The training field emptied in waves.
First the junior disciples, who backed away as if the frost in the air might bite them for staring too long. Then the elders, who exchanged quiet looks that carried more meaning than words ever could. Even the Bai representatives withdrew with stiff posture, their faces carefully neutralâtoo carefully neutral.
Only when the last echoes of footsteps faded behind the walls did the courtyard feel like it belonged to Cloudcrest again.
Lin Tian stood at the edge of the ring where he had fought, the practice sword lowered at his side. The bladeâs edge was dull, but the faint aftertaste of qi still clung to itâwarm and steady, like a breath he could now control.
Across from him, Bai Xueya remained where sheâd watched. Azure Snow whites draped her frame like fresh snow over stone. Her posture was flawless, but the tension in her fingers told a different story: she had been holding herself still on purpose.
They were not alone.
There were always eyes now.
Lin Tian waited until the final Lin elder turned the corner and disappeared. Only then did he shift, stepping toward a side path instead of the main corridor. Not fleeingâchoosing a quieter line.
Xueya understood without being told. She followed at his side, their steps matching as naturally as breathing.
They slipped between two stone pillars and into a narrow covered walkway where the wind carried less sound. Bamboo leaves brushed softly overhead, a thin green curtain between them and the rest of the clan.
For the first time since Elder Shenâs arrival, Xueyaâs shoulders dropped by a fraction.
Just a fraction.
But Lin Tian noticed.
"Are you alright?" he asked softly.
Xueyaâs eyes remained forward. "I am fine."
"That wasnât my question."
Her lashes lowered. For a moment, her calm expression waveredâlike ice melting at the edges.
"Three days," she murmured.
The words were quiet, but they hit his chest harder than the blows heâd traded with Han Yue.
Three days until she was taken back into the sectâs hands. Three days until the distance between "fiancĂ©" and "burden" became something a powerful elder could decide with a single sentence.
Lin Tian inhaled slowly and forced his pulse to settle.
"Then we use three days," he said.
Xueya finally looked at him.
The Ice Fairy mask was still thereâpresent, practicedâbut beneath it he saw the girl who had whispered his name into his shoulder when pain had taken her breath.
"Youâre not afraid," she said, as if testing the claim with her eyes.
"I am," he answered honestly. "But fear doesnât get to steer."
A faint, almost invisible shift passed through her expression. The line of her jaw softened.
"Good," she said, voice low. "Because they will try."
Lin Tianâs fingers tightened around the practice sword for an instantâthen loosened again. He didnât want anger to become his habit. Not now. Not when control was the thing being judged.
Before he could reply, a cold ripple brushed the walkway.
Not the wild violence of Frost Yin instability.
This was deliberate. Controlled. A presence that didnât need to shout because it knew the world would listen.
Xueyaâs gaze sharpened.
Lin Tian turned.
A figure approached from the far end of the corridor, her steps soundless on stone. Not Elder Shen herselfâthis one was younger, a disciple with an expression smoothed into emptiness. Azure Snow crest at her sleeve. A messenger.
She stopped at a respectful distance and bowed.
"Disciple Luoyan greets Senior Sister Bai," she said. Then her eyes shifted to Lin Tian with cool evaluation. "And greets Young Master Lin."
Her politeness was flawless. Her meaning was not.
She raised her hands and produced a scroll sealed in deep blue wax.
"Elder Shen commands this be delivered," she said. "In the presence of witnesses, if possible."
Lin Tianâs eyes narrowed slightly. "Witnesses."
The discipleâs gaze flicked to the corridor behind themâwhere shadows could hide ears, but not eyes. "The sect prefers clarity," she replied.
Xueyaâs expression turned cold. "Then speak quickly."
Disciple Luoyan did not flinch. She held out the scroll.
Lin Tian took it.
The wax seal held a faint trace of frost qi. Even touching it made his fingertips feel cool.
He broke the seal carefully and unrolled the scroll.
The words were short. Clean. Written like commands meant to be obeyed, not discussed.
Disciple Bai Xueya is to return to Azure Snow Sword Sect within three days for continued monitoring.
Lin Tian may accompany as a provisional candidate under sect observation.
Upon arrival: full assessment.
Any indication of "harmful cultivation" will result in immediate separation and engagement review.
Lin Tian read it twice, not because he didnât understand, but because he wanted to control his expression when he looked up.
Disciple Luoyan watched him with blank patience.
Xueyaâs fingers tightened at her side. "We heard her yesterday."
"Then you understand the importance of compliance," Luoyan replied.
Lin Tian rolled the scroll back up and handed it to Xueya. His voice stayed calm.
"We will comply."
Luoyan bowed again. "Elder Shen will remain within the Lin clan compound until departure day. Any attempts to conceal developments will be treated as hostile intent."
Then she turned and walked away, leaving cold silence in her wake.
Xueya watched her go with eyes like sharpened ice.
When the corridor was empty again, Xueya exhaledâslowly, controlled. Lin Tian could almost hear the anger she swallowed.
"They talk like Iâm a tool," she said softly.
"They talk like theyâre afraid," Lin Tian answered. "And fear makes people grab tighter."
Xueyaâs gaze flickered toward him. "Theyâre not afraid of you."
"No," Lin Tian agreed. "Theyâre afraid of what you chose."
The words settled between them.
Xueyaâs lashes lowered. For a heartbeat, her expression turned wearyânot weak, not broken, just tired of always being measured and rearranged by someone elseâs hands.
Lin Tian took a half-step closer. Close enough that their sleeves brushed.
Not a public claim.
A quiet anchor.
"We have three days," he repeated. "We make them count."
Xueyaâs eyes lifted. "How?"
Lin Tianâs answer came without hesitation.
"Control. Proof. Stability. I donât need to impress them. I need to make it hard for them to lie about what they see."
Xueyaâs mouth twitched like she wanted to say something sharp, then chose honesty instead.
"And you need to be strong enough that if they try anyway..." She stopped.
Lin Tian finished for her, voice quiet. "Then theyâll have to use force."
Xueya didnât deny it.
End of Chapter 34