MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 135: THE LAB BENEATH THE ANCHOR
Chapter 135 — THE LAB BENEATH THE ANCHOR
For a long moment after the Black Steel Dragon fell—
No one moved.
Steel fragments lay scattered across the cavern floor like the remains of a fallen god. The molten glow that had once pulsed within its chest faded completely, leaving only dull, inert metal.
The anchor above dimmed from violent white to stable silver.
Quiet.
True quiet.
Not the tense silence of waiting.
The silence of something finished.
Colby was the first to break it.
"So..." he coughed, pushing rubble off his chest. "We killed it, right?"
Marek groaned from where he lay half-buried. "If it gets back up, I’m quitting."
Zehell exhaled slowly.
She was still half-supporting Long Hao, his weight leaning into her shoulder.
"You alive?" she asked quietly.
"Unfortunately," he replied hoarsely.
She almost smiled.
Almost.
He straightened slowly, though his movements were stiff. Every breath pulled at bruised ribs. His core felt... raw. Not broken.
But used.
Inside—
The triangular lattice rotated steadily. Damaged nodes reinforced. The silver fragment was quiet.
Longyu spoke softly.
"Guardian sequence terminated."
The silver fragment added:
"Anchor access unrestricted."
Long Hao lifted his gaze toward the upper chamber.
The dragon had been defending something.
Not simply testing them.
"Let’s finish this," he said.
Zehell nodded once.
They climbed through fallen stone toward the original chamber. The destruction above had altered its shape entirely. The once-pristine circular hall was fractured. Pillars shattered. Walls cracked open.
But the central anchor pillar remained intact.
The dark stone structure glowed faintly now, no longer hostile.
As they approached, the air felt different.
Less oppressive.
More... concealed.
Long Hao placed his hand gently on the anchor ring once more.
This time—
No defensive pulse.
No violent surge.
Instead—
The stone rings rotated slowly, almost invitingly.
A low hum resonated beneath the chamber floor.
Zehell tensed.
"What did you do?"
"I didn’t do anything."
The ground beneath the anchor shifted.
A circular segment of stone slid aside, revealing a narrow descending staircase carved into black rock.
Colby blinked.
"There was a basement?"
Marek muttered, "Of course there’s a basement."
Zehell’s grip tightened on her spear.
"After you."
Long Hao stepped forward.
The staircase descended far deeper than expected. Not rough cave work—precision cut. Straight. Clean.
The deeper they went, the less natural it felt.
The air cooled.
The stone shifted from jagged cavern to polished black surfaces.
At the base of the staircase—
A door.
Not stone.
Metal.
Smooth.
Seamless.
Completely out of place in the desert frontier.
Colby stared.
"That is not ancient."
Long Hao reached forward cautiously and brushed his fingers against it.
The door hummed softly.
Then split down the middle.
Sliding open.
Revealing light.
Not torchlight.
Not flame.
White.
Artificial.
They stepped inside.
And froze.
The chamber was not a cavern.
It was a facility.
Metal walkways.
Glass partitions.
Panels embedded into walls.
Tables with organized instruments laid neatly in rows.
Not dust-covered relics.
Maintained.
Preserved.
Modern.
Zehell’s voice was low.
"This... isn’t possible."
Long Hao moved slowly across the polished floor.
Monitors lined the far wall, their surfaces dark but intact. Strange devices sat connected by thin cables. Cabinets labeled with symbols and alphanumeric sequences.
Colby ran a hand across a metal console.
"It’s clean."
Marek frowned.
"This wasn’t abandoned centuries ago."
Long Hao approached a table stacked with paper.
Actual paper.
Bound stacks.
He picked one up.
Research notes.
Handwritten.
Detailed diagrams of evolutionary pathways. Charts mapping energy density fluctuations. Annotations on fragment resonance frequencies.
One page caught his attention.
Title scrawled in bold script:
SOVEREIGN REGULATOR — HUMAN INTERFACE EXPERIMENTS
Zehell stepped closer.
"What does that mean?"
He flipped pages quickly.
Sketches of human silhouettes overlaid with core placements.
Comparative stability metrics between full merger and partial dual-node authority.
His jaw tightened.
"They’ve tried this before."
Inside—
The silver fragment stirred faintly.
Longyu’s tone was unreadable.
"Data familiar."
The silver fragment spoke quietly.
"Historical archive."
Long Hao turned to another page.
A list of recorded host candidates.
Many marked with a single word.
FAILED.
Some marked:
TERMINATED.
One marked:
DIVERGENCE — UNPREDICTABLE.
The date beside it was recent.
Zehell’s breath caught.
"That’s you."
