MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 68: THE PLACES YOU’RE NOT SUPPOSED TO GO
Chapter 68 — THE PLACES YOU’RE NOT SUPPOSED TO GO
Dragon Turtle Academy was quiet in a way that felt temporary.
The kind of quiet that only existed because something bigger was waiting just out of sight.
The morning after Stage Two ended, the academy grounds looked almost peaceful. Training arenas that had been packed days ago now sat empty. Maintenance teams repaired cracked stone and scorched platforms. Formation lights flickered on and off as they recalibrated defensive arrays.
For once, no one was rushing.
Azure Dragon’s team had been given half a day off. Not officially. More like a collective understanding between instructors that if they didn’t let the students breathe now, someone would snap later.
Chen Wulian hated it.
He paced the courtyard like a caged animal, hands behind his head, boots scraping against stone.
"So," he said for the fourth time, "we’re just... resting?"
Bai Qianlan didn’t look up from where she sat on the low wall, legs crossed, idly weaving a small illusion of floating petals between her fingers.
"Yes," she said calmly. "That’s what rest is."
Chen stopped in front of her.
"That sounds fake."
Ling Yifan stood a few steps away, spear resting against his shoulder, eyes half-lidded as he watched students pass through the distance.
"Rest is necessary," he said. "Your body hasn’t fully recovered."
Chen turned to him.
"My body is fine."
Ling Yifan’s gaze flicked briefly to the faint bandages still visible under Chen’s sleeve.
"You were crushed into the arena floor two days ago."
Chen waved it off.
"Details."
Ouyang Xue’er leaned against a pillar nearby, arms folded, watching the exchange with mild amusement.
"Give it ten minutes," she said. "He’ll start a fight with a wall."
Long Hao stood apart from them, closer to the edge of the courtyard. He wasn’t pacing. He wasn’t talking. He was just... standing.
Listening.
The academy felt different today.
Not threatening. Not oppressive.
Just old.
He couldn’t explain it properly, and he didn’t try. It wasn’t a sensation that demanded action. More like background noise you only noticed once everything else went quiet.
Jin Roulan noticed him staring.
"You look like you’re waiting for something," she said.
Long Hao glanced at her.
"...Do I?"
She shrugged. "You always do."
Before he could reply, Qin Shuo cleared his throat.
"There are... sections of the academy we haven’t seen."
Everyone turned to him.
Qin rarely spoke unless he had a reason.
Chen’s eyes lit up instantly.
"Go on."
Qin adjusted his glasses slightly, voice measured as always.
"Dragon Turtle Academy is layered," he continued. "The main training zones are built over older structures. Some are sealed. Some are simply unused."
Bai raised an eyebrow.
"And you know this because?"
Qin hesitated for half a second.
"...I read the public formation schematics."
Chen grinned.
"I like where this is going."
Ling Yifan frowned.
"We weren’t told we could explore."
"We weren’t told we couldn’t," Chen replied.
Ouyang pushed off the pillar.
"I’m listening."
Long Hao finally spoke.
"...What kind of places?"
Qin considered his words.
"Old practice grounds. Legacy halls. Formation test corridors. Places designed before modern safety standards."
Chen clapped his hands together.
"Perfect."
Ling Yifan stared at him.
"No."
Chen pointed toward the far side of the campus, where a long stone walkway curved away behind a cluster of ancient turtle statues.
"You don’t want to see the parts of this place that weren’t polished for tourists?"
Ling Yifan looked unconvinced.
Bai tilted her head, thoughtful.
"...We wouldn’t be doing anything dangerous," she said slowly. "Just... looking."
Ouyang smirked.
"That’s what people always say before something breaks."
Long Hao didn’t object.
He didn’t encourage either.
But when Qin started walking, he followed.
That decided it.
The path Qin led them down wasn’t hidden. That was the strange part.
It was wide, well-built, and clearly meant for foot traffic. But the further they went, the fewer students they saw. Decorative lanterns became sparse. The stone underfoot darkened, older, more worn.
Eventually, the noise of the academy faded completely.
"This place feels..." Jin murmured.
"Like it’s holding its breath," Bai finished.
Chen laughed softly.
"You two are dramatic."
But even he lowered his voice.
They passed under an archway etched with faded runes. The characters were old, worn smooth by time. Qin stopped briefly to examine them.
"These aren’t warning inscriptions," he said. "They’re... calibration markers."
"For what?" Ouyang asked.
Qin didn’t answer immediately.
"Formation stress," he said eventually. "This area was used to test how cultivators behaved under pressure."
Ling Yifan’s posture shifted slightly.
"So a training ground."
"Originally," Qin said. "But not the kind meant for large groups."
They entered a wide circular chamber.
