Time spent reading at a leisurely pace was how Lynette liked to relax. While she could finish any book in an instant thanks to her practice of the Ten Thousands Scrolls technique, there was a serious difference between absorbing a book and properly reading it. If she only needed the knowledge contained within, absorbing it in a few moments was perfectly fine. However, she learned that even re-reading previously understood texts could provide further insights as her mind had time to dwell on the information.
Not that this one was worth reading simply for the information. It was fiction. As such, it served a much more important role than simply providing knowledge. It made her think, and feel. And while sometimes those feelings were negative, ultimately the simulated experiences helped her reach a better balance in the real world.
Right now, she had plenty of time to focus on such things, as she was simply waiting for the representatives of the Shining Cooperative. They could be arriving any time now. After the first scout ship, they had spotted several more at increasingly frequent intervals. So she was expecting them any time from a few days to a few months out, depending on how exact they wanted their arrival time to be… and their capabilities. Because it was entirely possible that they would have had to send people immediately to arrive when they did- the scouts could have been at the very limits of their territory.
That was all speculation, of course. Their actual information was limited. At least one Ascension-class ship, control over multiple systems, a hatred for the Trigold Cluster. These were the things they knew, plus the bits and pieces they’d picked up from observation of the scout ships.
Hopefully, they intended to attend the peace talks. Lynette was prepared to wait as long as was necessary- though after five or ten years she might ask for a shift change. However, considering they had scouts around already she would have to presume that anything longer than a year or so was them intentionally making her wait, which was a negotiation tactic that would get them off on the wrong foot. And if they wanted to act that way, she had any number of ways to make their life worse. Like not offering them any fruit. Oh, and her experience creating airtight contracts.
There was some chance they were a danger, and while attacking a diplomatic outpost wouldn’t be beneficial, there were some cultivators crazy enough to do so. If that happened, Lynette would mainly have to depend on her guards. The strongest among them had only recently arrive, and Lynette found that she fit quite well.
Looking at Nthanda, Lynette could fool herself into thinking she would win in a fight. The woman had natural energy that felt somewhere around the Essence Collection and Life Transformation divide. This would place her among the weakest of the guards- on par with some of the other diplomats and even their assistants.
And unless there was actual combat, nobody would be able to tell the difference. Nobody would know that Nthanda had a body more durable than the armor of most of their ships unless they attacked her. They wouldn’t see the way she could manipulate the matter around her, unless they forced her to. Which made her perfect, as she didn’t seem like a threat. Kind of the opposite of Anton in a way, except Anton wasn’t weak. He was just much more friendly. If it came down to actual combat, the only reason to prefer a battle with Anton was that he might have the spare capacity to keep people alive. Though some of that depended on having a bound star. The exact change in his power was a national secret that Lynette intentionally didn’t learn.
Waiting allowed too much time for thoughts. She should go to the gardens. Somehow, Anton had found plants that would bloom and fruit in different seasons, so there was always something to look at and usually something tasty. Though if the diplomats arrived at just the wrong time, they’d have to stick to their own food or the rather boring options available on the Alliance’s side.
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A noise awoke Lynette in the middle of the night. Her communicator. Looking at it quickly, it indicated a small fleet of ships was on approach. Couldn’t they have come at a better time?
Not that they likely even knew what sleep schedule she was sticking to. They just arrived when they arrived. Lynette quickly got up, dressed, and freshened up as much as she could. At her level of cultivation she really didn’t need all that much sleep. It just took a moment to adjust herself to wakefulness after the interruption.
Another message to her communicator. The Astral Spear was confirmed as one of the approaching ships. That was the small Ascension-class ship Anton had encountered, its captain being the lady Kybele. That was probably a good sign. Especially since it seemed to be the most powerful of the ships sent, which meant they either weren’t interested in violence… or were at least going to be incapable of enacting it as they intended.
Lynette swiftly made her way out of her rooms to find Kinslee, another diplomatic representative. This was far too important for just one person to take responsibility, after all. There were many more people involved as well, but having too many people at the highest level would just sow confusion.
“Figures it would have to happen while we’re asleep,” Lynette commented.
“Depending on their approach, they might actually arrive here during our morning,” Kinslee commented.
“Well, we’re already awake either way,” Lynette shrugged.
Since they were up, they gathered and organized. They had to be ready to give a proper greeting to the arriving group. Screwing up could set back relations decades, even if it really shouldn’t matter. Some people were simply too proud, and others were easily offended. Hopefully, they didn’t take offense at the relative modesty of the rooms. Some cultivators were far too used to lavish palaces, and they might not care that it wasn’t practical to ship something hundreds of lightyears.
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But Lynette put the speculation aside, trying to let herself get mostly unbiased impressions of whoever arrived. That was the best that anyone could do.
Time seemed to pass slowly, but eventually the Shining Cooperative fleet arrived. Lynette couldn’t feel it clearly, but her senses were enough to confirm that it was indeed a small fleet. The one ship certainly radiated a larger power than she expected, but she was well aware that humanity could develop down different paths in interesting ways.
