For one heartbeat, Lin Tian felt the trace try to open.
His vision sharpened. His blood felt hot under his skin. His qi wanted to explode outward.
First breath: dantian.
Second: ridians.
Third: mind.
The serpent recoiled and struck again, faster.
Lin Tian pivoted inside its line and drove a short palm strike against its lower jaw—not to crush it, but to disrupt the angle. His strike carried qi, compact and controlled.
The serpent’s head snapped up slightly.
Enough for Zhao Yuming’s blade to flash in.
Zhao Yuming slashed at the serpent’s neck plating, anger turning into decisive motion.
The cut didn’t sever.
The armor was thick.
The serpent hissed and whipped its body, tail smashing into Zhao Yuming’s side and throwing him into the snow.
Zhao Yuming grunted, breath knocked out.
He Lian finally moved—darting in, throwing a handful of frost needles from a concealed pouch.
They struck the serpent’s eye ridge and shattered harmlessly against ice plating.
Lin Tian’s gaze flicked to him.
The serpent lunged again, mouth wide, fangs aid directly at Lin Tian’s chest.
The ice-slick ground limited long evasions.
Lin Tian shifted his stance and stepped inside, trying to jam the head with his shoulder.
It didn’t work.
The serpent’s weight slamd into him and drove him backward into the snow.
For a heartbeat, the cold swallowed him.
Then the serpent pinned him.
Its body coiled, crushing down. Ice armor pressed against his ribs. Its fanged mouth hovered above his face, breath pouring cold mist over his skin.
Lin Tian felt his ridians tighten.
He could feel it, right there under his bracer, vibrating with hunger, a foreign cold eager to answer the serpent’s formation-fed cold with sothing that would not stay hidden.
He clenched his jaw.
His ribs compressed. Pain sharpened.
His breath shortened involuntarily.
The serpent’s mouth descended.
Lin Tian forced air into his lungs.
He applied the stabilization thod he had read—compression cycle, then release, without flare. He compressed his aura inward like steel wire wrapped tight.
The trace clawed at the edge of that compression.
He held it down with breath and intent.
The serpent’s fangs scraped his shoulder, puncturing fabric and skin, cold burning like frostbite.
Lin Tian’s vision darkened at the edges.
Not from poison.
From cold shock and pressure.
He did not panic.
He shifted his hips.
He used the ice beneath him.
Instead of trying to push the serpent off with strength, he slid.
He angled his body just enough that the serpent’s weight shifted slightly off-center.
It was small.
But on slick froststone, small was everything.
The serpent’s coil loosened a fraction as it corrected.
That was his opening.
Lin Tian drove his elbow up into the serpent’s throat joint where armor plates overlapped, channeling qi in a compact burst—short enough not to flare, sharp enough to disrupt.
The serpent’s hiss turned ragged.
Lin Tian rolled out from under it, lungs burning, shoulder numb with cold.
Zhao Yuming, breathing hard from where he’d landed, pushed himself up and struck again, blade chopping into the serpent’s midsection.
Xu Wen’s voice snapped. "Hold it—node is stabilizing!"
Xu Wen’s hand glowed faintly as the formation node responded.
Lin Tian saw the glow brighten under the snow.
He Lian’s eyes flicked to Lin Tian’s injury, then to the serpent.
He made a decision.
He darted behind the serpent and stabbed a frost-spear into the ground—a small formation spike ant to disrupt movent. It wasn’t lethal. It was clever.
The serpent’s tail whipped and struck the spike, its movent slowing for half a breath.
That half-breath was enough.
Lin Tian stepped in again—not to take glory, but to finish efficiently.
He struck the serpent’s exposed throat joint where his elbow had already disrupted armor alignnt. His blade slid in cleanly this ti.
The serpent convulsed.
Formation light flickered along its spine, then dimd.
It dissolved into frost mist that poured into the snowfield like smoke.
Tokens ford—three this ti, dense and cold—and split into thin shards that drifted to their bands.
Lin Tian’s wrist band chid.
Xu Wen’s band chid.
Zhao Yuming’s band chid.
He Lian’s band chid.
Then the formation node beneath Xu Wen’s palm flared bright.
A final token rose out of the snow—pure, clean, and smooth like crystal.
Xu Wen’s band captured it.
The crushing cold density eased suddenly, like a storm lifting its foot from the throat.
The blue formation lines beneath the snow dimd to a faint glow, no longer flaring in aggression.
Lin Tian stood still for a mont as the pressure dropped.
His breath was ragged, but controlled.
His shoulder bled slowly. Frostbite burn lingered in his skin, numb and stinging at once.
Zhao Yuming wiped blood from his lip and stared at Lin Tian.
His eyes were complicated now.
He had nearly been gored by the boar. He had been tossed by the serpent. He had watched Lin Tian intervene without show, without bragging, without flare.
And Lin Tian had been pinned.
Had nearly triggered sothing.
Yet he hadn’t exploded.
Zhao Yuming’s jaw tightened.
He looked away first.
"Hmph," he muttered. "At least you’re not useless."
It was the closest thing to acknowledgnt he could offer without swallowing pride.
