The first rays of dawn painted the sky in hues of pink and gold as Nyx stepped out of his farmhouse. He took a deep breath, savoring the crisp morning air tinged with the scent of pine from the nearby Whispering Woods. Today was the day he'd venture into Arcanum City with Torbjorn Rockfist, and excitement thrummed through his veins.
Torbjorn was already waiting by the gate, his diminutive stature belying the immense power coiled within his ancient frame. The dwarf's long white beard was intricately braided, adorned with small runestones that clinked softly as he moved. His eyes, set deep in a face weathered by countless battles, sparkled with an eagerness that matched Nyx's own.
"Ready for our little outing, lad?" Torbjorn called out, his voice a rumbling bass that seemed to vibrate the very air.
Nyx nodded, patting the coin purse at his belt. "As ready as I'll ever be. Let's see what the city has in store for us today."
As they set off down the winding path that led away from the farm, Nyx couldn't help but marvel at the contrast between himself and his companion. Where Torbjorn was a compact bundle of muscle and ancient technique, Nyx felt lanky and inexperienced in comparison. Yet, he knew that appearances could be deceiving, especially when it came to magic.
As Nyx and Torbjorn made their way along the winding road to Arcanum City, the ancient dwarf's eyes twinkled with barely contained excitement. The topic of Qi had come up, and Torbjorn was eager to share his wisdom.
"Ye see, lad," Torbjorn began, his gravelly voice filled with enthusiasm, "what ye mages call mana, we martial artists call Ki or Qi. It's all spiritual energy, but we approach it differently."
Nyx nodded, intrigued. "How so, Master Rockfist?"
Torbjorn stroked his long, braided beard thoughtfully. "Well, where ye focus on manipulating the energy outside yerself, we cultivators work on gathering and refining the energy within. It's a long process, mind ye."
"Is that why you're so much stronger than a normal person?" Nyx asked, recalling the dwarf's incredible feats of strength.
Torbjorn chuckled. "Aye, partly. But it's more than just strength. It's about transcending mortal limits altogether."
As they passed a babbling brook, Torbjorn paused, gesturing for Nyx to watch. The dwarf took a deep breath, his body seeming to vibrate with an inner energy. Suddenly, the water in the brook began to ripple and dance, responding to some unseen force.
"That's incredible!" Nyx exclaimed. "How did you do that?"
Torbjorn grinned. "Years of cultivation, lad. I've reached what we call the Foundation Establishment stage. It's like... well, imagine building a house. Yer Qi Condensation stage is gathering the materials. Foundation Establishment is laying the groundwork."
Nyx's brow furrowed in concentration. "So, you gather spiritual energy, and then... what?"
"Ye cycle it through yer entire body," Torbjorn explained, resuming their walk. "It washes ye clean, refines ye. Makes ye more suited for further cultivation. It's the true first step on the path, everything before is just preparation."
As they crested a hill, the spires of Arcanum City came into view. Nyx gazed at them thoughtfully. "It sounds similar to how we build our mana pools, but more... internal."
Torbjorn nodded approvingly. "Aye, there are similarities. But where yer magic focuses on manipulating the world around ye, our cultivation aims to cultivate the Dao itself."
"The Dao?" Nyx asked, puzzled.
"The way of all things, lad. The fundamental truth of the universe." Torbjorn's eyes took on a faraway look. "First, we cultivate ourselves. Then, we bridge the gap between the self and the Dao. It's a lifelong journey."
As they approached the city gates, Nyx felt a newfound respect for the ancient dwarf. There was clearly more to Torbjorn's strength than met the eye.
"Thank you for sharing this with me, Master Rockfist," Nyx said sincerely. "I have a feeling I've only scratched the surface of what cultivation truly means."
Torbjorn laughed heartily, clapping Nyx on the back. "Aye, lad. We've all got our own paths to power. Who knows? Maybe one day ye'll find yerself walking the path of cultivation alongside yer magic studies."
With that tantalizing thought, they passed through the gates of Arcanum City, ready to face whatever challenges awaited them.
As Nyx and Torbjorn made their way deeper into Arcanum City, the bustling energy they expected was noticeably absent. Shuttered storefronts lined the streets, their windows dark and uninviting. Where once there had been a cacophony of merchant calls and customer haggling, now there was an unsettling quiet.
"This isn't right," Nyx murmured, his brow furrowing with concern. "I've never seen so many shops closed before."
Torbjorn nodded grimly. "Aye, lad. The world's always changing, for better or worse. Speaking of change..." The dwarf's eyes twinkled, seizing the opportunity to continue their earlier discussion.
As they turned a corner, they came upon a group of beggars huddled near an abandoned market stall. The sight was jarring; Arcanum City had always prided itself on its prosperity.
"Poor souls," Torbjorn said softly. "Their plight reminds me of the core truths we cultivators seek to understand."
Nyx raised an eyebrow, curious despite the somber surroundings. "What do you mean?"
Torbjorn stroked his beard thoughtfully. "Well, lad, to reach true enlightenment – to break through to higher levels of cultivation – ye must grasp three fundamental concepts."
They paused at a street corner, watching as a lone merchant halfheartedly arranged wares on a tattered blanket.
"First," Torbjorn continued, "there's impermanence. Everything ye see here?" He gestured broadly at the city around them. "It's all temporary. The good times, the bad times – they all pass."
Nyx nodded slowly, his gaze lingering on a boarded-up tavern that had once been a favorite haunt of his. "I'm starting to see that more clearly now."
"Aye," Torbjorn agreed. "Which brings us to the second truth: suffering, or ye might say, dissatisfaction. Look around ye, lad. Even in the best of times, there's always something folks are unhappy about. It's the nature of existence."
They continued walking, stepping carefully around a puddle that reflected the gray sky above.
