Night in Cloudcrest didnât feel like night anymore.
It felt like a lid pressed over the worldâquiet, heavy, and watchful. Lanterns burned along the clanâs corridors, throwing warm pools of light on stone paths, but the darkness between those pools seemed sharper than usual. Even the wind carried a different taste now, thin and cold, as if Azure Snow had left frost behind in the air itself.
Lin Tian returned to his courtyard alone.
He had bowed, answered, fought, and endured the steady pressure of a sect elderâs gaze without flinching. People had watched him like he was a rumor made flesh. The Patriarch had spoken to him like he mattered. His grandfather had clapped him like he belonged on the path.
And yet none of that sat in his mind as strongly as one simple sensation:
A thin, foreign chill under his skin.
It wasnât pain.
It wasnât even obvious unless he stopped moving and listened with his cultivation senses the way heâd learned to do these past days. But once he noticed it, he couldnât un-notice it.
It clung to his right wrist where Elder Shen had pressed the testing needle earlier. It wasnât the needle itselfâsheâd taken it away. This was something else. A thread that didnât feel like his qi, didnât feel like the Lin clanâs environment, and didnât feel like Bai Xueyaâs cold either.
It felt... placed.
Like someone had brushed a finger of frost across him and left it there on purpose.
Lin Tian shut the courtyard gate behind him and stood still beneath the peach tree. Petals had stopped falling for the season; branches were bare and dark. The tree looked like a silhouette cut from ink.
He rolled his shoulder once. Flexed his hand. Circulated his qi gently from dantian to meridian, up the arm, into the wrist, and back down.
The moment the flow reached his right wrist, the foreign chill responded.
Not by fighting him.
By
settling
.
Like it recognized the movement and adjusted itself to ride along.
Lin Tianâs eyes narrowed.
"So itâs not a wound," he murmured. "Itâs... a hitch."
A leash didnât have to pull hard to be a leash.
His chest tightened. The memory of Elder Shenâs calm voice returned as clearly as if she were standing in his courtyard.
You do not lie... but you do withhold.
He exhaled and forced himself to relax his fingers.
Panicking wouldnât help. Being angry wouldnât help. Not yet.
He looked up at the moonless sky, then lowered his gaze and spoke softly.
"System."
A familiar chime rang inside his skull, not loudâjust present.
Light unfolded behind his eyes.
[ Harem Link Cultivation System â Active ]
The panel hovered, crisp and steady.
[ Status ]
Host: Lin Tian
Realm: Elementary Spirit Realm â Seventh Level
Talent: High Grade
Spirit Roots: High Grade
Physique: Pending
Bloodline: Locked
Linked Partner: Bai Xueya (1)
Harem Points: 505
Lin Tianâs gaze didnât linger on the realm. He already knew what he was. The proof had been on the training field.
He focused instead on the faint line at the bottom that flickered when his attention sharpened.
[ External Signature Detected ]
His stomach tightened.
A second pane expanded on its own, like the system had been waiting for him to ask.
[ External Signature â Analysis ]
Type: Sect Mark (Observation Trace)
State: Dormant
Trigger Condition: Sudden Qi Spike / Forced Disruption
Risk: Alert to Mark Owner
Recommended Action: Do NOT forcibly purge. Mask via controlled circulation.
Lin Tian stared at the words until his jaw ached.
"Observation trace," he whispered.
It wasnât even hidden behind pretty language. It said exactly what it was.
He clenched his hand slowly, feeling the foreign chill tighten by a hair.
Dormant. Waiting.
If he tried to rip it out, it would scream.
If he ignored it and let his qi flare wildly, it would react.
He swallowed.
"So Elder Shen tagged me," he murmured. "Like Iâm a wandering beast."
The system did not respond with comfort. It never did. It simply offered function.
A line appeared.
[ Suggestion: Practice Aura Compression ]
Goal: Reduce outward Qi signature variance.
Effect: Mark remains dormant, less responsive.
Bonus: Improves combat efficiency.
Lin Tian let out a breath through his nose. The anger didnât vanish, but it sharpened into something useful.
"Fine," he said quietly. "Then letâs see what he going to do."
He closed the panel.
The light faded, leaving the courtyard dim again.
He went inside, changed into simpler training clothes, then returned to the stone tiles under the peach tree. He did not pick up a sword yet. He sat down cross-legged and placed both hands on his knees.
Then he breathed.
Not the frantic cultivation he had done in the beginningâwhen heâd been drowning in sudden power and trying to keep up with it. This was slower. Measured. A practice of
restraint.
He guided his qi in a circuit.
He let it flow to his wrist again, deliberately touching the foreign chill with calm circulation. He didnât push. He didnât yank. He simply wrapped his own qi around the trace the way water wrapped around a stone.
Mask it.
Hide it inside his natural rhythm.
At first, the trace stayed distinct. Cold against warm. Foreign against familiar.
By the fifth circuit, the edges blurred.
By the tenth, the trace felt... less sharp.
Still there, still cold, but no longer a needle under his skin.
Lin Tian opened his eyes slowly, sweat not from strain but from focus.
"Good," he murmured.
He rose, rolled his shoulders again, and went to the practice sword resting against his wallâthe same dull blade he had held in the past as a cripple, swinging it with perfect form and no qi.
Now the sword felt different in his hand.
More obedient.
Like his body finally belonged to him.
He stepped into stance one.
Feet grounded.
Breath steady.
He began the Lin clanâs foundational sword set.
His movements were not flashy. He kept his aura close, compressed, tight to his skin. Each step was quiet. Each cut of the blade produced only the faintest hiss in the air.
And with every motion, his wrist mark stayed calm.
By the time he finished, his muscles burned and his lungs worked harder, but his qi had not surged out like a banner.
End of Chapter 37