The Art of the Invisible Strike
The Art of the Invisible Strike
Author: CABO
Chapter 1
Author: CABO
last update2026-04-15 02:28:39

The sun hung high over the Azure Cloud Sect, but it brought no warmth to Han Feng. It only made the sweat sting his eyes. 

He stood on the dusty Training Square, his legs shaking. His breath came in ragged gasps. Around him, the air smelled of dry earth and the bitter scent of crushed herbs.

In front of him stood the Iron-Wood Golems. These were not living things. They were massive, heavy training machines carved from wood as hard as steel. 

They moved on internal gears and weighted pulleys. Every time a golem swung its heavy arm, the air hissed.

Han Feng was not there to train. He was a "Shield." In the Azure Cloud Sect, disciples with Broken Roots were seen as less than human. 

Their internal nerve clusters, the pathways that allowed a person to move their biological energy, were shattered at birth. Because they could never become masters, the sect used them as living targets for the elite disciples.

"Keep your head up, trash! If you drop the shield, I’ll break your legs myself!"

The voice belonged to Lu Chen. He was the son of the Sect Leader. He wore fine white silks that stayed clean even in the dust. His face was handsome, but his eyes were cold and bored. To Lu Chen, Han Feng was not a person. He was a piece of equipment.

"Yes, Young Master Lu," Han Feng whispered. His throat was dry.

"Louder!" Lu Chen barked.

"Yes, Young Master!" Han Feng shouted, his voice cracking.

Lu Chen smirked and turned to the other elite disciples. They were all teenagers from rich families, born with "Perfect Channels." They looked at Han Feng with disgust.

"Watch closely," Lu Chen said. "The golems move in a pattern of three. If the Shield stands at the correct angle, he absorbs the shock. If he stands incorrectly, the force goes straight into his bones. It is a good lesson in body mechanics."

Lu Chen kicked a lever on the side of the nearest golem. The machine groaned. Gears turned. The massive wooden arm, thick as a tree trunk, swung in a wide arc.

Han Feng gritted his teeth. He held a heavy bronze plate in front of his chest. He knew the rhythm. He stepped to the left, bracing his shoulder.

THUD.

The impact felt like a mountain hitting him. Even though he blocked it, the vibration traveled through the bronze plate, into his arms, and down to his feet. 

His broken roots, the damaged nerves in his back, flamed with white-hot pain. He stumbled, but he did not fall. He couldn’t. If he fell, the punishment would be worse.

"See?" Lu Chen pointed. "He moved too slow. His center of gravity was high. Because of that, he wasted energy."

Lu Chen walked toward Han Feng. He didn't look angry; he looked disappointed, like a teacher with a failing student. "Han Feng, your stance was off by three inches. You are making my training look bad."

"I... I apologize, Young Master," Han Feng panted. Blood was leaking from a small cut on his lip. "The pain in my back... it makes it hard to pivot."

"The pain is because you are weak," Lu Chen said simply. "And because you are standing incorrectly."

Without warning, Lu Chen stepped forward. He didn't use a weapon. He used his palm. It was a basic move called the "Mountain Push." In a normal person, it would just knock them back. But Lu Chen had refined his Qi, his internal bio-energy, since he was five years old.

The palm struck the center of Han Feng’s chest, just above the bronze shield.

CRACK.

The sound of Han Feng’s ribs snapping was louder than the gears of the golems. He flew backward, his body spinning through the air. He hit the stone ground twenty feet away and skidded through the dirt.

The world turned gray. Han Feng tried to breathe, but his lungs felt like they were filled with broken glass. He coughed, and a spray of bright red blood hit the dust.

"Trash," Lu Chen sighed, wiping his hand on a silk cloth. "He’s broken. Get him out of here. He’s ruining the view."

Two large disciples walked over. They didn't check if Han Feng was alive. They grabbed him by his ankles and dragged him across the square. His head bumped against the stones, but he was too weak to even groan.

They dragged him past the beautiful jade pavilions. They dragged him past the gardens of glowing medicinal flowers. They dragged him toward the back of the mountain, where the smell of rot began to rise.

This was the "Discard Pit." It was a deep, jagged hole in the earth where the sect threw everything they didn't want. Broken furniture, spoiled food, and the bodies of "Shields" who didn't survive the day.

"Is he dead?" one of the disciples asked, looking down at Han Feng.

"Who cares?" the other replied. "He has no family. No one will ask for him. If he’s not dead, the cold will finish him by morning."

They swung Han Feng’s body between them, one, two, three,and tossed him into the darkness of the pit.

Han Feng woke up to the sound of dripping water.

Every inch of his body was screaming. His vision was blurry, but he could see the moon high above the mouth of the pit. He was lying on a pile of wet trash and old bones. The air was thick with the smell of decay.

"I... I’m still alive," he wheezed.

He tried to move his hand, but his fingers wouldn't obey. His "Broken Roots" were more than just a birth defect. They were a curse. In this world, your nerves were the wires that carried the energy of life. His wires were frayed and snapped. He was a lamp with no oil.

