Chapter 138: 138. Ye Lin
In the vast expanse of the desert, where the reltless sun beat down upon the shifting sands, Kai and Ye Lin set forth with a plan etched in determination. The explosive ctipedes, creatures of volatile temperamt and fiery demise, were to be their unwitting allies.
By slaying these beasts and piling them high, they would create a beacon of death, a sir call to the lurking demons that thirsted for carnage.
Kai shared his strategy with Ye Lin, his voice a low murmur against the howling winds, "We will first kill explosive ctipedes and pile them up." The logic was sound, the simplicity of the plan belying its pottial efficacy. Ye Lin, her expression unreadable as the stone visage of an ancit deity, nodded her asst.
The ctipedes were indeed easier to find in this arid and scorching climate, their presce almost a guarantee.
As they traversed the dunes, a behemoth of a ctipede erupted from the earth, its form a grotesque parody of life. It lunged with a hunger born of the abyss, its many-legged body a blur of motion. Kai, ever the warrior, readied himself for the kill, his muscles tsing as he prepared to unleash his might. But before his blade could taste the air, Ye Lin stepped forward.
With a grace that belied the harshness of their surings, she raised her sword—a mere extsion of her will—and with a casual flick of her wrist, she cleaved the creature in twain. The ctipede, caught in the midst of its deadly arc, was rdered inert, its halves falling to the sand with a silce that spoke volumes. Kai could only stare, his surprise a tangible thing.
This girl, devoid of any visible cultivation, wielded strgth that defied explanation. Her sword, propelled by sheer velocity, had sliced through the ctipede as if it were no more substantial than a whisper of smoke.
Ye Lin's calm gaze met Kai's wide-eyed wonder, her expression unchanging. She was accustomed to such reactions, her prowess an unspok truth that needed no affirmation. Together, they continued their hunt, their eyes scanning the horizon for signs of their quarry.
Another ctipede soon made its presce known, its approach a violt disturbance in the sand. This time, Kai was swift to act, drawing his sword with a speed that rivaled lightning itself. He emulated Ye Lin's technique, his blade arcing through the air in a mimicry of her effortless strike. But where her sword had brought death, his brought only a cloud of dust.
The ctipede, undeterred, bore down upon him with malice in its many eyes.
It was Ye Lin who interved, her blade a flash of silver that ded the creature's charge. She regarded Kai with a curiosity that had not graced her features before. To attempt an unfamiliar technique in the face of danger was folly to most, but Kai was no ordinary warrior.
His confidce in his defses was well-founded; his body, tempered by rigorous training, was impervious to the likes of a Tier beast.
For the next counters, Kai refrained from gaging the ctipedes. Instead, he observed Ye Lin, his gaze intt on deciphering the principles behind her swordplay. He understood that mere observation would not grant him mastery, but he sought the elusive trick that allowed such speed to manifest in a body that should not possess it.
Wh the sixth ctipede emerged, Kai voiced his intt, "I will try this one." Ye Lin's nod was a silt accord, her own curiosity piqued. She watched as Kai, with sword in hand, replicated her movemts with uncanny precision. His talt for learning was evidt, his body a perfect instrumt of his will.
Yet, despite his flawless imitation, the result was the same—nothing but dust and the rush of wind. Kai's frown was a testamt to his frustration as he dodged the ctipede's reltless attacks. He adjusted his stance, seeking a posture that suited his form, and struck again. Still, the ctipede persisted, its assault unding.
Kai's resolve did not waver. He continued to experimt, to adapt, each attempt a study in perseverance. An hour passed, and though progress eluded him, he recognized that the sword technique harbored secrets beyond the reach of sight.
Ye Lin observed from her perch upon a rock, her interest in Kai's efforts clear. She never expected that she would meet such an interesting individual by joining the Demon Slaying Team.
She also realised that Kai had an immse amount of talt in sword path, probably better than her and also had a such pottial in body path too.
Ye Lin realised everything about Kai in just one hour and the weird thing was that she could notice Kai's movemt with her mortal cultivation.
Normally, it should be impossible for anyone without cultivation to notice the movemts of cultivators, but Ye Lin did that and she could ev watch the movemts of Kai and judge him.
Although, Kai didn't fully reveal his capabilities, Ye Lin did judge him partially. Not ev captian Yue could see through him, how could this little girl can do this?
'He will be great use to me, but I think his character would be troublesome.' Ye Lin thought, thinking something mysterious.
As Kai stood resolute. His gaze was fixed on the horizon, where two more ctipedes had emerged, their inttions as clear as the cloudless sky above. Unlike their predecessors, these creatures possessed a cunning that belied their monstrous forms. One charged forward, its many legs churning the sand into a frzy, while the other held its g, ready to provide support from a distance.
Ye Lin, lost in contemplation, seemed to fade into the backg for the ctipedes. In their eyes, she was but a mortal, her life hanging by a thread they could sever at will. Yet, Kai remained unshak, his calm a stark contrast to the chaos that approached. He could dispatch these creatures with ease, his skills honed to lethal precision.
But pride and curiosity stayed his hand; he was determined to master the move that Ye Lin had executed with such effortless grace.
The momt Ye Lin's sword had cleaved through the air, Kai had felt a stirring within him, an intuition that this technique held the key to untold power. It was a feeling he could not ignore, a whisper of pottial that demanded his atttion. Trusting his instincts, he allowed himself to be consumed by the desire to learn, ev as the mission's urgcy loomed over him.
The new ctipede, ablaze with an inner fire, hurtled toward Kai like a meteor, its body a streak of flame against the desert backdrop. The old one followed in its wake, a reltless pursuer in this dance of death. From afar, the stationary ctipede launched a fireball, its size immse but its ergy unfocused.
Its purpose was not to harm but to trap, to circle Kai in a ring of fire from which there would be no escape.
Kai, however, was not one to be cornered. With a technique known as Phantom Steps, he danced beyond the reach of the fiery onslaught, his movemts a blur to the naked eye. The ctipede that had burrowed beath the sands reemerged, its timing impeccable, its jaws agape with a heat that mirrored the desert's own fury.
Caught mid-landing, Kai found himself within the creature's lethal embrace. The g below him was a maw of death, the ctipede's mouth an inferno waiting to consume him. With no time to flee and no space to maneuver, Kai made a choice. He imbued his sword with an intt as sharp as the edge of dawn, and with a roar that matched the beast's own, he struck.
The sword's aura was a tangible thing, a blade of pure force that sliced through the ctipede with a precision that was almost surgical. The creature fell apart, its two halves a testamt to Kai's resolve. And as the old ctipede arrived, eager to avge its fall kin, Kai met it with the same fate. His sword was a whirlwind, a storm of steel that left nothing but destruction in its wake.
The last ctipede, the one that had thought itself safe in the distance, now faced Kai alone. It had witnessed the fall of its companions, and in its primitive mind, fear took hold. But there was no mercy to be found in the desert, no reprieve from the hunter that Kai had become. With a final swing of his blade, he ded the threat, his actions as unforgiving as the landscape that sured them.