MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 124: PSEUDO-SOVEREIGN

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Chapter 124: PSEUDO-SOVEREIGN

Chapter 124 — THE ONE WHO WATCHES

The desert did not forget.

It only buries.

Beyond the eastern wall of Ruinsand, where the Pseudo-Sovereign had retreated into shifting dunes, the sand continued to move long after the hunters believed the threat had withdrawn. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶

Not violently.

Not visibly.

Just enough.

Deep beneath the surface, where no ordinary patrol would ever reach, the skeletal creature did not collapse into sleep.

It lowered itself.

Folded its elongated limbs.

And waited.

Farther still—beneath layers of sediment older than the Guild itself—an ancient chamber pulsed faintly.

Not carved.

Not constructed.

Grown.

The walls were layered with hardened mineral veins, each one etched with spiraling lines that resembled both language and claw marks. A faint amber glow flickered along those veins, traveling like a heartbeat through the stone.

At the center of the chamber stood a figure.

Tall.

Wrapped in layered desert cloth that concealed everything but the eyes.

Those eyes were not amber.

They were silver.

And they were open.

"You responded," the cloaked figure murmured softly.

The pulse along the chamber walls intensified briefly.

Above, miles of sand shifted imperceptibly.

"Not to the wall," the figure continued. "To him."

The Pseudo-Sovereign’s massive presence resonated faintly through the ground like a distant echo.

The figure closed their eyes for a moment.

"He carries it."

There was no anger in the voice.

No surprise.

Only inevitability.

For generations, the chamber had remained dormant.

For centuries, the seal lines had not glowed.

But now—

They were awake.

And somewhere far above—

Long Hao stood at the battlement, staring across the horizon as repair teams reinforced the cracked stone.

The desert wind carried fine sand against his robe, brushing against fabric still marked faintly with festival dye from the night before.

Zehell stood beside him.

She had not moved far since the creature retreated.

"Silver squads are sweeping the perimeter," she said calmly. "High Command wants reports from everyone who was present."

He nodded.

"They’ll ask what you did."

"Yes."

"What will you tell them?"

"The truth."

She glanced at him sideways.

"And that is?"

"That I didn’t attack it."

Her gaze sharpened slightly.

"That’s not an answer."

He didn’t respond.

Below them, Colby leaned against a stack of reinforcement crystals, watching engineers argue over stabilization matrices.

"Does it feel like we just got measured?" he muttered to Marek.

Marek didn’t joke this time.

"Yes."

Ryn crouched near the fracture line in the stone, studying faint residue left by the Pseudo-Sovereign’s strike.

"Energy signature is unstable," he called upward. "It wasn’t just brute force."

Darius stood silent, spear planted firmly beside him.

The wall still hummed faintly.

Longyu’s voice surfaced again in Long Hao’s mind.

"It did not intend to breach."

He narrowed his eyes.

"It tested."

"Yes."

"And withdrew when something deeper responded."

Long Hao’s gaze shifted toward the dunes again.

"The secondary fragment."

"Confirmed."

His pulse slowed.

"If there is a second fragment here, it is older than Sector Three."

"Correct."

"And stronger."

"Likely."

The weight of that settled heavily in his chest.

Zehell stepped closer.

"You went toward it."

"Yes."

"You didn’t hesitate."

"No."

She studied him carefully.

"Because you weren’t afraid?"

He finally looked at her fully.

"No," he said quietly. "Because it wasn’t trying to kill us."

That answer did not comfort her.

Before she could respond, a shadow fell across the battlement.

The Silver officer from earlier approached, cloak snapping lightly in the wind.

"Captain Zehell. Debrief now."

Zehell nodded.

She turned briefly to Long Hao.

"You’re coming."

He followed without protest.

Inside the Guild headquarters, the atmosphere was controlled but strained.

Hunters moved with precision.

No panic.

But no ease either.

They were led into a circular chamber lined with reinforced crystal panels. At the center stood a round stone table etched with detection arrays.

The Silver officer gestured for them to stand within the etched circle.

Long Hao stepped inside.

The moment his foot crossed the boundary—

The arrays flickered.

Zehell noticed immediately.

So did the officer.

"Stand still," the officer said sharply.

Long Hao complied.

The crystal panels glowed faintly.

A soft hum filled the room.

The officer studied a floating projection above the table.

"Residual frequency detected."

Zehell’s posture stiffened.

"From him?"

The officer did not answer immediately.

She adjusted the projection.

Two waveforms appeared.

One faint and stabilizing.

One distant and stronger.

Long Hao saw it.

Two pulses.

Separated.

Connected.

The officer’s voice was controlled.

"You engaged the entity."

"I did not attack," Long Hao said calmly.

"You stepped forward."

"Yes."

"Why?"

He chose his words carefully.

"It wasn’t behaving like a territorial predator."

The officer’s eyes sharpened.

"And what does that mean?"

"It was probing."

"For what?"

He met her gaze evenly.

"Something inside the wall."

The officer’s jaw tightened.

"You’re suggesting it targeted reinforcement arrays?"

"Yes."

"And why would it do that?"

Long Hao did not answer immediately.

Zehell watched him closely.

Because of you?

Because of resonance?

Because of the fragment?

He exhaled slowly.

"Because something here answered it."

Silence settled in the chamber.

The projection flickered again.

The officer dismissed it abruptly.

"This matter is above Bronze clearance."

Zehell stepped forward slightly.

"Then escalate."

The officer’s gaze flicked to her.

"It already has."

Outside the chamber—

Far beneath the desert—

The cloaked figure opened their eyes again.

The pulse in the chamber intensified.

A whisper moved through the carved veins.

"He walks under the wall."

The figure stepped toward the center of the ancient chamber.

A circular indentation in the stone floor glowed faintly.

The figure knelt.

"Soon."

Above, the Pseudo-Sovereign shifted beneath the dunes but did not rise.

It had received instruction.

Not from instinct.

From something deeper.

Back in Ruinsand—

The debrief ended with no resolution.

Zehell and Long Hao exited the chamber into a hallway lined with heavy stone pillars.

She stopped walking.

"You didn’t lie," she said quietly.

"No."

"But you didn’t tell them everything."

"No."

She studied him for a long moment.

"I won’t ask you what you’re hiding."

He blinked once.

"You won’t?"

"I will ask something else."

He waited.

"If it comes back—"

She didn’t finish the sentence.

"If it breaches the wall."

Her voice was steady.

"Will you be able to stop it?"

Long Hao thought of the secondary fragment.

The deeper pulse.

The silver-eyed figure he did not know existed.

"I don’t know," he said honestly.

She nodded slowly.

"Then we prepare as if you can’t."

He gave a faint nod in return.

Operational clarity.

That was her way.

Outside, the desert wind rose slightly.

Sand traced faint spirals along the base of the wall.

Far beyond sight—

The cloaked figure stood once more.

Silver eyes reflecting the faint amber glow of the chamber.

"He is incomplete," the figure murmured.

"And so am I."

The carved veins along the chamber wall pulsed once more.

Not violently.

Not urgently.

But steadily.

A signal.

The second fragment had awakened.

And now—

Both sides knew.

Above, in the city protected by stone and discipline—

Long Hao looked once more toward the horizon.

The wall had held.

For now.

But this was no longer about a King-tier raid.

Nor a rogue Pseudo-Sovereign.

This was something older.

Something patient.

And it was watching him.

[Chapter ENDS]