Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 23: Steps Taken Side by Side [2]

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Chapter 23: Steps Taken Side by Side [2]

"Status"

Light unfolded across his senses, clear and sharp.

[ Harem Link Cultivation System — Active ]

[ Status ]

Host: Lin Tian

Realm: Elementary Spirit Realm — Fifth Level

Talent: High Grade

Spirit Roots: High Grade

Physique: Pending

Bloodline: Locked

Linked Partner: Bai Xueya (1)

None of that had changed from before.

The difference was how it sat inside him.

He focused on the line that had lingered in his mind since morning.

[ Shared Cultivation: Converted & Stored ]

As if responding to his attention, a new pane unfurled beneath it. Text and shapes arranged themselves in a way his mind understood instinctively.

[ Shared Cultivation — Bai Xueya (1) ]

Stored Reservoir: Active

Assimilation Rate: Limited (Based on Host Realm, Physique, and Comprehension)

Synchronization Status: Stable

Partner Foundation: Preserved

Warning:

Forced assimilation beyond safe thresholds may result in:

Internal injury to Host.

Instability in Link.

Adverse effects on the partner’s cultivation stability.

Use Recommendation:

Gradual integration synchronized with the host’s independent cultivation. Dual cultivation sessions are advised for optimal balance.

Lin Tian stared at the words until they blurred against one another.

A reservoir.

He could almost feel it if he reached the right way: a quiet, dense weight sitting behind his cultivation, like a second dantian that did not entirely belong to him. Not foreign, not hungry—just there. Waiting.

It wasn’t all of her years of effort. It couldn’t be. No system could strip a person bare and leave them standing so calmly.

But some part of that sweat and pain had been transformed into something he could draw from.

His throat tightened.

It would be so easy to see that pool as a shortcut.

To imagine himself stepping realm after realm at unnatural speed, climbing on the back of what she had already paid.

He remembered her face in the dark, twisted with pain as her Frost Yin raged. The way she’d clung to him, not as Azure Snow’s Ice Fairy, but as a girl who had decided to trust him when everything could have ended in her shattered meridians.

Lin Tian exhaled slowly.

"I won’t waste this," he said softly. "And I won’t steal from you."

The System did not answer with words.

A small line appeared at the bottom of the panel, then faded almost as soon as he registered it.

[ Host Intent: Cooperative ]

[ Partner Protection Priority: High ]

He wasn’t sure if it was an evaluation or a simple record.

Either way, it didn’t change his decision.

He closed the Shared Cultivation pane and refocused on his own body.

"Test it," he murmured to himself.

He shifted his position on the bed, sliding down until he sat cross-legged at the center. He straightened his spine, let his shoulders relax, and began to guide his breath through the familiar pattern of the Lin clan’s foundational cultivation method.

In the past, this was where things had broken down.

His breath would hit a dead space in his chest or a knot of pain along one meridian and stall, leaving him shaking and drenched in sweat for only a sliver of gain.

This time, the qi he drew in was obedient.

It flowed along the channels with a smoothness that made his skin prickle. Where there had once been jagged obstructions, there was now gentle warmth. His dantian responded like a lake fed by a clean spring, not a dried-out pit being forced to swallow boulders.

Lin Tian sent the energy through a full circuit.

Once.

Twice.

By the third time, he became aware of something faint beneath the movement. A second rhythm, softer than a whisper, echoes the pattern at the edges of perception.

It reminded him of the way Bai Xueya’s qi had felt wrapped around his in the darkness. Cold and sharp and impossibly controlled, yet willing to soften for him.

He didn’t reach for that rhythm.

He acknowledged it. Then let it be.

When he opened his eyes again, his breath was steady. No tremor in his hands. No dizziness behind his eyes.

"I really am at Fifth Level," he murmured.

It wasn’t a dream. Not a temporary, reckless surge that would vanish with the first misstep.

The thought didn’t fill him with giddy joy.

It filled him with something quieter and far stronger.

Responsibility.

Lin Tian rose from the bed and moved to the door that opened onto his small courtyard. The stone tiles outside were still damp, traces of dew clinging to the moss between them. A practice sword rested against the wall where he had left it years ago; its grip was clean, but the blade was dulled from disuse.

He picked it up.

The weight sat differently in his hand now.

He stepped to the center of the courtyard and drew in another breath.

The Lin clan’s basic sword forms weren’t complicated. Even when he couldn’t cultivate, he’d drilled them until his muscles remembered the motions better than his bones remembered not breaking.

He sank into the first stance.

His footwork landed without the slight wobble he’d grown used to compensating for. The twist of his waist carried cleanly through to his shoulders. When he drew the blade through the opening arc, the air parted around it with a faint hiss.

Qi threaded through the movement on instinct, reinforcing his limbs rather than dragging them.

Strike.

Turn.

Guard.

Pivot.

He moved through the set, each step a test. He pushed harder than he should have near the end, deliberately overreaching just enough to feel the strain along his side.

In the past, that kind of overreach would have meant collapsing breathless, his meridians howling in protest.

Now, his muscles protested, not his channels.

His lungs burned the honest way. Sweat gathered at his temples. His pulse pounded in his ears, but the flow of qi remained smooth.

He came to rest with the practice sword lowered at his side, chest rising and falling.

A faint tug brushed against his senses.

Subtle. Easy to miss if he hadn’t just been studying the System.

Something in that distant reservoir had stirred when he overreached, like water rippling when a stone cut too close to the surface. Not yet flowing, just... aware.

He stopped immediately.

"Not yet," he told himself.

If he started leaning on that pool every time he hit a limit, he would never know how far his own effort could carry him.

He stood in the center of the courtyard until his breathing calmed, letting the last of the exertion settle. Then he returned the sword to its place and went back inside.

His body felt heavier with honest fatigue. His mind felt clearer.

The System pane hovered at the edge of his vision, ready whenever he called.

For the moment, he let it fade.

End of Chapter 23

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