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MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 174: DAY ONE — SHE MOVES
Chapter 174 — DAY ONE — SHE MOVES
The countdown did not wait for sunrise.
It began at midnight.
The golden lattice across the sky did not dim when the world slept. It brightened.
Seven.
The number remained suspended across the firmament, faint but undeniable to anyone who could sense law. Most civilians did not understand what they were seeing. To them, it was a strange aurora-like shimmer.
To Long Hao—
It was pressure.
He stood at the highest terrace of the Azure Dragon forward command post, overlooking the city below. The desert wind carried tension instead of sand.
Behind him, the Vice Dean spoke quietly.
"She hasn’t moved yet."
Long Hao did not turn.
"She will."
The fragment inside him was not restless.
It was listening.
Heaven had declared Convergence Protocol.
That meant Zehell would not remain passive.
She never reacted.
She forced.
And as if the thought itself triggered fate—
The sky trembled.
Not above Ruinsand.
Far to the west.
A convergence node flared violently.
The golden lattice across the horizon brightened like a star igniting.
The number above did not change.
Still seven.
But the western node burned brighter than the rest.
The Vice Dean inhaled sharply.
"That’s not natural escalation."
Long Hao’s jaw tightened.
"She chose one."
The western plains.
Agricultural belt.
Populated.
Dense.
Civilian.
The fragment inside him pulsed sharply in that direction.
A heartbeat later—
The western sky cracked.
Not a fissure.
A vortex.
Black-white and gold spiraling together in violent rotation.
Chen’s voice burst through communication array.
"Western plains barrier just collapsed!"
Ouyang followed.
"Energy signature spiking beyond sovereign baseline!"
The Vice Dean’s aura expanded instantly.
"She forced a node eruption."
Long Hao already stepped forward.
"She didn’t attack."
"She triggered."
The western horizon darkened unnaturally.
Lightning without clouds.
Wind without pressure change.
The ground beneath Azure Dragon trembled faintly.
The golden lattice brightened around the activated node.
Heaven was not intervening.
It was stabilizing.
The Vice Dean’s eyes narrowed.
"She’s accelerating convergence."
Long Hao nodded.
"She’s compressing seven days into one."
He turned sharply.
"Open transit."
The Vice Dean hesitated half a second.
"You know what this means."
"Yes."
"If you use full output in a populated region—"
"I won’t."
The Vice Dean studied him once.
Then activated spatial array.
Blue sigils ignited beneath their feet.
The world folded.
—
The western plains were chaos.
Fields of grain bent in unnatural spirals around a growing singularity of black-white light.
At its center—
The convergence node had descended.
Not as a simple point.
As a rotating sphere of compressed reality.
Golden threads from the sky anchored into it.
Black-white radiance pulsed outward in waves.
Each pulse flattened structures.
Barns shattered.
Vehicles flipped.
Civilians ran in every direction.
Long Hao appeared midair above the outskirts.
The Vice Dean beside him.
He assessed instantly.
Zehell stood at the center of the singularity.
Not attacking.
Not casting.
Her hands were lowered.
She was simply allowing the node to accelerate.
The golden lattice above brightened further.
The number still read seven.
But the pressure in the air felt like day three.
Long Hao landed on a fractured roadway.
The ground trembled beneath his boots.
He did not surge.
He did not expand aura.
He activated Ascendant control.
Black-white filaments formed thinly around him.
Undetectable to normal sight.
He stepped forward.
The Vice Dean shouted over the wind.
"She’s pulling civilian zones into the epicenter!"
Long Hao’s eyes sharpened.
The rotating singularity expanded slightly.
A bus overturned fifty meters away.
He moved.
No explosion.
No dramatic aura.
His body blurred.
Not through speed.
Through reduced presence.
He reached the bus.
Compressed filaments extended.
The bus stopped mid-slide.
Not violently.
The ground beneath it folded gently inward, halting momentum without shockwave.
He lifted his hand.
