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MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 176: FRACTURE THEORY
Chapter 176 — FRACTURE THEORY
Six.
The number did not blink.
It did not pulse.
It simply existed above the world like a silent judge.
And the world was not handling it well.
By morning, every major city had split into factions.
In some places, people gathered in prayer beneath the golden lattice.
In others, riots broke out against academy offices and government buildings, demanding "stability measures."
Some blamed Heaven.
Some blamed Long Hao.
Some blamed each other.
Fear was louder than logic.
And fear—
Had weight.
Long Hao felt it.
Not as sound.
Not as energy.
But as pressure.
He stood alone inside the inner chamber beneath Azure Dragon Academy, where ancient sigils dampened external interference. The Vice Dean had sealed the room personally.
Still—
The golden mark burned.
Not violently.
Irritably.
Like something reacting to static.
Long Hao pressed his palm against his chest.
It pulsed in uneven rhythm.
The fragment inside him was calm.
But the mark—
The mark was fluctuating.
A faint hairline shimmer ran across its surface.
He narrowed his eyes.
"Do you see it?" he asked quietly.
The Vice Dean stepped closer.
His gaze sharpened.
"Yes."
The mark was not breaking.
But it was no longer perfectly smooth.
Tiny fractures—microscopic—were forming along its golden edge.
Not from force.
From pressure.
Ling Yifan folded his arms.
"It’s reacting."
Mei Ying leaned against the stone wall, still recovering.
"Not to energy output."
"To narrative."
The Vice Dean nodded slowly.
"Heaven declared convergence necessary."
"The public divided."
"Fear destabilized."
"And now—"
"The mark recalibrates."
Long Hao closed his eyes.
He extended his senses inward.
The golden mark was not merely suppressing the fragment anymore.
It was compensating.
Balancing.
But the more public fear spiked—
The more aggressively it adjusted.
He could feel it clearly now.
When news feeds spiked with panic—
The mark burned hotter.
When calm briefings aired—
It cooled slightly.
Belief density.
Public emotional output.
The lattice in the sky was not measuring just power.
It was measuring perception.
Chen’s voice cut in from the outer hall.
"Major coastal city just declared martial law."
The mark flared.
A sharp sting across Long Hao’s chest.
He inhaled sharply.
The Vice Dean looked at him.
"You feel it when fear spikes."
"Yes."
Ouyang’s voice followed.
"Religious sect just declared you either divine or demonic."
The mark flared again.
Hotter this time.
A faint crack became visible.
Not splitting open—
But visible.
Ling Yifan swore quietly.
"This is insane."
Mei Ying exhaled slowly.
"Heaven doesn’t just regulate power."
"It regulates belief."
Long Hao opened his eyes.
"If public fear increases instability..."
"The mark compensates harder."
"And if it compensates too hard—"
The Vice Dean finished the thought.
"It fractures."
Silence.
The golden lattice above shimmered faintly.
Six.
Still six.
But the world beneath it churned violently.
Long Hao walked toward the chamber’s center circle.
Ancient stone.
Inscribed with stabilizing runes.
He activated Ascendant control.
Thin filaments formed beneath his skin.
Not outward.
Inward.
He compressed the fragment slightly.
The mark responded.
Its heat decreased marginally.
The fracture shimmer dulled.
"Can you maintain that?" Mei Ying asked quietly.
"For a while."
"But not permanently."
The Vice Dean’s expression darkened.
"If the mark shatters—"
"Threshold breach."
"And Heaven won’t hesitate."
Long Hao nodded.
"Yes."
This was Zehell’s deeper strategy.
Force public exposure.
Trigger Heaven’s declaration.
Let humanity fracture.
Let belief pressure the mark.
Make Long Hao unstable without direct confrontation.
It was elegant.
Cruel.
Effective.
Outside the academy walls, crowds grew louder.
Protests now mixed with violent clashes.
Some demanded Long Hao step forward publicly again.
Others demanded his confinement.
A news alert flashed across the outer hall screen.
"Coalition Security Council requesting direct access to Long Hao for evaluation."
The mark burned.
Another faint crack formed—barely visible but real.
Ling Yifan slammed his fist into the stone pillar.
"They’re making it worse."
"Yes," the Vice Dean said quietly.
"They think control equals stability."
"But pressure equals fracture."
Long Hao stepped into the center circle.
He exhaled slowly.
Ascendant filaments tightened.
He compressed his aura further.
Not vanishing.
Minimizing.
The mark cooled slightly.
The fracture shimmer steadied.
But it did not disappear.
