MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 236: THE ANCHOR THAT WAS BROKEN
Chapter 236 — THE ANCHOR THAT WAS BROKEN
The moment the mask shattered—Reality staggered. Not metaphorically. Not symbolically. Actually. The sound did not echo. It failed to. A sharp, crystalline fracture spread outward from the Executor’s face, the smooth, flawless surface splintering into jagged lines of light that flickered erratically. And with it—the sky broke.
The lattice collapsed. Not entirely. Not permanently. But violently enough that its structure lost cohesion. Lines of light that had once intersected with absolute precision now warped, misaligned, or simply vanished. The dense grid that had compressed the battlefield fractured into uneven segments, gaps forming where control had once been total.
The beams stopped. Not gradually. Instantly. Hundreds of them froze mid-existence, their presence flickering as if awaiting confirmation that they were still allowed to be there. And for the first time since Heaven had descended—it hesitated.
Long Hao didn’t. His hand was still buried within the Executor’s form, darkness coiling tightly around his arm, compressing, grinding, forcing pressure directly into the entity’s structure. He could feel it unraveling, not like flesh tearing, not like energy dispersing, but like a concept losing definition.
"...You’re not stable." His voice was low. Certain. The Executor convulsed. Its body flickered violently, shifting between states faster than the system could reconcile—present, absent, present again—its outline distorting as if reality itself no longer agreed on what it was.
The crack across its mask widened. Then split. A section of its face collapsed inward. Not falling. Not breaking off. Just gone. And that was enough.
Above, the five radiant rings faltered. For the first time since their manifestation, their rotation broke rhythm. One slowed. Another stuttered. The perfect synchronization that had governed their motion fractured into uneven cycles. The sky dimmed. Not darkened. But less absolute.
Below, the city felt it. The pressure lifted further. People who had been struggling to breathe suddenly gasped, air rushing back into lungs that had been compressed by something they couldn’t even see. Some fell to their knees. Some cried. Some simply stared upward at the impossible.
High above, the remaining Executors reacted. Not in panic. Not in disorder. But with immediate recalibration. All of them moved simultaneously. The damaged Executor was pulled back, not physically dragged, but repositioned—its form phasing backward as the others adjusted around it, creating space, distance, containment.
They weren’t trying to save it. They were isolating the error. Long Hao let it go. Not because he had to. Because he understood. "...You’re discarding it."
The broken Executor hovered at a distance now, its form unstable, cracks spreading across its body as its structure struggled to maintain coherence. The others reformed. This time not in shapes, not in patterns, in layers.
The sky shifted again. The lattice didn’t return. Something deeper did. Long Hao felt it immediately. A pressure not from above, not from any direction, but from the rules themselves. A tightening. A correction. "...You’re rewriting."
The rings stabilized slowly, deliberately. And then they changed. The light they emitted became sharper, more refined, less overwhelming, more precise. The system had adapted again, but this time it wasn’t escalating power, it was refining control.
The first sign came quietly. The broken Executor stopped flickering. Its unstable form stilled, the cracks across its body freezing mid-expansion. Then they began to close. Not healing. Not regenerating. Being rewritten.
Long Hao’s eyes narrowed. "...You’re fixing it." The system wasn’t abandoning the damaged unit. It was correcting it. And it was doing so without interruption.
He moved instantly, appearing in front of the broken Executor, hand raised, darkness gathering. The space in front of him disappeared. Not erased. Not destroyed. Denied. His movement failed.
For the first time since he had broken through their system, he couldn’t even reach his target. "...Selective exclusion." The Executors weren’t stopping him. They were removing the possibility of interaction.
Above, the rings pulsed once. The correction accelerated. The cracks across the Executor’s body shrank further. The missing portion of its mask began to reform—light gathering, structure rebuilding, definition returning.
"No." The word came from below. The Jade Dragon surged upward, faster than before, more violent. Emerald light exploded outward as it tore through the layered constraints, its claws ripping open a path through the invisible restrictions that had denied Long Hao.
For a moment, the system couldn’t keep up. The Jade Dragon reached the damaged Executor and struck. This time it didn’t stop. Its claws tore through the entity’s form, not attempting to redirect, not trying to counter, but to overwhelm.
The Executor’s body collapsed again. The partially restored mask shattered a second time. And this time the cracks didn’t stop. They spread rapidly, violently, across its entire structure.
The system reacted immediately. The other Executors moved, but not toward the Jade Dragon, toward the broken one. They formed around it, not in defense, in reinforcement. Lines of light connected them, forming a tight network that pulsed with synchronized energy.
"...They’re stabilizing it." Long Hao’s voice was sharp now. "They’re sharing structure." The network pulsed again. The cracks slowed, stopped, then reversed. "...Tch." Even now they could recover.
Above, the Eclipse Dragon moved, not with urgency, with intent. Its massive form descended slightly, black-gold energy condensing around it, warping the light of the system as it approached. "They are not independent units."
Its voice carried weight, clarity. "They are extensions of a single will." The Jade Dragon pulled back slightly, its emerald aura still flaring. "...I know." Its gaze shifted toward Long Hao. "...and you’re the disruption."
For a brief moment everything stilled, the system, the dragons, the sky. All of it paused, not because it stopped, because something else was observing more closely now.
Long Hao felt it. A shift, subtle but unmistakable. The pressure changed. It wasn’t just control anymore. It was focus. "...So now you’re watching."
His voice was quiet, but this time it wasn’t directed at the Executors. It was directed beyond them, to something higher, something deeper.
The rings pulsed, not violently, not reactively, deliberately. And then the system changed again. The network around the damaged Executor dissolved, not because it failed, because it was no longer needed.