The Astral Spear remained in orbit while a number of smaller ships descended towards their small compound. There had been preparations made to guide them, if they were unaware of the location, but the previous scouts had done their job well enough.
They hadn’t known what sort of landing area would be necessary, but large open spaces were easy to prepare. There didn’t seem to be any hesitation in the craft as they landed, so that was something. Lynette also noted that the vessels lacked the traditional shape of sea craft that was often kept as they developed flight and space travel.
The Lower Realms Alliance diplomatic team waited near the landing area. If there had been proper protocols in place, they could have been oriented directly down the exit ramp, but it wasn’t too awkward to have an entourage walk down the ramp and turn towards them. The clear leader of the bunch was a man, with an appearance neither young nor old. Somewhere around the peak of Life Transformation, though that was the limit they’d seen for humans from the Shining Cooperative so far.
“Greetings, members of the Shining Cooperative,” Lynette took the role of hostess. “The Lower Realms Alliance hopes your journey was swift and comfortable.” Regardless of whether it was those things, kind words shouldn’t hurt.
The man nodded. “The journey was as pleasant as it could be, given the distances involved.” His slight smile was clearly practiced, but Lynette didn’t necessarily peg it as fake.
“I am Lynette,” she introduced herself, “And this is Kinslee. We are the head envoys sent here. We also have many assistants that can help you and your entourage get settled and facilitate later exchanges of information.”
“Wonderful,” the man said. “I am Daris, envoy of the Shining Cooperative. We appreciate your willingness to meet us despite the distances involved.”
“And us as well,” Kinslee added. “Perhaps we should first direct you to your rooms, though of course you can stay on your ships if you find the accommodations there preferable.”
Daris followed after them, and soon commented, “I am impressed there are actual structures here, so far away. They look quite solid as well.”
“Indeed,” Lynette commented. “There are no formations, so they lack some amount of privacy, but common courtesy should suffice in that regard.”
She could feel the man scanning the compound with his senses. When they reached the far side, he tilted his head slightly. “And you have gardens. Well kept, even. I am impressed.”
“They were developed personally by one of the foremost experts in the growth of plants.” By some metrics, the head of the Grasping Willows might beat out Anton in that regard, but Anton would certainly be listed near the top in any case. And most people didn’t have any use for ancient semi-sentient trees becoming even more impractically large.
Basic greetings and welcoming necessities took time, but ultimately they got around to official proceedings in the late afternoon.
Though he said it more eloquently, Daris made the intentions of the Shining Cooperative rather straightforward. They wanted to know the extent of the Lower Realms Alliance- though they didn’t seem to be pushing for exact details. They wanted to know the official stance on the Trigold Cluster and others in the upper realms. And… Daris wanted to know how they intended to deal with future invasions. It wasn’t explicit, but a nonaggression pact was further down the list, simply by the emphasis Daris placed on everything.
Lynette had to be content that the nonaggression pact was at least somewhere on the priorities list. And while the next opportunities for invasions from the upper realms should be centuries off, she also knew that it was important.
“I think our first order of business should be an exchange of information regarding what we know about the Trigold Cluster,” Lynette said. “Though you will excuse us caution in that regard, as they are known to infiltrate local populations.”
“Have you had much trouble with that lately?” Daris asked, not fully hiding his concern. He hardly even made any attempt to conceal the way he scanned the people around him. Perhaps just enough to be slightly diplomatic about it.
“Whenever we come across occupied systems, it is one of our primary concerns,” Lynette explained. “But we have systematically eradicated them from our populations.”
“Even…” Daris narrowed his eyes. “The Twin Soul Sect?”
“Especially the Twin Soul Sect,” Lynette emphasized. The approaching individuals had been scanned several different times in different ways looking for that exact thing.
“So you too have developed a way to sense them,” Daris nodded. “We would like to exchange methods some time in the future but… you will forgive us some level of caution in that regard, I hope.”
“Because we need to make certain the other has truly eradicated the Twin Soul Sect,” Kinslee made the unspoken idea heard aloud. Lynette might not have done so, but ultimately it relaxed Daris somewhat.
“Yes. We have detected no issues so far. And I would presume the same for your side. But… if we’ve somehow missed anyone, I would hope you let us deal with it.”
“And what would you do?”
The man’s face hardened. “Destroy them. Such parasites living among our systems were the cause of millennia of suffering, or at least mediocrity. We were lucky to break from the cycle.”
“When was that, I might ask?”
“Just this previous cycle,” Daris said. “The unnatural shortness combined with some fortunate circumstances allowed several systems to break free… these systems discovered each other, and the Shining Cooperative was formed.”
So that would put them at about four centuries of development. Which was actually quite remarkable, for how far they had reached. Ceretos was now close to a millennium since it was last ground down. Though perhaps the destruction of those particular systems was not quite as thorough. They would have to ask about those fortunate circumstances.