The ultimatum, born from a century of grief, hung in the devastated crater, an undeniable, absolute demand for vengeance. Spine's massive form trembled, his entire being focused on the single act of destruction that he believed would grant his soul peace. The air was thick with his rage, a palpable, suffocating force.
Elder Tian Long, who lay broken and powerless on the ground, felt that killing intent wash over him. Death, which had been a distant concept for a peak expert like himself, was now a certainty, a looming shadow just moments away. His mind, which had been frozen with terror at Li Yu's power, now scrambled with a desperate, primal urgency. He had to live.
"Wait!" he screamed, his voice a hoarse, desperate croak. "Your son! He could still be alive!"
The words were a hammer blow to Spine's soul. His forward momentum, his gathering of power for the final strike, all of it halted. His mind, which had been a clear, burning inferno of rage, was now a maelstrom of confusion, disbelief, and a terrifying, fragile new emotion: hope.
"Lies!" Spine roared, though his voice now lacked its earlier conviction. "You are a coward, trying to buy your life with tricks and deception! You will die!"
"It's not a trick!" Tian Long pleaded, seeing a sliver of an opening. "I am a beast, just like you! I sensed his bloodline! He was special! Too valuable to kill! I can tell you what happened, where he might be! Spare my life, and I will give you back your son!"
Spine was frozen, his mind a battlefield. His rage, the companion of one hundred and fifty years, screamed for him to tear this monster apart, to finally claim the vengeance he had sought for so long. But the hope, that tiny, poisonous, beautiful glimmer of hope that his son, his last connection to the life he had lost, might still be in this world… it was a force more powerful than any rage. He was conflicted, torn between the past and a potential future, between vengeance and salvation.
He looked to the one person whose authority he had sworn to obey. His burning, desperate eyes fell upon Li Yu.
Li Yu had been watching the exchange, his expression unreadable. He saw the torment in his retainer's eyes, the war being waged in his soul. This was not a decision a master could make for his servant. It was a choice that would define the rest of Spine's existence.
"Spine," Li Yu said, his voice calm and steady. "The choice is yours."
The weight of that choice settled upon Spine. He looked at the monster who had destroyed his life, the target of all his hatred. Then he thought of his son's face, a memory he had replayed in his mind a million times, the face of a boy who might, impossibly, now be a man.
After a long, agonizing moment that seemed to stretch for an eternity, the fire in his eyes dimmed, replaced by a deep, shuddering resolve. The hope, however faint, was more important than the hatred.
He suppressed his rage, a monumental act of will that made his massive form tremble. "Talk," he growled, the single word a surrender and a demand.
A wave of immense relief washed over Elder Tian Long. He had survived.
While this life-and-death negotiation was taking place, Kui, who had recovered from his initial shock, had a deep frown on his face. His merchant's mind screamed that letting this man live was a terrible business decision. He was a powerful enemy, an elder of a hostile faction. Allowing him to walk away was leaving a known liability on the books, a threat that was almost guaranteed to cause problems in the future.
But then he looked at Spine. He saw the rigid tension in his friend's massive form begin to ease, replaced by a trembling, fragile hope. He saw a century of crushing grief begin to lift, if only slightly. And Kui's frown was replaced by a small, genuine smile. He was happy for his friend. This was more important than business.
With that thought, a lightness entered his heart, and his practical mind, now freed from the grim calculation of threat assessment, immediately turned to the immediate opportunities. With a cheerful shrug, he began to move through the crater, efficiently collecting the storage rings from the hundreds of dead cultivators. "Waste not, want not," he hummed. "Someone has to be practical, after all."
Elder Tian Long, propped up on his elbows, began his story, his voice still weak but now filled with a desperate eagerness to please. "One hundred and fifty years ago, my Faction gave me a mission. To destabilize the local human sects in this coastal region and acquire resources and new recruits. Your town, and your son's sect… they were two of my many targets."
"After we… concluded our business at the sect," he continued, choosing his words carefully, "I was inspecting the captives for any with notable potential. We captured a few promising seedlings, young disciples who could be sold as high-quality slaves or, if their will could be broken, brainwashed into becoming members of our Faction. That is when I found him."
