POV Kam Tonghyon, eldest of the Kam Brothers
This was the second time he and his four brothers had done a job in the Barren Wastelands. It was every bit as dirty and frustrating as he remembered. The people were weak and savage, barely better than animals.
Still, a job was a job.
And when sects were desperate to contribute to the Great
Martial Alliance, they were easy to scam. They were getting paid three times
their usual rate for this job, although as far as his little brothers
were concerned, it was only double. It was worth running across the
dusty landscape of the wasteland. Also, while the sect who hired them
would take most of the credit, this job would be leverage which could be
used to finally legitimize their family.
As trackers and assassins, finding a foothold in the
upper echelon of the martial society was difficult. The fact that all
five of them were covered in scars from a lifetime of hard work didn’t
help them fit in. With the war reaching new heights of intensity,
however, there was no better time to finally gain the recognition they
deserved.
Their family crest, which adorned their dark grey combat
clothes, was a serpent with a knife in its mouth. As a result, most
people assumed they were criminals and thugs. Even so, they couldn’t
change it. It had been their family crest for countless generations, a
source of great pride. Those hypocrites of the alliance always
considered it improper during times off peace, but now those pretenses had
loosened.
After this job, they would have both the money and the
connections to finally establish the Kam Family, as their father and
grandfather had always dreamed about.
They ran for weeks, during which they confiscated houses along the way to rest every few days. Finally, Mujin was within sight.
Their gracious hosts who offered up their homes, beds,
and pantries along the way told them rumors of the city. How it used to
be an insignificant town but over the course of the past decade and a half or more had
grown to become the biggest city in the wastelands. The capital of the demonic cult.
The latest news, told by the most recent host, was that
the inner cult had moved away from their capital and relocated to the
mountains north of the city.
Pride washed over him as he thought back on those
wasteland savages who hosted them during their journey. He had been able to give their lives purpose in
aiding a great cause before they fell to his blade. An act of true
generosity on his part.
“We’ve reached the city,” Tonghyon said to his brothers.
“The mountain range should be due north of here. No need to spend more
time than necessary in this hellhole, we’ll head there immediately.”
They turned away from the city and ran north. After a
while, they found the road which connected the two. In an effort to
avoid detection from any who might be traveling there, they followed
it at a distance. Most people would have struggled to follow the tracks
of the road from such a distance, but not them. They were professional
trackers.
A few hours later, they came to a stop. Their path forward was blocked by a wall of fog that covered the base of the mountains.
“First Brother, this doesn’t seem natural. How could
there be such a dense fog in the Barren Wastelands? The air is far too
dry,” asked the third brother.
“Could it be smoke?” asked the fourth. “Though it doesn’t look the part, nor do I smell anything…”
Tonghyon, the first brother, took in the sight of the fog
pensively. “It’s likely a trap of some kind, some enchantment to hide themselves some predators. It doesn’t matter. If they
limit our vision, they also limit their own. I understand their
thinking. They know the land and have likely trained guards to fight in
the fog.” He shook his head in disappointment. “It might work against
lowly wasteland gangs, but against us, it’s a grave mistake. We excel in
such environments. We’ll turn their trap against them, use it to our
advantage.”
They all smiled with confidence. They were assassins and rogues, even pitch black conditions wouldn’t be an issue for them.
The five brothers dashed into the fog.
“The fog is dense, but it’s not enough to hinder our
senses. I can see dozens of meters, more than enough to deal with any
attack. You were right, First Brother,” said the fourth brother.
“It’s easy to be right when your opponents underestimate you.”
Five minutes later, Tonghyon looked over his shoulder.
His four little brothers had followed him for most of their lives, and
he knew they could handle most everything that could be thrown at them.
They were all Experts.
Not a single brother had succumb to the might of the Major Accomplishment Tribulation. A job like this was nothing to them.
Still, worry began to fester.
After 15 minutes, he frowned. Something was clearly wrong, but he couldn’t put his finger on it. It was probably nothing, he was just letting his worry for his brothers get the best of him.
They kept running.
30 minutes, and they finally stopped.
“This doesn’t make any sense!” the third brother called
out. “We should be half way up the mountain by now, but there isn’t even
an incline in the terrain yet. What in the hells is going on!?”
