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MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 141: THE ONE WHO CHOOSES
Chapter 141 — THE ONE WHO CHOOSES
The cavern did not return to what it had been.
Even after the golden eye shattered.
Even after the chains dissolved.
Something fundamental had shifted.
The stone above was stone again.
The slab was quiet.
The dragon was gone.
But the air—
The air felt aware.
Zehell stood very still beside Long Hao, her breathing slowly stabilizing.
Bronze Squad had collapsed fully during the confrontation. Now they were stirring faintly, groaning, confused, but alive.
Alive.
That alone felt like a victory.
Long Hao did not move for several long seconds.
His gaze remained fixed upward at the place where Heaven’s eye had formed.
The void inside him was quieter now.
Not dormant.
Settled.
He had refused ascension.
Again.
Zehell finally broke the silence.
"So."
She let out a shaky breath.
"Is that it?"
He didn’t answer immediately.
He lowered his head slowly and looked at his hands.
Still human.
Still scarred.
Still trembling faintly from the clash.
"I don’t think so," he said softly.
The slab behind them pulsed once.
Faint.
Not violently.
Not urgently.
Acknowledgment.
Zehell stepped closer.
"Tell me something," she said quietly.
"When it offered you that... throne."
He met her gaze.
"Did you want it?"
The question was simple.
The weight behind it was not.
He considered the answer honestly.
For a heartbeat—
Yes.
Not for dominion.
Not for control.
For certainty.
For an end to collapse.
For the power to prevent suffering without hesitation.
For the ability to stop Heaven entirely.
He closed his eyes briefly.
"It would have been easier."
Zehell didn’t flinch.
She nodded slowly.
"I know."
He looked at her again.
"But it wouldn’t have been me."
Silence.
The cavern seemed to exhale.
Bronze Squad slowly pulled themselves upright behind them.
Colby blinked at the ceiling.
"So... did we win?"
Marek rubbed his temple.
"If that was winning, I don’t want to see losing."
Zehell didn’t take her eyes off Long Hao.
"You said you chose mortality."
He nodded.
"Yes."
"Why?"
He turned fully toward her now.
Because she deserved the truth.
"Because absolute power removes doubt."
"And doubt is what makes choice real."
She stared at him for a long moment.
Then she gave a small, breathless laugh.
"You’re insane."
"Probably."
Her hand reached out and pressed flat against his chest.
Right over his heart.
"You’re still here."
"Yes."
"And you’re not... something else."
He covered her hand lightly with his own.
"No."
The slab pulsed again.
Stronger this time.
They both turned.
The carvings along its surface were shifting once more.
Not projecting battles.
Not showing past cycles.
The hollow circle at its center deepened into black again—but this time, it did not flare violently.
It opened.
Not outward.
Inward.
A depthless aperture formed across its surface.
Zehell’s grip tightened on her spear again instinctively.
"Is that another trial?"
Long Hao shook his head slowly.
"No."
Inside—
There was no Longyu.
No Sovereign voice.
No system.
Only silence.
But it was not empty silence.
It was waiting.
He stepped closer to the slab.
The black aperture shimmered faintly, and within it—
He saw not stars.
Not void.
Not Heaven.
He saw a reflection.
Himself.
But different.
Older.
The Shadow King silhouette from before.
Standing tall in fractured starlight.
Not cloaked in shadow now.
Clear.
Eyes steady.
Not corrupted.
Not cold.
Just—
Certain.
The reflection spoke.
But not aloud.
You remember enough.
Long Hao inhaled sharply.
Zehell stepped beside him.
"What is it?"
He did not look away.
"It’s me."
The reflection continued.
Not the dominion you refused.
Not the throne you shattered.
But the choice.
The reflection lifted its hand.
Not in challenge.
In offering.
The slab vibrated gently.
Choice was never about destroying Heaven.
It was about defining boundary.
Long Hao felt the truth of it settle into him.
He had not been reincarnated to end Heaven.
