Chapter 105 ASCENDING PLATEAU
Chapter 105 ASCENDING PLATEAU
"Sister, your friend didn't look so good," Li Hao managed, but before he could finish, Li Hua's grip on his shoulder tightened anxiously.
"What do you mean he didn't look good? Was he injured?" The worry in her voice was unmistakable, her usual composure forgotten in her concern.
"Oh? Worried about him, are we?" Despite his wounds, Li Hao's eyes sparkled with familiar mischief. "Who is he, sister?"
"Li Hao." There was a plea in her tone rather than warning.
"He said he just needs time to recover," Li Hao's voice gentled, "and promised he would come find you."
Li Hua nodded, her shoulders relaxing slightly at the news. She tried to hide her relief behind her usual composure, but her brothers knew her too well—Li Hao's knowing smile and Li Wei's careful study of her face told her she wasn't entirely successful.
Her brothers tried to stand, but their legs betrayed them, shaking from the lingering effects of the cultivation-suppressing chains. They didn't fall—instead, all three of them shifted to support each other, their bodies remembering countless similar moments during their hunting expeditions when Li Hao's boundless enthusiasm or Li Wei's scholarly determination would overcome their judgment. Li Hua became their steady center, her strength helping to stabilize her brothers' weakened frames as they leaned against each other.
The familiar action brought tears to their eyes—how close they had come to losing this, to losing each other. Like this, with Li Wei's trembling form on one side and Li Hao's weakened body on the other, they held each other up, though Li Hua bore most of their weight, her sister's love turning her into the pillar they both needed.
"Some things never change," Li Wei murmured, his scholarly voice thick with emotion.
Li Hua tightened her grip on both brothers, her throat too constricted to speak. The weight of their bodies against hers, even weakened as they were, felt like an anchor pulling her back from the edge of despair she'd teetered on during their separation.
Reality solidified around them gradually, like ink settling into paper. The first thing they felt was the gentle brush of mountain air, crisp and pure in a way that spoke of higher realms. As their vision cleared, they found themselves standing in a sheltered valley, where ancient trees grew in patterns that couldn't be natural—their father's formation work evident in every careful placement.
Before them stood a modest courtyard house, its walls gleaming with protective arrays that pulsed in response to their rings. The formations on their fingers resonated with the sanctuary's defenses, each pulse of light confirming what their mother had promised—the rings would guide them home. The entire valley hummed with their parents' power, layers upon layers of protection woven into the very fabric of this hidden sanctuary.
Li Hua adjusted her grip on her brothers, their weights still heavy against her shoulders as the realm crossing left them even more drained. "We made it," she whispered, relief coloring her voice as she felt the sanctuary's defenses settle around them like a warm embrace.
Li Wei, despite his exhaustion, was already studying the formation arrays with scholarly appreciation, while Li Hao managed a weak whistle at the sight of their refuge. "Trust Māmā and Bàba to prepare something like this," he murmured, his usually booming voice still soft from fatigue.
"Come on, we need to get you both healed and bathed." Li Hua guided her brothers toward the courtyard house, their combined weight steady against her shoulders. The wooden doors swung open at their approach, responding to their rings' essence, revealing chambers that had been prepared and waiting—as if their parents had known exactly what they would need.
Inside, they found rooms already furnished with everything necessary for recovery: healing herbs laid out in precise arrangements and clean robes folded neatly on carved wooden shelves. The air itself seemed to carry restorative properties, their father's formations working to accelerate healing even as they breathed.
Li Hua settled her brothers in their respective chambers, each equipped with its own jade-carved bath. In Li Wei's room, she first conjured pure water with her essence, letting it fill halfway. From her inner space she carefully poured in the spirit water to complete the bath. Steam rose in spiraling patterns, carrying faint traces of spiritual energy.
Her movements were measured and deliberate as she ground the medicinal herbs in a spirit-jade mortar, following the precise ratios their mother had drilled into them during their training. The fragrant herbs would help purge the temporal energy from his meridians while strengthening his damaged core. Some herbs she scattered directly into the steaming water, watching as they dissolved into trails of golden essence, while others she set aside in a jade bowl for him to consume during recovery.
"The medicinal bath is ready," she told Li Wei, noting his expression of stubborn pride. "And no arguments—I can see the damage to your spiritual pathways, eldest brother. I'll prepare Li Hao's bath next."
She moved to her second brother's chamber to repeat the process, determined to see them both begin their recovery properly.
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