Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 49: Frostheart Residence [2]

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Chapter 49: Frostheart Residence [2]

The outer administration office sat at the edge of the outer quarters, a simple hall with a single front desk staffed by clerks who looked like they hadn’t smiled since entering the sect. Lin Tian stepped inside and waited his turn.

When he reached the counter, the clerk looked up and examined him without warmth.

"Name," the clerk said.

"Lin Tian," he replied.

The clerk’s eyes flicked to a ledger, then back.

"Purpose."

"Formal written inquiry," Lin Tian said, placing the sealed note on the counter. "For Disciple Bai Xueya."

The clerk’s fingers paused above the paper.

A faint crease formed between his brows, as if annoyed that the rules had to be used properly.

He took the note anyway.

"It will be screened," the clerk said flatly.

"I understand."

"Delivery is not guaranteed."

"I understand."

The clerk slid the note into a wooden tray and stamped a small slip.

"Receipt," he said, pushing it toward Lin Tian. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖

Lin Tian took it and bowed slightly. "Thank you."

The clerk did not respond.

Lin Tian turned and left.

Outside, the cold hit him again. He breathed it in and let it settle.

He had done what could be done.

Now he had to act.

Not by running toward Frostheart.

By climbing.

He returned to the outer training ground and spent the morning drilling footwork on ice until the cold beneath his boots felt like something he could predict rather than fear.

He practiced tight, efficient arcs that didn’t waste motion.

He practiced short-range entries that broke wide techniques.

He practiced stopping his own instinct to flare when someone’s aura brushed his skin.

At noon, he sat alone on a stone bench near the terrace edge and ate his ration quietly. The rice was plain. The pills tasted like bitter snow.

He didn’t mind.

He wasn’t here to be comfortable.

He was here to survive.

And to pull her out of being alone under their eyes.

As the day stretched, the Link remained steady—but the tension in it didn’t ease.

It tightened and loosened in subtle cycles, like a breath held, then released, then held again.

Not panic.

Pressure.

Someone was pushing her.

Someone was pressing questions into her in polite voices.

Someone was demanding explanations without ever saying the word demand.

Lin Tian didn’t need to see it to understand it.

He had lived among people who smiled while trying to crush you.

Azure Snow simply did it cleaner.

By late afternoon, he returned to his room and cultivated in slow, controlled circuits, letting the denser sect energy thicken his foundation without rushing it.

The trace at his wrist prickled once during the third circuit.

A warning.

He slowed.

He focused on stabilization instead of absorption.

The prickling eased.

He opened his eyes afterward and stared at the wall for a long moment.

Every decision here had weight.

Every emotion was a lever someone could pull.

He had thought his crippled life was hard because he was powerless.

This was different.

Power existed now.

And everyone wanted to shape it.

Evening came with no sunset warmth—only a slow dimming of the pale sky and a sharpening of cold. Lin Tian lit a small lamp and sat at the table again, not to write, but to wait.

He didn’t expect a response immediately.

Screening took time.

Delays were convenient.

He remained still anyway.

And then, as the lamp flickered, the Link shifted.

Warmth surged suddenly—stronger than it had all day.

It hit him like a hand pressed against his chest.

Not arousal.

Not lust.

Something softer and more dangerous in this place.

Relief.

Recognition.

A thin thread of warmth that carried the feeling of his name without words.

She had received the note.

Or at least she had been told about it.

Lin Tian’s throat tightened unexpectedly.

He hadn’t realized how hungry he’d been for any proof that she was still there behind the walls of sect etiquette.

He let out a slow breath, shoulders easing.

For a heartbeat, the Link felt like Cloudcrest again.

Quiet pavilion.

Warm yang braided with cool yin.

Her fingers brushing his.

Then—

Cold slammed down.

A clamp, sudden and sharp, as if a door had been shut.

The warmth didn’t vanish completely, but it was pushed beneath layers.

Contained.

Forced down.

He felt a brief spike of anger in the Link—hers, controlled so tightly it almost cut him.

And beneath that anger—

A warning.

Someone had noticed the moment of softness.

Someone had stepped closer.

Someone had pressed their presence into her space until she smothered herself back into composure.

Lin Tian’s jaw tightened.

His hand curled on the table.

The trace at his wrist pulsed faintly in response to his spike of emotion.

He forced his fingers to loosen.

Breathe.

He breathed until the pulse dulled.

He closed his eyes and reached into the Link again, gently.

The connection answered faintly.

Stable.

But colder now.

Not because she was cold to him.

Because she had to be.

He sat in the lamp’s thin light, listening to the faint hum of formations in the walls.

Surveillance wasn’t a rumor.

It was real.

And it wasn’t only aimed at him.

They were watching her for any deviation from the mask they preferred.

They were watching for any sign that she chose something outside the sect’s control.

Lin Tian’s breathing stayed steady, but his thoughts sharpened.

They thought separation would weaken them.

They thought rules would make him hesitate.

They thought screening a note and watching her reaction would teach them how tight the bond was.

Fine.

Let them watch.

He would give them nothing explosive to record.

Nothing desperate to twist.

He would climb like stone rising under snow—slow, inevitable, and impossible to stop once it had weight.

He opened his eyes and stared at the faint glow above the doorframe where the listening formation rested.

Then he looked down at his wrist.

The trace was quiet again, but it felt more awake than yesterday.

As if it had noticed the clamp.

As if it had felt someone else’s cold pressing near it and had leaned closer, curious.

Lin Tian flexed his hand once.

"Not yet," he whispered.

Then he stood, extinguished the lamp, and sat cross-legged on the bed.

He did not cultivate with hunger.

He cultivated with patience.

Outside, the outer quarters slept under cold stars and higher cold eyes.

Somewhere above, behind walls carved from froststone and layered with formation lines, Bai Xueya held herself like a blade in its sheath.

And still, beneath that control, the Link remained.

Warm enough to remind him of what he was climbing for.

Cold enough to remind him what would happen if he failed.

Lin Tian’s breathing did not change.

His qi flowed steady.

His mind stayed calm.

But in the quiet of the outer quarters, one thought settled into him with the weight of something final:

They could screen his words.

They could restrict his steps.

They could clamp down on her warmth.

But they could not erase what had already been chosen between them.

Not without breaking something.

And if Azure Snow ever tried to break it—

Lin Tian would make sure the sound carried all the way to the highest peak.

End of Chapter 49