He could feel the weight of millions of thoughts pressing against it.
Fear.
Expectation.
Hatred.
Hope.
Each emotion like a grain of sand in an hourglass tipping toward convergence.
Mei Ying’s voice was soft.
"Can belief strengthen it?"
Long Hao looked at her.
"Yes."
"But belief is unstable."
Ouyang spoke quietly.
"Then we influence it."
The Vice Dean turned sharply.
"How?"
Ling Yifan answered before Long Hao could.
"Control narrative."
Chen added, "Public calm briefings."
"Transparent updates."
"Reassurance."
Long Hao’s gaze lifted slightly.
The golden lattice shimmered faintly.
He could feel it reacting to global spikes in emotion.
Heaven was not evil.
It was algorithmic.
It responded to collective imbalance.
And right now—
Humanity was imbalanced.
The Vice Dean activated emergency communication lines.
"Prepare unified academy statement."
"Coordinate with allied institutions."
"Emphasize stabilization of western node."
"Downplay variable designation."
Orders spread rapidly.
Within minutes, multiple academies began broadcasting coordinated messages.
Clear.
Measured.
Reassuring.
"Convergence node stabilized."
"No immediate threat to population."
"Cooperative global response ongoing."
The mark cooled slightly.
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
One of the faint cracks faded.
Hope.
Calm.
Stability.
But then—
A viral clip spread across networks.
An extremist group claiming Long Hao’s presence caused the countdown drop.
Millions viewed it within minutes.
Fear surged again.
The mark burned violently.
Long Hao staggered half a step.
A thin golden fissure flashed across his chest—
Then sealed halfway.
Ling Yifan caught his arm.
"Sit down."
"I’m fine."
"You’re not."
The Vice Dean’s voice was sharp.
"Your emotional control must be absolute."
Long Hao steadied himself.
Ascendant filaments thickened slightly.
He compressed deeper.
The pain dulled.
But the fracture remained.
He whispered quietly—
"This isn’t just about power." 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢
"It’s about narrative density."
Mei Ying nodded.
"Heaven is using humanity as a balancing variable."
"And Zehell knew it."
Yes.
She had anticipated this.
Force him into the sky.
Let Heaven speak.
Let humanity divide.
Let the mark crack.
Long Hao clenched his jaw.
"I won’t let belief break me."
The golden lattice above shimmered faintly.
Six.
The Vice Dean looked at him carefully.
"You may not be able to prevent fluctuation."
"But you can stabilize yourself."
"How?"
"Detachment."
Long Hao shook his head slowly.
"If I detach, fear increases."
"If I over-engage, pressure increases."
"Then you walk between."
Ascendant control was about density without magnitude.
Now—
He needed presence without escalation.
He stepped toward the chamber exit.
Ling Yifan frowned.
"Where are you going?"
"To the terrace."
"Public?"
"Yes."
Mei Ying’s eyes widened.
"That could spike belief again."
"It could."
"But silence spikes it too."
The Vice Dean studied him for a long moment.
Then nodded.
"Measured appearance."
"No display."
Long Hao stepped onto the terrace.
The crowd below erupted at the sight of him.
Not violently.
Emotionally.
Some cheering.
Some shouting questions.
He raised one hand—not in dominance.
In acknowledgment.
The mark burned slightly—
But steadied.
He did not speak immediately.
He let the noise settle.
Then calmly—
He projected his voice without aura amplification.
"Convergence is not punishment."
"It is correction."
Murmurs rippled through the crowd.
"I am not your enemy."
"I am not your savior."
"I am part of this equation."
The golden lattice shimmered faintly.
The mark cooled slightly.
"The countdown did not change because of fear."
"It changed because instability increased."
"If we fracture—"
"It accelerates."
"If we stabilize—"
"It steadies."
Silence spread across the crowd.
Not total.
But significant.
The mark’s heat decreased marginally.
The fracture dulled.
He held the gaze of the crowd steadily.
"Prepare your homes."
"Support each other."
"Do not let division define the next six days."
The golden number above flickered faintly.
But it did not change.
Six.
He lowered his hand.
The crowd did not erupt.
They did not riot.
They watched.
Thinking.
Ling Yifan joined him at the terrace edge.
"That bought time."
"Yes."
The Vice Dean stepped beside them.
"But this will repeat."
"Yes."
Long Hao looked up at the sky one more time.
The golden lattice was still bright.
The mark still warm.
The fracture still present.
But not spreading.
He had learned something vital.
Heaven did not only measure output.
It measured impact.
And the world—
Was now a battlefield of belief.
He turned back toward the chamber.
