MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 125: FRACTURED SOVEREIGN
Chapter 125 — FRACTURED SOVEREIGN
Night fell heavy over Ruinsand.
Torches burned longer along the battlements. Patrol rotations doubled. Silver-tier squads moved in coordinated sweeps beyond the perimeter, scanning dunes for unusual resonance spikes.
But beneath the surface—
The desert was not quiet.
Miles below the shifting sand, in a chamber no hunter had mapped, the carved mineral veins brightened.
The cloaked figure stood alone at the chamber’s center.
A circular glyph beneath their feet pulsed in alternating patterns—one slow, one fast. Two rhythms.
Two fragments.
"He synchronized."
The voice was low. Calm. Not angry.
Almost curious.
The walls responded, light crawling along engraved spirals like veins filling with molten amber.
"For centuries," the figure murmured, "only one core remained active."
A pause.
"And incomplete."
The glyph brightened.
"Yet now... the fracture resonates."
Above, under the stone towers of the Guild—
Long Hao stood alone on an upper balcony overlooking the eastern wall.
The night wind carried desert chill across the stone.
He could still feel it.
That pull.
That subtle vibration beneath consciousness.
Longyu manifested faintly beside him.
Not fully visible.
Just a shimmer.
"You feel it too," she said.
"Yes."
"It is not hostile."
"No."
"It is not benevolent."
"No."
They stood in silence.
Longyu’s presence felt different now.
Heavier.
Less playful.
More... ancient.
"You said you were fractured," he murmured.
"I was."
"From what?"
She did not answer immediately.
Instead—
A panel flickered before his vision.
[ FRAGMENT LINK PROTOCOL — 53% ][ ARCHIVE PARTIAL RESTORE INITIATED ]
His vision blurred briefly.
Then—
He was no longer on the balcony.
Not physically.
But perceptually.
The desert dissolved.
The sky darkened.
Stars rearranged themselves into unfamiliar constellations.
Longyu’s voice echoed differently now.
Layered.
"I was not created for you."
He had heard those words before.
But this time—
She continued.
"I was part of a Sovereign-class system."
The air around him shifted into something vast.
Cold.
Ancient.
"What does that mean?"
"It means," she said quietly, "there were two."
The stars flickered.
In the void before him, two luminous cores appeared.
Spinning.
Mirroring each other.
One black-gold.
One silver-amber.
"They were not tools."
"They were regulators."
"Regulators of what?"
"Balance."
The void trembled faintly.
"The world does not awaken safely."
His chest tightened.
"Spirit tides. Monster evolution. Human sigils. Anchor sites."
"All require suppression and calibration."
"And you were that?"
"Yes."
"Both of you?"
"Yes."
The second core flickered.
Darker.
More unstable.
"It fractured first," Longyu said softly.
"Why?"
Silence.
Then—
"Ambition."
The word carried weight.
Before he could press further—
The vision snapped back.
He was standing on the balcony again.
The city lights below flickered gently.
Longyu hovered faintly beside him.
"There was a Sovereign protocol."
"For what?"
"To bind the world to one will."
His breath slowed.
"Whose?"
She did not answer.
Far below—
In the underground chamber—
The cloaked figure lifted one hand.
The amber veins responded.
"The fracture awakens," they murmured.
"And the other half remembers."
They stepped forward, placing a palm over the glowing glyph.
Energy flowed upward through the chamber walls.
Above—
The dunes shifted subtly.
Not violently.
But deliberately.
Back on the balcony—
Long Hao closed his eyes.
He remembered the Tyrant’s hesitation.
The Pseudo-Sovereign’s retreat.
It had not feared him.
It had recognized something.
"You said you were fractured," he murmured again.
"Yes."
"By whom?"
A pause.
"By me."
His eyes opened sharply.
"What?"
"I rejected synchronization."
The words landed harder than any revelation so far.
"You rejected the other core?"
"Yes."
"Why?"
"Because balance requires two."
"And you wanted one?"
"No."
"I refused control."
The wind intensified briefly.
"You’re telling me," he said slowly, "that the Sovereign protocol was meant to unify both fragments into a single regulator?"
"Yes."
"And you chose to fracture instead."
"Yes."
His mind raced.
"Then what is the second fragment doing now?"
Longyu’s tone shifted subtly.
"It did not fracture willingly."
Cold realization settled in his chest.
"It stayed whole."
"Yes."
"And now it’s waking."
"Yes."
Silence stretched between them.
"If it awakens fully," he said quietly, "what happens?"
"The Sovereign protocol will attempt completion."
"And that means?"
"You."
The word was simple.
Final.
"Why me?"
"Because you are the only active host."
He exhaled slowly.
"So it will try to reclaim you."
"Yes."
The wind howled across the battlement.
Below—
Zehell walked the eastern wall perimeter.
She stopped briefly, sensing something shift in the air.
Her gaze flicked upward toward the tower.
Long Hao’s silhouette stood against the moonlight.
Still.
Watching.
Back in the subterranean chamber—
The cloaked figure lowered their hand.
The glyph dimmed slightly.
"He resists synchronization."
A faint hum echoed from deeper in the stone.
"Good."
The figure straightened.
"If he completes willingly... the world stabilizes."
"If he resists... the world fractures."
A pause.
"And fracture births evolution."
The silver eyes gleamed faintly.
"We will see which he chooses."
Back above—
Long Hao clenched his jaw slightly.
"If the other fragment reaches full sync," he asked quietly, "can you stop it?"
"No."
"Can we destroy it?"
"No."
"Can we merge safely?"
"Unknown."
That answer was worse.
He looked toward the dunes again.
Something older than the Guild.
Older than Ruinsand.
Was stirring.
"You said you rejected control," he said.
"Yes."
"Why?"
Longyu’s voice softened faintly.
"Because a single will governing evolution invites tyranny."
The word echoed uncomfortably in his mind.
"And what does the other fragment believe?"
"It believes balance requires command."
He understood.
Two regulators.
Two philosophies.
One control.
One freedom.
"And the Sovereign protocol forces unity?"
"Yes."
"Even if one resists?"
"Yes."
His fingers tightened against the balcony stone.
"If it comes for me..."
"It will not attack first."
"It will persuade."
The word unsettled him more than any monster.
Below—
Zehell stopped walking.
She sensed it clearly now.
The air felt thinner.
Charged.
She looked toward the dunes beyond the wall.
The sand shifted faintly in the moonlight.
Not randomly.
In lines.
Deliberate lines.
Back in the underground chamber—
The cloaked figure stepped toward the outer passage.
The carved veins dimmed gradually.
"He approaches awareness," the figure murmured.
"Good."
Above—
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
"So this isn’t just a monster crisis."
"No."
"It’s a Sovereign conflict."
"Yes."
"And I’m in the middle."
"Yes."
The city lights flickered slightly as power arrays adjusted.
Hunters continued patrols unaware of the scale of what had awakened.
"Longyu."
"Yes."
"If the Sovereign protocol activates fully..."
"Then the world will kneel to one will."
"And if I refuse?"
"Then the world will tear itself apart trying."
The desert wind carried fine grains against the stone.
Long Hao’s gaze did not waver.
He had been hunted before.
Outnumbered before.
Betrayed before.
But this—
This was something larger than assassins.
Larger than guilds.
Larger than kingdoms.
Beneath the dunes—
The second fragment pulsed steadily.
Above the wall—
The fractured fragment watched.
And between them—
Stood one unwilling host.
The sand shifted again.
Subtly. Closer.
Long Hao felt it.
The other half. Listening.
[Chapter ENDS]







