He has the subtlety of a forest fire,
she replied, her mental voice laced with dry amusement.
His own elders are more upset with him than we are. They came to measure us, and all they learned is that they donât understand our measurements.
Lin Tian took another sip. The taste was better now.
Elder Shen cleared her throat, seamlessly reclaiming the proceedings. "Now that we are all... comfortable," she said, with just the slightest emphasis on the word, "let us proceed with the feast. The conference details will be shared at tomorrowâs assembly."
Servants began to move, bringing out platters of food. The normal sounds of a banquet slowly returned, but the atmosphere was permanently altered.
Lin Tian could feel dozens of eyes on himâweighing, calculating, reassessing. The story of the crippled young master who rose was one thing. Seeing the unshakable calm, the utter disregard for a direct provocation, the ally who could dismantle an attack with a smile... that was something else entirely.
He hadnât thrown a punch. He hadnât flared his aura. He hadnât even stood up.
And he had just publicly, and utterly, humiliated the Crimson Sun Sectâs proudest young genius.
Yan Lang leaned over from behind him, his voice a low murmur meant for Lin Tianâs ears alone. "Subtle. I like it. Heâll be out for blood now, you know."
Lin Tian gave a tiny, almost imperceptible shrug.
Let him come,
he thought, but didnât say aloud.
He caught Xueyaâs eye from across the hall where she sat with the inner disciples. A flicker of silver light passed through their bond, carrying a wave of cold, fierce pride. She had seen it all. She knew what it meant.
The real games hadnât even started yet. But the first move, and the first victory, belonged entirely to Azure Snow.
And to the Vanguard who didnât need to fight to win.
The morning air on the central peak was sharp enough to cut, but Lin Tian breathed it in like a tonic. He stood on the training ground outside his pavilion, moving through the basic forms of the Moonfrost Sword Dance.
Each extension was slow, deliberate, feeling the new weight of his power at the peak of the True Spirit Realm. It was a solid, humming presence in his core, a lake of balanced ice and flame.
Twelve days to the Seventh Level,
the Systemâs mission reminder floated at the edge of his awareness.
The conference is the shortcut.
"Youâre going to wear a groove in the stone," a voice called out.
Su Lan walked across the frosted grass, a steaming clay cup in each hand. She handed one to him. It wasnât tea, but a thin, aromatic medicinal broth that warmed his throat without heating his core.
She was already dressed in her Medical Pavilion robes, her hair neatly braided, but the new depth in her eyesâthe Emberheart Sage Physiqueâwas impossible to hide.
"Better than being soft," Lin Tian said, accepting the cup. He took a sip, feeling the careful blend of herbs soothe the minor fatigue in his meridians. "Any news from the Council?"
"The formal assembly is in an hour. But Yan Lang found me on my way here." Su Lanâs expression turned serious. "He said to tell you itâs not a conference. Itâs a feeding frenzy."
Lin Tian lowered the cup. "Explain."
"He wouldnât. Just said to keep our eyes open and our guards higher. He looked... grim. For him."
Before Lin Tian could press further, a flash of silver light resolved into a small, crystalline bird that landed on his shoulder. It was Xueyaâs messenger. It didnât speak, just projected a single image into his mind: the Grand Assembly Hall, packed, with three high seats at the front that werenât there yesterday. Then it dissolved into motes of cold light.
"Thatâs our cue," Lin Tian said, draining the broth.
They found Xueya waiting for them at the archway leading to the inner peaks. She was flanked by two stern-faced inner disciple minders, a formality she now ignored completely. Her Ice Phoenix aura was a controlled blizzard, held tightly to her body. When she saw Lin Tian, the storm in her eyes calmed to a focused flurry.
"Theyâve brought out the Heart-Seeing Mirrors," she said without preamble, falling into step beside him. The minders followed at a discreet distance, helpless to interfere. "All three sects. This isnât about posturing. They mean to measure everything."
The Grand Assembly Hall was transformed. The long banquet tables were gone. Instead, rows of stone benches ascended in a semicircle, facing a central platform. Floating above the platform were three massive, circular mirrors, each framed in a different material: Azure Snowâs was bound in pale blue ice-metal, Crimson Sunâs in dark, volcanic rock, and Void Whisperâs in smooth, polished wood that seemed to absorb the light.
