The cold from the observation platform clung to Lin Tianâs bones long after he left the thin, oppressive air of the central peak.
He walked down the carved stone steps, his footsteps echoing in the quiet mountain pass. His mind was a churning storm of ice and fire.
Three days.
The words beat in time with his heart.
Three days until they try to take her.
He shoved his hands into the pockets of his outer disciple robes, fingers curling into fists.
The fabric was coarse, a reminder of his place in the sectâs hierarchy. A place Mu Chen had made perfectly clear was temporary, and expendable.
The path wound down into the more crowded lanes of the outer disciple quarters. The afternoon sun did little to warm the perpetual chill here, but the bustle of disciples returning from training, chatting in small groups, was a stark contrast to the silent judgment of the peaks above.
Lin Tian kept his head down, his aura compressed tight. He didnât need the System to warn him that eyes were watching. He could feel them.
His stomach growled, a blunt, physical reminder of the strain of the last few days. He hadnât eaten since before the Spire. The body, even one tempered by Peak Elementary Spirit Realm cultivation, still had its demands.
The main refectory was a large, vaulted hall built into the side of the mountain, its stone walls sweating condensation.
The smell of simple grain porridge, steamed buns, and roasted mountain tubers wafted out, mixed with the murmur of a hundred low conversations.
Lin Tian paused at the entrance. The hall was crowded, long wooden tables packed with disciples in gray and white robes. The air was thick with steam and the low hum of gossip.
He saw a few faces he recognizedâXu Wen sitting alone at a corner table, head bent over a bowl, and farther off, Zhao Yuming laughing too loudly with a group from the Alchemy Hall.
Three disciples sat there, their postures too relaxed, their eyes scanning the room with a lazy arrogance.
They wore the subtle silver trim on their sleeves that marked them as aspirants to the inner court, lackeys who clung to the coattails of true power.
Lin Tian didnât know their names, but he recognized the type. They were Frozen Sword faction, through and through. And one of them, a lean disciple with a sharp nose, was looking right at him.
A slow, deliberate smile spread across the sharp-nosed discipleâs face. He nudged the disciple beside him, a bulky youth with thick shoulders.
Both of them turned to watch Lin Tian approach the serving counter.
Here we go,
Lin Tian thought, the ice in his core giving a faint, anticipatory pulse.
He joined the short line, collected a plain wooden tray, and moved past the servers. A ladleful of bland-looking porridge was slopped into a bowl. A steamed bun was placed beside it.
He took the meal, his movements automatic. As he turned from the counter, the sharp-nosed disciple was suddenly there, stepping into his path.
"Oh, apologies, brother," the disciple said, his voice slick. He made a show of stumbling, his hand flailing out. His fingers brushed the rim of Lin Tianâs bowl.
It was a clumsy, obvious move. But Lin Tian felt itâa whisper of something cold and invasive, like a needle of pure frost, slipping from the discipleâs fingertips into the porridge. It wasnât aimed at him physically. It was aimed at the food.
The disciple recovered his balance, his smile still in place. "Clumsy of me. The floors are slick, you know?" He didnât wait for a response, stepping aside with a mock bow.
Lin Tian looked down at his bowl. The porridge looked exactly the same: pale, lumpy, steaming faintly. But to his spiritual sense, honed by the conflicting energies of ice and fire within him, it was now different.
A core of profound, draining cold had been implanted in its center. It wasnât a poison meant to kill the body. It was meant to kill the spirit.
Spirit-Quenching Ice,
the Systemâs voice murmured in his mind, a flat, informational tone.
[A refined toxin. Upon ingestion, it binds to the dantian, temporarily freezing qi circulation and dampening spiritual sense. Effects last between twelve and twenty-four hours, depending on cultivation level. Designed to incapacitate, not kill.]
Lin Tianâs grip tightened on the tray.
So this is their opening move.
A public humiliation. They couldnât attack him directly after the Councilâs verdict, not without cause. But a little "accident" in the refectory?
A disciple who suddenly found his cultivation sluggish and unresponsive on the eve of the betrothal? It would make him look weak. Unstable. It would be proof that Mu Chen was rightâhe was a variable that needed to be removed.
He could throw the bowl away. He could make a scene, accuse the disciple. But that would be playing their game. It would show fear. It would give them the reaction they wanted.
He felt the eyes of the sharp-nosed disciple and his friends on his back. He felt the curious glances from other tables. Xu Wen had looked up from his meal, his expression concerned.
Lin Tian walked calmly to an empty spot at a long table, set his tray down, and sat. He picked up the spoon. The porridge was lukewarm. He could feel the hidden nucleus of cold within it, a tiny, malevolent star waiting to explode in his gut.
They want to freeze my qi,
he thought.
They have no idea whatâs inside me.