The cracks stopped spreading, but they didn’t close completely. They remained, a flaw, a weakness, left intact. Long Hao’s eyes narrowed. "...You’re keeping it damaged."
The realization hit instantly. This wasn’t recovery. This was adaptation. The broken Executor wasn’t being repaired. It was being redefined as something else.
The other Executors spread out again, not forming shapes, not forming patterns. They formed layers. Three moved higher. Two remained lower. The damaged one stayed in the center.
The sky darkened slightly, not from loss of light, but from increased density. The system had shifted from control to pressure.
Long Hao felt it immediately. His body tensed, not from force, but from resistance. Everything around him became heavier, not physically, conceptually. Movement required more intent, more focus, more effort. "...You’re raising the cost."
Above, the rings pulsed again. And the pressure increased. Below, the city groaned. The pressure did not fall all at once. It settled. Slow. Inevitable. Like a weight the world had always carried—but had suddenly remembered.
At first, it was subtle. A man running through a shattered street slowed, his steps losing urgency. Not because he chose to, but because the need to run began to fade. His breathing steadied. His panic dulled. He stopped. Looked around. Confused.
Moments ago, he had been desperate to escape. Now that desperation felt unnecessary. Behind him, a collapsing building froze mid-fall, not held in place by force, but stabilized. The cracks along its surface sealed. The broken edges smoothed.
It wasn’t being repaired. It was being corrected. Nearby, a child who had been crying moments before went silent, not comforted, not reassured, just quiet.
Her expression flattened, the fear in her eyes dimming into something distant, unfocused. She reached out toward where her mother had been, then slowly lowered her hand. The need to reach disappeared.
Across the city, similar changes unfolded. Fires shrank, not extinguished, reduced. Flames lost their chaotic movement, settling into controlled, consistent shapes before fading entirely.
Smoke no longer billowed, it thinned, then vanished. Cracks in the streets stopped spreading. Rubble shifted, not collapsing, aligning. Every irregularity began to smooth. Every inconsistency adjusted.
And with it, the people changed. Voices quieted, not silenced, lowered. Arguments dissolved mid-sentence. Fear faded before it could escalate. Even pain dulled, no longer sharp enough to demand reaction.
A soldier clutching a wound looked down at the blood on his hands. For a moment, confusion crossed his face. Then nothing. The urgency to survive faded. The need to fight vanished.
Above them, the sky no longer looked violent. It looked perfect. Too perfect. Symmetrical. Balanced. Controlled. And wrong.
Because nothing resisted anymore. Nothing struggled. Nothing chose. Even the wind had lost its will. It moved in smooth, predictable currents, flowing along invisible lines that dictated where it should go.
Not a single motion was wasted. Not a single action was unnecessary. The world was becoming efficient. Stable. Complete. And empty.
High above, Long Hao felt it, not as pressure, not as force, but as something far worse, the slow erasure of everything that made the world alive. His eyes narrowed. "...So this is what you want."
Not destruction. Not domination. But perfection. And in that perfection there was no place for will, no place for choice, no place for anything that could deviate.
Below him, a man looked up at the sky. Their eyes met. For a brief moment something flickered, a trace of fear, of awareness, of resistance. Then it was gone.
And that was when Long Hao understood. This wasn’t about killing him. This wasn’t even about stopping him. Heaven wasn’t trying to win.
It was trying to make a world where he could never exist in the first place.
Structures that had survived until now began to collapse, not from impact, but from strain. The very idea of their existence was being compressed, reduced, forced into tighter definitions that they could no longer sustain.
People screamed, not from fear, from suffocation. The Jade Dragon roared. Its aura exploded outward again, pushing back against the descending pressure. Emerald light clashed against the invisible weight, forcing temporary space, but it was harder now, slower.
"...It’s different." Its voice was strained. "This isn’t suppression." The Eclipse Dragon answered. "...It’s normalization."
Everything was being forced into a single, acceptable state. Long Hao exhaled slowly. "...Then I’ll break that too."
He moved, this time slower, not by choice, but by cost. He stepped and the world resisted, not denying him, but taxing him. Every movement consumed more. Every action demanded more. "...So this is your next layer."
He didn’t stop. He pushed forward. Appearing in front of the damaged Executor once more, his hand rose, darkness gathered, denser than before, heavier.
The system reacted immediately. Beams formed, not hundreds, not scattered, focused, all of them on him.
They descended at once. Long Hao didn’t dodge. He stepped forward into them. Darkness erupted, not outward, inward, compressing, pulling, overwriting.
The beams struck and broke, not stopped, not redirected, broken. For a fraction of a second the system failed completely.
And in that moment Long Hao’s hand reached the Executor. This time he didn’t grab it. He drove through it.
Darkness pierced its core. And everything stopped.
The rings froze. The sky held. The pressure vanished.
And then the Executor collapsed. Not flickering. Not destabilizing. Collapsing.
Its form shattered, not into pieces, into nothing. Gone.
Silence followed. Real silence. Below, the city stopped shaking. The air cleared. The pressure disappeared.
For a moment it was over. But Long Hao didn’t relax. Because he could still feel it.
That presence. Stronger now. Closer. And watching.
Above, the four remaining Executors didn’t move, didn’t react, didn’t attack. They paused.
And the rings stopped completely. The sky darkened, not gradually, instantly.
And something began to descend. Not light. Not energy. Something else.
Something heavier. Something with will.
Long Hao’s eyes narrowed. "...So you’re done observing."
The world held its breath. And for the first time—
Heaven prepared to judge.
END OF Chapter







