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Tempest Book 1 Chapter 8

It took time for me to get a clearer understanding and view of each Spirit. The more time I spent refining my perception, the easier it became. The process was made even more difficult because of the need to see how the Spirits differed from the affinities that they had been modeled on. They were not just wind, river, and ocean. There was a vitality to them, a sense of life that made them more.

As I began to more fully understand their nature, what they were, and how they related and influenced the world around them, I had to wonder how a current of wind, a ripple of water, or a crash of ocean's wave had managed to accumulate enough vitality to not only gain life but become sapient. What reproductive imperative drove the elements of the world to engender life.

The contract that bound them was obvious to see once I was able to tell what it was that defined Spirit, where it began, and where the elements they were based on began. Yvonne had mentioned there would be a defining compulsion, an order to the randomness that the Spirits were modeled on, something similar to a [Dao] that constrained them to adhere to the contract.

For me, this order manifested as a series of interlocking chains, manacles of aether that tied their hands, metaphysically speaking, and controlled their actions. A soul contract that the three Spirits had agreed to, that agreement binding them to protect the area in return for soul stability.

Spirits came in gradients of power. These three might not be the most powerful, but they had to come close. They were the reason the town had taken such little damage when faced with hurricanes or tropical storms over the years. Together they were able to calm the sea, divert the wind, and control coastal flooding.

They were strongest when working together, and whoever had created the initial contract had been smart enough to understand the natural relationship that existed between river, ocean, and wind, in this place where the three elements converged.

If I was going to affect change, then communication became imperative. They needed to understand my intent, and that I hoped to help. Now that my perception had identified them, it became easy for me to hear them. Each sound the wind or water made had meaning if you stopped to listen.

The problem was getting them to hear and understand me was another matter and took time. My ignorance when dealing with them was the reason most of that time was spent trying to gain their attention. Screaming into the aether would have little effect. I needed to affect the elements that I had an affinity for and that they were made of.

The Kata forms I practiced had always had an element of dance and gymnastics to them. They flowed elegantly from one to the next. [White Crane Opens Wing], [Spin and Dive Into the Ocean], [Dragon Sweeps the Tail], [Catch the Moon], and [Dancing Wind and Rain]. Together it was a choreographed ballet of death, but it was also an orchestrated combination of wind, water, ice, lightning, and fog.

As I harnessed and released each element, summoning storm, they finally noticed me. And with that notice, communication was possible. They had learned the language of Elf and Hindel over the eons of their existence, but the contact between us was still primal, elemental, and emotional.

Our conversation was frenzied, funneled through our own prism of understanding. There weren't words exchanged, but none were needed. We built a language that we could all understand. Vocabulary based on concepts. The fresh scent of spring rains. The change in ocean temperature creating weather patterns that stirred the air. The overflow of the riverbank during flooding.

Each movement of [Tessenjutsu], each release of elemental Qi increased the vocabulary of concepts and understanding we were building. The more I danced, the clearer our understanding of each other. And as I learned to speak, the understanding of the elements that were mine to call increased. My abilities with each Kata reached the next stage, and I began to tentatively add the next five techniques that were open to me now that I had reached Qi Gathering Realm.

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[Thunder Strikes], [Falling Cherry Blossoms], [Dragon Tail], [Moon Opens], and [Wing Step]. Movements that required Dharmic control as well as Qi. Each Kata a progressive leap forward in strength. My fumbling attempts seemed to amuse the Spirits, and despite their pain, they began to look favorably on me.

I continued linking one movement to the next, each revolution leading to the next step, each movement getting me one step closer to reaching effective understanding. It would take years before I reached perfection, but my body already began adding the muscle memory I would need to truly claim these new Katas as part of my skill set.

I had planned to form new contracts with each, hoping to inject them with enough vitality to begin healing, not sure if that was possible since they were already under contract. I made the offer, but they were constrained by the established contract unable to agree. The contract that bound them to their duty was still firmly in place, and it was too strong to be broken or overwritten, at least by me.

With time that would change, but there hadn't been enough degradation, enough time to have passed for that to have occurred. Which meant that whoever had formed this contract had renewed it recently or had established it within the last twenty years. I thought the latter the most likely. The town and the eight trigrams formation would have been in better shape if the cultivator had visited recently.

Still, I tried.

The process of forming a contract with a Spirit required an exchange. We each would offer the other a part of our essence. For the Spirits, they would offer part of their truth, that part of themselves, that bit of nature that they had embraced while forming. For me, I needed to detach some of the weaves that made up the astral cord, the link that tethered my soul to my body.

It required precision and perception that a cultivator had no chance of achieving before reaching the Qi Gathering Realm. Now that I was at that level, I was able to see the millions of threads that, when spun together, formed the astral cord. Teasing one loose, without damaging the cord, was time-consuming, but if care was taken not really dangerous.

Once freed, I directed the thread, offered it along with intent, and with the limits of the contract I hoped to form. I didn't change any of the parameters that had already been agreed on. The Spirits would work to protect the land, bound by contract to do their best. It seemed a lopsided agreement to me. They put in all the effort and get little in return. Until they explained to me that by forming a contract, they became more. The contract acting as an anchor establishing a stable connection between the world of spirit and this one.

Solid with an identity. The contract acted as a shield against dissolution. Spirits could die, they could become so lost to the element they emulated that they faded, extinguished by that element as it reabsorbed the concept that had formed them. The contract gave them something substantive to cling to. It gave them purpose. It made them stronger.

With a new contract impossible to form, the only thing I could do to help them was to address the issues that were damaging them. The problems affecting the Ocean spirit were already well on the way to being resolved. The sewage issue had already been addressed, beast cores had been installed, and the array was once again purifying wastewater before it was dumped into the ocean. I would see about finding a method to clear the contaminants that had already been released.

For the Wind Spirit, I would have to take the long view. Storm had been correct that the Spirits were dying, but it would take decades for that event to occur. Now that we knew what the problem was, we could take steps to repair the damage. For Wind, harvesting the forest would have to be controlled, a large area of downed trees would have to be allowed to regrow, even encouraged with fresh planting. A program of husbandry instead of banditry would slowly restore the forest that had been decimated, allowing the Wind Spirit to heal holistically.

The River Spirit was an easy fix, as long as we could find the source of pollution. The poison as lava spilled into the waters should be easy to find. There were earth-attuned cultivators that could easily divert the lava, allowing the River to heal as well.

Storm had been disappointed that I couldn't do more to heal the Spirits immediately. I think she was shocked to find there was something I couldn't do. Still, once I explained that I understood what the problem was and that I would fix it so they wouldn't die, she became resigned to wait and watch.

It was a hard lesson for her to accept. But a needed one. We could only do our best. Sometimes that meant we could only offer support. It would be even more painful when that time came, when our best meant that someone we cared about was beyond our help, if she wasn't allowed to learn and process these small setbacks now, that lesson would be all the more painful.