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MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 127: ASCENSION AND TERMS
Chapter 127 — ASCENSION AND TERMS
The desert did not roar immediately. Slowly. Terribly. Inevitably.
The ridge that had split the dunes in the previous moment expanded outward like the spine of something older than memory. Plates of armored stone unfolded from beneath the sand, each segment interlocking with mechanical precision. Sand did not cascade off it. It orbited.
A massive circular current formed around the emerging structure, spiraling upward into the sky like a pillar of controlled chaos.
Hunters on the battlement staggered as pressure distorted the air. The Guild’s barrier arrays flickered alive—blue sigils igniting one after another across the eastern wall.
Zehell did not look at the creature.
She looked at Long Hao.
Because the creature had paused.
Mid-rise.
Suspended between burial and emergence.
Waiting.
And that meant this was not instinct.
It was assessment.
Beyond the wall, the silver-eyed envoy stood unmoving, cloak snapping sharply in the spiraling wind.
"You have asserted provisional override," it said calmly.
The dunes trembled harder.
"Demonstrate governance."
The final plate of the Sovereign-class entity’s torso breached the surface.
It was not shaped like a beast.
It was shaped like a construct.
Symmetrical.
Segmented.
Its limbs unfolded in deliberate sequence, not animalistic but engineered. Vast stone ribs curved inward toward a hollow core cavity that pulsed faintly with muted amber light.
Not rage.
Not hunger.
Function.
The sky dimmed slightly as atmospheric currents bent around it.
Inside the void—
The two cores spun faster.
The silver-amber core brightened as the creature outside stabilized.
Longyu’s black-gold presence surged defensively.
"He is anchoring to the active construct," she warned.
"If the entity completes surface stabilization, regulatory enforcement begins."
"What does enforcement mean?" Long Hao asked, steady.
The silver core answered first.
"Correction."
Images flashed through the void again.
Cities erased not by fire—but by suppression.
Energy channels forcibly collapsed.
Awakened beings sealed mid-evolution.
The regulation was not malicious.
It was absolute.
"You destabilize balance by resisting unity," the silver fragment continued. "This construct exists to restore it."
Outside—
The Sovereign entity’s head rotated slowly toward the wall.
It had no eyes.
Only a smooth central cavity where light gathered.
Hunters along the battlement lowered weapons without being told to.
Some instinct deeper than fear told them.
This was not prey.
This was judgment.
Zehell stepped half a pace closer to Long Hao.
"You can feel it, can’t you?"
"Yes."
"What does it want?"
He answered without hesitation. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
"Order."
The envoy nodded slightly.
"Correct."
A ripple of vibration rolled across the dunes as the entity’s lower limbs locked into place. The sand around its base hardened into a crystallized lattice, stabilizing its foundation.
Not one grain moved randomly.
Every shift was calculated.
Longyu’s voice sharpened.
"It is linking to planetary ley strata."
The void pulsed violently.
"You have less time than you believe."
Long Hao lifted his gaze toward the rising construct.
He felt it now.
Not as a threat.
As a system.
It was not targeting Ruinsand because it hated it.
It was targeting Ruinsand because of statistical deviation.
The kingdom sat on volatile evolution density.
Unregulated growth.
Excess awakenings.
Too many variables.
Too little calibration.
The silver core’s voice deepened.
"Merge, and it stands down."
The words were not coercive.
They were logistical.
Long Hao closed his eyes briefly.
Inside the void, he pulled both fragments inward again.
This time not as chaos.
As structure.
The spinning cores slowed.
The void reconfigured.
Lines of geometric lattice formed around them, creating a defined chamber of negotiation.
"You speak of balance," Long Hao said evenly.
"But balance for whom?"
"For the biosphere," the silver fragment answered.
"For the planetary continuum."
Longyu flared in response.
"And at what cost?"
"Individual deviation."
The words did not hesitate.
Outside—
The Sovereign entity’s core cavity brightened slightly.
The wall groaned faintly under shifting atmospheric compression.
