The heavy door to Elder Shenâs chambers slammed shut, sending ripples through the ancient floorboards beneath Lin Tianâs feet.
He remained frozen, tracing the whorls in the wood grain with unfocused eyes.
One. Two. Three.
Each heartbeat echoed in his ears. The Elderâs aura clung to his skin like frost on glass, refusing to dissipate.
His first step sent him lurching sideways.
The curse tore from his throat, raw and unbidden.
His palm slapped against white stone, fingers splaying. The perfect poise heâd maintained, his shoulders squared, chin lifted, voice crumbled. Air raked through his lungs in broken shards. His left hand betrayed him, the leather bracer rattling against trembling flesh.
Control tested too severely will shatter,
Elder Shenâs words echoed.
"I didnât shatter," he rasped to the shadows. "Not yet."
Bile rose in his throat as his eyes squeezed shut. The meeting replayed in his mindâeach moment like balancing on a bladeâs edge, waiting for it to slice. Sweat trickled down his temple, his sleeve coming away damp when he wiped it.
Status.
The thought wavered like a candle in the wind.
[Trace Suppression: 38% - Critical Instability]
[Stress Reaction: Elevated]
[Reward: Trace Suppression Technique (Intermediate) - Unlocked]
Two more minutes in that chair and his trace would have spiked like a beacon. Elder Shen would have seen. Game over.
His spine creaked as he forced it straight, peeling away from the wall. The administrative district loomed around him, each shadow potentially hiding watching eyes.
Walk,
he commanded his leaden legs.
Each step down the corridor felt mechanical, joints moving like rusted hinges. He reached through the chaos in his mind, searching for that familiar warmth. That anchor.
âXueya?â
Her presence flooded him like sunlight through ice, but sharp with worry. She felt the tremors in his soul.
âIâm fine,
he projected through gritted teeth.
I survived.â
Her response pulsed against his mind, frantic.
Go back to the quarters. Lock the door. Donât let them see you shaken.
His lips twisted in a brittle smile as he rounded the corner. She read his body like a book now, knew the calm exterior masked a raging current beneath.
"Iâm going," he breathed.
The transit plazaâs sunlight stabbed at his eyes. Two inner disciples drifted past, silk whispering against silk. Their eyes raked over his damp hairline, his pale face.
"Looks like the Elder chewed him up."
"Probably begged for mercy."
Lin Tian kept his gaze forward, each step measured. The burning in his wrist fueled him, spite held his shoulders square.
Let them laugh. His legs still carried him forward.
The duel petition appeared on the slab at midday, carved into the ranking board with fresh ink that hadnât yet dried.
Chen Rui (#18) formally challenges Lin Tian (#19).
Terms: Standard arena. Two days hence, Hour of the Ox.
Lin Tian studied the characters while disciples gathered behind him like crows to carrion. Chen Ruiâs name carried weight in the outer sectâprecise swordsmanship, ice-aligned techniques refined over three years, and a reputation for dismantling opponents through methodical control.
"Looks like someone wants his rank back," a voice muttered.
"Chen Rui doesnât lose to upstarts."
Lin Tian turned from the board without acknowledging them. His wrist pulsed beneath the bracer, a warning tremor heâd learned to recognize.
Morning cultivation the next day brought the crisis heâd been delaying.
Cross-legged in his quarters, Lin Tian focused on the circulation pattern Elder Mei had taught himâsteady compression, layer by layer. But the trace resisted like a living thing, agitated by weeks of accumulated pressure from surveillance formations, evaluation interviews, and suppressed emotional spikes.
The Systemâs display flickered into his peripheral vision.
[Trace Suppression: 44% - Severe Instability]
[Warning: Sustained suppression below 50% may trigger automatic reporting]
His breath stuttered. Sweat beaded along his hairline as he compressed deeper, forcing the volatile energy into tighter spirals. For a moment it heldâthen recoiled like a spring pushed too far.
The trace flared hot against his wrist.
Lin Tianâs eyes snapped open, his hand clamping over the mark. The heat faded slowly, reluctantly. His pulse hammered against his ribs.
Diminishing returns.
He could compress the trace all he wanted, but without addressing the underlying pressure, he was only delaying the inevitable spike.
He needed a different approach.
The libraryâs frost-etched doors opened to the same hostile attendant as before, a thin-faced woman whose eyes tracked him like a hunting bird.
"Tier Two access," Lin Tian said evenly, presenting his updated jade token.
She examined it longer than necessary before waving him through.
The second floorâs shelves held older manuals, their spines cracked and faded. Lin Tian moved between them methodically, fingers trailing along worn leather until he found what he needed.