He felt a cold lump against his chest. It was tucked inside his inner pocket. With a shaking hand, he reached in and pulled it out.

It was a jade pendant. It was small, shaped like a sleeping dragon, and the surface was dull and scratched. It was the only thing his father had left him before his entire family was murdered by "bandits" ten years ago. Han Feng had kept it hidden all these years, fearing the sect would steal it.

Now, the pendant was cracked. Lu Chen’s palm strike had shattered the protective lead casing Han Feng had built around it.

"I’m sorry, Father," Han Feng whispered, tears stinging his eyes. "I couldn't even keep this safe."

A drop of blood fell from Han Feng’s nose. It landed directly on the crack in the jade dragon.

Suddenly, the pendant didn't feel cold anymore. It became warm. Then, it became hot.

Han Feng tried to drop it, but his fingers were stuck. The pendant began to hum. It wasn't a sound he heard with his ears; it was a vibration he felt in his teeth.

Vrrrrm. Vrrrrm. Vrrrrm.

The hum grew faster. It began to match the rhythm of his racing heart.

Suddenly, a strange sensation flooded his arm. It wasn't magic—it felt like a rush of pure, icy water being pumped into his veins. It was oxygen, but not the kind you breathe. It was "Primal Oxygen," concentrated and dense.

The energy rushed from the pendant into his palm. It traveled up his arm and headed straight for his spine.

"Ahhhh!" Han Feng arched his back.

He could see his own body in his mind’s eye. He saw his Broken Roots, his nervous system, looking like a burnt-out forest. But as the silver light from the pendant touched them, they didn't just heal. They changed.

The "Primal Oxygen" began to scrub his marrow. It was like a fire burning away all the weakness. The pain was ten times worse than Lu Chen’s kick. It felt like his blood was boiling, turning into liquid metal.

Whoosh.

A wave of pressure exploded from his chest. The trash around him was blown back in a circle.

Han Feng’s eyes flew open. They were no longer brown. For a split second, they glowed with a cold, metallic silver light. He could see everything in the dark pit with perfect clarity. He could see the individual flies buzzing over the rot. He could hear the heartbeat of a rat fifty feet away.

Then, a voice echoed.

It wasn't a person speaking. It sounded like the grinding of tectonic plates, deep and ancient. It came from inside his own skull.

"The flesh is a cage. The blood is a lie. To become a god, one must first break every bone in their body."

Han Feng’s heart stopped.

CRACK.

His left arm snapped. Not from an outside blow, but from the inside.

CRACK. CRACK.

His ribs, which had just begun to heal, shattered again into tiny pieces.

CRACK.

His legs buckled as the bones splintered.

Han Feng tried to scream, but his jaw bone cracked, locking his mouth shut. He lay there in the mud, his body collapsing in on itself. This wasn't death. It was a total demolition.

He could feel his old, weak bones being ground into powder. And in their place, something new was forming. Something denser. Something that hummed with the power of a dying star.

The last thing Han Feng heard before the world went black was the sound of his own spine snapping in twenty-four places, and the voice whispering:

"The Bone-Forging has begun.”

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  • Chapter 64

    "I am not a human body," Han Feng said. He took a step forward. Thud. His silver boot hit the ground, and a small crack appeared in the marble dust under his heel, running straight toward the Sect Leader."I am the Watchman," Han Feng said. "I am the mountain. You can shatter a man, Sect Leader. But you cannot shatter the earth."The Sect Leader backed away two steps. He looked at Han Feng’s silver-black knuckles. He looked at the choir of children who were still humming, their voices holding the black fire of the ship. He looked at the giant silver ship above, which was still shaking, its blue alchemical light flickering frantically under the pressure of the song.The Sect Leader realized the truth. He could not win this fight with simple techniques. He could not win by being fast. This boy was not just a cultivator. He was a living metamorphosis. He was a weapon that could rebuild itself in real-time."You..." the Sect Leader growled, his face twisted in a mask of manic fury. "You

  • Chapter 63

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  • Chapter 62

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  • Chapter 61

    Han Feng did not answer. He was already leaping. He jumped from the terrace of the barracks to the roof of the Outer Sect kitchen. The kitchen was an old building made of wood and dry straw.BOOM! When his heavy silver feet hit the roof, the wood shattered into splinters. But before he could fall through, the stone pillar under the kitchen rose up, supporting his weight.He looked at the Sect Leader, who was floating in the air above the garden. "Try this," Han Feng said. He swung his arm in a big circle.In the medicinal gardens below, the ancient pine trees began to shake. Their needles shivered, and their branches bent. Suddenly, the giant roots of the trees broke through the dirt like big, wooden snakes. They shot into the air, reaching for the Sect Leader’s ankles.At the same time, Han Feng threw his left fist forward.The air in front of his hand compressed, creating a wave of sharp, grey stone shards that flew out of the broken roof, following the roots like a swarm of angry

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  • Chapter 59

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