Silver officers shouted orders, reinforcing outer arrays.
Zehell’s spear hummed as she drove it into the battlement stone, anchoring herself against the pressure.
"You are not taking this city," she said quietly.
The envoy’s silver gaze flicked toward her.
"Cities are incidental."
The creature lifted one arm.
Not fully.
Just enough.
The sky above Ruinsand warped.
Not torn.
Warped.
Energy lines became visible—thin threads connecting horizon to horizon, converging faintly toward the construct’s central cavity.
Longyu’s voice dropped.
"It is mapping instability zones."
Inside the void—
Long Hao stepped closer to the silver core.
"If I merge," he asked calmly, "what becomes of choice?"
"Choice is inefficient."
"And if I refuse?"
"Correction proceeds."
Longyu’s black-gold presence expanded, shielding his consciousness from pressure spikes.
"He will not accept subjugation," she said sharply.
The silver fragment rotated slightly.
"You mistake governance for subjugation."
Images shifted again.
This time clearer.
An earlier age.
Ancient civilizations rising too quickly.
Monsters mutating beyond natural caps.
Entire ecosystems collapsing under runaway evolution.
The Sovereign Regulator descending not to conquer—
But to limit.
"You call it freedom," the silver fragment said.
"We record it as destabilization."
Long Hao inhaled slowly.
Outside—
The Sovereign entity completed surface stabilization.
Both arms fully emerged.
Its lower structure locked into the hardened desert lattice.
A low harmonic tone vibrated outward.
Not audible.
Felt.
Hunters dropped to one knee involuntarily.
Barrier arrays dimmed briefly.
Zehell’s jaw tightened.
"Long Hao."
He heard her.
Inside the void, he turned toward Longyu.
"You rejected unity once," he said.
"Yes."
"Why?"
For the first time—
Longyu hesitated.
"I was designed to regulate."
"Not to choose."
"And I observed."
"What?"
"Human deviation."
The black-gold light flickered softer.
"I observed unpredictability that generated advancement."
The silver core dimmed slightly.
"That advancement destabilized equilibrium."
"It also created resilience," Longyu countered.
The void trembled.
Outside—
The Sovereign entity’s core cavity brightened brighter.
A massive sigil began forming above Ruinsand.
Circular.
Layered.
Complex beyond comprehension.
Hunters stared upward.
Zehell whispered one word.
"Marking."
The envoy spoke clearly now.
"Correction classification imminent."
Inside—
Long Hao extended his hand again.
But not to either fragment.
He touched the lattice between them.
The void geometry shifted.
"You both assume something," he said quietly.
"Singularity."
The silver fragment pulsed.
"It is required."
"Is it?"
The lattice expanded outward.
Instead of forcing convergence—
He created a third axis.
A triangular stabilization matrix.
Longyu flared in realization.
"You are attempting dual-core coexistence."
The silver fragment’s rotation destabilized slightly.
"Impossible."
"Why?" Long Hao asked calmly.
"Because authority must be singular."
"Then redefine authority."
Outside—
The massive sigil above Ruinsand flickered.
The Sovereign entity’s harmonic tone stuttered faintly.
The envoy’s head tilted slightly.
"Interesting."
Inside—
The triangular lattice stabilized briefly.
Longyu’s black-gold light and the silver-amber light began orbiting on separate poles rather than converging.
"Authority does not have to erase deviation," Long Hao said.
"It can regulate thresholds."
The silver fragment’s voice sharpened.
"That introduces inefficiency."
"Yes."
"And?"
Silence.
Outside—
The Sovereign entity’s arm halted mid-lift.
The sigil above the city fractured faintly along one edge.
Hunters gasped.
Zehell’s eyes widened.
The envoy’s cloak snapped sharply in the wind.
"You are modifying protocol."
Inside—
The silver core pulsed erratically.
"You lack full access."
"Then grant it conditionally," Long Hao said.
"For what exchange?"
"Adaptive governance."
