Chapter 600
The hatch leading further into the arid had a defensive force behind it, waiting. Discerning just the surface of their cultivation methods, Anton felt something strange- more than a few felt like water cultivators. That seemed like it would be extremely limited in such an environment, but perhaps he was seeing a period of drought. There could be significant rainy periods but the life in the area didnt seem like something expecting rapid change.
Since they didnte out- there was little point in having a defensive barrier if one simply opened it- Anton projected his voice inward. Greetings.
Most of the cultivators drew back- while it was easier to slip the rtively weak power of voice past a formation, it could still be expected that it would block it. One man retained his position towards the front, responding. Who are you? What n are you from?
Just like projecting his voice in, Anton had to pull the sounds out of the barrier. Anton. Im not from any n. He had descendents, of course, but they could hardly be called a n. Especially not since he suspected this man meant something specific.
The man spoke with bravery- which was to say, Anton could sense the fear behind his voice and he still chose to respond. If you do not have the backing of a n, we will have to refuse your entry. We dont ept exiles.
I am not an exile, Anton responded calmly. How should he say it? Well, the direct manner was easiest. I am from off.
The man stiffened at that response. Even if that is true, we will still have to refuse you entry.
I understand, Anton said. Do you know of any who would be willing to speak to me?
The man hesitated for some time, before responding. No.
Anton had the feeling he meant that, though he might have been considering sending Anton to some enemies. People did not build security where they expected no danger. Anton couldnt think of anything else to say that wouldnt sound like and perhaps even <em>be</em> a threat, so he just turned to leave. Goodbye.
His luck was much the same elsewhere, and while there were regional variations the entire still remained extremelycking in moisture, just as he had felt from above. He didnt detect anything buried beneath the surface either, though he didnt probe terribly deep as he passed by various locations. No more than a kilometer or so, where he would have expected to find anything.
He <em>did</em> find something interesting that was not water. In several ces, concealed by exterior camouge and stored deep beneath the surface, there were ships. He only recognized them for what they were because of the Ruterans. They didnt particrly share many simrities, being constructed inrge part from sslike materials, but the main feature was they were different from <em>typical</em> cultivator vessels. Not that he expected this to be able to put together wooden boats, unless they were skilled at knitting together scraggly branches.
Those vessels should <em>at least</em> be able to fly, and perhaps more- though he couldnt do much without inspecting them up close, without barriers blocking him.
Anton didnt find the locals to be friendly but at least they were not overly aggressive. He ultimately left without seeing anyone face-to-face, even when he went to the other side of the where it was warming up from the cold nights instead of at its overheating phase. People had to go out at <em>some</em> point, but it seemed they all noticed him ahead of time. He was tempted to rush as quickly as he could to catch <em>someone</em> out, but that seemed like it could cause more trouble than it was worth. Perhaps he woulde backter and someone would change their mind about further interactions.
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Everyone expected Anishka to be an amazing cultivator- even Anishka, at first. Her parents were Assimtion cultivators, the peak of the world. Most of her older siblings were elders of the Fire and Ice Pce, and if they werent they <em>would</em> be eventually.
It wasnt an issue of talent- whatever <em>that</em> was. Anishka found she could control the elements of the sect with ease, though she <em>had</em> tried some things that were too hard early on. The stories about her father had been an early inspiration. The same with her grandfather. Or great-great-maybe-more-greats grandfather.
Ultimately, however, Anishka didnt want to be a cultivator. She didnt know what she <em>did</em> want to be, but it was something else. Of course, <em>everyone</em> was a cultivator. Whatever she was going to do, she would be better at it if her body was tempered by mes and ice and her mind flowed with power. So she would still be a cultivator, but she wouldnt be a <em>cultivator</em> cultivator. Fighting was uninteresting. She had no desire to delve into forgotten tombs or manage resources.
Nor did she have any desire to <em>tell</em> anyone any of that. How would she even do that?
So she just silently continued, ice and fire alternately flowing through her meridians. It was surprisinglyfortable, heating to warm her about the time she thought she would freeze, to be reced by coolness when she was on the verge of overheating.
When she was finished she was met with a rxed mental rity that brought a strange thought. If <em>she</em> didnt actually know what she wanted, maybe nobody else did either? A terrifying thought.
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Anton continued to pass through new systems, but he found himself growing fatigued. Distance wasnt supposed to be an important factor once he was out of a system, but he found that being away from Assimted stars for a long period of time as well as being the furthest distance hed ever gone- now somewhere over a hundred light-years- he simply felt empty.
He didnt want to get in the habit of choosing random stars to Assimte, but he had to make use of his avable connections eventually. Perhaps that was another factor as well.
