©WebNovelPub
Cultivation is Creation-Chapter 191: Divine Spirit Reclamation
The Sacred Grove had changed completely.
Where before it had been a collection of massive, ancient trees, it was now something else entirely. The trees were still there, sort of, but they had transformed. Their trunks had twisted and curved, forming perfect arches over the path. Their branches had interwoven above us, creating a cathedral-like canopy.
Most striking of all, every single leaf on every single tree had turned a deep, blood red, as if autumn had arrived for this one specific location while sparing the rest of the forest.
Updat𝓮d fr𝙤m ƒгeeweɓn૦vel.com.
"It wasn't like this before," Su Yue whispered.
"No," I agreed, studying the transformed grove with a mixture of awe and apprehension. "No, it wasn't."
As we cautiously entered the grove, I noticed something else—the spiritual energy that had previously saturated the trees now flowed in distinct patterns, like a complex network of rivers and tributaries.
The formation-like quality that Azure and I had detected earlier was now unmistakable, its structure so clear that even the non-formation-specialized cultivators in our group could see it.
"It's activating," Yan Ziheng murmured, his formation-trained senses clearly picking up the same patterns I was. "The entire grove is part of a massive formation that's beginning to stir."
Liu Chang's expression turned grave. "Can you determine its purpose?"
Yan Ziheng shook his head. "The structure is unlike anything I've studied. It's ancient, but also... alive, somehow. Responsive. I can tell it's gathering energy, but for what purpose, I can't say."
He then looked at me for confirmation, I shook my head, the complexity was beyond the understanding of low level formation practitioners like ourselves.
"We should proceed with extreme caution," Liu Chang decided. "Stay together, maintain defensive formations, and be prepared to retreat at a moment's notice."
No one argued with that assessment.
We moved forward as a tight group, every sense on high alert. The red leaves rustled above us despite the absence of wind, creating a whispering sound that almost—but not quite—resembled words.
The spiritual pressure increased with each step, growing from a gentle current to a raging river as we approached the center of the grove. By the time the shrine came into view, the pressure was so intense that some of the weaker disciples were visibly struggling to remain standing.
The shrine itself had also transformed.
The crumbling platform we'd investigated earlier was now whole and pristine, its stone surface gleaming as if newly cut. The partial walls and columns had fully reformed, creating a complete circular structure with twelve perfectly spaced pillars supporting a domed roof. At the center of the platform stood a large stone altar, its surface carved with the same script I'd partially translated before.
But now the writing wasn't just carved into the stone—it glowed with a pulsing, ruby light that matched the color of the leaves in the Sacred Grove.
"The script," I said, scanning the alter with my spiritual sense. "I can read it now."
"How is that possible?" Liu Chang asked. "You said earlier you could only make out fragments."
"I don't know," I admitted as the system began to translate the archaic script. "But it's clear now, like... like it wants to be read."
The others gathered around as I began to translate the glowing text, my voice growing more surprised with each line.
"Here lies Ke Jun, First Ancestor of the Ke Lineage, who reached beyond the stars and touched the face of eternity. Born of humble origins, he ascended to the Civilization Realm through unmatched determination and insight. Though his body returns to dust, his spirit watches over his descendants for all time. May his wisdom guide them through darkness, and his strength fortify them against adversity. The cycle continues; what sleeps shall awaken when the time is right."
The story has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the violation.
Silence fell over our group as I finished. All eyes turned to me, expressions ranging from shock to suspicion.
"Ke Jun?" Su Yue was the first to break the silence. "As in..."
"As in my ancestor, apparently," I said, feeling as surprised as everyone else looked.
The original Ke Yin's memories contained no knowledge of an illustrious cultivator in his family tree, let alone one who had reached the near-mythical Civilization Realm.
No wonder the village had persisted in making offerings at this shrine, even when imperial authorities banned the practice. They weren't just honoring some local nature spirit: they were honoring their own ancestor.
"The Civilization Realm," one of the younger disciples whispered in awe. "I thought that was just a legend."
"Every realm seems like a legend until someone reaches it," Bing Lan murmured, her eyes never leaving the glowing text. "But a Civilization Realm cultivator from a small village like this... that is surprising."
