The Beginning – The Slums of Grey Soot
The rain in the City of Grey Soot was a persistent, acidic drizzle that left orange streaks on the corrugated metal roofs of the slums. It was a city built on the refuse of the great sects—a sprawling junkyard where the "Iron-Root" commoners spent their lives smelting down the broken weapons of their betters.
Wei Chen sat in a cellar beneath a collapsed watchtower. The room was cold and smelled of damp earth and stale tea. He was younger here, his handsome features obscured by a layer of grime, his dual-colored hair matted with the dust of the smelters. He had no fine silks, only a tattered grey tunic. But even here, he sat with the spine of a king.
He was hungry. His Yin-Yang core was a dormant, frozen weight in his chest, and his physical body felt the frailty of the mortal coil.
A noise broke his meditation—the sound of a body hitting the mud outside his door, followed by the harsh laughter of men.
"Check her pockets! A Ghost-Root brat like this must have swiped something from the market!"
Wei Chen listened. He didn't see the girl, but he felt the "hollow" she occupied in the world. He felt the frantic, irregular pulse of a cornered animal. He stood, his movements slow and deliberate, and opened the cellar door.
The light of the orange moon fell upon a girl no older than twelve. She was emaciated, her skin so pale it looked translucent, and her eyes—wide and filled with a feral, terrifying intelligence—were the color of dying embers. She was Liara. She had been caught stealing a handful of low-grade Qi stones from the Iron-Tiger Gang.
The three thugs looked up, seeing a blind beggar with strange hair. "Back off, old man. This rat owes the boss a life."
Wei Chen didn't speak. He reached into his belt and pulled out a small, carved piece of wood—not even a weapon, just a fragment of a zither bridge. In one fluid motion, he stepped into the rain. He didn't strike the men; he struck the air around them. The vibration of the wood against the wind created a frequency that shattered the inner ear canals of the thugs instantly. They collapsed, clutching their heads, screaming in a silence only they could hear.
Liara didn't run. She stared at the blind man who had moved like a ghost.
"Why didn't you kill them?" she asked, her voice a dry rasp.
"Because blood is difficult to wash out of the mud," Wei Chen replied, turning back to his cellar. "And I have no clean water."
Liara followed him into the dark. She sat across from him, watching him with those ember eyes. "You're a cultivator. Why are you in a hole like this?"
"I am a man who is learning to see in the dark," Wei Chen said. He reached for a small, rusted sewing needle he had found in the scrap heaps. "And you, child, are a 'Ghost-Root.' The world has already written your death. Tell me... would you like to pick up the pen and change the ending?"