"We stabilize narrative."
"We stabilize the mark."
"And when Zehell moves again—"
Ling Yifan’s eyes hardened.
"We’re ready."
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
Six days.
And now—
The fracture was visible.
Not broken.
But real.
The final arc had shifted again.
Not only power.
Not only law.
But faith.
And the next move—
Would test all three.
Night fell slowly.
Too slowly.
The sky did not darken fully anymore. The golden lattice remained faintly visible even after sunset, like veins beneath translucent skin. The number hovered steady.
Six.
Long Hao stood alone in the lower stabilization chamber again.
The public address had worked—temporarily. The mark had cooled. The fracture along its surface had dulled from a sharp fissure to a faint hairline seam.
But it had not disappeared.
And something else had begun.
He felt it before he saw it.
A distortion.
Not above the academy.
Not in the western plains.
But near the stabilized convergence node.
A ripple in the air that did not belong to Heaven.
The Vice Dean stepped into the chamber abruptly.
"You feel that."
"Yes."
Ling Yifan followed, eyes narrowed.
"It’s not Zehell."
"No."
It was colder.
Not law.
Not eclipse.
Something between.
Long Hao closed his eyes and extended Ascendant control—not outwardly, but as a sensory web.
Thin filaments drifted invisibly across space.
They touched the western node.
And recoiled.
There was something inside it.
Not energy.
Not structure.
Memory.
The convergence node flickered faintly across the horizon. News feeds began reporting "visual anomalies" near the plains perimeter.
Cameras zoomed in.
A distortion formed at the center of the stabilized vortex.
Like heat rising off asphalt.
But vertical.
Humanoid.
The Vice Dean’s voice dropped.
"That shouldn’t be possible."
Long Hao felt his chest tighten.
The golden mark warmed—not burning.
Alert.
The distortion thickened.
Static crackled through every broadcast feed.
Audio warped.
Then—
A silhouette stepped out of the stabilized convergence node.
Not fully formed.
Glitching.
Half-solid.
Half-erased.
Its body flickered between visibility and absence, like a corrupted projection.
Black-white energy trailed from its limbs—but unstable, fragmented.
The sky above flickered faintly.
Not reacting aggressively.
Watching.
The figure lifted its head slowly.
Long Hao felt something twist deep inside him.
Recognition.
Not personal.
Instinctual.
Iteration.
Ling Yifan whispered hoarsely.
"Is that—"
"Yes."
Iteration Two.
Or what remained of it.
The figure’s face was partially blurred, features phasing in and out of coherence. One eye glowed faintly gold. The other was void-dark.
Its voice came not through air—
But through distortion.
"Iteration... Three."
The words cracked like broken glass.
The golden mark on Long Hao’s chest pulsed sharply.
Not in suppression.
In resonance.
The fracture shimmered faintly again.
Long Hao stepped forward.
The Vice Dean grabbed his shoulder.
"Careful."
"It’s not hostile."
"How do you know?"
Long Hao did not answer.
Because he did not know.
He only felt—
That this presence did not carry Heaven’s structure.
Nor Zehell’s manipulation.
It carried collapse.
The echo took one unsteady step forward.
The ground beneath it warped briefly, pixels of reality flickering.
It looked down at its own hands.
"They erased... continuity."
Its voice stuttered between tones.
Fragments of sound phasing in and out.
Long Hao inhaled slowly.
"You merged."
The echo’s head tilted sharply.
"Yes."
"And they erased you."
"Yes."
The sky flickered faintly.
The golden lattice shimmered slightly brighter.
The echo laughed softly.
But the laugh broke mid-sound.
"Balance achieved... by deletion."
The Vice Dean’s voice was tight.
"This is dangerous."
Long Hao nodded faintly.
But he did not retreat.
He stepped closer to the horizon-facing window.
Ascendant filaments spread gently—not as attack.
As containment.
The echo’s form stabilized slightly when the filaments brushed it.
It turned toward him slowly.
"Iteration Three... has not merged."
"No."
"Has not sealed."
"No."
The echo’s golden eye flickered.
"Good."
The word fractured.
Then stabilized.
"You are repeating... mistake."
Long Hao’s jaw tightened.
"Which one?"
The echo’s body flickered violently for a moment.
Images flashed around it—brief, incoherent flashes of sky splitting, golden chains descending, eclipse light flooding upward.
Then—
Stillness.
"I sought... perfection."
It paused.
"Alignment."
The golden mark burned faintly.
"You sought balance through merge."
"Yes."
"And they erased you."
"Yes."