His eyes flickered with a genuine memory of surprise. "He was different. I could sense it. There was a power in his bloodline, a dormant, oceanic might that felt both human and… something else. Something ancient and powerful. It was because I, too, am a beast."
A shimmer of dark light enveloped him, and for a moment, his human features were overlaid with a ghostly, lupine visage. "My true form is that of a Moonlight Wolf. My senses are far keener than any human's. I could feel the leviathan blood flowing through your son's veins. A half-breed of his potential was a treasure, a perfect candidate for indoctrination into the Faction's beliefs."
Spine listened, his massive form rigid, his heart a painful drum in his chest.
"I did not kill him," Tian Long said, pressing his advantage. "I personally escorted him to a special facility, a re-education branch of the Faction deep in the southern mountains. They specialize in… molding promising young minds. In turning them into loyal, powerful assets for our cause. It has been over one hundred and fifty years. If he is still alive, and with his potential, I have no doubt that he is… he would be a high-ranking member of the Beast Revolution Faction by now. Not at my level, perhaps, but a powerful figure in his own right."
The implication was a dagger of ice in Spine's heart. His son could be alive. But if he was, he was now an enemy, a loyal soldier of the very organization that had destroyed their lives. The hope was inextricably tangled with a new, horrifying despair.
The rest of the group processed this new, complicated reality. They now knew Spine's son might be out there, a powerful, brainwashed agent of their foe. They would have to be careful. In any future conflict with the Faction, they would have to pay attention, to try and sense Spine's aura on anyone they fought, to make sure they did not kill him by mistake. That was, if he was still alive.
Spine, having made his choice, looked at Elder Tian Long with a cold, dead-eyed expression. "You have told me what you know. You may go."
"A wise decision," Tian Long said, a hint of his old arrogance returning as he struggled to his feet. He was terrified of the quiet young man who had unleashed that world-ending roar, but he believed his life was now secure.
"But," Li Yu's voice cut through the air, cold and absolute, "you will leave everything behind."
Tian Long froze. "What?"
"Your storage ring. Your spiritual weapons. Every item on your person. Leave them. You have bought your life, not your possessions."
The man's face twisted in fury. He was a peak Core Formation expert! To be stripped bare like a common bandit was the ultimate humiliation. But then he felt the weight of Li Yu's gaze, the quiet, indifferent pressure of the boy who had just annihilated an army without lifting a finger, and the fury died in his throat, replaced by a cold, pragmatic fear. He knew he had no choice.
With a snarl of pure hatred, he ripped the storage ring from his finger and threw it at Kui. "Take it, you scavenger!" he spat. "Looting the corpses of my men while I'm still standing here!"
Kui caught the ring with a cheerful smile. "One man's tragedy is another's treasure, Elder! Thank you for your generous donation to the Golden Shell Guild!" He then walked up to the man, his smile never wavering, and began a thorough, professional pat-down. "Now, now, let's not forget about that personal beast storage space that high-level beasts have. Wouldn't want you hiding any little trinkets in there, would we?" He was utterly shameless, and his cheerful demeanor was, in its own way, more infuriating than any threat.
Stripped of his wealth, his weapons, and his dignity, Elder Tian Long finally turned and began to walk away, his body still wracked with pain from the soul attack, his every step a testament to his utter defeat.
The group watched him go, a lone, pathetic figure disappearing into the darkness.
Li Yu turned to Jian Xuan, his voice a low, cold whisper. "Follow him," Li Yu commanded. "See where he goes. Find his nest. And before he is able to talk with anyone, before he can report what happened here tonight… kill him. And return."
Jian Xuan gave a single, imperceptible nod. He melted into the shadows of the canyon, a silent, inevitable angel of death now on the hunt. His own strength was not revealed during the fight, Li Yu had ended things so abruptly he never got to act besides protecting himself and Kui.
The reason they had taken everything from Tian Long was now clear. They wanted to make sure he couldn't easily communicate with his Faction. He would have to go back to a hideout or something else to recover and get basic equipment again. It would also make it unlikely that he could tell them about this group, but even if he did, it wouldn't matter. All he knew was they were from the Golden Shell Guild.