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Verity - The Tale of an Undead Martial Artist

“Kill your hound once the hunt has ended, lest you one day find its fangs in your neck.” This was the creed of all that desired power, be they moral or not. It was a law of the jungle for bestial people who enjoyed the title of “civility,” who lived in abundance in a hidden land known as the Jianghu. This was a place where Martial Artists of unparalleled strength resided, seeking immortality at any cost. There were two primary styles of Martial Arts: External and Internal. The stronger Internal Martial Arts largely belonged to the more powerful sects and cults, while the weaker External Martial Arts were often practiced by subsidiary sects and cults. However, there was a third, a primordial, savage and base style known only through hearsay and legend: the Enigmatic Style. This forgotten style remained dormant beneath the Jianghu, waiting to pounce as if it were a coiled viper. At least, until an undead creature and a spritely young warrior discovered a strange book, filled with glyphs from another time. Will the two be able to survive in this world, rife with treachery, debauchery, and a deluge of whitewashed blood, drifting away like water beneath burnt bridges? Will the young ones be able to find who they are, when the shadows around them are so dark that they cannot even see their own hands? Will they ever know if there's a purpose for them? Who knows? With enough luck, they just might find the truth of it all.

Daoist2VL2c3 · Eastern
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2 Chs

Chapter 0 - The Dragon

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The wails of his friends reverberated through his ears. He had lived for eighteen years, but no amount of experience could have prepared him for the carnage surrounding him. The world lay before him, engulfed in flame, crimson tendrils of heat rising from bodies and lapping the air, as if they were the tongues of hellhounds, begging for morsels from Heaven above. However, it did not even respond with tears of pity, only cold, gray indifference. It was as if the boy were an herb in a furnace, being pulled apart by chains woven from his heartstrings, binding and drawing him to the corpses of the ones he grew up knowing. He had been hiding next to the walls in safety, watching them collapse while he shook, unsure of if it were from physical trauma or terror. However, some ethereal force, perhaps that of a shock so great it was no longer shock, or perhaps that of a love so great it was no longer love, drove his feet forward, sending him to his younger sister in the center of the bombarded courtyard. She lay on the ground beneath the corpse of her personal guard, crying out her older brother's name, tears streaming down her face on one side and blood down the other. One of her eyes had been blinded from the strike of one of the courtyard pebbles, which had flown about the scene like shrapnel. These pebbles, meant to protect her by alerting her guards' ears to an assassin's footfall, now took the price of an eye from their mistress. 

As his feet stepped forward, he heard the beats of a dragon's wings from over the walls of the citadel, striking every few moments. Following each metronomic pulse, from the sky rained the leviathan's breath into his home, hundreds, or maybe thousands of whistling balls of flame floating down and bursting as they hit the ground, crackling, exploding, and multiplying as they landed. The cannoneers lay limply next to their bamboo cannons, blackened and torn apart from usage, those loyal men clutching their repeating crossbows with the remnants of strength remaining in their dying bodies. At least, that was the case for the unlucky few who still had hands with which to hold them, who had died bleeding out from being struck rather than an immediate impact. He had to keep marching forward. A bone-chilling shriek echoed through his head, elicited from a woman familiar to him.

"Young master!"

He turned to the wall he had left to search for that voice. It had come from his maid, panic chiseled into her face by a divine hand. He looked above himself and saw another wave of blaze coming down from the sky. He closed his eyes, and his vision faded to black.

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Drip. Drip. Drip. Splash.

He could hear the sound of… what was it again? He felt like he knew the noise so well, yet he could not remember it at all. It sounded almost cold to him. It was scary. So, so scary, he didn't want to think about a thing. He wanted to shiver, yet he couldn't. It was a small, frail sound expanding into a grand roar, every few seconds. He could not open his eyes, he could not move. He had to stay still, and simply breathe. Someone spoke.

"Wake up."

If his body could run, and if his tongue could cry out, he would have long done so, like a baby in swaddling clothes, bereft of its mother. Never had he heard such a loud noise as that simple voice, nor did he know the direction from which it came.

He sensed that the voice held meaning, but could not understand a word it spoke. 

He was exhausted, desperately desiring for some rest for his sluggish body, which felt as if it were filled with mud.

He was laid down, face up, his nostrils filled with the stench of alcohol, feces, blood, rot, and other such lovely scents. He was cold. He could see, but not far enough to perceive his own hand, even if he could be permitted to lift it up. All that worked was his ears, though he did not even know what hearing was.

The only indicators he had that time could have been passing were the constant dripping echo and the splashing of water, like it was poured from a great bucket. As time passed, the silence grew louder and louder to him, and the drips and pourings began to become pleasant moments of respite, because they distracted him from the hastily drawn breaths and exhales of the one who spoke before.

He mustered all the strength of his body to call out to whoever had spoken to him.

He made no sound. 

He tried to move his right hand.

It did not respond.

He tried to lift his right leg.

It did not obey his will.

Panic enveloped and slowly constricted his heart until it was crushed to a bloody pulp incapable of operation.

He heard the voice again, a nigh-indistinct twinge of emotion beneath it this time.

"You may speak."

His mouth burst open, and he began to yell, crying out in terror.

The voice spoke again, colder.

"You can't, can you?"

He continued to scream, terrified and hyper-aware of anything his ears could hear. 

Suddenly, he could hear the loud shuffling of wool in the distance, along with the clatter of stones, the striking of wood on stone, and iron on wood, as if the creator of the noise had suddenly stopped dead in its tracks. After some time, he could hear strange pitter-patters, clinking, and shuffling noises approaching, and feared them as they came closer. 

The voice trembled a bit, as if to share his sentiments.

"...Live well."

He gained control of his body, and sat up straight. He was sitting on a rudimentary pedestal made from two large, smooth stones, one stacked on top of the other. Around him was a damp, dark place, with many stone blades reaching out to one another from the ceiling and the floor. Much of the ground had smaller spikes, making it quite hazardous to walk on without shoes. Small patches of dark blue moss slightly lit the place, though the amount was so little and sparse that the patches of light could not even touch one another. His torso was clothed in lustrous satin, and his legs were covered by burlap. Between his knees lay a patternless white mask with holes for the eyes, but nothing for the mouth or anything else.

The manic sounds were getting louder, louder, and louder still from the more expansive area on his right.

The sluggish mud in his veins was quickly replaced with a liquified, then frozen fear that gripped his very core. He had to hide himself.

He rolled off the pedestal to his left, putting himself between the pedestal and the wall, away from the approaching sound. On his way down, he nearly impaled himself on a stalagmite, but luckily missed it and instead scraped his right arm on it, landing in a puddle of water beside it. He screamed, holding the gash with his other arm, stamping his feet on the ground and lifting his pelvis. In his wanton thrashing, he lifted his body with his good arm, and saw his reflection in the pool.

Perhaps it was an instinct inherent to all creatures, perhaps it was one unique to him and his ilk, but such quandaries were for a different time.

After one look at his reflection, he knew that he was dead.