The metal reformed just enough to open a passage.
Civilians crawled out.
The golden mark pulsed faintly.
Monitoring.
The sky flickered—
But did not escalate.
Ascendant control held.
Long Hao turned toward the singularity.
Zehell finally looked at him.
No smile.
No mockery.
"You came quickly."
Her voice carried through the chaos.
"You forced civilians into it."
"I accelerated the node."
"You chose the location."
"Yes."
Another pulse erupted from the singularity.
A farmhouse disintegrated at its edge.
Long Hao stepped forward again.
Filaments spread.
He did not attack Zehell.
He attacked instability.
The wave of force folded inward upon itself.
Neutralized without outward shock.
The golden lattice flickered.
The Vice Dean stabilized a perimeter barrier behind him.
Zehell tilted her head slightly.
"You’re careful."
"I have to be."
"Because of Heaven?"
"Yes."
She glanced upward briefly.
The golden threads shimmered.
"Heaven isn’t interfering."
"I know."
"Why do you think that is?"
Long Hao did not answer.
Another pulse erupted.
This time stronger.
The singularity’s rotation accelerated.
The sky above the western plains darkened further.
The convergence node glowed brighter.
The number seven flickered faintly.
Long Hao felt it.
This node was no longer isolated.
Other nodes across the world responded faintly.
She was creating resonance cascade.
Zehell stepped backward into the singularity’s edge.
The black-white radiance did not harm her.
"You protect," she said quietly.
"Yes."
"And in protecting, you delay."
He understood instantly.
She was forcing him to use Ascendant control repeatedly in public.
To strain precision.
To approach threshold gradually.
The golden mark pulsed harder now.
He felt its heat.
But it did not escalate.
Not yet.
A skyscraper on the plains’ outskirts began tilting toward the epicenter.
Long Hao moved again.
Filaments wrapped around its foundation.
Compressed space beneath it.
The building stabilized mid-tilt.
Sweat rolled down his temple.
Precision at this scale was draining.
Zehell watched.
"You can’t hold every collapse."
"I don’t need to."
The singularity pulsed violently.
The ground split.
A shockwave spread outward.
This one stronger.
Long Hao clenched his jaw.
Ascendant filaments thickened.
For a fraction of a second—
He considered surging.
Ending the node.
Destroying the convergence sphere outright.
But he remembered the Arbiter.
Threshold breach equals erasure.
Instead—
He compressed deeper.
Condensed resonance into a razor-thin plane.
The shockwave struck it.
Folded.
Bent.
Redirected upward into the sky.
The golden lattice above shimmered violently.
Heaven detected the redirection—
But did not escalate.
Zehell’s eyes sharpened.
"You’re adapting."
"Yes."
"Good."
The word was not praise.
It was confirmation.
The singularity began pulling inward.
Objects within fifty meters lifted off the ground.
Cars.
Debris.
Fragments of earth.
Long Hao stepped closer to the epicenter. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
The Vice Dean shouted.
"Don’t cross inner radius!"
Long Hao did not stop.
The golden mark burned hotter.
The fragment inside him pulsed sharply.
The singularity’s gravity intensified.
Zehell stood inside its eye.
"Destroy it," she said softly.
He met her gaze.
"You want that."
"Yes."
"Because if I destroy it at this stage—"
"Threshold breach."
The sky above shimmered faintly.
The number seven flickered again.
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
He stepped into the singularity’s outer ring.
The pressure crushed inward.
His Ascendant filaments screamed under strain.
The golden mark burned painfully.
The sky trembled slightly.
Zehell whispered.
"You cannot transcend if you still protect."
Another pulse erupted.
A row of houses at the outskirts began collapsing inward.
Long Hao made his choice.
He turned away from Zehell—
And toward the civilians.
Filaments extended.
The collapsing structures froze mid-fall.
He compressed them into stable blocks.
Shielded.
The golden mark pulsed harder.
Pain shot through his chest.