He had been reincarnated to limit it.
To prevent inevitability from becoming tyranny.
To ensure that structure never erased freedom entirely.
The reflection’s voice deepened.
You are not its enemy.
You are its correction.
The slab’s black center rippled.
Memories surged—not of battles, but of moments.
Standing before Heaven’s core and lowering his fist.
Fragmenting himself instead of seizing power.
Being mocked by the Long Clan.
Being called talentless.
Choosing to smile instead of retaliate.
Protecting Zehell instead of pursuing supremacy.
Choosing.
Always choosing.
Zehell’s voice pulled him back slightly.
"What’s happening?"
He reached forward slowly.
And this time—
He placed his hand into the black aperture willingly.
Not forced.
Not bound.
The slab did not explode.
It absorbed.
A pulse of black-and-white light expanded gently through the cavern.
Not destructive.
Harmonizing.
The fractures in the ceiling sealed completely.
The shattered stone reformed.
The energy left behind by Heaven dissipated like mist under sun.
Bronze Squad blinked in confusion as the oppressive weight fully vanished.
The slab’s carvings dimmed.
The black aperture shrank.
The reflection faded.
Before it vanished completely, it said one final thing.
This cycle will not end as the others.
Then it was gone.
The slab returned to inert stone.
The cavern was just a cavern again.
Zehell exhaled slowly.
"That felt... final."
Long Hao nodded.
"It was."
She studied him carefully.
"Do you remember everything now?"
He shook his head.
"No."
"Enough?"
"Yes."
She tilted her head slightly.
"Enough to what?"
He looked up toward the surface.
Toward the world beyond the cavern.
"Enough to understand the rules."
Silence settled softly.
Bronze Squad finally regrouped around them.
Colby scratched the back of his head.
"So are we still in danger?"
Marek frowned.
"When are we not?"
Long Hao gave a faint smile.
"We’re always in danger."
Zehell rolled her eyes lightly.
"That’s reassuring."
He turned toward the exit corridor.
"Heaven won’t offer ascension again."
"How do you know?"
"Because I refused it twice."
"And?"
"And Heaven adapts."
Zehell’s expression darkened slightly.
"So next time it won’t negotiate."
"No."
"It will enforce."
The words were not dramatic.
They were inevitable.
Zehell walked beside him as they began ascending the tunnel.
"Then we prepare."
"Yes."
She glanced sideways at him.
"You’re not going to disappear on me again, are you?"
He looked at her fully.
"I fractured myself to stay."
"I chose mortality to remain human."
"I’m not leaving."
She held his gaze for a long moment.
Then nodded once.
"Good."
They reached the upper chamber where the Black Steel Dragon had once fallen.
Its fragments were gone.
Not shattered remains.
Gone.
As if they had never existed.
The anchor pillar stood quiet and dormant.
The research facility beyond lay silent.
But something fundamental had shifted.
The Sovereign system no longer felt dominant.
Heaven no longer felt absolute.
And Long Hao—
He no longer felt incomplete.
He was not Shadow King returned in full.
He was not singular dominion.
He was not Sovereign.
He was boundary.
The one who says no.
The one who chooses.
The one who refuses inevitability.
As they stepped out of the cave into the open desert air, the sky above was clear.
No golden fractures.
No cosmic eyes.
Just blue.
Zehell inhaled deeply.
"For now," she said softly.
"For now," he agreed.
But far beyond mortal sight—
Heaven was not silent.
Golden threads were restructuring.
Not for negotiation.
For enforcement.
This cycle would not offer mercy.
And when it came again—
It would not ask him to ascend.
It would try to erase the boundary entirely.
Long Hao looked toward the horizon.
Not afraid.
Not eager.
Ready.
He had once been the blade that nearly severed Heaven.
Now—
He was the line it could not cross.
And the next time Heaven descended—
It would not find a fractured dragon.
It would find a man who remembers why he chose to be human.
[Chapter ENDS]







