Three days on the mountain. Four. He lost count on the second when a fever
arrived.
Not serious his body was fighting it with what seemed like unusual vigor, the
accelerated repair mechanism from the transmigration still operating. But it was
enough to lay him out for most of a day in the hollow, shaking against the damp earth
while rain came in sideways from the northwest and the mountain demonstrated its
indifference to his plans.
He learned the body during the fever, because pain and heat slow thought to its
fundamentals and the fundamental thing was understanding the mechanism he'd been
given to work with. He lay in the dark and mapped what he could perceive: two
functioning meridians running warm and irregular, the cracked central channel sitting
like a fault line down the middle of his torso, the eight secondary channels dormant,
the small accumulation of refined energy at his lower abdomen what cultivators called
a dan jeon, energy sea barely the size of a fist and poorly consolidated.
For comparison: a Vein Tempering cultivator, first major stage, average
development, would have a dan jeon the size of both fists combined and considerably
denser. A Core Forging cultivator's would be dense enough to radiate warmth
detectable through the clothing. He was significantly below even beginning cultivation
benchmarks.
What he did have: the accelerating baseline recovery. The fever broke on the
second day. The head wound completed its healing on the third, leaving a ridge of scar
tissue above the ear he could trace with his fingertip. Whatever the transmigration had
done to the body's repair mechanisms was normalizing he could feel it decreasing, the
rate slowing back toward something that might merely be excellent rather than
impossible but for now the effect remained.
He used it.
Not through meditation or active cultivation practice he lacked the energy
reserves for that, and forcing the issue with an already stressed system seemed
inadvisable. Instead: passive structural assessment. He simply paid attention to what
the energy was doing naturally, without directing it. The way you'd watch a structure
settle before touching anything. The way you'd listen before you spoke.
What he found was interesting.
The damage in the central meridian had forced the energy to seek alternatives.
Small, informal pathways through connective tissue, through bone, through the
margins of muscle attachments not formal meridians but functional ones, created by
the body's long term effort to compensate for the blocked primary route. The body had
been doing this for years, he realized. Badly. Inefficiently. Creating local
accumulations and uneven loading and the kind of micro damage that eventually
became macro damage. But the instinct was there, undeniable and persistent: find a
path through.
He had seen this before. When a primary load path fails in a structure, the
structure doesn't simply stop. It redistributes. Sometimes the redistribution is
catastrophic progressive collapse, each element failing as the one before transfers load
to it. Sometimes, if you understood what you were looking at, the redistribution was
surprisingly elegant. If you let it work rather than fighting it.
He began, very carefully, to map the compensation pathways.
On the fourth day the fever was gone and he was hungry enough to eat pine
bark with what could only be described as enthusiasm. He'd found the stream again.
He'd exhausted the mountain's offerings within a kilometer of the hollow.
He had also, he found, become fractionally stronger than he'd been on the first
morning. The mapping work had, inadvertently, begun to smooth the uneven loading
in the secondary channels clearing small blockages, stabilizing the routing,
redistributing the existing energy more evenly across a larger network. Not formal
cultivation. Infrastructure maintenance was closer. The load was the same; the paths
carrying it were better.
The cracked central channel remained cracked.
But the system surrounding it was less chaotic. The body moved a little better.
He breathed a little deeper without thinking about it.
He started moving east, staying high on the ridge, watching the road below.
