SSS-Rank 10x Reward System: Accepting Disciples to Live Forever Chapter 237 237: Sword river
"Utter one more word," Lin Huang said, "and I will wipe you out from the face of the earth."
He said it the way soone states the weather — plain, almost casual, entirely without performance. As if reshaping Chen Hu's fate was a matter of mild inconvenience rather than consequence.
And yet.
Sothing happened to the air in the courtyard the mont those words landed. It was difficult to na precisely — not pressure exactly, not sound, but sothing beneath both of those things. Like the ground itself had shifted by a fraction of an inch, just enough for every person standing on it to feel the floor was no longer quite where they had assud it was. A collective unsteadiness passed through the gathered disciples like a current moving through still water.
Not one of them doubted him. Not for a single mont. The words had carried a quality that bypassed doubt entirely and settled sowhere older and more instinctive than rational thought.
Even Chen Hu went silent.
The roaring had stopped completely. The man who had been screaming and fuming and radiating wounded pride in every direction stood with his mouth closed, and the silence from him was sohow louder than all the noise that had preceded it. His jaw was tight. His eyes burned. But he did not speak.
He had miscalculated — badly, irrevocably, in front of an audience — and the humiliation of that sat on his shoulders like a physical weight. There was nothing left to recover in this courtyard, and whatever remained of his pride was too small to spend on another round. He let out a cold snort, sharp and compressed, and jerked his chin toward his lackeys.
The gesture was clear enough. Get out of here.
A few of them moved instinctively to comply — stepping forward, reaching down.
Lin Huang's eyes moved to them.
Just his eyes. Nothing else shifted. He didn't raise his voice, didn't alter his stance, didn't so much as adjust the angle of his head by more than a degree.
"Master Chen Hu stays here."
The words ca out with the sa unhurried evenness as everything else he had said. And sohow, that consistency was the most frightening part.
"As for the rest of you — disperse. Get out of my sight before I change my mind."
The effect was imdiate and absolute.
Every cultivator in that courtyard stopped moving simultaneously, as if the sa string had been pulled taut through all of them at once. They looked at Lin Huang. Then they looked at Chen Hu — at the stumps, at the blood still soaking into the courtyard stone, at the undeniable arithtic of what had just happened to a Grand Ascension realm cultivator in the span of a single exchange.
The struggle that passed across ninety percent of their faces resolved itself with remarkable speed.
One of them crouched slightly toward Chen Hu, voice carefully, almost apologetically, lowered.
"Master Chen Hu… forgive us. I'm afraid we cannot carry you back."
Another, already sidling toward the gate with his eyes fixed carefully on a point sowhere above Lin Huang's head, added: "We'll bring word to the Elder at once. He'll co himself. Everything will be—"
"Cowards."
Chen Hu spat the word onto the ground along with a mouthful of blood. His voice was stripped raw, the contempt in it absolute.
But he didn't tell them to stay. He didn't call them back. And one by one, with varying degrees of haste and varying attempts to preserve their dignity, the gathered disciples filtered out of the courtyard until the sound of their footsteps faded entirely.
Lin Huang watched them go. He stood exactly where he had been standing throughout, the Sword River Phantom still faintly present above him — not fully manifested anymore, but not entirely gone either, like a tide that had receded without quite returning to the sea.
Once the last of them had cleared the gate, he turned his head away.
Chen Hu remained on the ground behind him.
Lin Huang did not look at him again. He did not offer words, did not gloat, did not so much as acknowledge his continued presence. The man who had walked into this courtyard with the full weight of his na and his lineage and his burning entitlent was now simply a detail in the background — furniture that hadn't been there before and wasn't worth orienting around.
The courtyard was quiet.
Sowhere nearby, the sound of a single leaf settling against the ground was briefly audible.
Once the last footstep faded beyond the courtyard gate, Lin Huang's attention turned inward without ceremony. The world outside ceased to matter. Chen Hu, the scattered disciples, the faint residue of tension still hanging in the air — all of it dissolved at the edges of his awareness like morning mist under sunlight.
His entire focus shifted back to the sword.
Sword River…
The thought carried sothing almost like wonder, quiet and unhurried.
What a fascinating place.
As his focus deepened, the courtyard around him began to feel increasingly distant — present, but irrelevant, the way a wall is present without being worth looking at. His perception drifted forward, pulled by sothing that had no na but felt unmistakably like gravity.
And then, without any clear mont of transition, he was there.
The river stretched in every direction — vast and deep and utterly, incomprehensibly full. Countless sword daos drifted through its current like lanterns moving downstream, each one distinct, each one carrying the weight of a lifeti compressed into a single, distilled truth. Lin Huang moved through them slowly, eyes tracing their shapes, and then stopped himself.
He shook his head.
They were not daos. Not exactly. Sothing close, but different — older, perhaps, or more elental. As to what precisely they were, he couldn't yet say. The vocabulary to describe them hadn't finished forming in his mind.
Then, from sowhere that had no specific location, a phrase surfaced.
Sword Authority.
It arrived without explanation, without context, and yet it carried with it a certainty that felt less like a conclusion and more like a recognition. As if so part of him had always known the word and had simply been waiting for the right mont to rember it.
The Sword River was not a place in the conventional sense. It was a library — endless, living, accumulating. Every sword cultivator who had ever drawn breath, ever raised a blade, ever carved a single honest insight from the stone of their cultivation — their experiences had flowed here after them. Their understanding had beco the water. The river fed on what they had left behind, and in turn, it grew.
Lin Huang began to move through it.
With every step, sothing shifted in his mind — a subtle but unmistakable sharpening, like a lens being brought slowly into focus. The sword, he was beginning to understand, was not rely a weapon. It was a whetstone. It refined not just technique but the instrunt behind technique — the mind that wielded it, the clarity that directed it. With each step deeper into the current, the noise inside his head quieted by another degree.
Around him, the river showed him things.
Countless young cultivators moved through the current alongside him — or perhaps these were echoes, impressions left behind by those who had walked this sa path before. Their expressions were taut with effort, their movents sharp and full of a ferocious, straining energy. Sword moves that would have seed incomprehensible from the outside carried a sudden, startling coherence from within the river, as though the Sword River itself was providing the translation.
And the deeper Lin Huang moved, the stronger it beca — a resonance that began sowhere in his chest and expanded steadily outward, as if the river was recognizing sothing in him and pulling it forward in response.
He paused.
A thought arrived at the edges of his mind, uninvited and persistent.
His perception drifted, almost against his will, back to a particular mory. A dojo. Training halls worn smooth by years of use. The sound of a blade cutting air in a pattern too clean to have been learned, only understood.
The Phoenix and Dragon Dojo.
His eyes moved slowly through the current ahead of him.
I wonder if I will encounter Master here.
The thought settled in his chest with a warmth that the river's vastness couldn't dilute. He knew, without needing to be told, that his own attainnt in the field of the sword — everything he had built and refined and pushed himself toward — was still nothing compared to Wang Chen's. Not even close. Wang Chen's understanding of the sword existed at a level that Lin Huang could currently only perceive the outermost edge of, the way one can perceive the shape of a mountain range from a great distance without being able to see the individual peaks.
That knowledge didn't discourage him.
It did the opposite.
Lin Huang increased his pace, moving deeper into the river's current with a focused, eager energy that hadn't been there a mont before. If Wang Chen's shadow existed sowhere within this endless library — if even a fragnt of his insight had bled into this place — then Lin Huang intended to find it.
There were worse reasons to keep walking forward.
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