A year had passed. By appearance, Kiaria was still a four-year-old child, yet his bearing no longer belonged to childhood. Nights beneath the waterfall and months of silence had carved into him as calm older than his years. His seclusion had pressed him against the bottleneck of Bodily Refinement-Impermanence; where others of twenty faltered without elixirs, he had already stepped beyond.
Yet he did not think of ranks or realms. On the eve of the Martial Exchange Event, his thoughts were only of one thing: What gift can I offer Master? How do I show the weight of this year's cultivation? The waterfall thundered before him. Its endless torrent fell like silver ropes, pounding the stone where he sat. At first, the roar gave him no answer. Then, in the stillness between breaths, he noticed it–the scattered rhythm of droplets rebounding from the rocks. Each droplet cut through air, light and sharp, drifting like feathers yet flashing like stars. He raised his palm. A single droplet froze into a shard of ice, needle-thin. He flicked it. It pierced another falling bead mid-flight. The spark it made shimmered in his gaze. His lips moved faintly. "Star… Feather." The name settled into his heart like destiny.
Morning came. The Enlightenment Sect gathered before the great platform, a ring carved into the mountain's peak. Elders sat in solemn ranks, disciples clustered in anticipation. This was no common duel ground; this was the Exchange–where each year, cultivators revealed what they had grasped, and where Didhian, the Former Master, judged them. Many disciples stood back. Their skills were half-formed, their hearts not ready. Better to watch and learn than to shame themselves before the Founder's gaze. Orman arrived with Kiaria at his side, both panting from their sprint. Orman threw himself dramatically to the ground, groaning as if mortally wounded. "See, little brother? We made it! If we had come any later, Master would've beaten me with a stick!"
"You said that," Kiaria murmured softly, "while dragging me through half the forest." Laughter rippled faintly. Even in such tension, Orman's humor disarmed. He ruffled Kiaria's hair and pushed him forward. "Go on. Don't keep the old men waiting." A hush fell when Kiaria stepped into the ring.
He closed his eyes. Breath steadied. The climate shifted. The sky darkened faintly; the air grew moist. Droplets condensed in the air around him. Then–light spread. Each droplet gleamed, sharp as a quill, soft as down, yet glimmering with starlight. Hundreds formed, drifting like celestial feathers through the ring. Gasps echoed. Even seasoned elders leaned forward. With a movement of his hand, the feathers aligned. They shot forward–silent arcs of brilliance, piercing stone, splitting droplets, weaving light through the very air. When they dissolved, silence clamped the platform. Orman's voice broke it. "Little brother… remind me never to let you cut my hair with that." The crowd chuckled, awe softening into disbelief.
Only Didhian remained still. His gaze lingered, deep as rivers. His heart stirred. Fairy Nature Essence… Impossible. A child of four years commanding this? Such genius is rare even in an age of legends. But his sigh was quiet, his thought hidden. No one is eternal in strength. No one forever unbroken. To shine too soon may cast longer shadows in the future.
Aloud, he asked, "Did you forge this technique yourself?" Oh… how come I forget his Five-Elemental Bloodline… its itself attract natural energy no matter how far.
"Yes, Master," Kiaria replied.
Didhian nodded, but his eyes clouded. "Impressive. Yet not enough. What of the Pavilion's skills? The ones you studied each month?" Kiaria's head bowed. "I did not practice them. Instead, I asked others of their skills–their advantages, their flaws. I chose to stabilize my realm rather than scatter myself." A murmur rippled through the sect. Didhian's voice sharpened. "You abandoned breadth for a single creation. Do you believe that is wisdom?" Kiaria's silence was answer enough.
Didhian turned. "Orman. What level have you reached in the form you chose?" The Seventh Brother straightened proudly. "Third form, Master."
"Good. Duel him."
The crowd stirred. Orman winked at Kiaria. "Don't worry, little brother. I'll try not to break your bones too badly." He raised his hand. Leaves shimmered above the ring–autumn leaves, golden and sharp, descending in slow, endless fall. "Autumn Summer, First Form–Autumn Rain!" The leaves sharpened into blades, filling the air. But before they struck, Kiaria moved. He vanished. In a blink, Orman was at the edge of the ring, clutching his chest, knocked aside by a blow he hadn't seen. He laughed breathlessly. "At least… let me blink next time!"
Gasps spread. Some disciples cheered, others whispered in awe. But Didhian's face did not soften. "Reckless," he said, stepping into the ring. His gaze pierced Kiaria. "What do you think you have achieved?"
"I… won," Kiaria murmured.
"No," Didhian's voice cracked like thunder. "You lost." The Founder lifted his hand. "Fight me." Kiaria dashed, faster than sight. Yet the instant he moved, his body struck the ground. He had not even seen Didhian stir.
The Master's voice filled the sect. "This is Autumn Summer, Fifth Form–Autumn Sequence." Leaves swirled into existence, drifting through the ring. "Wherever these fall, they become my phantoms. Two strikes false, the third true. Against this, speed means nothing. Even if you move unseen, you are still cut. Kiaria, had this been war, your corpse would already be ash."
He swept his gaze across every disciple. His words rang like scripture. "Do you know why our sect carries no swords, no forged weapons? Because enlightenment is not chained to tools. Anything can be a weapon–water, feather, leaf, stone. To depend on one trick is arrogance. And arrogance is death. Seclusion alone is not cultivation. To live, to see, to comprehend–this is enlightenment. A cultivator who cannot adapt is already a corpse waiting to fall." The leaves dissolved into silence.
The disciples bowed, hearts trembling. Orman scratched his head, grinning awkwardly, but even his laughter felt muted. "Kiaria. Orman. Stay." The crowd dispersed slowly. Only the two remained. Didhian's tone softened. "One of you is silence, the other laughter. Together you will temper each other. Orman, do not let jest become carelessness. Kiaria, do not let silence become arrogance."
He turned to Kiaria, placing a jade token in his palm. "Your next path is not here. For two months, you will descend the mountain. Live among the valley people. Learn their lives–their joy, their pain. Return only when you understand. That is enlightenment."
Kiaria bowed deeply. "Yes, Master." Orman grinned, clapping him on the back. "Two months with villagers, eh? Don't worry little brother. I'll make sure you don't die of boredom." For the first time, Kiaria smiled faintly. And thus the Martial Exchange ended–not with triumph, but with a lesson carved deeper than any strike.