"But why is his grave here?" Liu Chang wondered aloud. "If he truly reached such heights, he should have a monument at one of the major sects."
"Unless he didn't want to be found," Yan Ziheng suggested. "Unless he wanted to be remembered only by his direct descendants, in the place where his journey began."
As nice as that sounded, I found that hard to believe, but before I could respond, the glowing script suddenly flared, becoming so bright that we had to shield our eyes.
The entire shrine began to vibrate, the stone altar shaking so violently that cracks appeared in its previously pristine surface.
"Get back!" Liu Chang shouted, and we all scrambled away from the altar as the vibrations intensified.
With a deafening crack, the altar exploded outward, sending fragments of stone flying in all directions. Zhang Wei raised a hasty jade barrier that deflected the larger pieces, while the rest of us used our qi to create personal barriers.
Where the altar had stood, a rectangular opening now yawned in the floor of the shrine, dark and seemingly bottomless.
For a moment, nothing happened.
Then, slowly, a massive stone coffin began to rise from the depths, levitating upward until it hovered about three feet above the opening.
The coffin was made of some black stone I couldn't identify, polished to such a high sheen that it reflected our tense faces like a dark mirror. Inlaid in its surface in gold and silver were countless tiny formations, so intricate and complex that I didn’t understand most of them.
"Those formations…," Yan Ziheng whispered.
Before anyone could ask what he meant, the lid of the coffin began to slide open.
It didn't move like normal matter should. There was no scraping sound, no visible force pushing it. It simply... phased sideways, as if the physical laws that governed solid objects didn't quite apply to it.
No one spoke.
No one moved.
We all stood transfixed, watching as the lid finally slid completely aside, revealing the interior of the coffin.
"Prepare yourselves," Liu Chang warned, his qi visibly gathering around him as he readied for whatever might emerge.
I expected to see a body: preserved, perhaps, by whatever spiritual techniques had been used to create this elaborate burial.
But instead, there was only a shallow pool of liquid.
Then the liquid moved.
It rose up, coalescing into a humanoid shape that gradually became more defined. First a torso, then limbs, then a head with distinct facial features. The liquid solidified, taking on the appearance of a man: tall and imposing, dressed in robes of an ancient style that I recognized from historical texts about the pre-imperial era.
He: or it: floated upward, emerging fully from the coffin to hover in the air above it.
The figure was both beautiful and terrifying.
It had the appearance of a man in his prime: perhaps thirty years old by mortal standards, with a commanding presence that made even Liu Chang seem diminished by comparison.
His skin was pale but not unnaturally so, his features were undeniably similar to the original Ke Yin's—the same high cheekbones, the same straight nose, the same slightly angular eyes.
But there, the similarities ended.
This being radiated power on a level I hadn't thought possible, his qi signature so vast and complex that it was like comparing an ocean to a droplet of water.
He didn't look dead, but he didn't look fully alive either. There was a translucence to his skin, a fluidity to his movements that was distinctly inhuman. His qi signature was... wrong. Not evil, necessarily, but fundamentally different from any being I'd encountered.
"Divine Spirit Reclamation," Bing Lan whispered, her usual composure showing the first cracks I'd ever seen. "I thought it was just a myth."
"What's Divine Spirit Reclamation?" I asked, not taking my eyes off the floating figure.
"An ancient demonic technique," she explained, her voice hardly more than a whisper. "Used by the highest-level cultivators to preserve their consciousness after death. Not quite immortality, but something close to it. A way to persist when the body fails."
The figure's eyes opened.
They were blood red, with no whites or pupils: just solid crimson orbs that seemed to glow from within. Those inhuman eyes swept across our group, taking in each of us with an intensity that was almost physical.
Then they locked onto me.
The moment those red eyes focused on my face, I felt a connection snap into place. It wasn't like the soul bond I shared with Yggy: this was older, deeper, tied to something fundamental in the body I now inhabited.
A bloodline connection, perhaps, recognizing one of its own.
The figure's lips curved into a smile of recognition that chilled me to my core, and when he spoke, his voice resonated directly in my mind, bypassing my ears entirely.
"My child," he whispered, and I could feel the weight of eons in those two simple words. “At last.”