Chapter 165: Ch-165: Burn in Agony - Cultivation starts with picking up attributes - NovelsTime

Cultivation starts with picking up attributes

Chapter 165: Ch-165: Burn in Agony

Author: Ryuma_sama
updatedAt: 2025-09-18

CHAPTER 165: CH-165: BURN IN AGONY

The Root Division assembled under the flickering light of moonlit lanterns, the echoes of the warning bells still thrumming in the mountain wind. Feilun Sect had not convened its full division council at such urgency in decades. The disciples of every rank filed into the Grand Hall, their faces pale, their eyes betraying the same thought—foreign blades had tasted Feilun soil, and the heavens themselves had witnessed Tian Shen’s slaughter.

At the hall’s center stood the long table carved of starwood, its surface etched with ancestral talismans. Elders sat in a crescent around it, their eyes heavy and scrutinizing. At the head, beneath banners of storm and mountain, Sect Master Feilun Yao brooded with hands clasped.

Tian Shen entered last.

He carried no arrogance, no triumphant air of victory—only the quiet weight of thunder still humming around him. Even restrained, his presence bent the air, drawing every eye. Feng Yin shadowed his step, calm yet alert, a silent counterbalance to his storm.

"Tian Shen," spoke Elder Su, his voice sharp like a blade honed for accusation. "You defied command. Root Division was to intercept as a unit. Instead, you went alone—"

"And returned alone," another elder cut in dryly, Elder Meng, lips twisting. "With twelve corpses as proof of his folly. Tell me, Elder Su, how many more would lie in that valley had Root Division arrived too late?"

The chamber tensed.

Sect Master Feilun Yao raised a hand. Silence fell. His eyes, deep as old thunderclouds, fixed on Tian Shen. "Speak. Why did you act before the command was given?"

Tian Shen’s gaze did not waver. "Because hesitation is a luxury. Those men were not scouts of chance. They were a test. To see if we are soft. To see if we will wait, argue, deliberate—until their true spears pierce our gates."

His voice carried no flourish, no plea. It was fact, edged with the certainty of a spear thrust.

Some elders frowned, some nodded.

But Elder Su slammed his palm against the table. "Reckless! Every realm beyond Core is violent—every breakthrough demands patience! To leave so soon after tribulation, before stabilizing your core, is courting inner ruin. Do you think the sect will clean your corpse when your Utopian Core devours you?"

A murmur swept through the hall. The truth of his words was undeniable. A newly ascended cultivator’s qi was unstable, volatile. Most secluded themselves for months, even years, after breaking through. Tian Shen had gone to war the very next dawn.

Feng Yin stepped forward. "And yet, he won." Her tone was calm, but every syllable struck like frost. "You argue theory, Elder Su. Tian Shen brings results. If he had not struck, the foreigners would already be deeper in our territory, slaughtering disciples too weak to resist."

The hall split—elders arguing, disciples whispering, tension rising like an approaching storm.

Feilun Yao let it run for a time, then struck the starwood table with his finger. Lightning sparked across its carvings, silencing all.

"Enough." His gaze swept the chamber. "The matter is not whether Tian Shen was reckless. The matter is who sent these foreigners, and why they step upon our soil now."

The words cut the air.

Elder Meng leaned forward. "Their armor, their speech—it was not of the Central Region. Likely western nomads. But those tribes should not have the cultivation to forge a Core Reinforcement band. Someone sponsors them. Someone teaches them."

Another elder hissed. "The Demon Sect."

"No," countered Elder Su grimly. "Too crude for demon hands. But perhaps... rivals to the north. The Ironfang Union has long coveted our mountain passes."

Speculation grew, names thrown like daggers in the dark. Each possibility painted the same truth: Feilun Sect stood at the edge of greater storms.

Through it all, Tian Shen remained silent. His mind was not on politics. His core still raged within, every pulse begging for the next battle. The beast inside strained against its leash, hungering to prove itself on greater prey.

Feilun Yao’s eyes shifted to him again, reading the storm in his silence. "You slew them all?"

"Yes," Tian Shen answered simply.

"No prisoners? No tongues to question?"

"They had no time to scream," Tian Shen said.

The Sect Master’s lips thinned, but he did not chastise. Instead, he leaned back, as though weighing an unspoken burden. Finally, he declared:

"Root Division will guard the northern frontier. Tian Shen, you will remain its spear."