The sky flickered—
But did not open.
Zehell watched in silence.
The singularity stabilized slightly.
Not shrinking.
Not growing.
Paused.
The golden lattice above brightened again.
The number remained seven.
But its glow intensified.
Zehell’s voice softened.
"You chose them."
"Yes."
"And in choosing them—"
She stepped forward, her silhouette merging briefly with the convergence node’s radiance.
"You shorten the path."
The singularity pulsed once more.
Then—
It stabilized completely.
Not destroyed.
Not escalating.
Held.
Long Hao stood breathing heavily, Ascendant control trembling at the edge of sustainability.
The golden mark glowed fiercely.
The sky above shimmered.
The node no longer expanded.
Zehell began walking backward.
Into the radiance.
"You passed day one," she said quietly.
"But you moved the needle."
She dissolved into black-white light.
The convergence node dimmed slightly.
Not gone.
Not ended.
Active.
The golden lattice across the sky pulsed once more.
The number flickered—
Then steadied.
Seven.
The Vice Dean landed beside Long Hao.
"You stabilized it."
"For now."
Long Hao looked up at the sky.
He felt it.
The entire lattice had tightened.
She had forced an early compression.
Convergence did not decrease.
It intensified.
And the countdown—
Though unchanged—
Felt closer.
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
Day one.
And she had already begun reshaping the board.
The convergence node did not disappear.
It stabilized.
Suspended like a second sun above the western plains—black-white radiance rotating at its core, golden threads from the sky anchoring into it like a cage made of law.
Long Hao stood beneath it, breathing hard.
Ascendant filaments flickered faintly around him before dissolving into invisibility. The civilians he had shielded were evacuating under emergency command, escorted by academy units scrambling to control the perimeter.
But something else had changed.
The sky above the plains shimmered.
And then—
Screens lit up.
Everywhere.
Phones.
Billboards.
Emergency broadcast panels.
The golden lattice that had been visible only to the attuned now manifested faintly to the public eye.
The number—7—glowed across the heavens.
And beneath it—
A figure.
Long Hao.
Suspended against the convergence node’s violent light.
The Vice Dean swore under his breath.
"They’re broadcasting it."
Long Hao turned sharply.
"Who?"
"Not us."
The academy had activated no transmission sigils.
No public alert.
Yet across the plains and beyond, drones hovered—civilian, commercial, private surveillance feeds—all capturing the same image.
Him.
Standing against the singularity.
The golden mark over his chest faintly visible beneath torn fabric.
The Ascendant threads briefly flickering around him.
Public exposure.
Zehell’s final move of Day One.
Long Hao felt it then.
Not physically.
Psychologically.
The world was watching.
A child cried somewhere behind him.
A mother clutched her son, staring at the sky in terror.
News anchors, their voices trembling, struggled to narrate what they were seeing.
"—unknown individual stabilizing the anomaly—"
"—countdown visible across multiple regions—"
"—is this a sovereign event—"
The golden lattice pulsed faintly.
The number did not change.
Seven.
But its brightness intensified.
The Vice Dean stepped closer.
"She forced you into the open."
Long Hao nodded slowly.
"She wanted this seen."
Because protection in secrecy was one thing.
Protection under scrutiny—
Under fear—
Under expectation—
Was another.
The convergence node pulsed again, though weaker now.
Long Hao stepped forward instinctively, Ascendant control activating in thin strands.
The golden mark burned faintly.
The sky flickered.
The broadcast feeds caught the movement.
Slow motion replays of his filaments redirecting shockwaves.
Commentators whispered the word.
"Sovereign."
The Vice Dean’s voice cut sharply.
"Contain your signature."
Long Hao did.
The filaments shrank.
Compressed.
Invisible.
But it was too late.
The world had seen enough.
A figure who could stand inside a convergence node.
A mark that glowed in response to the sky.
A countdown that seemed tied to him.
Zehell’s voice echoed faintly in his memory.
You cannot transcend if you still protect.
