MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 170: THE MARK’S CONSEQUENCE
Chapter 170 — THE MARK’S CONSEQUENCE
The sky sealed.
The canyon fell silent.
The Heaven Executors had withdrawn.
But Long Hao did not feel victorious.
He felt... heavier.
The golden mark over his heart no longer burned wildly. It pulsed softly, like a second heartbeat layered beneath his own.
Thump.
Pause.
Thump.
Not pain.
Observation.
The Deans approached him carefully.
The Vice Dean studied his chest, eyes narrowing. "It stabilized."
The Dean shook his head slowly. "No. It evolved."
Long Hao exhaled, steadying himself.
"I felt it compress," he said quietly. "Like it folded inward."
Ling Yifan, supported by Chen, gave a faint nod. "You forced resonance instead of resisting it."
"Yes."
"And Heaven responded."
Long Hao looked up at the sky.
For the first time since the battle began, he felt something far worse than pressure.
He felt a thread.
Thin.
Invisible.
Attached to him.
Watching.
He closed his eyes and focused inward.
The fragment inside him rotated smoothly now—stronger, denser, more aligned than before.
But the golden mark had changed.
It was no longer just a seal.
It was an interface.
A monitoring node.
A regulator.
He tested it.
Just slightly.
He let a faint pulse of eclipse resonance rise from his core.
Instantly—
The mark flared.
Pain lanced through his chest, sharper than before.
Golden sparks crawled up his neck.
The sky flickered.
And something responded.
Not physically.
Not visually.
But structurally.
His internal energy pathways constricted.
The fragment dimmed slightly as if suppressed by external authority.
Long Hao’s breath hitched.
He cut the resonance immediately.
The pressure receded.
But the message was clear.
The Vice Dean saw it in his face.
"It punishes escalation," he said quietly.
Long Hao nodded.
"Not immediate death."
"Correction."
The Dean’s jaw tightened. "Heaven no longer sees you as an anomaly."
"It sees me as a developing threat."
Silence settled.
Mei Ying, still pale but standing now, crossed her arms despite the pain. "So it leashes you every time you use Anchor-tier output?"
Long Hao didn’t answer immediately.
He raised his hand again.
This time, he channeled a slightly stronger pulse of resonance—controlled, focused.
The mark ignited violently.
His body seized.
Golden lightning cracked across the sky.
The pressure descended instantly, compressing his lungs.
He dropped to one knee.
Ling Yifan swore under his breath.
"Cut it!" Ouyang shouted.
Long Hao forced himself to stop channeling.
The lightning ceased.
The sky steadied.
He remained kneeling, breathing hard.
The conclusion was undeniable.
"It scales," he said hoarsely.
"The stronger I get... the tighter it responds."
The Vice Dean nodded grimly.
"Adaptive suppression."
Chen frowned. "So what? He just doesn’t use it?"
Long Hao slowly stood.
"That’s exactly what it wants."
The wind returned faintly to the canyon.
But something had shifted.
He could feel it in his bones.
The golden mark pulsed again.
This time—
It hurt without him doing anything.
A sudden stab through his sternum.
His breath caught.
"What now?" Mei Ying snapped.
Long Hao gripped his chest.
The pain intensified.
Not because he was channeling power.
But because—
Something else was.
The fragment inside him rotated faster.
Without his command.
The golden mark responded instantly.
Heaven’s pressure descended again, though weaker this time.
Ling Yifan’s eyes widened.
"It’s reacting autonomously."
Long Hao closed his eyes and focused inward.
The fragment wasn’t unstable.
It wasn’t rebelling.
It was adapting.
It had tasted Executor-level confrontation.
It had awakened further.
And now—
It wanted to expand.
The mark would not allow it.
The clash happened inside him.
Black-white radiance pushed outward.
Golden law pressed inward.
His veins lit up faintly beneath his skin.
Not violently.
But visibly.
The Vice Dean moved closer.
"If it escalates internally—"
"It’ll tear him apart," Mei Ying finished.
Long Hao forced himself into a meditative stance.
He lowered his breathing.
Focused.
If he resisted the fragment—
It would push harder.
If he fed it—
Heaven would punish him.
He needed a third path.
He remembered the moment in the battle.
When he stopped resisting the mark.
When he let it burn.
Alignment.
Not opposition.
He inhaled slowly.
Instead of suppressing the fragment—
He guided it.
Compressed it further.
Folded it inward.
Reduced its outward signature.
The pain sharpened briefly—
Then stabilized.
The golden mark dimmed slightly.
The sky calmed.
Ling Yifan exhaled slowly.
"He found a workaround."
Long Hao opened his eyes.
Sweat dripped from his jaw.
"This isn’t suppression."
"It’s negotiation."
