The Vorn Estate had seven cultivation chambers.
The first three were public — used by branch family members, servants with awakened abilities, and low-ranking guards. They were adequate. Functional. Barely worth mentioning.
Chambers four through six were reserved for direct descendants. Better mana circulation. Reinforced walls to handle power fluctuations. Attendants who provided pills and guidance.
Chamber seven was for the Patriarch alone.
Kael stood outside chamber four, staring at the locked door.
"Still sealed," he muttered.
Marcus requested exclusive access for the next month, the System noted. Apparently, pushing a Mana Heart realm cultivator to Rank 5 requires "uninterrupted focus."
"Or he just wants to spite me."
Both can be true.
Kael shoved his hands in his pockets and walked away.
He'd find somewhere else.
THE EASTERN RUINS — ESTATE GROUNDS
Every Vorn estate had them — ruins from before the family's conquest. Old buildings, broken wards, crumbling walls that hummed with residual mana from centuries past.
Normal cultivators avoided them. The mana was wild, unpredictable, occasionally dangerous.
Kael sought them out.
He found his spot behind a collapsed watchtower — a natural depression in the earth where the old wards had failed so completely that ambient mana pooled like rainwater in a pothole. The concentration was three times higher than the cultivation chambers.
Sitting here was like drinking from a fire hose instead of a straw.
Kael settled onto the cold ground and closed his eyes.
Mana Gathering worked on a simple principle: your body was a container. Ambient mana was the water. You pulled the water in, circulated it through your meridians to cleanse and refine it, and stored it in a growing reservoir behind your navel.
The size of that reservoir determined your rank.
Rank 1: Barely a puddle. You could sense mana, barely manipulate it.
Rank 5: A small lake. You could sustain abilities for minutes at a time.
Rank 9: A deep reservoir. You could fight for hours without depletion.
And then came Core Formation — compressing that lake into a solid sphere of refined mana. The quality of that core determined everything that followed. Cracked cores could never advance past Foundation Establishment. Flawless cores could reach Spirit Soul. Perfect cores had no known limit.
Transcendent cores were theoretical.
No one had ever made one.
Kael pulled mana into his body and began the slow, grinding work of expanding his reservoir.
The wild mana fought him. It was like trying to drink from a raging river — too much, too fast, threatening to tear his meridians apart.
Most cultivators would have given up. Used a chamber. Played it safe.
Kael had never played it safe in either life.
He gritted his teeth and pulled harder.
Three hours in, he felt the barrier.
Every rank had one — a wall of resistance that separated one level from the next. Breaking through required either brute force (dangerous), comprehension (slow), or a catalyst (expensive).
Kael had none of the above.
So he did what he always did.
He cheated.
His gravity power wasn't just for combat. Gravity affected everything — including mana. By creating a micro-gravity well centered on his navel, he could pull mana into his reservoir faster than his meridians could naturally circulate it.
It was dangerous. The technique wasn't in any manual. If the well collapsed, the backlash could shatter his meridians permanently.
But Kael didn't have time for safe.
He formed the well.
Mana surged inward — a whirlpool of raw energy spiraling into his body. His meridians screamed. Blood trickled from his nose. His vision went white at the edges.
You're going to rupture something, the System warned.
"Then heal it."
I can't heal meridian damage. That requires an external healer or a—
"Then I'll manage."
The barrier cracked.
A hairline fracture in the wall between Rank 5 and Rank 6, letting a trickle of mana through.
Kael held the well for thirty more seconds.
Then he released it and collapsed backward onto the cold earth, gasping.
Blood ran freely from his nose and ears. His hands shook. His vision was blurry.
But behind his navel, his reservoir was larger.
Not a full rank breakthrough. Not even close. But the crack was there now — a foothold he could exploit over the coming days.
You're an idiot, the System said.
"But I'm an idiot who's closer to Rank 6."
You're an idiot who almost burst his own meridians in a ruined watchtower with no healer within shouting distance.
"Details."
Kael wiped the blood from his face with his sleeve and stared up at the sky. Three moons. Strange constellations he didn't recognize from his old life.
"Do you remember the stars?" he asked quietly.
The System was silent for a moment.
No.
"Me neither." Kael closed his eyes. "But I feel like I should."
"Kael?"
He opened his eyes.
Sophie stood at the edge of the ruins, wrapped in a light shawl, a small lantern in her hand. Her face was pale in the moonlight — worried, searching.
"What are you doing out here?" she asked. "It's past midnight."
"Cultivating."
"In the ruins? Kael, the mana here is unstable — you could seriously hurt yourself."
"I did hurt myself." He sat up, not bothering to hide the blood on his face. "But I also made progress, so I'd call it a net positive."
Sophie's expression shifted from worry to something sharper. She crossed the distance between them and crouched beside him, her fingers hovering near his face as if she wanted to touch him but didn't dare.
"You're bleeding from your ears."
"I know."
"That's meridian strain. That's—" She swallowed. "That's what happens when someone pushes too hard too fast. Kael, if you keep this up, you'll destroy your cultivation foundation before you even form a core."
"Sophie."
"Your mother—Miriam—she wouldn't have wanted—"
"Sophie." His voice was gentle but firm. "I'm fine."
"You're not fine. Look at you."
"I'm alive. I'm progressing. I'm not dead in a gutter somewhere, which is what half this family wants." He met her eyes. "That's the best I can offer right now."
She stared at him.
Then, without warning, her hand came up and pressed against his cheek.
Kael froze.
Her palm was soft. Warm. Trembling slightly.
"You have blood on your face," she whispered, though she made no move to wipe it away.