“I don’t know,” Tonghyon admitted. “You’re right, it
doesn’t make any sense. Moreover, the fog is much denser than before. I
can barely see a few meters now.” He shook his head. “It doesn’t matter,
we’ll deal with it when it when there’s something to deal with. We
can’t stay here, we keep going!”
They kept running.
Another 10 minutes went by, and the fog grew denser with every passing second.
Tonghyon had enough. “Fourth Brother, your [Extended
Sense] and [Piercing Eye] Skills are the strongest out of all of us.
What can you see?”
Silence.
“Fourth Brother, answer me!” Tonghyon called out again.
“Fourth Brother!” The other three brothers joined in.
They all turned around and looked for their brother, but he was nowhere to be found.
“What the fuck! Where is he? First Brother, this is bad!” The fifth brother freaked out.
“Calm down! He can hold his own. The fog is getting
denser, that must mean that we’re getting close to the edge. If we just
keep going, we’ll get out!”
They continued running.
Nobody said a word but they all stayed close so as to not
lose each other in the fog. After another fifteen minutes lights
finally permeated through the fog in front of them.
“Daylight! We did it, we made it through,” Tonghyon said enthusiastically.
With a puff, they pushed through the edge of the fog and stumbled on the ground.
The moment they stepped foot outside the fog, it was as
though the ground attacked them. The entire world flipped and they fell
face first into the dirt.
“What the fuck!” The fifth brother shouted.
The second brother pushed himself up to his feet and
adjusted his balance against the incline. “The fog must have messed with
our senses and our balance. We thought the terrain was flat, but we
just didn’t notice the incline. When we finally stepped outside of the
fog, our senses adjusted back to normal, and the earth itself looked like it came
flying at us.” His eyes frowned. “I don’t know how they did it, but I’m
impressed.”
“Agreed,” Tonghyon said, his eyes peeled on their
surroundings. “But now’s not the time to stand around feeling impressed
by our target. We need to hurry in case they know we’re here.” He turned
around to face his brothers. “Let’s— Wait… Where’s Third Brother?” They
all looked around in a panic. “Shit, it doesn’t matter. He’s just gonna
have to handle himself. Once we’ve finished the job, we’ll come back
for him and Fourth Brother.” Deep down, he knew he was mostly trying to
convince and console himself rather than his two remaining brothers.
“Let’s go!”
This content has been misappropriated from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
The second and fifth brothers shared a worried look. Silently, they followed their first brother up the hill.
There was more vegetation on the hill than expected, it
was just a few bushes and areas of tall grass but something about the
mountain felt more alive than most of the Barren Wastelands.
Their guards were up as they carefully made their way up the mountain.
After a few minutes, frustration and confusion came back in full force.
“Brothers, why is it that we can never seem to reach
those rocks up there,” the second brother said. “We keep climbing but
we’re not getting anywhere.”
“You’re right.” Tonghyon looked around. When he didn’t
see anything out of the ordinary, he activated a Movement Skill and
dashed forward up the mountain. Upon landing, he looked over his
shoulder. His two brothers were still right there. Even with his dash,
he had barely moved. “We’re trapped.”
“What is this, what kind of trap could do this—“ The
fifth brother was interrupted by an unusual sight. Everything in the
distance began to blur and spin. They themselves remained perfectly
still, as did the area directly around them, but beyond a certain point, the world spun counterclockwise. Slowly at first, but it quickly sped up.
The three brothers moved closer to one another and positioned themselves back to back.
Soon, they found themselves in the center of a tornado.
Distorted wind spun at extreme speeds all around them, stretching up high above them.
The border closed in on them.
“What the fuck! What do we do!?” The fifth brother shouted.
“I— I don’t know…” Tonghyon blinked and stuttered.
Within moments, the tornado was almost on them, just a few meters away.
The youngest, Fifth Brother, couldn’t take it. He
screamed in an attempt to take back some control of his mind, but he
failed utterly. “I can’t stay here, I won’t!” He dashed with everything
he had directly into the tornado, hoping it wasn’t as dangerous as it
looked.
Once engulfed by the winds, he stopped.
Not by choice.
He thought that he had leaped for dozens of meters, but in truth, he had barely moved, just like his first brother earlier.
The winds cut into him.
