MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 84: THE SPEAR THAT DANCES WITH THE WIND
Chapter 84 — THE SPEAR THAT DANCES WITH THE WIND
The arena of Vermillion Phoenix Academy still trembled with noise.
The roar of the crowd had not faded since the Vermillion Dean’s declaration. Twenty competitors. No teams. No alliances. No safety. The air was thick with anticipation, ambition, and something sharper—something hungry. The battlefield below was no longer just a stage. It had become a promise of violence waiting to be fulfilled.
Ling Yifan and Long Hao stood among their teammates, neither speaking now. The competitive spark between them was quiet but undeniable, like two blades resting in the same sheath, waiting for the moment they would be drawn.
Above them, the dome shimmered as additional layers activated. The arena floor rearranged itself subtly, terrain modules shifting into configurations meant to support prolonged conflict rather than spectacle. Officials moved with urgency. Healers took their positions. Barrier technicians triple-checked containment fields.
This was no longer an exhibition.
And then—
The world cut away.
SOMEWHERE ELSE -
Far from Vermillion. Far from academies, politics, and watching eyes.
A chamber awakened.
White light poured across polished metallic walls, illuminating a space so vast and pristine it felt almost unreal. The floor was a seamless alloy, etched with microscopic runes so dense they resembled flowing script when viewed from a distance. Each rune pulsed faintly, alive with calculation, feeding data into unseen processors embedded throughout the structure.
This was not merely a training room.
It was a simulation crucible.
The ceiling arched impossibly high, layered with translucent panels that shifted color as atmospheric parameters adjusted. Pressure. Temperature. Gravity. Oxygen density. Every variable was under absolute control.
At the center of it all stood a girl.
She was motionless, but not relaxed.
Every inch of her posture radiated readiness.
Her spear rested lightly in her grip, its shaft perfectly balanced, the faint silver lines along it glowing softly as it synced with her presence. This was no ordinary weapon. It responded to intent as much as force.
Her lush green hair flowed freely down her back, vivid and full, like a living grassland stirred by wind. It framed her face in soft contrast to the sharp focus in her eyes. Brown, deep, and unflinching.
Her expression was calm.
Not empty.
Controlled.
She inhaled slowly, feeling the chamber respond, the air adjusting to her breath.
"Training protocol," she said. "Difficulty level eight."
A half-second pause.
Then—
"CONFIRMED."
The floor trembled.
Reality fractured.
The pristine chamber dissolved into raw chaos as a simulated battlefield surged into existence. Jagged terrain tore upward from the ground, stone plates locking into place. The sky darkened instantly, heavy clouds churning unnaturally fast, lightning flickering without sound.
Wind screamed.
Warning glyphs flashed briefly along the chamber’s periphery.
"ENTITY GENERATION IN PROGRESS."
"THREAT CLASSIFICATION: KING."
Then, after a noticeable delay—
"SECONDARY CLASSIFICATION: BALD APE."
The pressure doubled.
The girl’s eyes narrowed, interest flickering for the first time.
"...Double-tag," she murmured. "They really don’t want me getting comfortable."
The ground split open.
A roar shook the entire simulation.
The monster emerged in full, towering and grotesque, scales layered like jagged armor, each one humming faintly with destructive resonance. Its eyes burned red, locked instantly onto the lone human presence that dared stand before it.
This was no mindless beast.
This was an apex existence.
The same class of monster that had once pushed an entire academy team into despair.
The monster charged.
The girl moved.
Not away.
Into it.
Her foot slid back, body lowering, spear lifting in one smooth motion. The monster’s claw descended like judgment itself.
She twisted at the exact instant before impact.
Stone exploded where she had been. Shockwaves ripped outward.
She was already airborne.
Using the recoil, she propelled herself forward, spear thrusting straight toward the monster’s eye. The beast reacted fast, faster than most king-tier entities, jerking its head aside.
Sparks burst as spear met scale.
She landed, skidding, boots biting into the stone.
A grin flashed across her face.
"Good," she said, genuine excitement in her voice. "You’re smarter than the data logs."
The monster roared again, tail whipping out in a massive arc.
She vaulted, planting her foot against the tail mid-swing, riding the momentum upward. Her body twisted, spear spinning, energy coiling tightly along the shaft.
"BOOM."
The overhead strike landed squarely on the monster’s shoulder, driving it down with a thunderous crash. Simulated blood sprayed across the battlefield, alarms flickering briefly as damage thresholds were exceeded.
But the monster endured.
Energy gathered in its throat, destructive resonance climbing rapidly.
The girl sprinted toward it.
The beam erupted.
A torrent of annihilation tore across the battlefield, vaporizing stone, carving molten trenches into the ground.
She ran through it.
Not recklessly.
Precisely.
