Lin Tian turned back to Lu Cang. He reached into a pouch at his belt and pulled out a small, porcelain vial. He tossed it to him. "High-grade marrow cleansing pill. Itâll help purge any residual foreign qi from their drain and stabilize your foundation. Donât waste it."
Lu Cang caught the vial, his thick fingers closing around the cool porcelain. It was a Tier-3 medicinal pill, incredibly valuable for an outer disciple. It was the kind of resource you hoarded for a life-or-death breakthrough, not given away to a teammate whoâd just been captured.
He looked from the vial to Lin Tianâs impassive face. Something heavy and solid settled in his chest, right next to the ache of his wounds.
All his life, Lu Cang had understood strength. He came from a minor branch family, where strength was the only currency that mattered. Heâd respected Lin Tian after the ranking duels, after seeing him break the Frozen Sword Faction. But that was respect for a superior, a talented rival on the same path.
This was different.
Watching Lin Tian descend like a natural disaster, seeing the two women beside him reveal power that redefined their very roles, witnessing the utter, effortless dismantling of a prepared enemy formation... it wasnât just superior strength. It was a different
scale
. Lin Tian wasnât just walking the path ahead of him. He seemed to be
redrawing the map
.
And this man, this monster wearing a discipleâs robes, had just turned his back on five enemies to check on him. Had given him a pill worth a small fortune without a second thought. Had called him âbait that fights backâ like it was a compliment.
Lu Cang wasnât a man of pretty words. He was earth and stone, slow to move but impossible to shift once set. He uncorked the vial with his teeth, swallowed the pill in one gulp. A warm, cleansing flow immediately began to soothe his torn meridians. He took a deep, shuddering breath, the first clean breath since the trap had closed.
Then he sheathed his broadsword across his back. He took a painful, deliberate step forward, and then he went down on one knee again. Not from weakness. This was a choice.
He bowed his head, not to the ground, but in a deep, formal nod of submission. "Young Master Lin," he said, the title feeling right for the first time. "This oneâs life was yours the moment you stepped into this canyon. My sword, my strength, my loyalty. They are yours to command. Not for the sect. Not for duty. For today."
He looked up, his eyes clear and fierce. "Just point me at the next wall that needs breaking."
Lin Tian looked down at him for a long moment. He saw the genuine shift, the unshakable conviction in the manâs eyes. Lu Cang wasnât offering flattery or temporary alliance. He was pledging his path.
A solid foundation,
Lin Tian thought.
Better than any fleeting power.
He gave a single, slow nod. "Get up. We have a Progenitor Core Fragment to find. And you," he said, his voice dropping slightly, "are going to need a new sword after weâre done. That oneâs got a crack in the tang from you leaning on it."
A startled, rough laugh escaped Lu Cangâs throat. He pushed himself to his feet, standing taller than before. "Yes, Young Master."
Behind them, Su Lan finished securing the last prisoner with cords of shimmering energy. Xueya walked over, her gaze sweeping the canyon. "The Nexus Key is still pulling us toward the central spire," she said softly to Lin Tian. "But the resonance is stronger now. I think... I think it reacted to your Domain."
Lin Tian focused inward. The amber key in his spatial pouch was warm, almost humming. The Systemâs interface flickered at the edge of his vision.
Mission Update: Secure Teammate â Complete.
Team Cohesion: Increased.
Progenitor Core Fragment Resonance: Amplified.
Warning: Significant spiritual disturbance detected at primary coordinates. Rival factions converging.
He looked toward the far end of the obsidian canyon, where the tunnel theyâd originally been heading down continued into darkness. The path to the core was no longer just a treasure hunt.
It was a gauntlet.
And everyone in the Rift now knew exactly where the prize was headed.
Lin Tian didnât waste another thought on the defeated disciples. The Nexus Key in his spatial ring pulsed with a deep, resonant warmth, tugging him toward the heart of the Rift. He looked at his team.
Lu Cang was battered but upright, his jaw set in a hard line. Xueya stood poised, a light dusting of frost still clinging to her sleeves. Su Lanâs hands glowed faintly with residual golden heat. They were waiting for his lead.
"The core fragment is ahead," Lin Tian said, his voice cutting through the low moan of the canyon wind. "The path isnât a walk. The System calls it a âChaos Storm.â Itâs the Riftâs final defense."
"A storm of what?" Lu Cang asked, wiping blood from his brow.
"Raw spiritual energy. Unrefined. Contradictory. It shreds techniques and shatters shields." Lin Tian met Xueyaâs eyes, then Su Lanâs. "We canât fly over it. We have to walk through."