It was as though there were incredibly sharp razor blades
embedded into the wind itself. They weren’t deep, just surface level,
but it cut him thousands of times over just a few seconds. He let loose a
scream that couldn’t quite reach his brothers but they felt his pain
and fear just by looking at him.
They just stared in horror at the sight of their brother being cut to threads in front of them.
The winds cut deeper and deeper with every passing second. Soon, there was barely anything left of the man.
Kam Tonghyon’s mind went blank. His second brother collapsed to his knees,but Tonghyon just stood there.
Moments later, the tornado closed shut and covered them
both. For a moment he instinctively tried to protect himself, but his
defenses broke down quickly.
A minute later, the winds calmed down and the land
returned to its former calm. If not for the red stains on the grass,
nobody would have known anything ever happened.
POV Baz
Words appeared on a glazed section of the wall in the main room of Baz’ temple.
Five intruders discovered, all neutralized.
One killed by the [Reversing Heaven Killing Earth Formation].
One caught and killed by the Azure Mist Demon Squad.
The remaining three killed by the [Thousand Blades Space Compression Formation]
It wasn’t the first message of its kind.
The cult’s mages and formation masters still hadn’t
recreated the communication badges from the Wandering Wolves, but they
had managed to reverse engineer certain functions.
Message boards were installed in important places to
allow them to send messages to fixed points. Baz didn’t interfere too
much with the day-to-day, but he did ask for regular updates on
important topics. In the Formation Hall main building, they had set up a
unit dedicated to monitoring the [Grand Demonic Mist Formation] that
surrounded Mansan who kept Baz and the various squads informed of any
and all intrusions.
In the years that followed Víctor’s tribulation there had
been dozens of assassination attempts every year. None as high leveled
as the first but some were certainly strong enough that they could have
killed a Master Practitioner if they reached them, and caught them by
surprise.
Once the formation perimeter was properly in place, however, not a single assassin made it through.
The cult’s formations improved by leaps and bounds. They
were even able to mimic Baz’ [Heavenly Demon Cosmic Steps]—which he
finally got around to naming—to create the [Thousand Blade Space
Compression Formation], which also drew inspiration from the heavenly
winds that assaulted Baz during his Heavenly Tribulation. A truly
fearsome combination.
It opened doors previously beyond their imaginations.
They had only been able to maintain the spacial effects within a limited
area for the moment, but in time they were confident that teleportation
formations and storage artifacts would become a reality. Though they had been informed that storage artifacts were known to exists through
Elder Jaemin, that was only as legendary artifacts for the upper
echelon of the world. Exceedingly rare and prohibitively expensive.
Teleportation, however, would be a truly unique creation if the cult
managed it.
Satisfied with the success of the cult’s defenses, Baz acknowledged the visitor who approached the Temple of the Heavenly Demon.
A man in his late twenties kneeled by the temple
entrance. His robes were simple, the kind worn by most every commoner
outside of the Red Sea. Compared to the standards of Mujin, however,
they would still be considered high quality garments, if a bit bland
given their simple charcoal grey colors.
“I greet the Heavenly Demon!” the young man called out with reverence.
Baz smiled and walked past him, following the path toward his flower garden. “Demonic General Joon, accompany me to the gazebo.”
They walked in silence, both enjoying the serenity of the
beautiful greenery. Even with the success of the cult, gardens were
still rare sight in the Red Sea.
Once they arrived at the gazebo, Baz sat down while Joon remained standing until Baz gestured at him to sit.
They sat in silence for moment while Baz poured them both a cup of tea.
“So, how is the situation in the Jeoksa Family?” Baz said, breaking the silence.
In the past, it would have been difficult, if not
impossible, to hear spoken words at the mountain peak due to the
constant extreme winds. As part of the reconstruction of the peak,
several formations had been installed for various reasons. One of them
was to deal with the weather. The peak was almost isolated in a bubble,
shielded from the hurricane winds and any other nuisance brought about
by the weather.
“Our preparations are nearly done, Demon Lord. When the day comes, it’ll be swift and efficient.”
Work on the plans for the coup of the Jeoksa Family had
begun long ago, but they mostly fell apart with the loss of the cult’s
Vice Leader, Marion, six years earlier.