The Dean watched him carefully.
"You’re integrating Heaven’s law into your resonance."
"Yes."
"Dangerous."
"I don’t have a choice."
The golden mark pulsed again.
But this time—
It felt less hostile.
More... responsive.
Long Hao frowned.
"That’s new."
Mei Ying narrowed her eyes. "What?"
"It’s not just punishing."
"It’s analyzing."
The Vice Dean’s expression darkened.
"Of course it is."
Long Hao looked at him.
"What do you mean?"
"Heaven doesn’t just destroy threats."
"It studies them."
The implication hung heavy in the air.
Ling Yifan whispered it first.
"It’s learning from you."
Long Hao felt a chill crawl down his spine.
Every time he evolved—
Heaven updated.
Every time he adapted—
Heaven recalibrated.
The Executors had not come to win.
They had come to confirm.
Iteration Three.
Cycle Continuation.
This wasn’t just suppression.
It was preparation.
A faint tremor rippled through the golden mark.
Not pain.
Signal.
Long Hao’s breath slowed.
He focused again.
This time—
He felt it clearly.
Beyond the canyon.
Beyond the academy.
Beyond the desert.
Small fluctuations.
Other signatures.
Weak.
Distant.
But similar.
His eyes widened slightly.
The fragment inside him responded faintly to something far away.
The Vice Dean noticed his expression.
"What?"
"There are others."
"Others what?"
"Fluctuations."
The golden mark pulsed sharply.
As if acknowledging the detection.
The sky flickered once.
Ling Yifan’s face went pale.
"Executors weren’t the only deployment."
The Dean looked upward again.
"Heaven doesn’t isolate variables."
"It tests ecosystems."
Long Hao clenched his fists.
"If it can’t suppress me directly..."
"It destabilizes the world around me."
The realization hit all of them at once.
Sovereign-class awakenings.
Anchor anomalies.
Law distortions.
Heaven wasn’t just watching him.
It was mapping the board.
Mei Ying muttered under her breath. "So the leash tightens every time you grow."
"And the world pays the price."
Long Hao felt the weight of that sentence settle heavily on his shoulders.
The golden mark pulsed again.
Thump.
Thump.
He touched it lightly.
This time—
No pain.
Just warmth.
Not friendly.
Not hostile.
Observant.
He looked at the Deans.
"I need to learn how to fight without triggering it."
The Vice Dean nodded slowly.
"You must reduce signature output."
"Mask resonance."
"Operate below Heaven’s threshold."
Ling Yifan added quietly, "Which means..."
"No overwhelming strikes."
"No wide-area destruction."
"No sovereign-level displays."
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
"That’s exactly how Zehell wants me weakened."
The canyon wind rose again, carrying dust through fractured stone.
Heaven had withdrawn.
But it had not retreated.
It had adjusted.
Long Hao looked at his hands.
The power was there.
Stronger than ever.
But now—
Every step forward required precision.
Every surge invited correction.
Every mistake would cost more than just him.
The golden mark pulsed one final time.
Not painfully.
Not violently.
Simply—
Present.
The Dean stepped beside him.
"You survived termination phase."
The Vice Dean’s voice lowered.
"Now comes containment phase."
Long Hao looked toward the horizon.
Somewhere out there—
Something else had just awakened.
He could feel it faintly through the fragment.
The cycle had resumed.
And Heaven had shifted from execution—
To surveillance and systemic destabilization.
He closed his eyes briefly.
Then opened them again.
Calm.
Focused.
"If it’s watching," he said quietly,
"Then let it watch."
The wind moved through the canyon once more.
And far above—
Though invisible—
The eye did not blink.
The canyon never truly recovered.
Even after the Heaven Executors withdrew.
Even after the sky sealed.
Even after Long Hao stabilized the fragment and forced the golden mark into temporary alignment.
Because something had already shifted.
The Vice Dean was the first to confirm it.
They were halfway back toward the academy’s temporary forward encampment when the communication sigils activated simultaneously.
Three.
Then five.
Then nine.
Emergency frequency.
Not localized.
Wide spread.
The Vice Dean’s expression hardened.
"Report."
A projection unfolded in midair—shimmering blue-white.
The first feed came from the eastern coastline.
A city near the Azure Dragon maritime border.
The image flickered.
Then stabilized.
The sea was boiling.
Not metaphorically.
Literally.
Water rose upward in spiraling columns as if gravity had inverted beneath it. At the center of the vortex, a colossal skeletal structure pushed upward through the ocean surface—rib bones like ivory towers, crowned by a half-formed dragon skull.
The transmission crackled.
"—Sovereign-class signature confirmed—"
"—barrier formations collapsing—"
The feed cut out.
Silence.
A second projection activated.