His next stop found himself around a tiny- though nowhere near as tiny as his target- lone star. A red dwarf with nos surrounding it, less than a third the radius of Ceretos star and thus proportionately much more miniscule. He named it Zed. Anton didnt think it had been cataloged from Ceretos, and if it was it hardly mattered. The name only mattered to him, and if it didnt he could have pushed for his name over another.
Binding to it didnt take particrly long- Anton was already familiar with the process, and he was able to be as close as he wanted. Since hed even bound to Ruteras star at least partially from the neighboring system it was simple enough.
Surprisingly, Anton didnt feel that this star, despite being smaller and dimmer than others, was any less powerful. However, as he pulled away he felt it faded away more quickly, giving it a smaller area of influence. Not that it mattered terribly much. Anton felt refreshed after a short time near a bound star, replenishing his body and spirit before he moved on.
Anton continued, impatience driving him forward to the end of his journey of more than a year. Finally he reached his destination, though it was only once he approached the stars influence that he was certain he hadnt gotten off track. The star had nos, and he couldnt currently see it even with his exceptional vision.
He approached closer and closer. He could feel the power of the star, and soon enough he was nearly touching it. Or rather, where it <em>would</em> have been if it had the same radius as Ceretos star. Power vibrated through Anton, yet he couldnt even make out the star without augmenting his eyes.
Azun was a star less than twenty kilometers across, smaller than some sects, and nowhere close to matching a or even other stars. Discovering it, even after centuries of searching the stars, hade down to Ruteras advanced telescopic technology and people like Matija. They called it a neutron star, formed from the death of a muchrger specimen.
Its properties had been uncertain except for some typical features- and its massive density. Simply approaching it was filled with great danger, as its rotation spewed a massive amount of power from its poles. However, approaching from the correct angle had brought Anton to where he was now, and he felt like his body might rip apart not from gravity but instead the powerful maic field. He had stored his bow as he approached, leaving everything actually metallic inside his storage bag.
Anton had wanted to get closer, but moving any further was risky without binding it to him. Anton very carefully sat, meditating in afortable position and focusing on the power in front of him.
If he simply opened a channel of power he could easily see himself being torn apart. First he had to understand this. Still a star, but not a star. A dead star, yet filled with more vigor than many that truly lived. Not copsed into what appeared to be nothing like a ck hole, but filled with a strange mystery.
Anton meditated, feeling the spinning density and the great power, significant amounts of radiation spewing out of the poles at any point. Cultivators could be quite resistant to radiation, but Anton had no qualms imagining that he could withstand it for long. It was much less than what would happen during a supernova- the event that could lead to their formation- but it was enough to detect hundreds or more lightyears away despite the phenomenon being miniscule in size on an interster scale. The maism formed a great field on a scale Anton hadnt felt before.
This time Anton reshaped himself <em>before</em> the connection was formed. If he had tried to describe the process of limatizing himself to unfathomable amounts of maism, he would havecked the words. It was simply a matter of bing part of it.
Slowly and intentionally, he drifted closer to Azun. It was not particrly hot- on the level of stars- where he was, but he could feel its surface was hotter than any of the suns he had visited, once again by a great many times. This was great power packed into the smallest spaces imaginable.
Insights drove Anton, bringing him ever closer both internally and externally. By the time he touched down upon its surface, he was part of it and it was part of him. It took more than that understanding for him to not be incinerated, but it was simple enough to counteract with that power.
It wasnt limitless in fact, Anton was much more aware of how such a thing was fading, even if only on massive timescales. It was simply a matter of extremes. If an Augmentation cultivator were to challenge Anton <em>here</em>, next to the neutron star Azun, Anton wouldnt fear them even if they had their full expected power in the upper realms. But of course, he would only maintain a small part of that power further away. At the more familiar radius of a star it was both more and less powerful. At what Anton hade to judge as the edge of the system, it was much the same as anything else. Just different. The maism was one thing, but the beams of radiation might also add power to Antons arsenal. Power he wasnt sure he needed.
Well then. Time to set up all of the machines the Ruteran scientists had pressed onto him. It would be a shame toe all this way and not get measurements up close. None of them would survive anywhere close to that absurd maic field, but he could certainly get something usable. Certainly even his own observations would be better than what machines could measure all the way from Rutera. Though they <em>would</em> be filled with far fewer numbers and measurements. Rutera was going to be simply <em>flooded</em> with measurements when he returned. Maybe before, if themunications devices worked here- something Anton would absolutely not bet on. After setting them up and making sure that at least the lights were green- though the devices had no external readout other than that- Anton began to familiarize himself with his new abilities and wondered how he might include them in his abilities elsewhere.