Joon was one of the top graduates of the third generation
of the Cave of Latent Demons. It was discovered early in his training
that he was one of the rare few born with a Talent. [Shapeshift] allowed
him to subtly alter his appearance. It was fairly limited. No matter
how hard he pushed it, he couldn’t turn into someone else, but it did
functionally work as a natural ability to disguise himself. Combined
with an inherent disposition for stealth and information gathering, he
was a natural spy.
Baz had promoted him to Demonic General and master of the
cult’s new Intelligence Hall. For the past year, he and a squad of his
men had been embedded in Jeoksa Family to work with Elder Jaemin in
preparation of their coup.
“Good, we’ll act once we have his son firmly in our
grasp,” Baz said. “He’s old enough to enter the Cave of
Latent Demons now. We can’t let the elder become too powerful before we
have a proper means of controlling him, even if he is willingly handing
his son over to be a hostage. How is the progress with the other
contenders?”
Inclining his head respectfully, Joon answered, “Slow but steady,
Demon Lord. As you know, Elder Jaemin has climbed in the ranks to become
a core elder of the Family and as such is that much closer to the seat
of patriarch. While the current patriarch is one of only two Masters in
the Family, he is old. He is expected to step down and hand power over
to his eldest son shortly. A decision not without controversy. The
patriarch himself is well respected, but his eldest son has a penchant
for gambling and is known to frequent local brothels. No one is
particularly thrilled about his ascension, but the traditionalists value
the Family laws more than their discomfort. The second son, however, is
gradually gaining support from the younger generations of elders. He is
playing a more subtle game, though. At no point has he voiced any
interest in becoming patriarch, though his ambition is clear to see. He
takes any and all opportunities to point out his older brother’s vices
and inadequacies while at the same time push for the Family to adopt
more progressive ideas. Ones supposedly growing in popularity with the
greater sects of the Great Martial Alliance in the central plains.”
Baz picked up his cup. “Progressive ideas that might lead
to the Family becoming more flexible in matters of succession, I
assume,” he said before taking a sip.
“Precisely, Demon Lord.” Joon nodded. “As a result, the
Jeoksa Family is somewhat divided in two factions, the traditionalists
who support the first son, and the more progressive elders who support
the second son. It’s a long game, one that will most assuredly grow in
intensity as the patriarch’s abdication draws closer.”
“And Elder Jaemin, how are the other elders feeling about his new position?”
“An even more subtle strategy than that of the second
son’s is in play. At first, most elders were quite sour about his
ascension to core elder. They expected that he would interfere and
complicate their affairs or leverage his new position for personal
benefit. Their expectations were proven wrong. He chose neither the
first son’s faction nor the faction of the second son. Instead, on our suggestion, he
befriended the patriarch’s youngest, his daughter. As she has no claim
to power in their patriarchal system, she has maintained a neutral
stance. By ostensibly choosing neutrality and using his well crafted
political skills, Elder Jaemin has managed to get on most people’s good
side. He’s liked by the older traditionalists and the younger
progressives alike. I, along with my men, have spent a considerable
effort in spreading positive rumors about him to the mortals and lower
echelons of the Family, as well.”
Baz nodded, satisfied with the briefing. “Excellent, well
played. We’ll likely have to eliminate all three, the patriarch and his
two sons, for this to work so these years of preparation will make the
transition smoother.” He took another sip. “So, plans are in place for
how we execute once the time comes?”
“Yes, Demon Lord. Details will need to be handled when
the day is closer, anything can change until then after all, but we have
the outline in place. We escalate the conflict between the two brothers
and weaken the patriarch’s position and reputation in the process. Make
it seem as though his care for his own flesh and blood surpasses that
of his love for the Family. Most importantly, we make it seem as though
one of the brothers brought in external aid. That a rival Group weaseled
their way in through the brothers’ conflict. Once the struggle within
the patriarch’s family reaches a boiling point, we strike and take them
all out in one fell swoop. Elder Jaemin has retained his role as
External Elder even with his new status, and to save the Family, he will
make use of his connections to our Heavenly Demon Divine Cult to bring
the unrest to a stop. He takes control as the new patriarch, and we
become the saviors of the Jeoksa Family.”
They finished their tea as Joon’s report came to a close.
Once alone, Baz walked up to the edge of the cliff at the peak of the mountain and looked out over the cult like a proud parent.
Seeing the progress they had made and the thought of how far they would go in the future brought a smile to his face. The coup at hand also played a part, taking down a grand martial Family got his heart racing.
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