Her Truth Sense was screaming at her. Every sensation, every impulse, every shameful thought was laid bare before her own power like a confession she couldn't stop making.
She should pull away.
She didn't.
Kael's eyes studied her face — the worry lines, the slight redness around her eyes that suggested she'd been crying before she found him, the way her lips parted slightly when she breathed.
"Sophie," he said carefully. "You're shaking."
"I know."
"Are you cold?"
"No."
He held her gaze for a long moment.
Then, slowly, deliberately, he reached up and removed her hand from his cheek.
He held it for a second — just long enough to be felt — then released it.
"Go inside," he said. "It's late."
Sophie pulled her hand back as if burned.
"Of course. Yes. I—forgive me, I didn't mean to—"
"Don't apologize." He stood, steadying himself against the ruined wall. "Just... go."
She went.
Kael watched her disappear into the darkness, lantern light bobbing like a drowning star.
She's in love with you, the System said flatly.
"Don't be ridiculous."
I don't make observations. I make statements. She's in love with you. Her heart rate spiked forty percent when she touched your face. Her pupils dilated. Her body temperature rose by—
"Stop."
You asked me to tell you things. I'm telling you.
"I don't want to hear this."
Then don't ask questions you don't want answered.
Kael said nothing.
He walked back to his quarters in silence.
THE NEXT MORNING — DINING HALL
Breakfast in the Vorn family was a battlefield.
Not physically — the Patriarch had banned fighting at meals after Marcus threw Sebastian through a table in 2847 — but politically. Where you sat. Who you spoke to. What you ate. Everything was observed, catalogued, and used as ammunition.
Kael entered the dining hall and scanned the room.
Cassandra sat at the head of the children's table — not the Patriarch's seat, which remained empty, but the position of authority among the siblings. Lucian flanked her left, Marcus her right. Thalia was absent — probably in her laboratory. Sebastian lurked near the end, picking at his food.
Isabella sat alone in the middle — carefully neutral territory. Elena and Nora weren't present. Sophie never ate with the children.
Kael took a seat beside Isabella.
"Rough night?" Isabella murmured without looking up from her plate.
"Productive."
"You have blood in your ear."
"Part of the process."
Isabella's mouth thinned. She said nothing else.
Across the table, Marcus noticed Kael's arrival. His lip curled.
"Little brother. You look like shit."
"Thank you, Marcus. You look like yourself, so I'll consider us even."
A few siblings snorted. Marcus's expression darkened.
"Still got that sharp tongue. Pity it's the only sharp thing about you."
"I have other sharp things." Kael picked up a piece of fruit. "Would you like a demonstration?"
The gravity in the room shifted — Marcus's power flaring, a subtle pressure that made the silverware rattle.
Kael didn't react. He simply bit into his fruit and chewed slowly, letting the silence stretch.
"You're bold for someone at Rank 5," Marcus growled.
"And you're boring for someone at Rank 4." Kael swallowed. "Shouldn't you be off crushing something? That seems to be your only trick."
Cassandra spoke without looking up from her tablet. "Enough. Both of you."
The gravity pressure vanished.
Kael smiled at Marcus — sweet, poisonous, utterly without fear.
"We'll finish this later, brother."
"There's nothing to finish," Marcus snapped. "You're nothing."
"Then why are you sweating?"
Marcus looked down.
His brow was, in fact, beaded with sweat — from the effort of maintaining gravity pressure while simultaneously trying to intimidate Kael.
He stood abruptly and left the dining hall.
Kael returned to his fruit.
You're going to make him kill you eventually, the System observed.
"Eventually," Kael agreed. "But not today."
After breakfast, Kael found Elena in the memorial garden — the small courtyard where the family kept records of its dead.
She was standing before a blank section of wall.
"There's nothing there," Kael said, stopping beside her.
"I know." Elena's voice was distant. "My mother should have a plaque here. But she doesn't. She wasn't important enough."
She was talking about Miriam. Kael's mother. Her stepmother.
"She raised you," Elena continued. "After my mother... struggled. Miriam was the one who fed us. Read to us. Told us stories." Her hands clenched. "And she doesn't even have a name on this wall."
Kael looked at the blank stone.
"I'll put her name here someday," he said quietly.
"How?"
"By becoming someone too powerful to ignore." He glanced at Elena. "When I'm strong enough, I'll carve her name into this wall myself. And no one will dare erase it."
Elena looked at him.
In her too-large eyes, something shifted — fear giving way to something fiercer.
"Promise?"
"Have I ever broken a promise to you?"
"No."
"Then stop asking."
She almost smiled.
They stood together in silence, two children before a blank wall, mourning a woman the family had decided didn't matter.
And Kael added another name to the list of people he would burn this family to avenge.
[STATUS UPDATE]
Name: Kael Cassian Vorn
Age: 14
Realm: Mana Gathering (Rank 5) — 92% to Rank 6
Soul Integrity: 49%
Talent: Orange (Suppressed) | White (True — Locked)
Shadow Points: 450
Powers:
Gravity Manipulation — Novice III (87% to Novice IV)
Lightning Manipulation — Novice II (34% to Novice III)
Techniques:
Gravity Step (Earth Grade) — Mastered
Gravity Well Cultivation (Unranked — Self-Created) — Highly dangerous and unstable but effective so far.
Basic Soul Absorption (Passive)
Intent: None
Domain: None
Active Quest: The Patriarch's Gaze
Time Remaining: 5 months, 26 days
Warning: Current trajectory insufficient for objective. Recommend acquiring external resources.
