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Unintended Cultivator V4: Chapter 70 – Hey!

Feeling more than a little conflicted about what had happened, Sen managed to escape the throne room without any more encounters with people he really didn’t want to talk to, for so many reasons. Yet, it seemed that fate or karma or luck was feeling particularly unkind toward Sen that day, because he’d barely made it two dozen steps before there was an enormous crash and the sound of water splashing behind him. Sen took two deep breaths to steady himself, certain that he was going to regret his choice to walk instead of run or even fly away from that room. That certainty was validated when a woman yelled at him in cold fury.

“Hey! You don’t get to just walk away from me after that.”

Sen turned around to see Chan Yu Ming storming toward him, almost glowing with all the qi she was cycling. He considered his options, then drew his jian and leveled it at her. Regardless of how angry she might be, he wasn’t simply going to let her kill him. She almost stumbled to a stop at the sight of the unsheathed blade before directing an incredulous look at him.

“What?” she demanded. “Did you think I was going to attack you?”

“Yes,” said Sen, pushing lighting qi into the jian.

His answer and the sight of lighting crackling around the sword appeared to give the woman pause. She didn’t stop glaring at him, but she did stop cycling qi like she intended to drown him in it. Sen released his own qi cycling and, almost against his better judgment, sheathed his jian. He didn’t let go of his hyper-alertness, though.

“You look like you still think I’m going to attack you,” she accused.

“You still look like you’re going to attack me.”

“And why wouldn’t I? You killed,” she started.

“Stop!” Sen ordered in a voice that could shatter stone. “Stop right there. This is why I was leaving. You’re angry. You’re hurting. You want a fight. And if we fight in here, we’ll leave this place in ruins.”

“Or you think I’ll kill you, you coward.”

Sen shook his head. “That isn’t going to get you what you want.”

“No?”

“No. Because even if I was stupid enough to let you goad me into a real fight, at the end of it, we’d still be right here. And you’d still be angry.”

“You think you know me that well?”

“I know anger that well,” said Sen, walking toward her. “Or have you forgotten why it was I went and found that dragon in the first place?”

As he narrowed the distance between himself and her, something clicked in his head. He tapped into the part of him that created the auric imposition. Instead of directing it at her, he let the auric imposition swell around him. While he no longer felt driven by that anger had fueled the heart demon, he remembered how it had felt inside of him to be that angry. He let that feeling suffuse the auric imposition. As he moved toward her, tiles shattered beneath his feet. Stones in the walls around them broke or burst into dust. Small pieces of furniture simply exploded. He started speaking, although it struck Sen more like something or someone else was using him to convey those words.

“I know what it is to feel rage inside of you. To feel like you can never break enough things or hurt enough people to ever make it go away. To look around and want to see everything burning. To want to leave nothing in your wake.”

He stopped when Chan Yu Ming was as the very edge of that field of auric pressure and anger. Then, he let it fall away.

He took a breath and then continued. “Even if we fought. Even if I let you kill me, it still wouldn’t make that anger go away.”

“You killed my father! My brother! It’s your fault!”

“Is it?”

“Yes.”

“I made your father sell people to demonic cultivators? I made him murder children? I made your brother keep quiet about it?”

“You’re twisting it all around! You decided that you just had to do something about it when you found out. You couldn’t just leave it alone! Not you. Not the great and wise Judgment’s Gale. Except, it wasn’t your place!”

The hold on reasonableness that Sen had been desperately clinging to slipped from his grasp at the words it wasn’t your place. Abruptly, Chan Yu Ming was transformed from being someone that Sen was trying to not hurt into another noble looking down on him. Something very cold was born in the center of Sen’s chest and it shot through every part of him.

“Not my place,” said Sen in a tone that reflected the ice inside of him. “I am, after all, just a peasant.”

Chan Yu Ming stepped back from him, her belligerence displaced by sudden fear. “That isn’t what I said.”