The air thrummed with suppressed spiritual pressure. Disciples from the three sects were segregated by colorâazure, crimson, and charcoal greyâbut the lines of attention cut across the room like knives. Lin Tian felt the weight of dozens of gazes the moment he walked in with Xueya and Su Lan. Curiosity, hostility, calculation.
Yan Lang waved them over to a front-row bench reserved for Azure Snowâs conference team. The Hidden Dragons were already there: Shan, Gor, Wei, Lian. They nodded at Lin Tian, their earlier casual respect hardened into something more professional.
"Took your time," Yan Lang muttered, but his eyes were scanning the Crimson Sun contingent. Zhu Yan was glaring from across the hall, his earlier humiliation burned into his expression like a brand.
"Whatâs the frenzy about?" Lin Tian asked quietly, taking a seat.
"Youâll see."
A chime sounded, deep and resonant, silencing the hall. Three figures walked onto the central platform. Elder Shen Ruoyi for Azure Snow. The Rust-Beard Elder from Crimson Sun, who Lin Tian now heard introduced as Elder Zhu. And the whispery-voiced woman from Void Whisper, Elder Ming.
Elder Shen spoke first, her voice amplified by the hallâs formation. "Welcome to the true commencement of the Heavenly Dawn Inter-Sect Conference. We gather not merely for fellowship, but for a shared opportunityâand a shared trial."
She gestured upward. The three mirrors shimmered, and their surfaces melted away, showing not reflections, but a chaotic, swirling landscape of broken mountains, floating islands of rock, and rivers of shimmering energy that bled color into a starless black sky.
"This," Elder Shen said, "is the Progenitor Rift."
A murmur rippled through the disciples. Lin Tian leaned forward. The spatial pocket was vast, and utterly alien. He saw fragments of architectureâa shattered pagoda here, a half-collapsed bridge thereâall drifting in the silent void. Glimpses of glowing plants pulsed on some islands. On others, shadows moved with deliberate, predatory grace.
"It is an unstable dimensional pocket, recently anchored to our realm," Elder Zhu of Crimson Sun boomed, taking over. "Within it are fragments of legacies from a time before our sects. Techniques. Divine herbs. Spirit ore. Even traces of progenitor cultivation methods."
"It is also profoundly dangerous," Elder Ming whispered, yet her voice carried perfectly. "The laws of reality are... frayed. Spatial tears appear without warning. The native creatures are adapted to chaos. And the rift itself is collapsing. We estimate it will remain accessible for no more than three lunar cycles."
Elder Shen stepped forward again. "Entry is limited. The rift can only bear so much spiritual pressure before it destabilizes completely. Therefore, the sects must compete for entry slots and for priority within."
So thatâs the game,
Lin Tian thought.
Theyâre not fighting for pride. Theyâre fighting for loot.
"The first phase," Elder Shen continued, "will determine the allocation of slots and the order of entry. Each sect will field a team of five in a series of exhibition matches. The matches are not to submission or injury, but to demonstrated mastery, control, and adaptability. The floating mirrorsâthe Heart-Seeing Mirrorsâwill judge and score each performance."
She looked out at the crowd, her gaze lingering on the Azure Snow team. "Victory in these matches earns points. The sect with the most points chooses its entry time and receives the largest allocation of stable entry tokens. The tokens are your lifelines inside. Lose one, and you will be trapped when the rift seals."
The stakes settled over the hall, cold and heavy. This wasnât a sparring tournament. It was a prelude to a life-or-death scramble.
"The matches begin at dawn tomorrow," Elder Zhu announced, a competitive fire in his eyes. "Prepare your teams. The rules are simple: no killing strikes, no permanent crippling techniques. Everything else... is a demonstration of your worth."
The elders stepped down, and the hall erupted in conversation. Lin Tian felt a tap on his shoulder. It was Xu Wen, slipping through the crowd with a tense expression.
"You need to see this," Xu Wen murmured, jerking his head toward a side exit.
Lin Tian exchanged a look with Xueya and Su Lan, then followed Xu Wen out into a secluded corridor behind the hall. The noise faded to a dull roar.
End of Chapter 127