She had not attacked to destroy.
She had attacked to reveal.
The convergence node dimmed slightly more.
Its violent rotation slowed.
Not neutralized.
Stabilized.
The golden lattice across the sky pulsed once more.
Then—
The number flickered.
The Vice Dean inhaled sharply.
It did not change from seven.
But beneath it—
Text formed faintly.
Not audible.
Visible.
VARIABLE IDENTIFIED.
The Vice Dean’s blood ran cold.
"They’ve classified you publicly."
Long Hao looked up.
The golden threads shimmered brighter around his location.
He felt the mark respond.
Not suppressing.
Logging.
The fragment inside him stirred uneasily.
Across the plains, social feeds exploded.
Some calling him savior.
Some calling him cause.
Some calling him threat.
The Vice Dean’s communicator buzzed violently.
Azure Dragon headquarters.
Other academies.
Government councils.
All demanding explanation.
Long Hao felt something tightening in his chest.
Not the mark.
Responsibility.
Expectation.
Fear.
He stepped forward again.
One final adjustment.
Ascendant filaments extended into the convergence node itself.
He did not try to destroy it.
He altered its rotation.
Just slightly.
Shifted its internal spin axis.
The golden lattice flickered in response.
The node’s violent core steadied.
Stabilized to a contained vortex rather than an expanding singularity.
The sky shimmered faintly—
But did not escalate.
The golden mark burned once—
Then dimmed.
The node locked into equilibrium.
No longer collapsing outward.
No longer expanding inward.
Held.
The Vice Dean exhaled.
"You’ve paused it."
"For now."
The world watched as the terrifying sphere of destruction stopped growing.
As debris ceased rising.
As buildings stopped tilting.
Cheers erupted from some pockets of the plains.
Tears from others.
Phones remained lifted.
Recording.
Long Hao turned his gaze toward the horizon.
Zehell was gone.
But her intention lingered.
Now—
He was no longer a hidden anomaly.
He was a visible axis in the convergence.
The golden lattice above pulsed again.
The number flickered faintly.
Still seven.
But beneath it, the words shifted.
OBSERVATION PHASE — EXPANDED.
The Vice Dean cursed softly.
"They’re widening surveillance."
Long Hao nodded.
"Heaven isn’t punishing."
"It’s measuring global response."
Because convergence was not only about fragments and law.
It was about the world’s reaction.
Fear destabilized balance.
Faith altered probability.
Public perception influenced systemic law.
Zehell had forced him into myth.
The Vice Dean’s voice hardened.
"We need to leave."
Long Hao glanced at the civilians one last time.
Emergency teams were stabilizing the perimeter.
Academy units sealing fractures.
The convergence node hovered above like a silent storm cloud.
But it was contained.
For now.
He allowed the spatial transit array to activate.
Blue sigils ignited beneath their feet.
The plains vanished.
—
Back at the command terrace, the sky above Ruinsand shimmered faintly.
The golden lattice remained.
The number seven unchanged.
But global feeds continued.
Every screen replaying the moment.
The filaments.
The mark.
The stabilization.
Ling Yifan stood at the far end of the terrace, pale but upright.
"You’ve become the face of convergence."
Long Hao remained silent.
Chen spoke quietly.
"The public won’t stay calm."
"They’ll divide."
"They always do," Mei Ying muttered.
The Vice Dean turned to Long Hao.
"This was calculated."
"Yes."
"She wanted Heaven to see you clearly."
"And the world."
Long Hao looked at his reflection in the darkened glass of the terrace window.
For a split second—
He saw something else layered over it.
Not a dragon.
Not a sovereign.
A symbol.
Axis.
The golden mark pulsed faintly.
He pressed his palm against it.
"You wanted exposure," he murmured quietly to the absent Zehell.
"You got it."
The sky above trembled faintly.
Not cracking.
But thinning.
The number flickered once more.
Seven.
Day One had ended.
The convergence node remained stabilized.