“Of course, you didn’t say it. Nobles never say anything directly. It’s just what you meant. Well, let me ask you this, your most honorable and noble princess. Where do you think those children came from? The homes of your noble friends? The well to-do merchants?”

“Don’t talk to me like that,” shouted Chan Yu Ming.

“Or what? You’ll look down on me? Oh, we did that already. I guess that means we’ll move on to the threats to let me know my place. Then again, maybe you’ll just try to put me in my place by force. After all, I am just a peasant. How hard could it be? Well, go ahead, princess. Try to put me in my place. See how well it works out for you. I’ll tell you this much, though. I won’t miss this time.”

A voice in the back of Sen’s head was screaming at him to stop talking, to stop hurting her, to stop trying to make her into one of those nobles he’d hated as a child. He could see the tears in the corners of her eyes. He could see that she was shaking. He might not have stabbed her, but he knew he was drawing blood. He was piling emotional injuries on top of fresh wounds. He knew he should stop. Yet, despite that voice trying to warn him that he was making things worse, again, the words kept coming.

“Since you apparently don’t care where the children that your father was raping and murdering came from, let me clue you in, your highness,” he said with scorn dripping from the last two words. “I’ll bet you a thousand gold tael that they were taken from the streets. Where I grew up. I could have been one of those children. So, don’t you dare talk to me about my place! As far as I’m concerned, those walking piles of shit you called a father and brother got off easy!”

Sen opened his mouth to say one more thing, but the words caught in his throat. As angry as she’d made him, if he said what he was going to say next, he really would be a monster. He’d be giving voice to what was probably her worst fear. It might even be enough to break her. And the cruelest irony of all was that every word of it would be true. All I have to say, he thought, is that none of this would have happened if she’d just left me alone. Sen felt like time slowed and stretched. He could see two roads in front of him. Down one of those roads, he said the words. Down the other road, he didn’t. If he picked the road where he said the words, he had the sense that life would become easier for him in some ways. The catch was that it would get easier largely because he would stop caring about anyone.

The other road would definitely be harder because it meant giving a damn. And, as much as he wanted things to be easier, he did give a damn. He lost sight of that sometimes when he got angry, but he didn’t want to hurt Chan Yu Ming that profoundly. So, Sen swallowed the words. They felt like a burning coal in his throat, but he swallowed them anyway. That suspended moment popped like a bubble and everything started moving again. He was still filled with that icy anger, but it wasn’t quite as uncontrolled as it had been. Chan Yu Ming was staring at him with wide eyes, her face utterly devoid of blood, and tears streaming freely down her cheeks.

“Get out,” she whispered.

Sen didn’t do anything for a moment, before he turned and started walking away. He tried to ignore all of the damage he’d done to the hallway. He consoled himself with the idea that it wasn’t quite a ruin. He was about to round a corner when Chan Yu Ming tossed off a parting shot at him.

“I never want to see you again. Do you hear me, Judgement’s Gale? Never again!”

He knew that he should just keep walking. It wouldn’t cost him anything to let her get a last dig in to salve her wounded pride if nothing else. It was the smart thing to do. It was the right thing to do. It was the kind thing to do. And if Sen had been less angry, it was the thing he would have done. Instead, he turned and gave her a mocking bow.

“As you command, your highness.”

Comments

So...is Sen's lack of control and less than optimal decision-making significantly influenced by his "disease" (i.e. his cultivation beginning to spiral out of control)? I am wondering how much his "illness/disease" is affecting him. I have seen a person who was sick and in pain behave VERY differently than when she isn't having constant migraines (among other things). I know that Sen isn't experiencing migraines and pain, but if your body is out of whack (neurotransmitters, hormones, other chemicals, and even maybe lack of balance among the 5 elements of his cultivation and/or his very being at some mystical level), that can really affect your behavior...is he already suffering from that? And if so, how much is that affecting him and these decisions he has been making? Lastly, assuming he isn't suffering (yet) from a spiraling-out-of-control cultivation, or at least that it is not influencing his behavior, is the pressure of his impending doom having this effect instead? Honestly, contrasting the Sen in the beginning of this journey to the Sen of now, it is hard to reconcile the two. I know that he has been in a pressure cooker that only seems to ratchet upward, and that is driving gradual (yet accelerating) changes, that have added up. But how much of this "pressure", at this point, is affecting/driving him at the level of his unconscious mind, and unrecognized? In short, how much of the Sen we are seeing in these latest chapters the "Real" sen, vs. how much is a "transient" sen that will disappear/revert once his illness is healed and the pressure cooker is turned off (or ratcheted down).

