Sovereignty of the still heart
Sovereignty of the still heart
Author: Sing
Chapter 1
Author: Sing
last update2026-05-24 21:44:03

The air at the base of the Pillar of Heaven felt expensive. It was thick with the sweet, suffocating aroma of burning ambergris and the high-grade spirit-incense used by the High Sects to sharpen the senses of their favorites.

To the hundreds of disciples gathered at the starting line, the atmosphere was an intoxicant, a promise of the ethereal heights they were about to claim.

To Naji, it felt like drowning in perfume.

He stood at the edge of the formation, his boots sinking a fraction of an inch deeper into the damp earth than anyone else’s. While the others shimmered—their Cloud Veins glowing through their skin like neon silk, making them appear light enough to simply drift upward—Naji was like a smudge of grey stone in a sea of lanterns.

Inside him, the struggle was silent and brutal. His heart, a dense muscle tasked with an impossible labor, gave a slow, grinding thud against his ribs. One. It took nearly five seconds for the next one to follow. Two.

His blood moved like cooling magma. It was Lead Blood, a biological joke that the heavens had played on him at birth. In a world where cultivation was the art of becoming light, gaseous, and swift, Naji was a walking anchor. He was perpetually cold, his skin a shade of pale ash, and his limbs felt as though they were being pulled toward the center of the earth by invisible chains.

"You look like you're already buried, brother."

The voice was like a flute—clear, melodic, and vibrating with the arrogance of the gifted. Kael stepped into Naji’s vision. His younger brother was the apex of the clan’s genetic luck. Kael’s Cloud Veins were so vibrant they cast a soft white halo around his head, and he bounced on the balls of his feet as if gravity were merely a suggestion he was considering ignoring.

Naji didn't turn his head. The effort to move his neck muscles was a puzzle he wasn't ready to solve yet. "The race hasn't started, Kael."

"For you, it never will," Kael replied, his voice dropping to a whisper that didn't reach the ears of the nearby Elders. "Look at them. They look at you and see an omen of failure. You’re a leaden weight on the family’s reputation. Today, the Sovereign Sects are watching. They don't want to see a man who struggles to breathe. They want to see gods in the making."

Naji finally shifted his gaze. His eyes were dark, heavy, and lacked the sparkling Qi of his peers. "I am here because I earned the right to stand at the line."

Kael laughed, a short, sharp sound. "You’re here because Father couldn't bear the shame of leaving you in the servant’s quarters. But don't worry. I’ll make sure the burden is lifted."

The signal fires at the summit of the first peak ignited, sending a cloud of violet smoke into the sky. The Ascension Race had begun.

In an instant, the starting line exploded into a flash of light. Disciples surged forward, their Cloud-Step techniques turning them into blurs of motion. They skipped over the uneven terrain, their feet barely touching the grass, looking like a flock of birds taking flight.

Naji moved.

He took a single, deliberate step. His boot hit the earth with a heavy thump, sending a small tremor through the dirt. His heart hammered—Three—and the leaden sludge in his veins groaned. Every inch of forward progress was a battle of friction and willpower. Within ten seconds, he was already at the back of the pack. Within twenty, he was alone.

The path began to steepen as it wound toward the Great Ravine, a jagged wound in the earth that served as the first true test of the race. Most would leap across it using their internal buoyancy.

Naji reached the edge of the cliff, his breath coming in shallow, icy gasps. His body felt like it was made of frozen clay. He looked across the gap and saw the trailing shadows of the other disciples disappearing into the mist of the higher slopes.

Then, he felt the air change.

A sudden, violent pressure gathered behind him. White light flooded the area, smelling of ozone and predatory intent. Naji tried to turn, but his leaden blood refused to accelerate.

"I told you, Naji," Kael’s voice hissed in his ear.

Kael had circled back, moving with a speed that Naji couldn't hope to match. The younger brother’s palm was glowing with a concentrated sphere of Cloud-Qi, spinning like a miniature cyclone.

"The family doesn't need an anchor. We need a sail."

Kael’s boot connected with Naji’s chest. It wasn't a push; it was a discharge of kinetic energy. Usually, a strike of that magnitude would have shattered Naji’s ribs, but his Lead Blood acted as a weirdly efficient dampener. The energy didn't ripple through him—it hit the wall of his density and stopped.

However, mass has its own rules. Naji’s body didn't break, but it was displaced. He was sent backward, over the lip of the Great Ravine.

As he fell, the world turned into a vertical smear of grey rock and mocking white light. He saw Kael standing at the edge, looking down with a face that was too difficult to read—triumph, a flicker of lingering guilt, and a final, cold resolve.

"Stay in the dirt where you belong, Lead-Eater!" Kael shouted, his voice echoing against the canyon walls.

The wind didn't whistle past Naji; it roared. Most cultivators falling from this height would use their Qi to slow their descent, to catch the air like a parachute. Naji didn't have that luxury. He was a stone. He was a falling star with no fire.

He hit the floor of the ravine not with a splash, but with a sound like a hammer hitting an anvil.

CRACK.

The earth shattered beneath him. Dust and ancient silt billowed upward, obscuring the sky. Naji lay in the center of a small crater, his vision swimming in shades of dark crimson. He could feel his blood pooling in his back, the sheer weight of it pinning him to the floor of the ravine like a specimen on a board.

His heart gave a singular, violent throb. Four.

The silence of the ravine was absolute, a heavy, suffocating blanket. He looked up, but the Pillar of Heaven was gone, hidden by the mist and the sheer distance of his failure. He was at the bottom of the world, exactly where the clan had always assumed he would end up.

He closed his eyes, feeling the coldness of the lead in his veins. But beneath the cold, for the first time in his life, he felt something else.

Friction.

The violence of the fall had stirred the sludge. The impact had forced his blood to move faster than it ever had, and the resistance against his vein walls was generating a tiny, microscopic spark of heat. It was faint—a dying ember in a blizzard—but it was there.

Naji didn't move. He couldn't. But in the dark, still heart of the ravine, he began to arrange the Rubik’s cube of his own survival. If the world wanted him to be the dirt, he would become the bedrock.

He waited for the next heartbeat.

Five.

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