The silence followed him all the way back to the Outer Quarters.
It wasn’t a true silence. The wind still hissed through the icy peaks, and distant training yards echoed with the clatter of practice swords. But the normal background chatter, the whispers and muttered conversations that usually trailed him like a second shadow, were gone.
The paths were preternaturally clear. Disciples he passed didn’t et his eyes. They looked at the ground, or at the distant mountains, or at anything but him. When he turned a corner, he felt the weight of a dozen stares landing on his back the mont he was out of sight.
Shock. Good.
He kept walking, his pace steady despite the throbbing deep in his bones. Let them be shocked. Let them whisper behind their hands. It was better than their pity, and far better than their open contempt.
The pain was a constant companion now. It lived in the fine cracks along his ridians, a network of hairline fractures that burned with every circulation of qi.
The vast, neutral power he’d forged in the Reflection Tower was a still, deep lake inside him. But the channels to access it were damaged. Drawing on it felt like trying to pour an ocean through a cracked clay pipe.
He reached the door to his room. The simple wooden slab, marked with the sect’s frost emblem, looked no different. But as he placed his hand near the lock, he saw it. A faint, visible shimr in the air, like heat haze over a desert, flickering weakly. The Veil of Tranquil Mist.
It was failing.
He pushed the door open and stepped inside. The usual chill of the room was gone, replaced by the stagnant, watchful cold of the outside world. The array he’d painstakingly installed, the one that blurred the surveillance formations and gave him a sliver of privacy, was sputtering. Its energy source was tied to his own stable qi flow. And his qi flow was anything but stable.
He closed the door and leaned against it, letting out a slow breath. His eyes adjusted to the dim light. The room was sparse. A bed, a desk, a small chest for his belongings.
On the desk, the frostbloom Xueya had once used as a code lay pressed inside a basic prir on herbology. The only personal touch in a cell ant to remind him he was temporary.
A sharp, prickling sensation crawled up his right arm. He looked down, rolling up his sleeve. The black veins of the curse were gone, purged by the legacy room. But in their place was a subtler, more insidious damage.
The skin itself looked normal, but when he focused, he could see a faint, spiderweb pattern of light glowing just beneath the surface. His ridians, visible through his skin when he pushed his senses. They pulsed with a soft, gold-and-silver light.
He walked to the center of the room and sat on the floor, crossing his legs. He closed his eyes and reached inward.
The System interface blood in his mind’s eye without a prompt. It was no longer the clean, blue-and-white display. It was flickering, lines of text glitching and reforming.
[Harem Link Cultivation System]
[Host: Lin Tian]
[Cultivation: Elentary Spirit Realm - 9th Level (Peak)]
[Physique: Unstable Vessel (Heaven-Grade Talent, Damaged ridian Network)]
[Linked Partners: 2]
[Bai Xueya: Bond Stable. Resonance: High.]
[Su Lan: Bond Forced. Resonance: Fluctuating.]
[Warning: Host’s spiritual foundation is compromised. Physical vessel integrity at 62%. Continuous qi circulation is accelerating degradation.]
[Recomnded Action: Cease all cultivation. Seek high-grade ridian nding elixirs or a Master-level healer.]
[Mission Updated: Survive. Maintain bond stability. Prevent physical collapse.]
Cease all cultivation.
He almost laughed, a dry, soundless thing in his throat. In the Azure Snow Sect, ceasing cultivation was like ceasing to breathe. It was an invitation to be swallowed whole.
He opened his eyes and looked at his hands. They didn’t shake. He willed a trickle of power from that inner lake, the barest whisper. It flowed down his arm. The glowing ridians under his skin brightened. And at the first dark crack, the energy splintered. A bolt of white-hot pain lanced from his elbow to his fingertips. His fingers spasd.
He let the energy go, withdrawing it back to that damaged lake at his center, and the white-hot agony receded by degrees until it settled into sothing duller ,a persistent, grinding ache that lived in the bones of his forearm, a constant reminder of the line he could not cross.
So this is it.
The thought arrived with perfect clarity, stripped of self-pity.
I have the strength to shatter an inner disciple’s armour with a flat strike. But if I try to use a real technique. I might break myself instead.
Raw power pooled in his core like floodwater behind a cracked dam, imnse and entirely useless. He was a weapon he could not safely draw.
A soft chi rang out from the direction of the door. The sect’s standard ssage chi, the sound produced when a jade slip was deposited in the communication notch carved into the outer fra. The tone was light, almost polite. He didn’t move. He sat with his back against the wall and his damaged arm resting across his knee and let the silence stretch.
The chi sounded again, longer this ti, more insistent, the resonance of it pressing against the still air of the small room like a finger jabbing at his shoulder.
With a grunt, he pushed himself to his feet and went to the door. There was no one outside. At his feet lay a single, off-white jade slip. A low-grade ssage slip, the kind used for bulk announcents.
He picked it up and channeled a minuscule thread of awareness into it. Words ford in his mind.
By order of the Discipline Hall.
The altercation between Outer Candidate Lin Tian and Inner Disciple Ye Feng on the North-South Path has been noted.
Candidate Lin Tian is reminded that duels outside sanctioned arenas are prohibited.
As Inner Disciple Ye Feng initiated the confrontation, and based on witness testimony, no formal censure is issued at this ti.
He crushed the slip in his palm. The cheap jade shattered into dull powder, which he let fall to the floor.
Advised. They were advising him. After he’d publicly humiliated a mber of the Frozen Sword Faction. After he’d displayed power that should belong to soone twenty ranks higher.
The ssage was clear. The institution itself was shrugging. It wasn’t taking a side. It was watching, waiting to see if the crack in the vessel would hold, or if it would finally split open.
He returned to the center of the room. The Veil of Tranquil Mist gave one last, visible shudder. The shimr in the air snapped out of existence.
He felt a slight, psychic pressure lifting, then imdiately being replaced by the familiar, invasive tingling of the sect’s surveillance formations reactivating. He was naked to their view again. Every breath, every fluctuation in his damaged aura, now broadcast to so monitoring station.
Fine. Let them watch.
He sat back down, not to cultivate, but to think. To assess the battlefield of his own body.
The power was real. He could feel it, a solid, humming weight in his core. Reaching the peak of the Elentary Realm was a threshold many outer disciples never crossed. It was the gateway to the Core Formation Realm, to true strength. He had the key. But the door was blocked by a wall of cracked stone.
He needed to heal. But high-grade ridian nding elixirs were Tier One treasures, locked in the inner sect’s vaults. A Master-level healer? The only ones he knew were Su Lan, who was a complication he couldn’t afford to deepen, and the sect’s own dical elders, who reported directly to people like Shen Ruoyi.
Xueya. The thought of her was a sharp ache, separate from the physical pain. Their bond was stable, but he could feel a distance in it, a cool reserve. The forced link with Su Lan had hurt her. He needed to see her, to explain. But the Frostheart Residence was barred to him, and any attempt to force his way now, in this condition, would be suicide.
He wasn’t a cripple anymore. He was sothing worse. A weapon that couldn’t be fired without breaking in the user’s hand. A secret that was slowly becoming visible to every watching eye.
Outside his window, the short, pale day was already fading into the long azure twilight of the high peaks. The distant gong sounded for the evening al. He didn’t move.
He just sat in the middle of his failing room, feeling the watchful cold seep back into his bones, and stared at the faint, glowing cracks beneath the skin of his own wrists.
The sect was in shock.
But he was the one sitting on the floor, holding perfectly still, because every breath felt like it might be the one that finally made everything split apart.
Then a knock can be heard.
End of Chapter 78
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