The echo’s voice lowered to a strained whisper.
"Because I became... stable."
Long Hao frowned.
"What?"
The echo stepped forward again, more solid this time.
"The system requires instability."
The Vice Dean’s eyes widened slightly.
Long Hao felt the weight of that statement settle inside him.
"If convergence stabilizes completely—"
"Cycle ends."
The echo’s void-dark eye sharpened.
"Heaven requires cycle."
"Balance through repetition."
Long Hao felt something shift in his fragment.
Iteration One sealed.
Iteration Two merged.
Iteration Three transcends.
But if transcendence ended the cycle—
What would Heaven do?
The echo’s form destabilized briefly, static tearing across its torso.
"Zehell..."
Long Hao’s head lifted sharply.
"What about her?"
The echo’s golden eye flickered.
"She was not catalyst."
"She was... witness."
The chamber air felt colder suddenly.
"She remembers... before."
Before iteration.
Before fragmentation.
Before cycle.
The sky flickered faintly.
The golden lattice brightened slightly.
The echo’s body trembled.
"They are recalibrating."
Long Hao stepped closer to the window.
"What are they recalibrating?"
The echo looked up at the sky.
"Convergence... must not end."
Long Hao’s breath slowed.
"They want balance."
"Yes."
"But not resolution."
The echo’s voice fractured again.
"If you transcend..."
The sky flickered more violently.
The golden threads around the western node tightened.
The echo staggered slightly.
"They erase... system."
The golden mark on Long Hao’s chest flared painfully.
A crack widened a fraction.
Ling Yifan moved instinctively toward him.
The echo’s form began dissolving at the edges.
"They detect anomaly."
Long Hao’s voice sharpened.
"What anomaly?"
The echo’s final words came in broken fragments.
"You... are not variable."
The sky trembled.
Golden light descended faintly from above—not a beam.
Pressure.
The echo’s form glitched violently.
"They cannot calculate... you."
Long Hao felt his heart skip.
The golden mark burned intensely now.
The fracture widened slightly again.
The sky above flickered.
The number six shimmered.
The echo turned one last time toward him.
"Do not stabilize."
The words cracked.
"Do not complete."
And then—
It shattered.
Not into dust.
Not into light.
Into absence.
The distortion collapsed inward silently.
The stabilized convergence node returned to quiet rotation.
The sky steadied.
The golden lattice dimmed back to previous intensity.
Six.
Long Hao stood frozen.
The Vice Dean exhaled slowly.
"That... was not meant to exist."
"No."
Ling Yifan’s voice was tight.
"It said Heaven requires instability."
"Yes."
Mei Ying stepped closer, pale but focused.
"If convergence ends the cycle—"
"Heaven loses regulatory loop."
Long Hao closed his eyes briefly.
The fragment inside him was no longer calm.
It was thinking.
Iteration One sealed to preserve.
Iteration Two merged to perfect.
Heaven erased stability.
Zehell accelerated instability.
The echo’s final statement echoed in his mind.
You are not variable.
He opened his eyes slowly.
"They can’t calculate transcendence."
The Vice Dean studied him carefully.
"Meaning?"
"If I end the cycle..."
"Heaven loses framework."
Silence.
The golden mark burned faintly.
The fracture shimmered but did not widen further.
Long Hao placed his hand over it.
He whispered quietly—
"You erased Iteration Two because he completed the equation."
The sky did not answer.
But it flickered faintly.
Ling Yifan looked toward the horizon.
"Then what are we doing?"
Long Hao’s gaze hardened slightly.
"We don’t complete."
"We break."
The Vice Dean’s voice lowered.
"That may trigger full erasure."
"Yes."
The mark pulsed once more.
Warm.
Alive.
And somewhere beyond the visible lattice—
Something recalculated.
The echo had not been part of Heaven’s plan.
It had slipped through during Zehell’s forced acceleration.
A glitch in the cycle.
Proof that iteration was not infinite.
Proof that Heaven was not omniscient.
The number above the world glowed steadily.
Six.
But for the first time—
It did not feel inevitable.
It felt contested.
Long Hao turned toward the chamber exit.
"We’re not just balancing convergence."
Ling Yifan nodded slowly.
"We’re ending it."
Outside, the world still argued.
Still feared.
Still believed.
The sky still watched.
But now—
Long Hao knew something Heaven did not want known.
The cycle required instability.
And transcendence—
Was system death.
The fracture on his chest shimmered faintly.
Not breaking.
Not healing.
Waiting.
Six days.
And the equation had changed.
[Chapter ENDS]







