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Chapter 61 - Steps Into the Clouds

The platform lay shattered behind me.

Blood pooled in cracks. Stone crumbled into the abyss.

The elder was gone—vanished into clouds with qi heavy enough to shake the marrow of the mountain.

But his words lingered.

"Climb higher. If you survive, the mountain will test you again."

Arjun's ember pulsed faintly against my chest. His whisper trembled.

"…Ishaan… he could have killed you…"

I coughed blood, grinning crookedly.

"Yeah. Guess I'm hard to kill."

The ember flickered, as if sighing.

The Inkblade purred, shadows curling eagerly around my wrist.

"…not mercy… challenge… the marrow of this place wants to taste more of you…"

"Good," I rasped, planting one foot on the next stair. "I'm still hungry."

The staircase narrowed as I climbed.

Mist thickened, swirling cold around my wounds. My ribs ground with every step, blood soaking my shirt, dripping across stone.

But I climbed.

Every strike from disciples.Every word from the elder.Every echo of the gong.

All of it pressed me forward.

The mountain wanted me to fall.

So I climbed higher.

Hours blurred.

Stone underfoot. Mist in my lungs. Blood in my throat.

The higher I went, the heavier the air grew. Qi thickened, pressing into my wounds, clawing at my breath.

But with every step, something shifted.

Threads.

Fracture Sense revealed faint cords woven into the mist itself.

A barrier.

The sect's wall.

The Inkblade hissed, amused.

"…they hide behind fog and qi… clever… but walls are only marrow waiting to be cut…"

I raised my blade, shadows boiling.

Arjun's ember stirred faintly, whispering.

"…wait… feel it first…"

I froze, blood dripping from my chin.

And then I felt it.

The mist wasn't just wall.

It was alive.

The fog shifted, swirling tighter, cords vibrating violently.

Shapes emerged within it—figures of qi, faceless, armed with blades.

Guardians.

Not disciples.

Not flesh.

Formations.

The sect's defense.

The first guardian stepped forward, sword cutting silently through mist. Its strike hummed with discipline, threads tight and unyielding.

I raised the Inkblade, shadows screaming. Steel and shadow clashed, sparks scattering into fog.

The impact rattled my ribs, nearly sent me sprawling.

But I didn't fall.

I pressed forward, blade cutting arcs of shadow.

The guardian staggered back, cords trembling faintly.

Then another stepped forward.

And another.

Dozens of faceless warriors rose from mist, blades humming in silence.

Their qi pressed like a storm, cords weaving tighter, forming a net across the stairs.

Arjun's ember flickered violently, whispering.

"…you can't fight them all…"

I grinned faintly, blood dripping from my lips.

"Then I won't."

Fracture Sense burned brighter, cords screaming across my vision.

The guardians weren't individuals.

They were one.

A net.

And at the center of the net—

A single cord pulsed faintly.

The knot.

The Inkblade howled in delight.

"…yes… the marrow of their wall… cut it… unravel the fog itself…"

I lunged, ribs grinding, blood soaking stone, blade arcing for the knot.

The guardians swarmed, blades clashing, qi tearing at me.

I roared through blood, shadows screaming outward.

And I cut.

The knot snapped.

The mist screamed.

The guardians dissolved into fog, cords tearing apart, qi unraveling into nothing.

The staircase cleared.

The wall was gone.

I staggered forward, chest heaving, vision blurring red.

Arjun's ember pulsed faintly, whispering.

"…you broke their wall…"

I grinned weakly.

"Habit."

The Inkblade purred, shadows curling tighter.

"…step by step… cord by cord… this mountain is yours to cut…"

I placed one foot on the next stair.

And climbed higher, into clouds that no longer hid me.

The mist thinned.

With the knot cut, the fog wall collapsed into pale streams of qi, dissolving around the staircase.

For the first time, I saw beyond.

The mountain opened into terraces carved into the cliffside—training grounds, courtyards, halls with banners snapping in the wind.

And disciples.

Dozens of them.

Not gray-robed novices like before.

These wore darker robes, qi shimmering heavier around their forms, movements sharper, eyes colder.

Inner disciples.

Their gazes turned as one, locking onto me—blood-soaked, staggering, blade dripping shadow.

The silence lasted only a breath.

Then whispers rippled.

"The outer wall fell."

"An outsider cut it."

"He carries demonic arts."

Their voices hardened into one rhythm.

"Kill him."

Arjun's ember stirred faintly in my arms, whispering, "…again…"

I grinned weakly, coughing blood.

"Yeah. Again."

The Inkblade screamed in delight, shadows lashing outward.

"…yes… new marrow, sharper marrow… let's see if discipline still holds…"

The first inner disciple stepped forward.

His qi pressed heavier than any I had faced so far. His blade hummed faintly, edge wrapped in vibrating threads.

He struck.

The air bent, cords trembling.

I raised the Inkblade, shadows boiling. Steel clashed with shadow, sparks scattering, the impact rattling my ribs.

I staggered back, blood spraying from my lips.

But I didn't fall.

I cut.

Fracture Sense burned, cords screaming across my vision.

The disciple's threads were tighter, denser, sharper.

But still threads.

I slashed the weakest one.

His strike faltered, qi unraveling for a split second.

I drove the Inkblade through, shadows devouring his rhythm.

He collapsed, blood spraying across stone.

The others did not flinch.

They moved together, qi weaving between them, a formation even sharper than the last.

Blades sang.

Stone split.

Threads screamed.

They struck in waves.

One blade cut low—qi lashing my leg, nearly buckling me.

Another swept high—steel grazing my shoulder, blood spraying.

A third lunged straight for my heart.

I twisted, shadows intercepting, ribs grinding like broken glass.

Blood sprayed across my chin.

But I cut back.

Every weak cord.

Every trembling thread.

And disciples fell.

The terrace shook with battle.

Sparks flared. Shadows screamed. Blood soaked into stone.

The inner disciples pressed harder, sharper, their formation stronger than the outer wall's guardians.

But I pressed harder still.

Because every step I took—

Every cord I cut—

Tore deeper into their order.

Their discipline.

Their marrow.

Arjun's ember flickered violently, whispering, "…Ishaan… you're breaking… yourself…"

I coughed blood, grinning faintly.

"Story of my life."

The Inkblade howled, shadows devouring another disciple's blade, tearing qi apart.

"…yes… break them… break yourself… as long as cords fall, it is worth it…"

By the time silence returned, the terrace was a grave.

Dozens of inner disciples sprawled across the stone, blood dripping into cracks, qi dissolving into mist.

I stood barely upright, chest heaving, ribs shattered, blood soaking my body.

But I stood.

From above, a deeper voice echoed.

"Enough."

The air thickened, qi pressing heavier than before.

Figures stepped from the terrace's upper hall.

Not disciples.

Not outer guards.

But men and women robed in black, qi storming around them like coiled dragons.

Elders.

More than one.

And they were watching me.

Arjun's ember flickered faintly, whispering, "…this… is worse…"

The Inkblade purred eagerly.

"…yes… more marrow… more storms… climb, fracture… climb…"

I raised the blade, shadows trembling, blood dripping from my lips.

And I smiled faintly.

"Guess the mountain's not done with me yet."

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