Gasps whispered across the hall. To place a newly ascended cultivator at the forefront of the defense was madness—or brilliance.

Elder Su rose half from his seat. "Sect Master! He is unstable—"

"Then let the storm temper itself upon the battlefield," Feilun Yao interrupted, voice sharp as thunder. "Do you fear the beast, Elder Su? Then cage it yourself. Or will you admit your fangs have dulled?"

The hall froze. Elder Su sat, color burning his face.

The decree was settled.

Tian Shen bowed, but not deeply. "As commanded."

When the council dismissed, night had deepened over the mountains. The sect bustled with rumors, disciples whispering Tian Shen’s name like both a warning and a prayer.

On the balcony above the northern walls, Tian Shen and Feng Yin stood alone. Below them, squads drilled through the night, preparing for whatever came next.

"You don’t trust the elders," Feng Yin said softly.

"I trust their caution," Tian Shen replied, watching the torch-lit drills. "But caution builds walls. Our enemies will not respect walls."

She studied him, then asked, "And what do you respect?"

He turned, eyes glimmering with stormlight. "The spear."

The answer sent a shiver down her spine—not of fear, but of recognition. He was not wrong. The world respected only strength.

Yet she could also feel the violence still gnawing at him, the Utopian Core demanding he feed it more battles, more blood.

"Promise me one thing," she whispered.

His brow rose.

"When the beast inside demands you break, promise me you’ll remember—control is not only discipline. It can also be trust."

For a long time, he said nothing. Then, quietly: "I promise to try."

It was not the answer of a gentle man. But it was enough.

...

Three days later, the foreigners came again.

Not twelve. Not scouts.

Hundreds.

They descended through the northern passes like a dark tide, banners snapping in the icy wind, their steel-black armor gleaming with the light of foreign forges. Their formation was disciplined, drilled—this was no wandering warband.

At their center marched a commander twice the height of any man, his qi monstrous, surging at the very edge of Utopian Core. His roar echoed across valleys.

"Feilun Sect! Kneel—or burn in agony!"

The gates trembled. Disciples quaked.

Tian Shen stepped forward, spear resting upon his shoulder. His core thundered inside, hungry, eager.

"Then let them burn, and the face of the bottom of the hell."

He said.

And the storm descended once more.

...

The first clash came like the tearing of the heavens. Foreign drums thundered, shaking the very stone beneath Feilun’s gates, and the enemy surged forward in a black tide of steel and dust.

But Tian Shen did not wait behind walls. He strode beyond them, spear gleaming under the cold moonlight. Each step was calm, measured—yet the ground itself seemed to flinch at his tread. His aura rose higher, oppressive, pressing against the lungs of friend and foe alike.

"Open the gates," he commanded without turning back. His voice was low, yet it carried across the battlements like a crack of thunder.

Feng Yin’s breath caught, but she gave the order. The gates groaned open, iron hinges screaming, and Tian Shen walked into the valley as if into his own courtyard.

The foreigners roared in triumph, mistaking his solitude for arrogance. Their commander raised a colossal glaive, qi blazing red like molten steel. "One boy dares mock us!" he bellowed. "Break him!"

They surged forward, hundreds of boots pounding like a war drum.

Tian Shen planted his spear into the earth. The pulse of his Utopian Core flared outward—violent, untamed, magnificent. The night split with violet lightning, arcs crawling across the ground, searing through armor and flesh alike. The first dozen who charged never even screamed; their bodies blackened, smoking husks before they struck the dirt.

The tide faltered. For a heartbeat, fear flickered in the eyes of hardened soldiers.

Then their commander roared again, charging through the corpses of his own men, glaive cleaving a path. His aura clashed with Tian Shen’s, shaking the valley, two storms colliding in the night.

Tian Shen smiled—not with joy, but with the grim hunger of his core demanding prey. He lifted his spear up high.

"Come, then," he said, voice sharp as steel. "I’ll show you what thunder carves into those who trespass."

The two powers met. The clash was apocalyptic—lightning against fire, thunder against steel. The mountains themselves groaned under the weight of their blows, and the disciples watching from the walls could scarcely breathe beneath the pressure.

The war had truly begun.

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