The side courtyard was quieter, ringed by smooth stone and shaded by high walls. A few elders followed them—Elder i, Lin Zhaotian the Patriarch, Lin Haoyang, his grandfather, two martial elders, and the Bai representatives.
Weapons were stacked neatly along the far wall. The air slled faintly of polished wood and steel.
Lin Tian stepped into the center of the ring.
A martial elder approached, an expression of polite, testing interest on his face.
"No need for elaborate displays." The elder tapped the butt of his spear lightly on the ground. "Show us your realm. Then we’ll trade a few blows."
"As you wish," Lin Tian said.
He planted his feet, let his breath settle, and drew in qi.
It answered instantly.
A soft swell of spiritual pressure suffused the courtyard, clear and solid—Fifth Level, unmistakable. The air rippled around him, stirring dust at the edges.
Elder i watched with sharp, clinical eyes. The Bai elder leaned forward slightly, brow furrowing with reluctant respect.
Lin Tian shifted into the Lin clan’s basic stance.
The martial elder nodded. "Begin."
Lin Tian moved.
The practice sword in his hand cut a clean line through the air. His steps were steady, each transition smooth. When he stepped into the final arc of the form, qi threaded through the movent naturally, flowing into his muscles like a second breath.
Lin Haoyang let out a quiet breath of sothing close to awe.
Before today, Lin Tian had never looked like this—not on the training grounds, not in private practice.
The martial elder stepped forward.
"Good. Let’s test it."
He suppressed his own cultivation down to a matching level and struck—not a lethal blow, but not gentle either.
Lin Tian parried. The clash vibrated through his arm, but his feet held firm.
A second strike ca faster. Lin Tian pivoted, redirected it, and only staggered half a step.
A third blow hit his shoulder. Pain flared, honest and sharp, but his ridians remained clear. He gritted his teeth, anchored his core, and pushed back with a controlled burst of qi.
The elder shifted back, impressed.
"Stable foundation," Elder i murmured. "Remarkably so."
The Bai elder’s eyes narrowed—not critically, but calculatingly.
"If this continues," he said, "Azure Snow may indeed wish to evaluate him."
Xueya’s gaze never left Lin Tian. Her expression was composed, but sothing in her eyes had ward—approval, relief, sothing quiet and fierce.
Lin Tian straightened, lowering the sword.
The Patriarch nodded once. "Enough. His realm is genuine."
The Bai elder accepted the conclusion with a stiff incline of his head.
The test was over.
But its consequences had only just begun.
After the others dispersed, Lin Tian was summoned to a quieter chamber behind the main hall.
The patriarch waited there, standing beside a low table. Lin Haoyang, his grandfather stood at his shoulder, still looking as if he hadn’t fully processed what he’d seen.
Lin Zhaotian dismissed the hall attendants and closed the door behind them.
For a long mont, he simply looked at Lin Tian.
Then—very softly, very simply—
"Well done."
Lin Tian blinked.
His father rarely praised. Certainly not for anything related to cultivation.
But Lin Zhaotian wasn’t smiling. His eyes held pride, yes—but beneath it, sober weight.
"You’ve stepped onto the path," he said. "Truly stepped onto it. But this also ans you’ve stepped into the eyes of people who do not look kindly upon sudden miracles."
Lin Tian nodded slowly. "I understand."
"No," his grandfather corrected quietly. "You understand the idea. You do not yet understand the scale."
He walked closer, lowering his voice.
"Azure Snow will not ignore this."
Lin Tian felt a cold thread crawl down his spine.
His grandfather continued, "The clan will support you. But once the sect takes notice, the storm won’t be small. They will co. They will probe. And they will asure you not as a fiancé, but as soone tied to one of their prized disciples. You must be prepared to stand on your own strength—again and again."
Lin Haoyang stepped forward with a quick, firm clap to Lin Tian’s shoulder.
"Then stand," his brother said. "You’ll train with us. Properly, this ti. If soone from Azure Snow tries to bully you, they’ll have to get through first."
Lin Tian huffed a quiet breath. "I appreciate the sentint."
"Sentint?" Haoyang snorted. "No. I just don’t want you doing sothing impressive without ."
The patriarch sighed, exasperation and affection mixing. "Let him breathe, father"
Lin Tian bowed. "Thank you. Both of you."
The patriarch’s voice softened a hair. "Just rember: strength can be earned. Reputation can be rebuilt. But trust—hers, and ours—is not sothing you can afford to squander."
He bowed his head. "I won’t."
A knock ca at the door.
A servant stepped in and bowed. "Young Master Tian. Miss Bai waits outside."
Lin Tian exhaled, straightening. "I’ll go to her."
He stepped out of the chamber.
Bai Xueya stood by a window alcove, her robe sleeves still neat from the hall, silver-white hair catching the muted daylight. Her expression eased slightly when she saw him.
"How did the inspection go?" she asked.
"They didn’t throw out," Lin Tian said dryly.
Her lips curved. "I would not have let them."
He stepped closer. "Did the Bai elder question you more afterward?"
"A little." Her gaze flicked downward briefly. "I gave them the sa explanation. They accepted it. Outwardly."
"And inwardly?"
"They will send a report to Azure Snow before nightfall."
Lin Tian stilled.
Xueya’s eyes lifted to his.
"This won’t remain within the Lin clan," she said quietly. "The sect will want answers. And they will want to see you."
He nodded.
"I expected as much."
She studied him for a mont.
"Today," she said softly, "you stood steadily under many eyes. You did not waver."
"Because you were there," he answered.
Her lashes lowered just slightly.
"Good," she murmured. "You will need that steadiness soon."
A faint wind stirred the corridor.
Xueya stepped back half a pace, preparing to return to the guest courtyard. Lin Tian did not reach for her—not here, not where shadows lurked in every corner.
But as she passed him, the barest brush of her sleeve crossed his wrist. A whisper of silk. A silent promise.
He looked over his shoulder, watching her walk away.
Farther down the path, a Bai clan servant hurried toward the city’s ssenger station, clutching scrolls sealed with Azure Snow’s crest.
Lin Tian watched the servant vanish around the bend.
The night that had bound them together was no longer theirs alone.
Now, the whole sect would co looking.
End of Chapter 27
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