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MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 114: FRACTURED ECHO
Chapter 114 — FRACTURED ECHO
The desert wind howled once more before settling into a low, restless hum.
The exposed slab was already sinking back into the sand, as if embarrassed by its own appearance. Whatever had risen had retreated just as abruptly.
Zehell’s grip on her spear loosened slightly, though her eyes never left Long Hao.
"You touched it," she said quietly.
"Yes."
"Why?"
Long Hao did not hesitate.
"I felt like I should check it."
Colby blinked. "That’s it?"
"Yes."
Marek scoffed. "You felt like it?"
Long Hao shrugged faintly. "It wasn’t attacking."
Zehell stepped closer, her boots pressing into the soft sand. The silver lines along her spear dimmed gradually as the tension faded.
"And?"
Long Hao glanced at the slab, now half-buried again.
"It wasn’t reacting to us."
The wind brushed across the dunes.
Zehell’s gaze sharpened. "Then what was it reacting to?"
Long Hao met her eyes calmly.
"...Proximity."
"Whose?" she asked.
There was a half-second pause.
"Mine."
No dramatics.
Just fact.
The others fell silent.
Colby let out a short breath through his nose. "You’re saying that thing came up because of you?"
"I am not implying that," Long Hao replied evenly. "But it changed when I stepped closer."
That was true.
It just wasn’t complete.
Zehell studied him for a long moment.
He wasn’t sweating.
He looked... analytical.
As if he had just tested a theory.
She didn’t like that.
But she didn’t challenge it.
"Report to base," she said finally. "We document this."
They moved quickly after that. The exposed area was marked with temporary signal flares and scanned for residual energy. Ryn muttered about unusual waveform spikes. Darius kept glancing at Long Hao like he was trying to measure something invisible.
The jeep ride back was quiet.
Long Hao leaned back against the metal frame, staring at the desert horizon.
But he wasn’t seeing sand.
He was seeing shadow.
Not a clear memory.
A flicker.
A black sky torn by lightning.
A shape—massive, fractured—falling through clouds.
His chest tightened.
Why did that image surface?
Why did the vibration from the slab feel familiar?
Not in this life.
Older.
Deeper.
Like something brushing against the edge of memory that had never belonged to this body.
Why did it respond to my core?
No, Not core.
Code.
The word surfaced unbidden.
As if something had recognized a signature.
Something else.
The jeep jolted over a dune.
The vision snapped.
He blinked.
Colby glanced back. "You good?"
"Yes."
He looked toward the wall ahead.
The massive stone barrier of Ruinsand loomed closer, immovable and imposing.
But for the first time—
He wondered if it was truly holding things out.
Or holding something in.
—
Inside the guild headquarters, Zehell moved quickly.
She filed an immediate anomaly report to upper command.
"Construct type?" the duty officer asked.
"Non-organic. Seal-activated. Ground response tied to slab displacement."
"Cause?"
She paused.
"...Unknown."
She didn’t mention Long Hao.
Not yet.
Because she didn’t know what he was.
And she didn’t want speculation before certainty.
When she left the reporting chamber, she found Long Hao already turning down the dormitory corridor.
He didn’t look shaken.
He looked... thoughtful.
That unsettled her more than fear would have.
—
That night, Ruinsand was quiet.
Too quiet.
Long Hao stood in his room, lights dimmed.
The city beyond the window shimmered faintly under lantern glow.
He closed his eyes.
"Longyu."
Silence.
Then—
A flicker.
The Eclipse interface materialized slowly, like a system booting from deep sleep.
[ SYSTEM RE-INITIALIZATION COMPLETE ]
His gaze hardened.
"What was that?"
A pause.
Then text scrolled.
[ MEMORY ARCHIVE CORRUPTED ][ DRACONIC SIGNATURE MATCH DETECTED ][ FRAGMENT RECOGNITION EVENT ]
The words lingered.
He exhaled slowly.