Lin Tian didn’t respond with sarcasm.
He simply nodded once, as if that was enough.
Xu Wen rose slowly, fingers flexing as he shook cold from his hand.
"You saved ," Xu Wen said quietly.
Lin Tian looked at him.
"It would’ve cost us tokens if you got injured," Lin Tian replied.
Xu Wen’s eyes softened faintly, as if he understood what Lin Tian had done—how he frad it to avoid creating debt in a team that might later turn hostile.
He Lian brushed snow off his sleeve and smiled again, though it was thinner now.
"Good teamwork," He Lian said.
Zhao Yuming shot him a look sharp enough to cut.
He Lian’s smile didn’t falter, but his eyes flicked away.
They moved out of the depression without speaking much.
The snowfield beyond was still cold and still watched, but the air felt lighter now that they weren’t inside a compression pocket.
Lin Tian maintained his breathing anchor as they walked.
His shoulder throbbed.
The trace at his wrist pulsed faintly, still agitated from near-trigger.
They had collected efficiently, and they had done so under formation stress.
That mattered.
Hours later, when the horn sounded again across the snowfield and teams began returning toward the bridge, the sky was already dimming into pale evening.
Wind cut harder now, carrying needles of snow.
The outer terraces ca into view through mist, lit by cold lantern light.
At the gate, elders and attendants waited with jade tablets.
Lin Tian stood with his team in line, shoulder wrapped in a quick cloth strip Xu Wen had offered without comnt.
When their turn ca, an attendant pressed a jade tablet to each band.
Blue light flickered across the screen.
The attendant’s brows rose slightly at their count.
He recorded it and stepped aside.
"Team 17," he said, voice neutral. "Complete."
Elder Qiao’s gaze shifted toward them briefly.
His expression didn’t change.
But Lin Tian saw the faintest tightening at the corners of his eyes—interest, perhaps.
As the teams dispersed back into the outer quarters, Lin Tian felt it.
Eyes.
More eyes than before.
Not just outer disciples now.
The trial would be reported upward.
He returned to his room under the hum of formation lines and closed the door behind him.
For a mont, he leaned against the wood.
He sat at the low table and unwrapped his shoulder carefully.
Two punctures.
Cold burn.
Not deep, but enough that it would leave a mark.
He cleaned it with a small cloth and a vial of basic dicine from his ration kit.
As he worked, the System interface slid into view with a soft chi.
[ Trial Log: Snowfield Hunt — Completed ]
[ Token Acquisition: Recorded ]
[ Performance Discipline: High ]
[ External Signature: Near-Activation Event Logged ]
[ External Signature Suppression: 49% Stable ]
Warning:
[ Continued formation pressure combat spikes may exceed suppression threshold. ]
Reward Progress:
[ Physique Unlock: Phase 1 — 52% ]
Lin Tian stared at the suppression percentage for a long mont.
Forty-nine.
It had slipped below fifty.
He exhaled slowly and dismissed the panel.
He finished dressing his wound and sat cross-legged on the bed.
He cultivated once—short and controlled—using the stabilization thod.
Only then did he reach inward to the Link.
Warmth answered.
Stronger than it had in days.
Sharp, imdiate pride.
Not the gentle warmth of a quiet pavilion.
A pulse like a blade struck cleanly into stone.
Xueya had felt what he did.
Her pride hit him so clearly it made his chest tighten for a heartbeat.
Then— Fear.
A cold, contained dread that sharpened beneath the pride.
Because she knew what this ant.
He had perford under formation stress without breaking.
He had collected tokens cleanly.
He had almost triggered sothing—and had suppressed it.
That was not comforting to the sect.
That was threatening.
Lin Tian’s fingers curled lightly on his knee.
He sent intention through the Link, soft and steady.
I’m fine.
The response ca like frost sliding over warmth.
I know. That’s the problem.
He didn’t hear those exact words.
But he felt the aning.
He sat still in the cold room, breathing slow.
Outside, in the outer administration hall, reports were being written.
Token counts tallied.
Discipline ratings filed.
And sowhere higher, behind frost veils and inner-peak stone, soone would read a line that mattered more than numbers.
A line like:
"Candidate Lin Tian perford with abnormal composure under formation stress."
He could already imagine the tone.
Lin Tian closed his eyes and cultivated again, one slow circuit.
And Azure Snow, for all its beauty and order, was ice shaped into a sect.
He exhaled.
Then he opened his eyes, gaze steady in the dim lamp light.
They would increase pressure.
Xueya felt it.
He felt it too.
Fine.
Let them.
He had survived one serpent’s weight trying to pin him into flaring.
He could do it again.
He would have to.
Because the only way to protect what he had chosen was to beco heavy enough that even a mountain of snow couldn’t bury him quietly.
The Link pulsed once more.
Pride and fear braided together.
Lin Tian let it settle into his chest.
And in the cold quiet of the outer quarters, while Azure Snow recorded his numbers and weighed his discipline like it was a threat, Lin Tian cultivated with the patience of soone building sothing that could not be taken apart by gossip, or rules, or watching eyes.
Sothing that would endure.
End of Chapter 57
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