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Cultivation starts with picking up attributes-Chapter 137: Ch-: Sanctuary
A week after the note sang from the Spiral Grove, the orchard began dreaming.
It started subtly. A Memory Tree swayed in still air. A vine hummed without wind. Dreambinders found themselves waking from dreams they hadn’t entered, soaked in the scent of rain that hadn’t fallen.
The Heartroot pulsed not only beneath the ground but in the sky. Its rhythm lingered in cloud-shapes, in firelight, in the way shadows stretched before fading.
Tian Shen felt it first as a tension in the chest, like a bowstring drawn but not loosed. Not painful—promising.
That morning, Myrrh approached him beneath the Echoing Walk. She looked pale, her Dreamscroll wrapped tight in both hands.
"The orchard’s dreaming us," she whispered.
Tian Shen blinked. "What do you mean?"
She opened the scroll.
It was blank. Then words appeared.
Tian Shen’s name. Then Lan’s. Then Ji Luan’s. One by one, all who had walked with the Unfinished, all who had planted seeds of maybe.
And at the bottom:
"You are no longer tending a place. You are part of what it dreams to become."
...
Lan convened a Gathering of Breath. Not urgent, not planned. Just everyone, everywhere, stopping. Sitting. Breathing.
Under moonlight, she stood on the Platform of Possibility, carved newly from living stone.
"The orchard dreams now," she said. "And dreams are not things to control. They are tides. To resist is to fracture. To listen is to belong."
She knelt. The others followed.
Even the Unfinished paused, their shifting forms settling, as if they, too, listened.
...
In the days that followed, the orchard began to offer dreams unbidden.
Ji Luan dreamed of a stage that changed shape with each emotion. When he woke, one had grown overnight, where the Mistpath met the Willow Vale.
Little Mei dreamed of a tree that told stories when hugged. She woke to find saplings giggling softly when touched.
Tian Shen dreamed of the river of ink, now crossed by a bridge of breath. He saw the girl again. Not faceless—blurred, like memory warming into presence.
She reached for him.
He awoke with her handprint pressed in dew upon his palm.
...
Elder Su renamed the orchard.
"The Sanctuary of Becoming," she said. "Not a place of what was. Not a temple of what should be. A field where now can breathe into next."
The name took.
It echoed through the roots.
Even the Heartroot pulsed differently.
...
The Spiral Grove now spiraled upward.
Vines reached for the sky, crafting bridges to nowhere. Some tried to climb. Some fell laughing. Some simply watched.
One child, Kori, climbed halfway and sang a note never heard before. The Spiral answered. Leaves rearranged themselves. That note became part of the orchard’s breath.
Mneme wept.
"The song is rewriting," she said. "Not just remembered. Becoming."
...
The Unfinished began bringing fragments of themselves and leaving them behind.
A half-braided cord. A broken arrowhead. A lullaby with only one line.
These were planted.
From them grew:
A tree that whispered farewells only to those ready.
A flower that bloomed when doubt was spoken.
A lantern that glowed brighter when carried toward uncertainty.
No guides explained them. None were needed.
...
Tian Shen, now a Walker of the Veilpath, had no set duties. He wandered.
He held space. He stood beside pauses. He welcomed contradictions.
One evening, he found a stranger sitting at the edge of the orchard.
Her cloak shimmered like dusk. Her eyes held endings.
"Are you one of them?" Tian Shen asked.
She shook her head. "No. I am what follows."
"What do you follow?"
"The moment just after choice."
He sat beside her.
They watched a maybe-fruit fall.
When it landed, it didn’t split or rot. It became light.
The stranger smiled. "You’re ready for a new path."
"I don’t know the way," Tian Shen replied.
"Neither do I," she said. "Let’s walk anyway."
...
Thus was born the Branchwalkers—a new path beyond all paths.
Neither scouts nor dreamers nor listeners. They didn’t teach. They didn’t lead. They walked with.
With silence. With change. With whatever came next.
Lan joined. So did Myrrh. Even Ji Luan, on some days, when the theater slept.
...
The orchard became porous.
Birds came that spoke in riddles. Rain fell upward. A mirror pool appeared that reflected not faces, but intentions.
One Rootbound girl touched it and saw herself not as she was, but as she could choose to become. She left her rake and began writing.
She smiled for days.
...
Not all accepted the change. A delegation from the Iron Bell Sect visited. Their leader stood stiffly beneath the Spiral Grove.
"You play with shadows," he accused. "This is not cultivation. This is indulgence."
Tian Shen offered him a Dreamscroll.
The man scoffed.