Northern mountain region.
A glacier had cracked open.
Something moved beneath it.
A shape too large to be classified as beast, too structured to be random mutation. Ice sheets slid downward as a black crystalline limb pushed through, dragging shards of frozen earth behind it.
The third projection.
Western plains.
Golden fissures splitting farmland in perfectly straight lines for kilometers.
From those fissures rose towering humanoid constructs—not Heaven Executors.
Not Anchor manifestations.
Something in between.
Unstable.
Incomplete.
The Vice Dean lowered his hand slowly.
"Heaven didn’t isolate you," he said quietly to Long Hao.
"It triggered systemic awakening."
Ling Yifan’s face went pale.
"It’s testing world resilience."
Chen clenched his fists.
"So now everything wakes up because of this?"
Long Hao didn’t answer.
He didn’t need to.
The golden mark on his chest pulsed again.
Warm.
Responsive.
Mapping.
He could feel it now more clearly.
Those distant awakenings weren’t random.
They were connected by resonance threads.
He closed his eyes briefly.
The fragment inside him rotated.
Each distant fluctuation echoed faintly through it.
Like distant thunder.
The Vice Dean turned to the Dean.
"This is coordinated."
"Yes."
"By Heaven?"
"Or by reaction to it."
Mei Ying crossed her arms despite the pain in her side.
"Zehell said escalation wouldn’t stop with her."
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
"This isn’t just about me anymore."
The Vice Dean’s voice lowered.
"It never was."
Another sigil flare interrupted them.
This time from the Ruinsand direction.
The projection formed shakily.
The massive frontier wall.
Cracked.
Sections of it collapsed inward as dunes swallowed the outer barricade.
Beneath the sand—
Movement.
The Pseudo-Sovereign they had encountered before was rising again.
But it was larger.
Denser.
More structured.
Its skeletal ridges now glowed faintly with gold inscriptions carved across them.
Not Anchor energy.
Heaven law.
Ling Yifan’s eyes widened.
"Heaven is reinforcing sovereign threats."
The Dean nodded grimly.
"It’s accelerating the board."
Long Hao felt a tightening sensation in his chest.
Not pain.
Responsibility.
He stepped forward slightly.
"We can’t wait."
The Vice Dean turned sharply.
"You cannot surge."
"I don’t need to."
The golden mark pulsed faintly, as if listening.
Long Hao looked at the projections again.
Each location was reacting differently.
Oceanic skeletal leviathan.
Crystalline mountain entity.
Humanoid law constructs.
Desert pseudo-sovereign reinforced.
Heaven wasn’t deploying Executors again.
It was destabilizing the ecosystem.
Forcing evolution.
Forcing response.
Ling Yifan’s voice steadied despite his injury.
"If Heaven suppresses you directly, you adapt."
"If it pressures the world, you’re forced to move."
Long Hao nodded.
"And every time I escalate..."
"The mark tightens," Mei Ying finished.
Silence fell again.
This was containment phase.
Not execution.
The Vice Dean raised his hand and expanded the projection.
More points lit up across the continental map.
Minor awakenings.
Sigil distortions.
Barrier failures.
Not all sovereign-class.
But growing.
The Dean spoke carefully.
"This is a systemic stress test."
"On whom?" Chen demanded.
"On the world."
"And on him," Ling Yifan added quietly.
Long Hao stepped closer to the projection.
He felt something distinct now.
The Ruinsand signal.
Stronger.
The fragment inside him pulsed faintly in sync.
The golden mark responded—not painfully.
Acknowledging.
He frowned.
"It’s not random."
"What?" the Vice Dean asked.
"The awakenings."
"They’re not chaotic."
He focused.
The resonance threads were faint—but patterned.
The ocean awakening aligned along an old ley-line intersection.
The mountain entity aligned near a sealed ancient site.
Ruinsand—directly beneath the original Anchor chamber.
The crystalline construct in the west—near historical Eclipse battlefield ruins.
Ling Yifan’s mind clicked instantly.
"They’re awakening where past fragments once surfaced."
The Vice Dean’s expression darkened.
"Heaven is activating old scars."
Long Hao felt the weight of that.
Old scars.
Old cycles.
Iteration one.
Iteration two.
Iteration three.
The golden mark pulsed again.
And this time—
It hurt.
Not from power surge.
From proximity.
The Ruinsand signal intensified sharply.
The projection flickered.
The Pseudo-Sovereign rose fully now, towering over the collapsed wall.
Golden inscriptions crawled across its skeletal frame.
Heaven wasn’t just letting it awaken.
It was stabilizing it.
Chen swore under his breath.
"If that thing marches inland—"
"It won’t stop," Ouyang whispered.
Long Hao looked at the Deans.