But now—
The world knew.
And Heaven had widened its lens.
The Vice Dean’s voice lowered.
"This changes everything."
Long Hao nodded slowly.
"Yes."
Because protection in shadows was strategy.
Protection under the sky—
Was declaration.
The fragment inside him was steady.
The golden mark was watching.
The lattice across the world glowed brighter than before.
And somewhere—
Zehell was smiling.
Not because he failed.
But because he stepped forward.
Day One had not reduced the countdown.
It had accelerated awareness.
The world now orbited convergence.
And Long Hao—
Stood at its center.
The silence after stabilization did not feel like victory.
It felt like scrutiny.
Above the western plains, the convergence node hovered in suspended equilibrium, its violent spin reduced to a contained vortex. Emergency responders moved cautiously beneath it, unsure whether to treat it as a disaster or a monument.
Cameras never blinked.
Across continents, the replay loops began.
Analysts slowed footage frame by frame—zooming in on the moment Long Hao’s filaments redirected the shockwave upward instead of outward.
Clips circulated with captions:
He bent gravity.He rewrote force.He’s not human.
Some called him savior.
Some called him catalyst.
Some called him countdown trigger.
Inside one war room thousands of miles away, a general leaned over a tactical display and asked quietly,
"If he can do that to a convergence node... what stops him from doing that to us?"
No one answered.
Because fear does not require evidence.
It requires imagination.
And imagination spreads faster than truth.
Back at Azure Dragon, Long Hao stood still while the Vice Dean fielded communications from three different councils at once. The tone varied—formal, restrained, diplomatic.
But beneath every voice was the same question:
What are you?
The golden lattice above the academy shimmered faintly.
The number did not change.
Seven.
Yet the light felt sharper now.
Focused.
Heaven had widened its observation phase.
Not only of him.
Of humanity.
Long Hao stepped away from the terrace railing and looked down at his hands.
They were steady.
But he could feel the weight of the world pressing in—not physically, but conceptually.
Expectation.
Fear.
Projection.
He understood something new then.
Power alone did not destabilize convergence.
Belief did.
If millions believed he was savior, pressure shifted one way.
If millions believed he was threat, pressure shifted another.
Either extreme distorted balance.
Zehell had not attacked him.
She had positioned him.
The Vice Dean ended a call and turned toward him.
"They want assurance that you won’t escalate."
Long Hao met his gaze calmly.
"I won’t."
"And if they demand containment?"
Long Hao did not answer immediately.
Instead, he looked at the sky.
The golden threads pulsed once.
A faint ripple passed through the lattice.
Not aggressive.
Attentive.
Heaven had not intervened when he stabilized the node.
It had not punished.
It had not rewarded.
It had observed.
Which meant—
The next instability would not come from the sky.
It would come from people.
Below the academy walls, the crowd began chanting.
Not violently.
But rhythmically.
Some calling his name.
Some calling for protection.
Some calling for surrender.
The sound rose like tidewater.
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
"This is the real battlefield," he murmured.
The Vice Dean followed his gaze.
"Yes."
Not desert.
Not sky.
Humanity.
And humanity was volatile.
The golden mark on Long Hao’s chest warmed faintly.
Responsive.
Adaptive.
The fracture had not yet formed.
But he could feel the subtle tension beginning.
Public attention had mass.
And that mass now orbited him.
Far away, in a dimly lit room beyond any camera’s reach—
Zehell watched the global feeds without expression.
She did not smile.
She did not frown.
She simply observed the crowd’s reaction to him.
To myth.
To fear.
To hope.
"Good," she whispered softly.
Not because he had failed.
But because the world had moved.
The convergence node remained suspended above the western plains like a silent witness.
The number in the sky remained seven.
But the world beneath it had shifted.
Day One had not reduced the countdown.
It had redefined the war.
And Long Hao—
Whether he wanted it or not—
Was no longer hidden inside the equation.
He was written across it.