Every step landed exactly where it needed to be. Every dodge was measured to the fraction of a second. Heat scorched her skin, alerts flaring in her peripheral vision, but she didn’t slow.
She leapt.
The spear pierced straight through the beam, dispersing it violently.
Her strike slammed into the monster’s skull.
BOOM
The beast staggered, roaring in fury and pain.
She didn’t give it time.
Her spear became a storm.
Thrusts, sweeps, pivots—each attack landed at joints, sensory nodes, energy convergence points. Her reflexes bordered on inhuman. The monster lashed out wildly, but every strike missed by the smallest possible margin.
She slid beneath its belly, spear carving upward.
The monster screamed.
She met its gaze mid-turn.
And smiled.
"Too slow."
Planting the spear, she vaulted high, spinning once, twice, energy condensing dangerously.
"YAY."
The final strike punched straight through the monster’s skull.
The beast froze.
Then shattered.
Light spilled outward as the simulation registered total failure.
The battlefield dissolved.
Silence returned.
The white chamber reformed around her.
She landed lightly, breathing steady, heart calm.
A result flashed.
"TRAINING RESULT: SUCCESS."
"KING-CLASS ENTITY DEFEATED."
"PERFORMANCE: EXCEEDS EXPECTATIONS."
She tilted her head.
"...Still needs adjustment," she said softly.
Somewhere beyond the chamber walls, unseen eyes followed her every movement.
Data streamed.
A voice murmured, low and thoughtful.
"So... she’s ready." 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢
The girl lifted her gaze toward the ceiling.
Toward something distant.
Toward something inevitable.
Her smile was small.
But certain.
Who was she?
Why had she been shown now?
And why did it feel like her spear of fate was already pointed toward Vermillion Phoenix Academy?
BACK TO VERMILLION ACADEMY -
THE ARENA
The Vermillion Dean let the noise rest first.
She waited as the arena swelled with voices, disbelief, excitement, fear, outrage, and manic anticipation layered on top of one another. Students shouted questions. Instructors argued in hushed tones. Some laughed too loudly. Others went completely silent.
When she finally raised her hand again, the sound cut off like it had been sliced.
"Stage Three, Part Two," she said calmly, "will commence in two days."
A collective inhale swept through the arena.
"Two days?""That soon?""They’re serious..."
"Those two days are not a delay. They are preparation time." the Vermillion Dean continued.
She turned slightly, her gaze sweeping across the captains.
"Rest. Train. Plan," she said. "Or don’t. It will not matter."
A pause.
"This battle," she said, "is every individual for themselves."
No coordination.
No comfort.
"No teams," she added. "No formations. No protection. No expectations."
Somewhere in the stands, someone laughed nervously.
Another person swallowed hard.
The Vermillion Dean inclined her head once. "You have all survived long enough to reach the final stage. What happens next is proof of what that survival was worth."
She stepped back.
The announcement was done.
The arena did not calm.
If anything, it grew sharper.
Students clustered immediately, voices low and intense. Some academies began arguing outright. Others withdrew into silence, captains already separating themselves instinctively, mentally stepping away from their teams.
On the central platform, the three deans hovered together.
The Dragon Turtle Academy dean folded his arms, grinning like a child who had just set something on fire and was proud of it.
"TWO DAYS," he boomed. "HAHA! I LIKE THIS. JUST ENOUGH TIME FOR PANIC."
The Azure Dragon dean shot him a flat look. "You encouraged this."
"INSPIRED," the Dragon Turtle dean corrected cheerfully. "SHE WAS INSPIRED."
The Vermillion Dean smiled faintly. "You were... persuasive."
The Azure Dragon dean sighed deeply. "Why does every academy suddenly believe rules are optional."
"BECAUSE RULES ARE BORING," the Dragon Turtle dean replied immediately. "THIS? THIS IS HONEST."
The Vermillion Dean tilted her head slightly. "It also keeps the audience invested."
The Azure Dragon dean glanced down at the still-roaring stands, then at the captains separating below.
"...That," he admitted, "it does."
The Dragon Turtle dean leaned closer, lowering his voice just enough to pretend at secrecy. "SO. ANY BETS?"
The Azure Dragon dean didn’t even look at him. "No."
"YOU’RE NO FUN."
The Vermillion Dean’s eyes flicked briefly toward the arena floor, where individuals were already unconsciously spacing themselves apart.
"Two days," she repeated softly. "Long enough for confidence to grow."
"And fear," the Azure Dragon dean added.
The Dragon Turtle dean laughed. "AND EGO."
Below them, the final stage was already beginning.
Not with weapons.
But with distance.
And above it all, the arena itself hummed, ancient formations settling into a configuration that had not been used in a very long time.
A battlefield meant not for teams.
But for last ones standing.
[Chapter ENDS]