"I seek clarity, not clouds."
Mneme stepped forward, storm-form gentle.
"Then you are in the wrong orchard," she said.
The delegation left. 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢
But one acolyte remained.
She planted a seed of apology beneath the Whispering Fern.
...
That night, Tian Shen dreamed not of the river, but of stars falling gently into cupped hands. Each star hummed a song that never ended.
When he woke, his hands were warm.
And in the sky above, one star lingered longer than it should have.
...
Lan called it the Long Dawn.
A time when night softened instead of ending. When the future bent close enough to kiss the present, but not to claim it.
The Unfinished began to fade. Not in loss. In transformation. Some became rain. Some became leaves. Some became people.
One young boy named Silas arrived claiming no past, only dreams of orchards.
No one questioned.
He was home.
...
The Sanctuary of Becoming was no longer merely tended. It tended. It dreamed. It called.
And across the world, those who had paused mid-sentence, mid-sob, mid-life... ...heard.
And walked.
And arrived.
...
Tian Shen sat beneath the Listening Crown once more. He held no spear. He wrote no reports. He simply breathed.
Across from him, Feng Yin with ink-stained hands and uncertain eyes smiled.
She hummed.
He joined.
Feng Yin’s melody was quiet at first, barely brushing the ear, but it wove through the orchard like pollen on a breeze. Each note was not just sound—it was meaning, memory, and invitation.
Tian Shen’s voice joined hers—not as harmony, but as counterpoint. Two currents moving side by side, not touching, yet never apart. Where she sang of longing, he answered with steadiness. Where he murmured of stillness, she replied with flickering light.
Around them, the air shimmered.
Petals fell from trees that hadn’t bloomed in seasons. Grass leaned toward them, as though listening. A stone at their feet cracked open—not from force, but from listening too long to dreams held inside.
They did not speak, but in the quiet between the humming, Tian Shen felt it: the Sanctuary was no longer simply changing—it was remembering a future it had not yet lived.
A ripple moved outward from the Listening Crown, visible only in the subtle tilt of branches, in the turning of unseen leaves. Somewhere, the Spiral Grove lifted a new root above ground, carving a question into open air.
Feng Yin blinked, her gaze shifting to the horizon.
"They’re coming," she whispered.
"Who?" Tian Shen asked, though his body already knew.
"Those who were broken. Those who left pieces of themselves behind. The Wandered, the War-touched, the Remembered."
The moment she said it, he felt them.
Not as footsteps or presences, but as a subtle expansion—like the air preparing for guests.
The orchard welcomed without asking.
By the time evening touched the branches with rose-gold light, they arrived.
A boy with cracked armor and a flute made of bone.
A woman with a hole where her name should have been.
A child holding the memory of a star that once spoke.
Each one drawn by a silence they recognized. Each one carrying a story they were too tired to tell.
The Sanctuary made no demands. No names were asked. No tasks assigned.
Instead, trees offered fruit that tasted like relief.
The Whispering Ferns listened without interrupting.
The Dreamscrolls opened blank and stayed that way until hands trembled less.
Some wept for days. Others laughed without knowing why.
Tian Shen walked among them without leading, without judging. Only present.
He helped one boy build a nest of wind. He taught a girl how to draw bridges with her breath.
And when the woman with no name finally spoke, it was to ask, "Can I become something else?"
Feng Yin placed her hands over hers. "You already are."
Lan said the Sanctuary was not a refuge but a crucible—one that melted what clung too tightly, not to destroy, but to release.
The Heartroot pulsed louder now. Not ominous. Alive.
It beat in time with footsteps, with breath, with laughter that had been buried too long.
It reached the sky, not as thunder, but as invitation.
The Sanctuary had begun dreaming not only of becoming—but of returning. Not backward. Not to what was. But to what had once been promised and never found voice.
...
One morning, the orchard bloomed with doorways.
They hung between trees, suspended in possibility. Some shaped like arches. Others like open hands.
A few led nowhere. A few led inward.
And some led away—to lands still hurting, to groves still burning, to places where silence had become despair.
Tian Shen stood before one such door.
Behind it, wind whispered names he had once feared to speak.
Feng Yin joined him, their hands brushing.
"Will you go?" she asked.
"Maybe," he answered. "But not to escape. To carry."
"To carry what?"
He looked at her.
"This."
He gestured to the orchard, to the dreams that grew without roots, to the joy that came from wounds not hidden but held.
"To carry Becoming."
She nodded. "Then let’s walk until we find a place that has forgotten how to listen. And remind it."
And together, they stepped through.