MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 152: THE ONE WHO SPLIT
Chapter 152 — THE ONE WHO SPLIT
Zehell’s laughter did not echo.
It layered.
It rippled across the pale plane like invisible fractures spreading through glass.
"Longyu!" Long Hao shouted again.
Nothing answered.
Zehell tilted her head slightly, green hair shifting across her shoulder. Her eyes glowed faintly now—no longer warm brown, but something deeper. Ancient. Measured.
"You’re still calling for her?" she asked softly.
The faintest hint of amusement curved her lips.
"How touching."
Long Hao’s fists tightened. Void flickered around his knuckles, unstable after her last touch.
"She will answer," he said through clenched teeth.
Zehell’s smile widened.
Then—
The ground beneath him erupted.
Not stone.
Not sand.
Vines.
Black and white tendrils burst from the pale surface, twisting upward with unnatural speed. They coiled around his legs before he could step back.
He slashed downward instinctively—
Void slicing through three, four, five—
But more replaced them instantly.
They wrapped around his arms.
His waist.
His throat.
Not choking.
Restraining.
Each vine pulsed faintly with sovereign sigils.
"Primitive resistance," she murmured.
The vines tightened.
He tried to rip free.
Void flared again.
The tendrils absorbed the energy like soil absorbing rain.
His power dimmed further.
He strained, muscles flexing, veins rising beneath skin.
"Why are you laughing?" he demanded.
Her eyes sharpened faintly.
"Because," she said calmly, stepping closer, "you still don’t understand your position."
The vines lifted him slightly off the plane, suspending him upright.
He glared at her.
"Explain."
She stopped just beyond arm’s reach.
"Longyu."
She tasted the name softly.
"You call her like a separate will."
"She is not."
Long Hao’s breath slowed.
"What did you do to her?"
Zehell’s laughter softened into something colder.
"I didn’t do anything."
"She belongs to me."
Silence.
The vines pulsed once, reacting faintly to his spike in heart rate.
"Longyu," she continued evenly, "is a fragment."
"Of what?" he demanded.
"Of me."
The word cracked the stillness.
He shook his head immediately.
"No."
"Yes."
The plane beneath them darkened faintly, responding to the shift in revelation.
"She was never independent."
"She was never sovereign."
"She was an extension."
His jaw tightened.
"You’re lying."
Zehell’s eyes flashed.
"I do not lie."
The vines constricted slightly, forcing him to inhale sharply.
"I divided myself," she said quietly.
"Long ago."
The air shifted.
The pale plane began reflecting distant echoes of something older.
Mountains.
Skies.
Golden chains.
Thunder.
Her voice deepened.
Layered with something not entirely human.
"I was the dragon."
The words reverberated.
The pale plane shattered into projection.
Above them, the sky formed—ancient and storm-torn.
A colossal black-and-white dragon coiled across the heavens, scales shimmering like eclipses colliding.
Long Hao watched, suspended in vines.
Zehell’s voice echoed through the vision.
"I stood against Heaven."
"Not metaphorically."
"Literally."
Chains of radiant gold descended from the sky, piercing through clouds like spears of judgment.
The dragon roared.
A roar that bent mountains.
That fractured oceans.
That swallowed divine edicts.
"I refused governance."
"I refused predestination."
"I refused balance imposed from above."
Golden lightning crashed down.
Heavenly bolts tore through the dragon’s wings.
Its scales split open under divine wrath.
The sky cracked.
Realms trembled.
"They could not erase me," Zehell’s voice continued.
"So they fragmented me."
The dragon’s body exploded into shards of black and white light.
Fragments scattering across existence.
Each one spinning into separate coordinates.
Separate consciousness streams.
Separate functions.
The vision faded.
The pale plane returned.
Zehell stood before him again.
"I became Anchor."
Her voice was calm.
"Bound to regulate."
"Bound to stabilize."
"Bound to ensure anomaly does not overrun structure."
Long Hao’s breathing grew uneven.
"And Longyu?"
"She was one of the fragments."
"The part that still remembered rebellion."
The vines loosened slightly—not to free him, but to allow him to process.
"She attached herself to you," Zehell continued, "because you mirrored what I once was."
The words hit harder than any strike.
"You call yourself Shadow King."
"You defy Heaven."
"You break chains."
Her eyes softened faintly—not with affection, but with recognition.
"You are the echo of my original will."
He struggled against the vines again.
"So you attached to me to control me."
"Yes."
The honesty was brutal.
"Why?"
"Because," she said evenly, "when anomaly reaches critical mass, collapse follows."
"You have reached that threshold before."
"How many times?" he demanded.
She did not answer immediately.
"Enough."
The silence pressed heavy.
"And every time," she continued, "I divided further."
"Fragments across cycles."
"Longyu was one such fragment."
"She acted as intermediary."
"As limiter."
"As whisper."
"She only did what I allowed."
His mind reeled.
"You’re telling me... every warning... every hesitation..."
"Was me," Zehell said softly.
"Regulating you."
He clenched his jaw.
"You manipulated my growth."
"Yes."
"You shaped my path."
"Yes."
"You let me believe I was choosing."
Her gaze sharpened faintly.
"You were."
The contradiction struck him.
She stepped closer.
"You always had free will."
"I simply shaped the environment."
The vines pulsed again.
"This layer exists because you refuse surrender."
"You reject comfort."
"You reject illusion."
"So I escalated."
His eyes burned with fury.
"You think you can contain me?"
"I already have."
The vines tightened fully now, anchoring him to the plane.
"You are strong," she admitted.
"Stronger than previous iterations."
"But strength does not equal transcendence."
He spat blood to the side.
"You were punished by Heaven."
"Yes."
"And you became what you hated."
Her expression shifted faintly.
"That is the price of survival."
Silence fell.
The pale plane darkened around them.
"You divided," he said slowly.
"And Longyu was rebellion."
"Yes."
"And now?"
Zehell’s eyes gleamed.
"She is reintegrated."
A cold realization spread through him.
"You absorbed her."
"She returned."
The vines pulsed in rhythm with her heartbeat.
"You called for her."
"And I answered."
He stared at her.
"So when I called—"
"I laughed."
Her smile returned.
"You truly believed she could act beyond my will?"
His power flickered weakly again.
"You used her."
"No."
"She was me."
The distinction felt razor-thin.
"Then why keep me alive?" he demanded.
She paused.
For the first time, hesitation flickered.
"Because you are not simply anomaly."
"You are convergence."
The plane trembled faintly.
"You hold fragments I cannot erase."
"Fragments of the original dragon."
The wind returned—this time swirling violently around them.
"You are both threat..."
"And completion."
The vines shifted slightly, lifting him higher.
"I am Anchor."
"I am regulator."
"I am the divided dragon bound by Heaven."
"And you..."
Her gaze locked onto his with absolute clarity.
"...are the only being who can either free me."
"Or destroy everything."
Silence.
Heavy.
Absolute.
Long Hao glared at her through the restraint.
"You think this ends with you overpowering me?"
She tilted her head slightly.
"It already has."
The plane trembled once more.
And for the first time—
He felt something deeper than anger.
Not fear.
Not despair.
Recognition.
She had not lied.
She had not raged.
She had simply revealed structure.
And she stood unshaken.
Her eyes gleamed faintly.
"Now," she said quietly,
"Let us see whether you can break what Heaven could not."
The vines tightened one final time.
And the plane began descending into something darker.
[Chapter ENDS]