The ceiling was high, domed, supported by thick stone ribs that resembled the underside of a massive shell. The floor was smooth, unbroken stone, faintly etched with overlapping formation lines.
Long Hao felt it then.
A pulse.
So subtle he almost missed it.
He stopped walking.
"...Did you feel that?"
Everyone looked at him.
Chen frowned. "Feel what?"
Bai glanced around, senses extended.
"...Something moved," she said. "Not physically."
Ouyang stepped forward cautiously.
The moment her foot crossed the inner ring of the formation—
The chamber reacted.
The runes lit up.
Not bright. Not violently.
Just... awake.
The floor hummed.
The air thickened slightly, like walking into deeper water.
Chen cursed under his breath.
"...Okay. That’s new."
Ling Yifan moved instantly, stepping in front of Bai and Ouyang, spear lowered.
"Formation test," he said. "Everyone stay still."
Too late.
The chamber shifted.
The stone ribs above them rotated slightly, rearranging themselves with a grinding sound. The floor markings glowed brighter, forming a pattern that pulled inward.
No attack came.
No explosion.
Instead, space bent.
The distance between them stretched and compressed unevenly. Chen suddenly found himself three steps farther from Bai than he had been a second ago.
"What the hell—"
"Don’t move!" Qin snapped, sharper than usual.
Everyone froze.
"This isn’t a combat formation," Qin said quickly. "It’s diagnostic."
"Diagnostic of what?" Jin asked.
"Of coordination."
As if responding to the word, the formation pulsed again.
A wave of pressure rolled through the room. Not enough to injure, but enough to throw off balance. Bai staggered slightly. Ling Yifan adjusted instantly, shifting his weight to counter it.
Chen tried to brute-force his way forward.
The pressure doubled on him.
"Ow. Okay. Lesson learned."
Long Hao stood still.
The pressure barely touched him.
Qin noticed.
"...Interesting."
The formation shifted again, isolating them in subtle ways. Bai’s illusions flickered as the formation interfered with her control. Ouyang’s frost responded unpredictably, spreading too far in one direction, not enough in another.
Ling Yifan compensated instinctively, adjusting his position to anchor the group.
But every time he did, the formation recalibrated.
"It’s reacting to leadership," Qin realized. "And reliance."
Chen frowned. "Meaning?"
"Meaning it’s showing us where we overcompensate."
Another pulse.
This one sharper.
Bai hissed softly as her illusions collapsed.
Ling Yifan caught her before she lost balance.
"Enough," he said. "We disengage."
"How?" Chen asked.
Qin’s eyes darted across the formation lines.
"...We stop correcting."
"What?"
"We let it settle," Qin said. "No forcing. No covering for each other."
Ling Yifan hesitated.
Then nodded.
They relaxed.
Not fully. Just enough.
The pressure eased.
The runes dimmed.
The chamber fell silent.
For a moment, no one spoke.
Then Chen exhaled loudly.
"...That was rude."
Before anyone could respond, footsteps echoed from the entrance.
Slow. Unhurried.
Instructor Mei Ying stepped into the chamber, hands clasped behind her back, expression unreadable.
"I was wondering how long it would take," she said.
Everyone stiffened.
Chen opened his mouth.
She raised a hand.
"I’m not angry," Mei Ying continued. "If I were, you wouldn’t still be standing."
She walked into the chamber, eyes scanning the formation lines.
"You triggered a legacy diagnostic array," she said calmly. "One that hasn’t been active in years."
Ling Yifan bowed slightly.
"Our mistake."
She glanced at him.
"No," she said. "Your curiosity."
She turned to Qin.
"You noticed the calibration markers."
Qin nodded.
"...Yes, Instructor."
Mei Ying looked at the group as a whole.
"This place wasn’t sealed because it was dangerous," she said. "It was sealed because it was honest."
Chen scratched his head.
"...That sounds worse."
She allowed herself a small smile.
"You’ve shown me exactly what I needed to see," she said. "Where you rely too much. Where you hesitate. Where you overreach."
Her gaze lingered briefly on Ling Yifan. Then Bai. Then Chen.
Finally, Long Hao.
"You feel it too, don’t you?" she asked him.
He met her eyes.
"...Yes."
She nodded.
"Good."
She turned back toward the exit.
"Rest of the day is no longer free," she said. "Training starts tomorrow morning."
Chen groaned.
"But—"
"Targeted training," she added.
That shut him up.
As they followed her out of the chamber, Long Hao glanced back once.
The formation lines had gone dark again.
But the feeling hadn’t fully faded.
Somewhere beneath the academy, something old had stirred.
Not angry.
Not awake.
Just aware.
And that was enough to be unsettling.
[Chapter ENDS]







