Laelyn approached the chamber with genuine wonder.
The Cerulean Spire was one of the most sacred structures in the Blue Sun territories, and standing within it, feeling its ancient power, was humbling.
She moved to the meditation cushion and settled into position.
As the blue light grew stronger and the first waves of energy entered the chamber, Laelyn closed her eyes and activated her Cerulean Vein. The pattern, an elegant, flowing design resembling calligraphic brushstrokes, glowed through her skin with a soft, steady light.
The energy flowed into her spiritual channels smoothly, guided by the precise control that characterized House Vareyn's calligraphy technique. Where Dorian forced and Aric guided, Laelyn invited. Each stroke of energy welcomed and directed like ink on parchment.
As she absorbed the blue sun's power, Laelyn reflected on what had brought her to this moment. House Vareyn had once been among the most prominent noble families in the eastern territories, renowned for their calligraphy technique and the three Saints they had produced throughout history.
But fortunes change.
A series of poor investments, political missteps, and natural disasters had gradually eroded their wealth and influence. ƒгeewebnovёl.com
The final blow had come during her grandmother's time, a devastating flood that destroyed their ancestral libraries, washing away priceless manuscripts and cultivation manuals that had been the foundation of their technique. And their situation only worsened with her death.
Now, House Vareyn maintained a precarious position among the noble families. Their name still commanded respect, but their resources were dwindling. The magnificent estate where Laelyn had grown up now stood half-empty, many rooms closed off to save on maintenance costs.
Becoming Saint would restore everything, not merely their wealth and political standing, but their dignity. It would validate generations of sacrifice and preservation against mounting odds.
Yet unlike Dorian or Amira, Laelyn didn't approach the Selection with desperate determination. Her grandmother, the family's last great Lightweaver, had taught her a different perspective.
"The Blue Sun chooses its voice for reasons beyond our understanding," the old woman had told her. "Seek to be worthy, not to win. The difference is subtle but crucial."
This philosophy had guided Laelyn's cultivation. She had trained diligently but joyfully, finding genuine pleasure in the calligraphic techniques. She had studied the sacred texts not merely to memorize them but to understand them. And she had developed her Cerulean Vein not to maximize power but to achieve harmony.
The blue energy continued to flow into her, filling her spiritual channels with cool, refreshing power. Her Cerulean Vein pulsed, the pattern extending gradually across her forehead and down her neck.
Time passed in the strange, elastic manner peculiar to the testing chambers. Laelyn maintained her focused meditation, absorbing the energy with the same careful attention she would give to executing a difficult calligraphic technique.
Eventually, she began to feel the first signs of strain, a slight pressure in her chest, a subtle irregularity in her energy circulation. These were the warnings her grandmother had described, the signals that she was approaching her natural capacity.
Unlike Dorian, who pushed against these limits, or Amira, who ignored them entirely, Laelyn listened to what her body was telling her. The Blue Sun valued harmony above all else, forcing more energy than her spiritual channels could comfortably hold would only create dissonance.
With a sad smile, she opened her eyes and approached the exit formation.
"I offer what I am," she said softly, placing her palm against the panel. "Nothing more, nothing less."
As the formation activated, Laelyn felt a profound peace settle over her. Whether she became Saintess or not, she had remained true to her family's deeper principles, not the desperate grasping at faded glory that characterized their recent generations, but the elegant harmony that had been their original strength.
If the Blue Sun chose her, House Vareyn would rise again. If not, she would find another path forward. Either way, she would face the future with the same grace that had guided her through the Selection.