He brought the spoon to his mouth. The first taste was just bland grain. Then, as the spoonful passed his lips, he felt it. The Spirit-Quenching Ice activated the moment it touched the warmth of his body. It was like swallowing a shard of glacier that shot straight for his core, seeking to encase his dantian in a shell of deadening frost.
Across the hall, the sharp-nosed disciple leaned forward, his eyes gleaming with anticipation.
Lin Tian closed his eyes. He didnât resist. He didnât try to expel it. Instead, he opened the gates.
His dantian, a swirling vortex of harmonized Ice Flame Qi, reacted not with rejection, but with hunger. The invading cold was pure, concentrated Yin energy, a sibling to the ice that was already half of his being.
As the quenching effect tried to take hold, the "Flame" part of his Qi flared. Not to burn it away, but to temper it.
It was like throwing a cup of water into a roaring forge. The Spirit-Quenching Iceâs intent was utterly alien to the dynamic, balanced chaos of Lin Tianâs core. The Ice part of his Qi recognized the substance, welcomed it, and began to absorb its raw energy. The Flame part catalyzed the process, melting its hostile structure and reducing it to pure, neutral spiritual fuel.
Inside him, it was a silent, violent digestion. A war fought in the space between heartbeats.
Externally, Lin Tian took another spoonful of porridge. He chewed slowly. He swallowed.
A faint, visible mist escaped his lips with his next exhale, not the warm steam of breath in a cold room, but a shimmering, silver-frosted haze that hung in the air for a second before dissolving.
The sharp-nosed discipleâs smile faltered. He exchanged a quick, confused look with his bulky friend.
Lin Tian ate another bite. And another. With each swallow, he felt the foreign cold being dismantled, consumed, and integrated. It wasnât adding to his power but it was being rendered harmless. More than harmless. It was being converted.
He finished the bowl. He picked up the steamed bun and took a large bite. He ate the entire meal, methodically, under the growing silence of the watching disciples.
When the last crumb was gone, he set the spoon down with a soft
clack
on the empty wooden bowl. He looked up, his gaze finding the sharp-nosed disciple across the hall.
The discipleâs face had gone pale. He was staring, his mouth slightly open.
Lin Tian pushed his tray aside. He focused inward for a moment, then deliberately relaxed the tight control on his aura. Not a full release, but a gentle, visible pulse.
A ripple of dual-colored energy, faint as a heat haze, shimmered around him for an instant. A fleeting glimpse of crystalline blue frost intertwined with deep, ember-red warmth. It was there, and then it was gone, suppressed once more.
But the message was sent. His qi wasnât quenched. It wasnât even disturbed. If anything, it seemed... sharper. Cleaner.
A low murmur broke out across the refectory. Disciples whispered, heads turning between Lin Tian and the Frozen Sword lackeys.
"Did you see that?"
"He just... ate it."
"What was in that porridge?"
"Spirit-Quenching Ice, had to be. Iâve seen the effects before."
"And it did nothing?"
The bulky disciple slammed a hand on the table, making the bowls jump. "Sorcery!" he spat, his voice too loud in the hushed hall. "He used some trick! No one absorbs Quenching Ice!"
Lin Tian stood up. He didnât look at the bulky disciple. He looked at the sharp-nosed one, the one who had planted the poison. He took a few steps toward their table.
The chatter in the hall died completely. Every eye was on them.
Lin Tian stopped a few paces away. "The floors are slick," he said, his voice quiet but carrying in the silence. "You should be more careful."
The sharp-nosed disciple flinched. He opened his mouth, but no sound came out.
"If youâre going to deliver a message," Lin Tian continued, his tone conversational, "make sure the recipient can actually read it. This one was... bland. Like the porridge."
He turned and walked toward the exit. He didnât hurry. His steps were measured, his back straight. He could feel the weight of dozens of stares, a mixture of shock, fear, and newfound curiosity.
As he passed Xu Wenâs table, his friend gave him a barely perceptible nod, his eyes wide.
Out in the cold afternoon air, Lin Tian took a deep breath. The residual energy from the Spirit-Quenching Ice was now a cool, steady hum in his veins, completely neutralized.
A snack,
he thought, with a grim inner smile.
The provocation had failed. Publicly. Spectacularly.
But it was only the first move. Mu Chen wouldnât send children to do his work next time.
Lin Tian looked up at the towering peaks, where the Frostheart Residence was hidden behind veils of cloud and formation.
Iâm coming,
he thought, sending the pulse down the bond that connected him to Xueya. It wasnât words, just a surge of unwavering resolve, warm against the sectâs eternal cold.
Somewhere high above, he felt a faint, answering warmth brush against his spirit.
Then he walked on, the eyes of the sect burning into his back.
End of Chapter 91