The void shook violently as the construct outside pushed back against the destabilized protocol.
Longyu’s voice rang sharply.
"If the entity completes the marking while matrix formation is unstable—"
"Then Ruinsand becomes correction zone," Long Hao finished.
He focused harder.
The triangular lattice sharpened.
Each fragment anchored to a separate node.
Instead of merging—
They synchronized rotational frequency.
Not identical.
Harmonic.
The silver fragment dimmed slightly.
"You would assume shared command?"
"Yes."
"You are incomplete."
"I know."
Outside—
The Sovereign entity’s harmonic tone dropped in pitch.
The sigil above the city dimmed.
The hardened sand lattice around its base cracked slightly as internal command pathways recalibrated.
Hunters looked between sky and construct in stunned silence.
Zehell whispered, almost disbelieving.
"It’s... hesitating."
The envoy spoke softly.
"You are forcing coexistence."
"Yes," Long Hao answered aloud.
His eyes glowed faintly now—one streak of silver, one of black-gold.
The pressure in the air shifted.
Less crushing.
More balanced.
Inside—
The silver fragment’s voice lowered.
"If shared governance fails, correction escalates exponentially."
"I accept risk."
"You risk planetary destabilization."
"I risk everything either way."
Silence filled the void.
Then—
The silver core slowed.
Rotational speed matched Longyu’s frequency precisely.
The triangular lattice solidified.
[ DUAL-FRAGMENT AUTHORITY — TEMPORARY STABILIZATION ]
[ REGULATION PROTOCOL — CONDITIONAL MODE ]
Outside—
The massive sigil in the sky shattered into particles of light.
The Sovereign entity’s raised arm lowered slowly.
Not defeated.
Recalibrated.
The hardened sand lattice beneath it softened slightly.
The harmonic tone ceased.
Wind resumed naturally across the dunes.
Hunters collapsed into relieved exhaustion.
Zehell remained standing.
Watching him.
The envoy lowered its head slightly.
"You have delayed singularity."
"For now."
Long Hao stepped forward once on the battlement.
"You don’t get to erase cities because they’re inconvenient."
The envoy regarded him calmly.
"Inconvenience is irrelevant."
"Then adapt."
The silver eyes narrowed slightly.
"You are not what the fracture originally recorded."
"No."
A faint flicker—almost approval—crossed the envoy’s expression.
"The construct will enter observation state."
The Sovereign entity behind it shifted slightly, lowering its massive frame partially back into the dunes—not retreating, but reducing surface presence.
The sky cleared gradually.
Pressure normalized.
Hunters began helping one another stand.
Zehell approached him slowly.
His glow faded.
His breathing remained steady.
"Did you win?" she asked quietly.
He shook his head once.
"No."
The envoy’s voice carried one last time.
"Shared governance introduces vulnerability."
"It also introduces growth," Long Hao replied.
A pause.
Then—
"Correction cycle postponed."
The envoy stepped backward.
The sand did not swallow it violently.
It simply faded into the dunes.
The Sovereign entity remained half-submerged, silent and watchful.
Inside the void—
The triangular lattice held.
Barely.
Longyu’s voice softened.
"This is unstable."
"I know."
"You now carry dual authority weight."
"I know."
The silver fragment’s voice echoed faintly.
"Adaptive governance trial initiated."
"Failure threshold: minimal."
The implication hung heavy.
Outside—
Zehell reached for his arm.
"Long Hao."
He turned toward her fully.
For the first time since the breach—
He looked tired.
But unbowed.
"It’s not over," she said.
"No."
Behind them, the half-submerged Sovereign-class construct remained like a mountain that could rise again at any moment.
The desert wind resumed its normal whisper.
But beneath it—
Something else had changed.
Not submission.
Not dominance.
A fragile equilibrium.
And far below the dunes—
The construct’s core pulsed once more.
Not in aggression.
In evaluation.
Because now—
The Sovereign protocol was no longer singular.
It was contested.
[Chapter ENDS]







