Chrono Blade: The Soul of the Forbidden AI - Chapter 6
Chapter 6:
The next morning, Jin stood at the edge of a broken cliff overlooking the valley.
Kyo stood beside him, chewing loudly on dried jerky.
“So, uh… what exactly are we looking for again?”
“A hall,” Jin replied.
“We’re gonna live in a hallway?”
“No. A place to turn into our sect base.”
“Oh. That makes more sense.”
“Your disciple is alarmingly stupid,” Chrono commented.
“Do you want me to discreetly dispose of him?”
“No.”
“Just asking. Efficiency matters.”
After half a day of hiking and arguing, they found it — an old ruin halfway up a cliffside. The broken stone archway still had a faded inscription:
“Ironhowl Sect — Abandoned Under Order of the Heavenly Council.”
Jin brushed moss from the cracked steps. Broken tiles. Vines choking out old training platforms. But the spiritual formation lines… they were still faintly glowing.
“This could work,” Jin said.
“What, this dump?” Kyo blinked.
“This dump has spirit-conducting veins beneath it. It’s defensible, quiet, and forgotten. That makes it perfect.”
“You mean… we don’t have to pay rent?”
“Exactly.”
As they entered the ruined courtyard, a flash of light flickered through the trees.
A sword whistled past Kyo’s ear and embedded itself in a tree behind him.
“HOLY HELL I’M TOO YOUNG TO DIE!” he screamed.
“Chrono—”
“Combat mode: enabled.”
Jin’s blade snapped to life.
From the mist stepped a girl — calm, sharp-eyed, her black hair tied back with a red ribbon. She wore no sect uniform, just battle-worn robes and a sheath at her waist.
“This place is claimed,” she said coldly.
“Leave.”
Jin didn’t lower his weapon.
“By who?”
“By me.”
They clashed briefly. The girl’s style was defensive, rooted in pure reflex and footwork. Jin didn’t use Chrono’s full strength — but enough to test her.
She was fast. Sharp. Focused.
But she was also hungry. Weary.
“You’re protecting this place,” Jin said, finally stepping back.
“But not because it’s yours. You have nowhere else to go.”
She hesitated.
“I’m not here to steal it,” he said. “I’m here to rebuild it. To start something new.”
“You think I care?”
“No. But I think you do.”
She looked at him for a long time.
Then she sheathed her blade. “My name’s Rina.”
“Jin.”
“I won’t bow to you.”
“I don’t want followers who bow. Just those who don’t run.”
That night, the three of them sat around a tiny fire.
“So… this is it?” Kyo asked.
“The start of Blade Resonance Hall?”
Jin looked at the ruined courtyard.
“Yeah. No gates. No walls. No elders. Just three idiots with scars.”
“Four,” Kyo said, holding up a toe. “I stubbed this earlier.”
“Useless,” Rina muttered.
“Hurtful, but accurate.”
“With two disciples and a barely functional roof,” Chrono said, “you now statistically qualify as a cult.”
Jin smiled faintly.
“Let’s make it a sect instead.”