Lite Fractal

Well that is certainly the death blow for my hopes of their relationship. Then again, she has been coming off as more and more of a naive twit as time went on, so I am not as disappointed as I may have been. What did she expect when her first impression of him was that he was willing to kill everyone in a battle to stop them from fighting? Obviously you have to expect collateral damage when you get him involved.

Andrew Webb

You couldn't just leave it alone... Ignore that he is a pedophile who rapes and murders children and sells people for ritual sacrifice. Yeah. I have no sympathy for her. She probably would've let her father keep doing what he was if she had known. After all cultivators don't give a shit about peasants, neither do nobles. Sen isn't perfectly noble, he could've probably handled it differently, but he also has very little experience, no formal training. He has less two years spend traveling around and wherever he goes people try to kill him for no good reason. He has no formal training. No knowledge of politics and how to handle stuff differently. Nobody taught him. And I still prefer he handled it the way he did than not handle it at all. He isn't perfect, but he's better than the rest. At least he's trying.

Alex

It is weird how we have have the people complain that sen is not apologizing and at the same time don't say anything when he lets a noble be tortured for several hours and then left to die sealed in rock.

Logan

I think the description of what happened is a little unfair to Sen's choice of options. The person Sen found out was committing these horrible crimes was the King. Who is going to judge this case? The Courts? Unlikely. The other noble houses? Possibly, but he has to get involved in more politics, and honestly, I am sure they have dark skeletons in their closets, maybe not the King-level bad, but stuff Sen might feel he has to act on. Even if not, this could lead to a civil war if the noble houses decide to make a power move. He could've gone to Jing beforehand, but the message would've been close to the same, kill your father, the king, or I will. Chan Yu Ming implied he should've left them alone, so in retrospect going to her might have accomplished nothing. Moreover, Sen wanted the surprise element to see who in the family knew. He thought Jing might not know, but maybe he did. So yeah, what he did was kind of shitty, but he did not have great options.

Derek Walker

It baffles me how people can read up to this point of the story and still expect Sen to be a paragon of virtue, a veritable saint who can just ignore all the shit he went through so he can be the chaotic good boi they want to self-insert into.

Divinor

It's shocking to me how many people view Sen as in the right here. The king absolutely deserved to die, and arguably the queen as well. Their lack of remorse and hideous crimes illustrate that well enough. The issue isn't that Sen ordered their deaths, but that he forced the actual deed of execution on innocent people, under intensely high pressure. Just imagine for a second that someone breaks into your house and ties up your parents/child/loved one. They put a knife in your hand, point a gun at your head, and tell you that the tied up person has been molesting and killing children. Then they tell you that it's YOUR job to kill them for it, personally—otherwise you're next. All this in your living room, and it's right in front of an audience made up of the rest of your family/friends/other loved ones. That would be hideously unfair, even if it's righteous to kill a serial child molester/murderer. Beyond that, I'm just tired of Sen holding the idiot ball as needed. Yes, it's "realistic" for people to go from rational to irrational, with little rhyme or reason. But Sen is always completely rational when it comes to justifying hurting and killing other people, and completely irrational when it comes time to think through his own actions. This is especially true when it comes to planning or imaging consequences beyond the shortest term. Having a higher being forcing these situations does not excuse this, IMO. If anything, it makes the length of this character arc tiresome. For all we know, Sen is going to find out Falling Leaf accidentally spilled the bag of taels on the ground and then kill her for the offense. It doesn't matter that Sen previously stated he doesn't care about money. It doesn't matter that it's Sen's fault for entrusting a fortune to a wild animal who only recently entered civilization. After all, a higher being could alter his thought patterns or make him completely irrational at any time. What's even the point then? If the main character has no agency, I have no interest. My understanding is the point of this character arc is to make Sen suffer. He's descending down a dark path of justifications and self-righteousness. But in my opinion, it's gone on far too long for any emotionally invested readers who have picked up on his issues for a long time now. Meanwhile, we see from the comments on each chapter that it's also too subtle for the rah-rah-power-fantasy readers (which there is nothing wrong with! One mark of great fiction is entertainment and meaning on multiple levels, people should be able to tangle with text at a variety of engagement levels). There really needs to be a big, dramatic confrontation, where Sen is inescapably wrong, and greviously harms his friends all at once. Maybe we're still building up to that, but personally, I'll be checking out until this situation resolves for better or for worse.

