Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 53: Contribution Trial: Snowfield Hunt [1]
The notice went up at dawn.
Not on the ranking slab this time.
On every slab.
Outer quarters. Training terraces. The corridor outside the ration hall. Even the wall beside the outer library had a new froststone panel etched with fresh lines of blue light, still humming as if the formation ink hadn’t finished settling.
Lin Tian saw it when he stepped out to collect his morning ration.
A ring of disciples stood around the slab, faces angled upward, mouths quiet but eyes sharp. The air around them felt different from the usual ranking-day tension.
Someone whistled softly under their breath.
"Contribution trial."
"So soon?"
"They really want to see him bleed."
Lin Tian didn’t react outwardly. He moved through the cluster with the same measured pace he’d learned to wear like armor. He stopped close enough to read without needing to lean in.
The title sat at the top in crisp characters:
OUTER CONTRIBUTION TRIAL — SNOWFIELD HUNT
Below it, the rules were carved with the kind of neat clarity that only sect law could produce.
He read once.
Then again.
Not because he didn’t understand.
Because he wanted to understand what was hidden between the lines.
Participants: Outer disciples and provisional candidates.
Format: Team-based hunt within a regulated snowfield zone (formation-controlled).
Objective: Collect Frost Tokens by:
Defeating designated Frostbeasts (tokens extracted upon confirmed suppression), or Securing formation nodes (tokens released upon node stabilization).
Scoring:
Total Frost Tokens collected.
Performance Discipline Rating (formation compliance + team conduct).
Deductions for reckless damage, formation violations, and prohibited intent.
Restrictions:
No lethal force against teammates.
No deliberate crippling.
No theft of tokens from teammates (automatic disqualification).
No use of restricted inner disciple methods.
Withdrawal permitted via emergency flare signal (penalty applies).
Duration: One day. Begin at midday.
Team Assignment: Posted one hour before entry.
He let the words settle.
Tokens.
Formation nodes.
Performance discipline.
That last one mattered.
It meant they weren’t just measuring strength.
They were measuring behavior under stress.
They were building a clean justification for whatever they wanted to do later.
If someone sabotaged him and he responded by flaring, overkilling, or violating formation limits, they could write it down as "instability."
If he stayed controlled, they’d be forced to acknowledge it.
Either way, they’d learn something.
Lin Tian turned away from the slab and walked toward the ration counter.
The clerk handed him his pouch without looking up.
As Lin Tian stepped aside, he felt eyes linger on his back. Not all hostile. Some curious. Some excited.
He returned to his room and sat for a few breaths before moving.
The Link pulsed faintly as he adjusted his bracer.
Xueya’s presence was still tight, controlled, and distant. But there was a change today.
A thread of alertness braided with something like worry.
She knew.
The sect always told her things before they told him. Not out of kindness—because she was under monitoring and they liked to watch her reaction to his name.
Lin Tian exhaled slowly.
He didn’t reach through the Link with emotion.
He sent intention instead.
I will be careful.
The response was faint and immediate, like a brush of frost against his palm.
Good. Don’t give them what they want.
He didn’t know if those were her exact words, but he felt the meaning.
He stood.
Today wasn’t for long cultivation cycles. Not before a field trial designed to drain stamina and push nerves.
He moved his body instead.
He walked the small length of his room back and forth, controlling each step like he was already on ice, already under formation pressure.
He let the cold qi in the air settle into his dantian without biting the edges of his limbs.
He did not let the trace become curious.
By late morning, the outer quarters had a different kind of movement.
Disciples checked swords, tightened wraps, adjusted boots meant for snow traction. Some laughed too loudly. Some stayed silent, eyes hard.
Teams weren’t posted yet, but people already clustered in familiar groups, forming expectations.
Lin Tian walked toward the central courtyard where the team assignments would appear.
When he arrived, Elder Qiao was already there.
The outer elder stood on a raised platform of froststone, hands behind his back, expression composed. He didn’t look like someone about to send youths into a snowfield hunt.
He looked like someone about to weigh them.
Behind him, several assistants held jade tablets and scrolls. A formation array glowed faintly at their feet, ready to record results.
The crowd quieted automatically when Elder Qiao lifted his hand.
"Outer disciples," he said, voice calm and carrying. "Provisional candidates. Today’s contribution trial is not entertainment."
A few disciples stiffened.
"It is not a place to prove bravado," Elder Qiao continued. "It is not a place to settle grudges."
His gaze swept the crowd.
It passed over Lin Tian for half a breath longer than necessary.
"And it is not a place to embarrass this sect with foolishness."
Silence.
Elder Qiao’s hand lowered slightly.
"The Snowfield Hunt zone is formation-regulated," he said. "It will test endurance. Control. Coordination. The cold density there is higher than the outer terraces. The formation pressure will amplify errors."
A murmur ran through the crowd at that.
"Tokens will be collected from frostbeasts and formation nodes," Elder Qiao continued. "Team performance will affect allocation. Team discipline will affect allocation."
A pause.
He let that sink in.
"Those who cooperate cleanly will be rewarded," he said. "Those who attempt to cheat will be marked."
Lin Tian’s jaw tightened slightly.
Elder Qiao gestured to the assistants.
"Team assignments will now be posted," he said.
A pair of assistants stepped forward and pressed jade tablets against a large froststone slab.
Blue light flared.
Names appeared in neat columns.
A ripple moved through the crowd as people searched.
Lin Tian found his name quickly.
Because it sat in a place that made several nearby disciples exhale in quiet amusement.
Team 17
Lin Tian — Provisional Candidate (#23)
Xu Wen — Outer Disciple (#41)
Zhao Yuming — Outer Disciple (#28)
He Lian — Outer Disciple (#63)
Lin Tian stared for a heartbeat.
#28.
Zhao Yuming.
A rank-holder close enough to him that resentment would be easy.
#41.
Xu Wen.
Neutral, mid-rank. A safe presence.
#63.
He Lian.
Low rank.
Opportunist, likely.
Lin Tian didn’t know their faces yet, but the structure was obvious.
It was balanced enough to look fair.
But "fair" was a tool.
End of Chapter 53