"And the third?" Nyx prompted.
"Not-self," Torbjorn said, his voice taking on a tone of reverence. "It's the trickiest to grasp, but perhaps the most important. The idea that there's no permanent, unchanging self. We're all constantly changing, influenced by the world around us and our own actions."
As if to illustrate his point, a gust of wind swept through the street, causing the merchant's blanket to flutter and sending a swirl of autumn leaves dancing around their feet.
Nyx furrowed his brow, trying to wrap his mind around the concept. "So, to break through in your cultivation, you need to truly understand these ideas?"
Torbjorn nodded vigorously. "Aye, not just understand, but internalize them. Make them a part of yer very being. It's no easy task, mind ye. I've been working on it for decades."
They turned down another street, this one showing faint signs of life with a few open shops and patrons.
"It's a bit different from magical study, isn't it?" Nyx mused. "Less about accumulating knowledge and more about... changing your perception of reality?"
"Ye've got the right of it, lad," Torbjorn beamed, clearly pleased with Nyx's insight. "It's why some folks think cultivators are a bit touched in the head. We see the world differently."
As they approached their destination, Nyx found himself looking at the city and indeed, the world with new eyes. The signs of economic trouble were still there, but now they seemed to underscore Torbjorn's teachings about impermanence and suffering.
"Thank you for sharing this wisdom, Master Rockfist," Nyx said sincerely. "I have a feeling it will be useful in ways I can't yet imagine."
Torbjorn chuckled, a sound like stones rolling down a mountain. "That's the spirit, lad. Keep an open mind, and who knows? Ye might find these truths helping ye in yer magical studies too. After all, the Dao underlies everything even magic."
"Even magic?" Nyx whispered under his breath, his mind reeling from Torbjorn's words. The bustling city around him faded into a blur as memories flooded back, vivid and overwhelming. Everyone had told him the Mental cultivation techniques was a fake. He had been re-reading all his basic magic theory books over these months as well there was no real magic techniques in that book. Who were the first mages? How did they create magic? Nyx breath caught in his throat. Impermanence, Suffering, Not-Self. The book was a fake. Enlightenment? Nyx grew dizzy the city was spinning.
He was back in his tiny apartment, a year out of the Arcanum Academy, holding the worn tome that had been both his hope and his shame. The book's cover, once promising "Mental Cultivation Techniques," now seemed to mock him with its faded gilt lettering.
"What've I got to lose?" he had asked himself then, voice tinged with desperation and a flicker of hope. Now, standing in the middle of Arcanum City, Nyx realized just how much he had gained.
The city spun around him as the pieces fell into place. Impermanence. Suffering. Not-self. The very concepts Torbjorn had described as key to cultivation breakthrough were there, hidden in plain sight within his journey.
Nyx staggered, overwhelmed by the implications. The book was a fake technique.
In his mind's eye, he saw himself sitting cross-legged on the floor of his apartment, reciting the words that had become a nightly ritual: "'To divide the mind is to multiply potential.'" He had scoffed then, believing he was wasting his time on a shortcut, a magical lottery ticket.
But now, with Torbjorn's wisdom echoing in his ears, Nyx understood. He hadn't been seeking an easy way out he had been unknowingly laying the groundwork for true enlightenment.
The familiar guilt he had felt during those nightly sessions transformed into a profound sense of awe. What he had dismissed as a distraction from "real" magical study had been the path of suffering to understanding magic at its most fundamental level.
"'Clear your mind of all distractions and focus on the core of your being,'" Nyx murmured, the words taking on new meaning. "'Imagine your consciousness splitting, like light through a prism...'"
As he delved deeper into the meditation, something felt different this time. The familiar frustration and self-doubt began to fade, replaced by a strange sense of clarity. Unbidden, thoughts of the ever-changing nature of magic, the struggle of countless mages before him, and the fleeting nature of the self-bubbled to the surface of his mind.
For a brief moment, Nyx felt as if he stood on the precipice of a great truth. That he seemed to pulse with an energy he had never noticed before. Was it always there, hiding beneath the surface? Or was this just another trick of his desperate mind?
A dizzying sensation washed over him, and Nyx's eyes snapped open. The room spun around him, and he gripped the edges of the book to steady himself. Something had changed, but he couldn't quite grasp what it was.
It all made sense now. The mental clones, the enhanced magical sensitivity, the rapid growth in his abilities—they weren't just random magical phenomena. They were the result of true cultivation, of reaching a state of enlightenment that allowed him to tap into the very essence of magic.
Nyx's breath caught in his throat as he realized the magnitude of his discovery. He hadn't just stumbled upon a new magical technique; he had unknowingly walked the same path as the first mages, those mysterious figures who had created magic itself. He had created his own magical technique.
The world around him came back into focus, the sounds and sights of Arcanum City rushing back. Nyx found himself leaning against a wall, his legs weak from the weight of his revelation.
"Lad? Are ye alright?" Torbjorn's concerned voice cut through the haze of Nyx's thoughts.
Nyx looked at the ancient dwarf, seeing him with new eyes. "I... I think I understand now," he said, his voice barely above a whisper. "The book was always just a fake."
Torbjorn's bushy eyebrows rose, a glimmer of understanding in his eyes. "Ah," he said softly, "ye've had a breakthrough, haven't ye? Welcome to the path of true cultivation, lad. It's a journey that never truly ends."
As they continued their walk through the city, Nyx felt as though he was seeing the world anew. The closed shops, the beggars on the street they were no longer just signs of economic trouble. They were reminders of impermanence, of suffering, of the ever-changing nature of reality.
And in that understanding, Nyx felt a surge of power unlike anything he had experienced before. He had taken the first step on a path that few mages had ever truly walked the path of cultivating magic itself.