"Through that?" Lu Cang gestured vaguely in the direction the Key was pulling them. From here, the canyon just seemed to end in a wall of swirling, multicolored mist. But Lin Tian could feel the titanic pressure waiting beyond, a psychic roar of pure disorder.
"We have an advantage they donât," Lin Tian said, tapping his chest lightly. The bonds within him hummed in responseâone a river of glacial silver, the other a coil of molten gold. "Two opposing, harmonized energies. We can create a pocket of order inside the chaos. A bubble."
He looked at Lu Cang. "Your job is the physical. The storm will throw debrisârock, crystal, maybe chunks of broken formations. Keep them off us. Iâll be maintaining the barrier. I canât split my focus."
Lu Cang hefted his broadsword, the motion steadying him. "I can do that."
"Xueya. Su Lan." They both stepped closer. "Donât feed me power. Donât try to help. Just be present. Be stable. The barrier works by resonating with the balanced state of our bond. If either of you fluctuates, the bubble pops. We get shredded."
Xueya gave a single, sharp nod. Su Lan took a slow, deliberate breath, letting the last embers of combat heat fade into a steady, banked warmth. "Weâre ready," she said.
"Then we go."
They walked to the end of the obsidian canyon. The wall of mist wasnât mist at all. It was a seething, roaring wall of conflicting colorsâviolet lightning crackled against emerald fog, ribbons of crimson fire bled into pools of indigo shadow. The sound was a physical thing, a deafening scream of a world being torn apart and remade over and over.
Lin Tian stopped at the very edge. The wind whipped at his hair, stinging his face with droplets of condensed spiritual poison. He closed his eyes.
In his mindâs eye, he didnât see the storm. He saw two threads. One was Xueya, a line of perfect, intricate frost, complex and beautiful. The other was Su Lan, a cord of vibrant, resilient flame, warm and enduring. They were separate, but they were linked to him, and through him, to each other.
He reached for them.
Not to draw power, but to
tune
them. Like adjusting the strings of an instrument. He felt Xueyaâs glacial essence, cool and vast. He felt Su Lanâs ember heart, fierce and nurturing. He didnât pull them together. He let his own Ice Flame Qi, the product of their union, become the median. The balancing point.
A sphere of silent clarity began to form around him, pushing back the howling chaos. It was invisible, but he could feel its edgeâa thin shell of perfect harmonic resonance.
"Step inside," he said, his voice strained. The effort was immense. It wasnât about brute force, it was about impossible, delicate precision while holding back an ocean.
Xueya moved first, gliding to his right side. Su Lan took his left. Lu Cang positioned himself at their backs, sword ready. The moment they were all within the conceptual boundary, Lin Tian took the first step into the storm.
The world vanished.
Chaos swallowed them. It wasnât walking through a hurricane, it was being dissolved in one. Violent psionic winds shrieked, trying to tear their minds apart. Spiritual pressure hammered down, wanting to crush their bones to dust. Through the swirling maelstrom, Lin Tian saw fragments of realityâa floating mountain peak shearing in half, a river of fire flowing upward, a silent explosion of black light.
His barrier held. It shimmered visibly now, a faint, opalescent bubble about ten feet across. Where the chaotic energies touched it, they didnât clash. They smoothed, they calmed, they flowed around the sphere in harmless ripples. The harmony of their three souls repelled the discord.
But the cost was Lin Tianâs complete concentration. Every ounce of his will was poured into maintaining that equilibrium. He became a living conduit, a fulcrum. Sweat beaded on his forehead, then froze, then evaporated from the heat radiating off Su Lan beside him. His meridians ached with the strain of channeling such a perfect, sustained state.
A jagged shard of dark crystal, the size of a man, tumbled out of the fury and slammed toward them.
"Left!" Lu Cang bellowed. He didnât wait. He pivoted, his broadsword flashing in the weird light. He didnât try to block the massive projectile head-on. He struck its edge with a precise, ringing blow, deflecting its course just enough. It screeched past the bubble, missing by inches, and was swallowed by the storm.
"Debris field ahead!" Xueya called out, her voice calm but urgent. Her ice affinity let her sense the density of the matter swirling around them.
Lin Tian couldnât answer. He could only walk, one agonizing step after another, holding the world at bay. He felt Su Lanâs steady, rhythmic breathing beside him, a metronome of life.
He felt Xueyaâs unwavering focus, a pillar of stillness. They were his anchors. Without them, he would have been swept away in seconds.
End of Chapter 137