The corridors leading to the Lin Clanâs main hall felt strangely longer today.
Lin Tian walked beside Bai Xueya, their steps matched without thought. The morning light had risen higher now, spilling across the stone in bright stripes. Disciples and servants moved along the paths with baskets, scrolls, or training gearâbut each time someone looked up and saw the two of them, the rhythm of movement faltered.
A girl carrying medicinal herbs slowed so abruptly she nearly stepped on her own hem. A trio of junior disciples straightened mid-stride, bowing stiffly. One elderly steward blinked once, twice, gaze flicking between Lin Tianâs steady posture and Bai Xueyaâs composed calmâas if trying to reconcile two incompatible realities.
Xueya said nothing, but Lin Tian saw how her lashes lowered for a moment, her expression slipping into that poised, distant mask of Azure Snow.
He wanted to reach for her hand.
He didnât. Not here.
The doors of the main hall stood open, tall wooden frames carved with the Lin clan emblem. Incense burned somewhere inside, faint and cool, almost undetectable until the breeze shifted.
Just before the threshold, Xueya paused.
Lin Tian stopped too.
Their eyes met. For a heartbeat, neither spoke. Her gaze was calm, but he sensed the tension beneathâquiet, sharp, controlled.
He nodded once.
She breathed outâsmall, subtleâand stepped forward.
Together, they entered.
The hall was full.
Patriarch Lin, stern and broad-shouldered, sat at the raised central seat. Lin elders flanked him on either side, robes pristine, expressions measured. Elder Mei sat closer to the front, a stack of medical records beside her. On the opposite side of the hall, in the seats reserved for honored guests, waited two figures in Bai clan colorsâa steward and an elder, both carrying the unmistakable air of long-practiced caution.
Conversations died the moment Lin Tian and Bai Xueya approached.
Lin Tian bowed deeply toward the Patriarch and elders.
Bai Xueya bowed a fraction deeperâto both the Lin elders and the Bai representatives.
The air felt stiff enough to snap.
"Be seated," the Patriarch said.
His voice was calm, but it carried weight.
Lin Tian and Xueya sat at the center of the hall, close enough that all eyes pointed their way, far enough that formality remained intact.
The Patriarch surveyed the room, then lifted a hand.
"Elder Mei."
She rose.
"Honored Patriarch. Elders. Representatives of the Bai clan." Her voice was crisp. "I have completed a preliminary examination of Miss Baiâs condition."
The silence grew thick.
Elder Mei continued. "Miss Bai has successfully reached the Core Spirit Realm, First Level. Her Frost Yin, previously unstable and prone to violent surges, has... settled."
A ripple moved through the eldersâa collective inhalation.
The Bai elder leaned forward. "Settled? In one night?"
Elder Mei nodded once. "More stable than I have ever witnessed in her. The long-standing cracks in her meridians no longer threaten immediate rupture. Her balance isâunexpectedlyâcloser to a healthy state than she has ever reported."
The Bai steward exchanged a stunned glance with his companion.
"And Young Master Lin?" the Patriarch asked.
Elder Mei turned slightly.
"Lin Tian has awakened fully as a cultivator. His meridians are unobstructed. His realm is public knowledge at this pointâElementary Spirit, Fifth Level. There are no signs of foundation instability, forcing, or external interference that I can detect."
This time, even the Bai elder couldnât hide his reaction.
A breakthrough of five realms in a crippled young master would have seemed absurd on any normal day.
Today, no one dared call it a lie.
The Patriarch steepled his fingers.
"We are grateful for your thoroughness, Elder Mei."
He turned to the Bai representatives.
"Now," he said mildly, "I believe the Bai clan has questions."
"Indeed." The Bai elderâs voice was smooth, diplomatic. "Miss Baiâs recovery is... welcome news. But the timing is concerning. Such a drastic shift, coinciding with her stay hereâone must wonder how such stabilization was achieved."
Xueya did not flinch.
She bowed her head slightly. "Last night, I reached a point of enlightenment while meditating. Elder Meiâs treatments, the Lin clanâs spiritual environment, and..." Her eyes flicked once toward Lin Tian. "Certain emotional burdens I had been carrying eased at the same time."
Lin Tian kept his face neutral.
Xueya continued, voice steady. "With my focus unbroken for the first time in years, I was able to push through the bottleneck."
The Bai elder nodded slowly, absorbing her words. He wasnât satisfied. Not yet.
"And Young Master Linâs awakening?" he asked. "Did you assist him?"
Xueya inhaled.
Before she could speak, Lin Tian leaned forward slightly.
"I did not take her cultivation," he said calmly. "I did not borrow her qi or use any forbidden technique. I simply... reached a point where I could not accept my own fear anymore."
A few Lin elders shifted, their eyes sharpening.
He continued. "Xueya spoke honestly about her struggles. About how she feared hurting the people around her. It forced me to confront the fact that I have been hiding behind excuses for years."
His hands tightened briefly.
"That clarity allowed me to break through the knot that kept me chained for so long. Nothing more."
The Patriarchâs gaze flickered with something unreadableâapproval, perhaps.
The Bai elder regarded him in silence for several long seconds.
Then: "You claim emotional clarity triggered a breakthrough of five levels?"
Lin Tian met his eyes steadily. "I claim that when someone stops running from their own life, the path forward becomes clearer."
Soft murmur among the Lin elders. Whether impressed or wary, he couldnât tell.
Elder Mei stepped in quietly. "My examination found no signs of forced breakthrough. His foundation is clean. Whatever triggered it... appears to be internal."
The Bai elder accepted the statement with a slow nod.
"For now."
Pressure lingered behind the words.
He turned to Bai Xueya. "Miss Bai. With your improved condition, do you wish to continue with this engagement?"
The hall went still.
Xueya did not hesitate.
"Yes," she said simply.
Her voice did not rise. It didnât need to.
"I chose this engagement with full awareness of my condition. That has not changed. And now that my condition has improved, I see no reason to reconsider."
The Bai elderâs eyes flickered. The Lin elders relaxed visibly. Lin Tian felt the weight of her words settle warm and heavy in his chest.
The Patriarch inclined his head. "Then let us proceed."
But the Bai elder wasnât finished.
"We will, of course, report all findings to Azure Snow. The sect will likely wish to observe both of you personally."
Lin Tianâs jaw tightened. Xueyaâs eyes narrowed subtly.
Before tension could swell again, the Patriarch lifted his hand.
"For now," he said, "we must confirm the stability of Young Master Linâs cultivation."
He looked directly at Lin Tian.
"A brief demonstration, in the side courtyard. To reassure our guestsâand ourselvesâthat your Fifth Level is genuine."
Lin Tian rose without hesitation.
"Of course."
Xueya stood as well, the faintest crease appearing between her browsâbut she didnât protest.
End of Chapter 26