"Explain."
Longyu’s voice came quieter than usual.
"I cannot access full archive."
"Why?"
"Because it is incomplete."
"Incomplete how?"
Another pause.
"Because, I was not created for you."
His eyes sharpened.
"...What does that mean?"
Silence stretched.
Then—
"I was fractured."
The word hung heavy in the air.
Long Hao didn’t blink.
"Fractured from what?"
"I do not possess full designation."
"Try."
A faint distortion ran across the interface.
"Original host was not you."
His pulse remained steady.
"And?"
"There is another part."
A flicker of something stirred inside him.
Not panic.
Recognition.
The desert slab.
The vibration.
The pause before the construct attacked.
"That slab," he said quietly. "Was it connected?"
"Yes."
The answer came instantly.
He inhaled slowly.
"Was it reacting to me... or to you?"
"...Both."
The interface glitched briefly.
[ ANCHOR SYNCHRONIZATION: 31% ]
His gaze narrowed.
"What is Anchor?"
"Primary resonance core."
"Define."
"Unknown classification. Ancient."
He closed his eyes.
The black sky image flashed again.
Cracked wings.
Falling light.
A voice echoing through thunder—
Carry it.
His jaw tightened.
"Why did that memory surface?"
"Because synchronization increases retrieval probability."
"Retrieval of what?"
"Past imprint."
He opened his eyes.
"So this is tied to my previous life."
"Yes."
"How?"
"I do not possess full archive."
That irritated him.
"Then give me what you have."
The system responded slowly.
[ PARTIAL LOG ACCESS ]
A fragmented audio trace filled the room.
Distorted.
Deep.
Not fully understandable.
"...If I fall... the eclipse must not vanish..."
Static.
"...fragment... scatter... wait for resonance..."
The audio cut abruptly.
Long Hao stood still.
That wasn’t imagination.
That wasn’t dream.
That was recorded.
His throat tightened faintly.
"I was involved."
"Yes."
"In what?"
"Seal event."
The word made the air feel heavier.
"Was I the one who fractured you?"
Silence.
Longyu’s voice returned softer.
"...You carried me."
Not "created."
Not "summoned."
Carried.
He looked toward the wall.
"And now?"
"Resonance has resumed."
"With the other part."
"Yes."
He ran a hand slowly through his hair.
"So the teleport."
"It was not external displacement."
"What was it?"
"Convergence." 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂
His gaze sharpened.
"Meaning?"
"The other fragment exerted pull."
"Because of interference at the tournament."
"Yes."
"And it pulled..."
"The matching half."
He stood in silence.
That meant—
He was not whole.
Something had remained behind.
Or something had been incomplete all along.
"What happens if synchronization reaches one hundred percent?"
The interface paused longer this time.
"Outcome uncertain."
"Try."
"...Integration."
"Of what?"
"Fragment and fragment."
"And me?"
"Unknown."
He exhaled.
That was honest.
Too honest.
He turned toward the window again.
The wall stood firm in the distance.
But now he could feel it.
A faint thrum beneath the city.
Low.
Patient.
Waiting.
"Does it know I’m here?"
"Yes."
A quiet answer.
His eyes darkened slightly.
"Does it want something?"
"...Completion."
The word didn’t sound hostile.
It sounded inevitable.
He was silent for several seconds.
Then he asked the question he’d been avoiding.
"Was I meant to find it?"
Longyu did not respond immediately.
When she did, her voice was barely above a whisper.
"You were meant to carry it."
He closed his eyes again.
Fragments.
Fracture.
Seal event.
Past life echo.
Dragon signature.
Nothing was complete.
But something had begun.
Outside, the desert wind shifted.
Deep beneath the guild headquarters—
The Anchor pulsed once more.
And in his room, Long Hao felt the echo answer.
Not violently.
But undeniably.
There was another part.
And it had recognized him.
[Chapter ENDS]