Peg

I hope this is all leading to the crazy nascent soul lady being normal, doesn’t like fighting, isn’t arrogant, doesn’t care for power and is just your kindly “old” lady

QuakDoktor

While she was definitely was losing her mind and not entirely rational, I do find it amusing she was shit talking Sen about not fighting when I’m pretty sure there’s a 50/50 chance Sen could just kill her with nothing but staring her down with his modified auric imposition

Derek Walker

She's more that a little insane with grief at the moment. No one who was in that throne room is exactly in a calm, rational headspace. I think she deserves a little slack.

Elijah Overland

Great character nuance, but man I m not enjoying being unable to root for the protagonist these last couple of characters

Iam

Damn, I have almost no sympathy for Chan Yu Ming here. First she begged not Sen, but judgements gale to help her. She saw what he did during the battle to stop everyone. Saw how much he hated it, and still roped him in anyway Getting him involved sent a nascent soul cultivator and an entire organization on him. (Did she not think the house of Choi would not respond ) She let Sen do all the dirty work by killing Choi Zhi Ping, and find out why they were going to marry him. She’s a core cultivator, she could’ve done it, but no Judgements Gale had to do it. Then obviously her family got what it deserved and she went after Sen for it.

Derek Walker

Does age really matter here? Honestly cultivators fall into the camp of greek gods lol. No matter how powerful or old they get, they're still filled to the brim with human failings. Like, sure, some do actually end up wise over the years. Yet just as many act like children with super powers

BubblyGhost

I'm going to disagree, we have to remember that Sen IS still young, at best a very angsty time. He did just have several very serious attempts on his life which ended with him killing or setting in motion the killing of a bunch of people. He may be powerful and he may even be wise but he still lacks the perspective of centuries his mentors have and he is still afraid he is going to die.... angsty stuff. Plus, from a writing perspective, we are at the end of the arc and about ready for another,.

Cogsys

Man, I thought we were done with this stuff after the heart demon. I'm honestly very tired of reading all this angsty shit. I think that Sen did the right thing by killing the king, but the fact he is sabotaging every single relationship he has made, and is planning on doing the same to the last few he has left, is very frustrating. Like, why wouldn't he tell the prince and Chan Yu Ming beforehand or something. I thought the Sen that came away from the dragon was "calm and controlled"? Right now it seems like Sen hasn't changed at all.

Trasen56

I know right, if not him enacting justice on the those guilty, than who? Another cultivator? Cause that’s the only person who can judge the king snd get away with it. Chan Yu Ming should be angry at her mother, not Sen; she probably had in her head a certain unshakable image of her family, that despite being royalty- with their own flaws and such, her family was ultimately decent. I hate people getting angry at those who expose someone’s worldview for what it truly is, and who’d prefer to just pretend a problem doesn’t exist and everything was just fine until the whistle blower came along.

Illue

I think the money thing is a Cultivator problem more than a Sen problem. It did happen to him really fast (like his power development) but I kinda understand how it happened. Money has lost meaning to him, and it's not the worst thing in the world. The ability to connect and communicate with other people is a really big issue though.