"We split response."
The Vice Dean hesitated.
"You are not cleared for high-output deployment."
"I don’t need high-output."
"You’ll trigger the mark."
"Then I don’t trigger it."
The Dean studied him carefully.
"You intend to fight below threshold."
"Yes."
Ling Yifan stepped forward, leaning slightly on his repaired spear.
"We can’t ignore Ruinsand."
"It’s the closest high-level escalation."
Mei Ying exhaled sharply.
"And it’s personal."
Long Hao didn’t deny it.
The fragment inside him resonated more strongly with the Ruinsand location than any other.
The Vice Dean made a decision.
"Chen, Bai, Ouyang — eastern coast response with secondary instructors."
"Ling Yifan, you remain here for coordination."
Ling Yifan opened his mouth to protest.
The Dean cut him off.
"You are injured."
Ling Yifan clenched his jaw.
But nodded.
The Vice Dean turned to Long Hao.
"You go to Ruinsand."
"Under supervision."
"Minimal output."
"Understood."
The golden mark pulsed once.
Almost like agreement.
The wind shifted.
The canyon behind them still scarred from Executor battle.
The world beyond destabilizing rapidly.
Long Hao closed his eyes briefly.
He felt it clearly now.
The cycle wasn’t restarting slowly.
It was accelerating.
Heaven wasn’t panicking.
It was testing.
Zehell wasn’t retreating.
She was observing.
And sovereign awakenings weren’t accidents.
They were echoes.
The Vice Dean opened a spatial transit array beneath their feet.
Blue sigils rotated in layered geometry.
"Prepare."
Long Hao stepped into the circle.
The golden mark warmed again.
Not punishing.
Tracking.
He opened his eyes and looked at the horizon one last time.
"This isn’t containment," he said quietly.
"It’s expansion."
The Dean nodded.
"Yes."
"And we’re entering phase two."
The sigils flared.
Space folded inward.
And the last thing Long Hao felt before transit engaged—
Was the distant pulse from beneath Ruinsand.
Stronger now.
Answering him.
The desert had awakened again.
And this time—
Heaven had written law into its bones.
The spatial array flared brighter.
Blue sigils rotated faster beneath their feet, light bending inward as the transit sequence reached critical threshold. Wind began spiraling toward the center of the formation, pulling sand, dust, and shattered stone fragments into orbit around them.
Long Hao stood at the heart of the circle.
The golden mark pulsed again.
Not painfully.
Deliberately.
It was aware.
He felt it now with unsettling clarity. The mark was not simply restraining him. It was cataloguing. Measuring every breath, every fluctuation in his fragment, every shift in resonance signature.
The Vice Dean glanced at him one last time.
"Remember. Below threshold."
Long Hao nodded once.
But inside—
The fragment was not calm.
It was responding to Ruinsand.
The desert call was stronger now. Not just an echo.
A summons.
Through the thin connection between awakenings, he felt something stirring beneath the sand that was older than the Pseudo-Sovereign they had faced before.
Something that had been dormant since the first fracture of Heaven.
Something that recognized him.
The spatial field reached full convergence.
Space folded.
The canyon vanished.
For a split second, there was only void.
Then—
Heat.
Blinding, oppressive heat.
The desert skyline tore open in front of them.
Ruinsand.
The frontier wall was half-collapsed.
Dunes swallowed stone towers like they were fragile toys.
And in the distance—
The Pseudo-Sovereign no longer resembled the skeletal beast they had fought before.
Golden inscriptions crawled across its bones like living script.
Its hollow eye sockets glowed.
And beneath its ribcage—
A second pulse echoed outward.
Not from Heaven.
Not from Zehell.
From below.
The desert itself began trembling.
Long Hao stepped forward instinctively.
The golden mark flared once—
Not in warning.
In recognition.
The Vice Dean inhaled sharply.
"That’s not reinforcement."
Long Hao’s eyes narrowed.
"No."
The sand split open.
A massive circular formation began rising from beneath the dunes, ancient stone etched with eclipse patterns.
Older than the academy.
Older than the Anchor chamber.
Older than Ruinsand.
The fragment inside Long Hao vibrated sharply.
A memory brushed the edge of his consciousness.
Iteration One.
The Vice Dean whispered what no one else dared to.
"This... was a battlefield."
The Pseudo-Sovereign turned slowly toward the rising structure.
As if awaiting permission.
The sky above Ruinsand thinned.
Not golden.
Not fractured.
Just... thin.
Long Hao exhaled slowly.
"Heaven didn’t just awaken monsters."
He took one step forward.
"It uncovered history."
The desert wind roared violently around them.
The golden mark burned brighter.
And far above—
Though unseen—
The eye opened wider.







