MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 102: THE ZONE WHERE NOTHING LIES
Chapter 102 — THE ZONE WHERE NOTHING LIES
Luo Qinghe stopped smiling.
Not abruptly. Not with anger. The expression simply... left him, like a courtesy he no longer saw value in extending. The green-black lattice of his domain pulsed once, deep and slow, and the battlefield answered like a loyal servant awaiting instruction.
"Enough," he said calmly.
The word carried weight.
Not authority shouted outward, but a command issued inward, into the bones of the arena itself. The ground shuddered—not collapsing, not rising—but aligning. The drifting platforms slowed. The erratic tilts corrected themselves. Gaps narrowed. Heights equalized.
The chaos that had favored misjudgment began to drain away.
Bai Qianlan felt it immediately.
Her steps did not falter, but her breath slowed, instincts sharpening. The illusion layers around her whispered warnings—not of danger, but of loss. Loss of ambiguity. Loss of error margins. Loss of that precious half-second where assumptions could be bent.
Luo Qinghe was doing exactly what an authority user should do.
He was removing uncertainty.
"Domains," Luo said, his voice carrying easily across the arena, "exist to define reality. I was indulging... flexibility."
The ground beneath him compressed, flattening into a wide, stable plane of fused stone-vein and mineralized root. Around that core, the arena reorganized itself into zones.
Rigid zones.
Platforms snapped into place, locking at fixed distances. Chasms sealed into predictable trenches. Elevations standardized. Even the wind lost its erratic pull, flowing now in smooth, measurable currents.
Above, the stabilizing formations flickered—then steadied.
The arena stopped dying.
It became structured.
A ripple of relief ran through the crowd.
"It’s stabilizing!"
"He fixed it!"
"So illusion girl’s done, right?"
Rong Yueran let out a breath she hadn’t realized she was holding, phoenix flames settling into a tighter orbit around her body. "Finally," she muttered. "I hate fighting guesses."
Ling Yifan’s expression darkened.
"...This helps him," he realized.
Yue Hanran, still barely holding his own footing against Luo’s pull, grimaced. "He’s collapsing variance. That illusionist loses her edge."
Bai Qianlan did not react outwardly.
Inwardly, her mind raced.
Illusion did not fail when reality became rigid.
It failed when reality became predictable.
Luo Qinghe took another step forward. The domain responded instantly, tightening. Lines of influence became visible now—not glowing, not dramatic, but felt. Invisible rails along which movement naturally flowed.
"You’re clever," Luo said, eyes finally locking onto Bai. "You exploit doubt. Distance. Assumption."
He raised one hand.
The space around Bai subtly resisted her next step, not blocking it, but nudging it into a defined lane.
"But doubt only exists where choices are unclear."
The arena locked.
No drifting plates. No misleading depth. No ambiguous footing.
Only clean geometry.
Luo lowered his hand.
"I choose clarity."
For the first time since the collapse began, Bai felt the illusion push back at her.
Not breaking.
Compressing.
She took a step.
The ground was exactly where it appeared to be.
She took another.
Same result.
No mistake to exploit.
No misjudgment to feed on.
Around her, the other remaining fighters adjusted quickly, relief bleeding into aggression. Two minor academy contestants surged toward her from opposite sides, confident now that what they saw was what existed.
Bai slowed.
Not in fear.
In calculation.
She let the first attacker close. Let him see her weight shift left. Let him commit to that line.
Then she did something unexpected.
She stopped projecting.
The illusion layers folded inward, collapsing not into deception, but into absence. Bai did not alter reality.
She altered herself.
Her presence thinned.
The attacker’s blade cut through the space she had occupied—because she was no longer quite there. Not invisible. Not displaced. Just... misaligned.
He stumbled, confused, his inner sense of distance lagging behind his vision.
The second attacker overcorrected.
Bai stepped between them, calm as water.
Her hand brushed the first man’s wrist.
Not a strike.
A suggestion.
He moved where he thought resistance would be.
There was none.
The rigid zone betrayed him.
He fell backward into a trench that had sealed moments earlier—now reopening just long enough to accept him before snapping shut.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
The second attacker froze, eyes wide.
Too late.
Bai exhaled.
The illusion unfolded again—but differently.
No false ground.
No phantom distances.
Instead, false finality.
A ripple of light flared beneath her feet, identical in pattern and intensity to the emergency elimination trigger. The sound echoed. The boundary formations activated.
From the stands, it looked unmistakable.
Bai Qianlan fell.
Light wrapped around her body, flaring bright—
—and she vanished.
The crowd exploded.
"WHAT—?!"
"SHE’S OUT!"
"THE ILLUSION GIRL’S DONE!"
The announcer’s voice hesitated, then followed protocol.
"E–ELIMINATION—"
The word stuck in his throat.
Because the system didn’t confirm.
The light dissipated.
The boundary remained silent.
Confusion rippled outward like shockwaves.
Luo Qinghe’s eyes narrowed.
"...Interesting."
He scanned the arena—not for Bai herself, but for disturbance. The domain tightened reflexively, trying to account for missing data.
But there was none.
Bai Qianlan was not hiding.
She was unregistered.
Her illusion had not fooled sight.
It had fooled the trigger logic.
She had layered perception so precisely that the arena’s own failsafes had misread her state. Not eliminated. Not present.
Undefined.
Ling Yifan felt it like a chill down his spine.
"She’s still in," he whispered.
Rong Yueran snarled. "Then where is she?!"
Luo Qinghe closed his eyes briefly.
For the first time since revealing his true domain, he did not advance.
Because for the first time, his clarity had produced something he could not define.
A blind spot inside structure.
The arena remained rigid.
The zones held.
But one variable was missing.
The crowd believed Bai Qianlan was gone.
The fighters reacted accordingly.
And somewhere inside the stabilized geometry—between fixed distances and absolute footing—Bai moved, unheard, unseen, unmeasured.
Not fighting the domain.
Waiting for it to finish choosing wrong.
High above, in the VIP chamber, someone leaned forward.
"...She inverted the rules," a voice murmured.
Another replied softly, "No. She inverted certainty."
Inside the arena, Luo Qinghe opened his eyes.
"...So that’s how you intend to win," he said quietly.
He smiled again.
This time, without confidence.
And the battlefield held its breath—because the most dangerous fighter was no longer visible, no longer targeted, and no longer accounted for.
She was still there.
And the game was no longer fair.
[Chapter ENDS]