He didn’t answer.
He moved deeper into the facility.
Another chamber opened to the right.
This one filled with storage crates.
Inside—
Devices.
Compact metallic cylinders.
Handheld scanners.
Even clothing.
Modern clothing.
A jacket folded neatly on a metal rack.
Colby picked up a small device with a cracked screen.
"It’s like tech from... outside."
Marek frowned.
"Outside what?"
Long Hao stepped toward a wall-mounted display panel.
He touched it.
The screen flickered.
Then powered on.
Not fully.
But enough.
A projection flickered into existence above the table.
A rotating globe.
Continental mapping.
Energy nodes blinking across its surface.
One pulsed red.
One silver.
One black.
Zehell whispered, "There are more anchors."
"Yes."
Long Hao zoomed the projection manually.
Coordinates appeared.
The red node blinked violently.
Correction in progress.
The silver node flickered weakly.
The black node—
Dark.
Offline.
Inside—
The silver fragment’s voice deepened.
"Black node suppression indicates hostile interference."
Longyu added quietly:
"Not natural collapse."
Long Hao stepped back slowly.
"So someone else is involved."
Zehell’s gaze sharpened.
"Not just Sovereign systems."
"Human interference," he murmured.
They moved into another adjacent chamber.
This one smaller.
A desk.
A chair.
A shelf of preserved files.
A single photograph pinned to a board.
Zehell approached it first.
She stopped abruptly.
Long Hao stepped beside her.
The photograph was slightly faded.
It showed—
A man in a lab coat.
Standing in this very chamber.
Beside him—
Another figure.
Hooded.
Silver eyes visible even in still image.
The envoy.
Zehell’s voice was flat.
"That’s him."
Long Hao studied the lab-coated man.
Human.
Not ancient.
Not mythic.
Modern.
On the desk beneath the photograph—
A final document.
Sealed in plastic casing.
He opened it carefully.
The header read:
PROJECT ANCHOR — CONTINGENCY PROTOCOL
The text below:
If dual-node governance stabilizes without singular assimilation, proceed to Phase Three.
Zehell read over his shoulder.
"What’s Phase Three?"
He flipped the page.
The next sheet contained only one line.
Deploy Human Variable — Generation Two.
Silence.
Bronze Squad stood quietly behind them now.
Even Colby had nothing to say. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖
Long Hao felt something cold settle in his chest.
"They planned for me."
Inside—
The silver fragment did not deny it.
Longyu’s voice was softer.
"You were never accidental."
He closed the folder slowly.
"So the dragon wasn’t just guarding an anchor."
"No," Zehell replied.
"It was guarding a secret."
He looked around the chamber again.
Not ancient ruin.
Not divine relic.
A research facility hidden beneath a Sovereign node.
Modern items.
Modern minds.
Studying something older than civilization.
He approached another console.
This one displayed energy readings frozen mid-log.
The last entry timestamped only days ago.
Zehell’s voice lowered.
"Someone was here."
"Recently."
The room felt colder suddenly.
Less abandoned.
More paused.
Inside—
The triangular lattice shifted faintly.
The silver fragment spoke:
"Observation ongoing."
Long Hao’s eyes narrowed.
"They’re watching."
Zehell’s grip tightened around her spear.
"Then let them."
He stepped back toward the central chamber slowly.
The anchor glow above had stabilized completely.
The Black Steel Dragon’s fragments lay inert above them.
They had won.
But this—
This was bigger than a guardian trial.
This was orchestration.
Long Hao turned to Zehell.
"They didn’t just test authority."
"They’re building it."
Her jaw set.
"For what?"
He looked toward the flickering globe projection again.
Red node pulsing.
Black node silent.
Silver node unstable.
"For control."
The lights above flickered briefly.
Just once.
Almost unnoticeable.
But not to him.
Inside—
The silver fragment whispered.
"External access attempt detected."
Longyu’s voice sharpened.
"Trace incomplete."
The screen went dark.
The facility fell silent again.
But not abandoned.
Watching.
Waiting.
Zehell stepped beside him.
"You thinking what I’m thinking?"
"That we just walked into something much larger than Ruinsand?"
She nodded once.
"And that someone out there knows you survived."
He didn’t answer.
Because he knew.
They hadn’t just passed a trial.
They had stepped into a war that wasn’t ancient myth.
It was active.
Modern.
Calculated.
Long Hao looked down at the folder still in his hand.
Generation Two.
The air felt heavier.
Not from dragon breath.
From implication.
They had won the battle.
But the deeper chambers held something far more dangerous than steel.
Intent.
[Chapter ENDS]