Cold Density Adaptation: Methods for Foundation Stabilization Under External Pressure.
He cracked it open, scanning the brittle pages. The text described techniques used by disciples stationed at hostile border peaksâmethods for acclimating to environments that constantly stressed the meridians. Not suppression. Adaptation.
Accept the pressure. Compress gradually. Redirect incrementally. Never absorb fully.
Lin Tianâs eyes narrowed. This wasnât about forcing the trace into submission. It was about teaching his body to function normally under abnormal conditions.
He copied three diagrams onto spare parchment and left before the attendant could question his selection.
Xu Wen found him that afternoon in the outer training yard, practicing footwork on ice-slicked stone.
"Heard about Chen Rui," Xu Wen said without preamble. "You planning to match him blow for blow?"
Lin Tian paused mid-step. "Should I?"
"Only if you want to lose." Xu Wen leaned against the courtyard wall, arms crossed. "Chen Rui fights like water freezingâslowly tightening control until you canât move. Heâll trap you in incremental advantages."
"So i need disrupt his rhythm."
"Exactly." Xu Wen tilted his head. "Donât let him set the pace. Force him to react instead of plan."
Lin Tian nodded slowly, resuming his footwork. The advice aligned with what heâd read. Donât absorb Chen Ruiâs pressureâredirect it.
"Why help me?"
Xu Wen shrugged. "You saved my skin in the Snowfield Hunt. Besides, watching you climb makes the rest of us look better."
Lin Tian smiled.
That night, Lin Tian reached through the Link deliberately, searching for Xueyaâs presence.
The warmth responded immediately but felt constrained, like a flame pressed beneath glass. Her frustration bled throughâsharp edges of worry wrapped in forced calm.
âTheyâre watching you constantly,â
he projected.
Her response came measured, controlled, each word carefully chosen despite the turmoil he could sense beneath.
âEvery breath. Every meal. Every moment I spend away from the main halls.â
The frustration leaked through more strongly now, sharp-edged and bitter.
âThey ask about you daily and your training habits, your demeanor, whether you seem different. Elder Shen watches me like Iâm a cracked vessel that might shatter at any moment.â
Lin Tian could picture it clearly: the subtle interrogations disguised as concern, the way conversations would pivot toward him whenever Xueya appeared. The careful scrutiny of every reaction, every flicker of expression that might betray something deeper than a discipleâs interest in her bonded spirit beast.
âWhat do you tell them?â
âI tell them youâre progressing well,â
she continued, and he felt her forcing calm back into the connection.
âThat your cultivation seems steady, unremarkable. They want to believe youâre simply what you appear to be.â
âThat youâre exactly what you appear to be.â
The last word carried weight that settled into his chest. Lin Tian exhaled slowly, leaning back against the wall of his quarters.
âIâm dueling Chen Rui tomorrow. #18.â
A pause. Then warmth surged through the Link, fierce and bright.
âWin.â
Lin Tianâs hand drifted to his wrist, where the trace pulsed against his skin. For the first time in days, it felt almost quiet.
The night before the duel, Lin Tian didnât train.
He sat cross-legged in meditation, visualizing the fight not as a battle to dominate but as a controlled demonstration. Each movement precise. Each response calculated.
The trace settled incrementally, responding to his deliberate calm.
[Trace Suppression: 49% - Stabilizing]
One percent from critical failure. The margin between maintaining his carefully constructed facade and complete exposure hung by the thinnest of threads.
Lin Tian opened his eyes as pale moonlight filtered through the narrow window of his quarters, casting long shadows across the sparse furnishings. The silver light seemed to mirror the precarious balance he walked, bright enough to see by, but cold and unforgiving in its clarity. His breathing had steadied during the meditation, each inhalation drawing in not just air but resolve, each exhalation releasing the tension that had coiled in his muscles like a serpent ready to strike.
The trace at his wrist remained mercifully quiet, its usual restless energy subdued by hours of focused mental discipline. He could feel it there, dormant but not defeated, a sleeping dragon that could wake at the slightest provocation. Tomorrowâs duel would test every technique heâd learned about suppression, every moment of hard-won control.
Tomorrow isnât about proving strength,
he thought, the words forming with crystalline clarity in the silence of his mind.
Itâs about proving control.
The distinction felt crucial now, more than it ever had before. Strength could be flashy, overwhelming, attention-grabbingâall the things he couldnât afford to be. But control? Control was invisible until you needed it most.
The System pulsed in agreement.
[Mission Updated: Defeat Chen Rui without trace activation.]
[Reward: Advanced Suppression unlocked.]
End of Chapter 60