CentaureHeart

It'd be nice if the story could step off the ol' angst treadmill for a bit. "Sen does a thing, gets berated, feels guilty" is honestly getting repetitive at this point. To paraphrase Uncle Kho, if you can't enjoy yourself ridding the world of utter monsters, what are you even doing?

BelligerentGnu

This is probably why it's bad for cultivators to gain too much power too quickly. Sen does not have the wisdom tempered by years to leverage his power effectively. He is still the same scared little boy hiding on the streets from nobles wishing someone would stop the evil in the world. And now he is that someone, but it's not as simple as he thought it was. So of course he is an asshole, playing hero by inflicting pain and suffering on villians doesn't make you a good guy. On the other hand, who would have stopped the king and delivered fair justice? Clearly the nascent soul cultivators either didn't know or didn't care. And the only other people who could hold the king to account was his family, half of which already knew. Could Sen have trusted them to enforce justice fairly? Probably not. Even in our own world, the powerful have friends at the top and often get lighter sentences and better prison accommodations, if any. I can't imagine this world is any different. Shitty situation, but it really feels like this was the inevitable end point based on the characters and who they currently are. Which means this was great writing!

Thransk

Telling someone what their words *really* mean and using that to sever a bond without taking responsibility is as classy as it gets. Putting this together with his other plan, it's pretty clear he's chosen to be self-destructive over communicating with friends. His 10 years long tragic backstory only goes so far in justifying this. He can't even comprehend what money means anymore, it didn't even occur to him to return all those taels to victims of his dispute or set up a fund for the poor. He has access to like 4 different city spanning networks that could make that money *mean* something. Instead he hands it out to other cultivators who don't need it either. My point here is that at this point he almost exclusively uses his past for self-justification, in so many other ways he's comfortable being and acting superior to all. Knowing Eric, much of this is intentional, but I'd like to see Sen able to cultivate a single good human relationship on his own before he ascends; it's a struggle to care about his problems at this point.

Valeria_

I'm loving Sen's communist arc. Have him take on landlords Mao style next 🔥

Hjörtur Þorgeirsson

exactly I mean why wouldn't he be lol

Patrick Brown

Yeah, Sen is turning out to be a massive asshole. Turns out it wasn't the heart demon. He is just a dick.

edgedancer

I’m pretty sure that whoever or whatever is speedrunning Sen’s ascent is also making it so he’s surrounded by terrible situations and will become an edgelord or otherwise get messed up more than he already has been. Eric’s a good enough writer that I’m pretty sure there has to be a reason for why 95% of the people Sen interacts with are evil, incompetent, or both.

Thewizzardpineapple

What an asshole (well done on the writing of it, though I hope we get to see some more of likeable Sen soon)

ben regnard

Hell no. This kind of thinking is why we have so many vile people getting away with abuse in the real world. Anyone who takes a firm stand and removes these people is seen as a villain. Sen didn't go looking, didn't want to be involved with her, but once he saw the issue he couldn't just let it be. She wants to be all emotional and high and mighty, it's more like she is turning into one of those young master types, how dare you call out my family for being evil, I am only backing down because I can't win characters.

AA

Well, that went poorly. I don't think Sen is in a good headspace to argue properly and he took it way too personal too fast. But Yu Ming is also in the same position. It wasn't the place of Sen to do that? Than whose place was it? And like Sen refrained from saying, she followed him based on the amazing things he would do, his whole thing is about killing assholes and that's what he did.

CentaureHeart

I don’t see what he twisted, he should have been more understanding maybe that she just lost two people that she loves and she was blind with rage to not lashes at her, but he didn’t twist much I feel like

Julien

This is really starting to look like it's setting up Sen to be the villain for some future protagonist to overcome.

arkhaix

I find it ironic that sen was the manipulator in this whole scenario. He is the one who keeps twisting words and thinks that he has the right to controll everything. He was behaving way more "noble" than the actual nobles.

Josh4n


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