MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 87: BLOODLINES

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Chapter 87: BLOODLINES

Chapter 87 — THE PRICE OF A NAME

The Ling Clan’s Grand Hall had not seen silence like this in decades.

A circular chamber carved from blackstone, its walls etched with the clan’s ancient sigils, it was designed to amplify authority. Every word spoken within carried weight. Every pause felt deliberate. Even the air itself seemed tense, heavy with restrained hostility.

Twelve elders sat along the inner ring.

High-ranking members. Patriarch elders. War elders. Lineage keepers.

At the head of the hall stood the Ling Clan Patriarch.

Ling Yifan’s father.

His hands rested behind his back. His posture was rigid, disciplined, immovable. His face showed no rage. No grief. Only something far colder.

Disappointment.

An elder slammed his palm against the stone table.

"THIS HAS GONE TOO FAR."

The sound echoed sharply.

"Our Ling Clan is one of the Five Great Clans," the elder continued, voice sharp with anger. "Our bloodline has stood at the center of the realm’s power for generations. And now—now the young master openly associates with the Bai Clan’s daughter?"

Another elder sneered.

"Associates? He is dating her."

Murmurs rippled through the hall.

"Publicly, too.""On broadcast.""In front of the academies.""In front of the Vermilion elders."

A third elder leaned forward, eyes cold.

"Does he think talent excuses disgrace?"

The patriarch did not respond immediately.

He stared ahead, gaze unfocused, as if replaying images only he could see.

Ling Yifan standing beside Bai Qianlan.

Ling Yifan fighting.

Ling Yifan smiling.

Finally, he spoke.

"Pathetic."

The word landed like a blade.

Several elders straightened.

"He believes himself talented," the patriarch continued calmly, "because he has not yet been crushed."

His voice was even. Controlled. More dangerous for it.

"He has strength, yes. Skill, perhaps. But nothing exceptional. Nothing worthy of defying lineage."

He turned slightly, eyes scanning the chamber.

"He thinks himself special because no one has reminded him what he is."

An elder scoffed.

"A child who mistakes potential for greatness."

Another added coldly, "He forgets his position."

The patriarch nodded.

"He is the young master of the Ling Clan," he said. "And that position does not belong to someone who entangles himself with another great clan’s bloodline without approval."

An elder with silver hair spoke next, voice heavy with disdain.

"The Bai Clan is not our ally. Their methods are deceptive. Their illusions manipulate perception. Their daughter—no matter how talented—is unsuitable."

Another elder raised his hand. 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮

"This relationship weakens our standing. Other clans are already whispering."

A war elder leaned back.

"Whispering?" he snorted. "They’re laughing."

A sharp slam echoed through the hall.

"Disgraceful."

The Third Elder’s voice was filled with undisguised contempt.

"The Bai Clan," he continued, "has the audacity to let their daughter stand beside a Ling heir? Have they forgotten Ghost Valley?"

Murmurs rippled through the hall.

"They haven’t forgotten," another elder said darkly. "That’s precisely why this is unacceptable."

The Fifth Elder leaned forward, eyes burning.

"Twenty-two years ago, two hundred Ling soldiers marched into Ghost Valley under Bai Clan illusion cover."

His fingers curled slowly.

"Seventeen returned."

The number hung in the air like a curse.

"And who took responsibility?" the Second Elder asked sharply. "Not the Bai Clan. Not their illusion masters. They buried their dead and blamed us."

"They claimed our vanguard pushed too fast," the Third Elder sneered. "As if Ling blood was cheap."

A low growl of agreement spread through the chamber.

"Our clan paid the price," another elder said. "Our banners were stained. Our reputation fractured. And the Bai Clan? They withdrew behind diplomacy and silence."

The Patriarch, Ling Yifan’s father, finally spoke.

His voice was calm.

Too calm.

"And now," he said slowly, "my son trains beside the Bai Clan’s daughter as if that history never happened."

His eyes hardened.

"He smiles. He laughs. He forgets the bones beneath Ghost Valley."

The Sixth Elder scoffed.

"Forget?" he said. "Or does he simply not care?"

A sharper voice cut in.

"This is why he cannot remain Young Master if this continues."

The words landed heavily.

"He aligns himself with the clan that let Ling soldiers die in the mist," the elder continued. "What message does that send to the families who lost sons?"

Another elder nodded.

"Today it is training. Tomorrow it is alliance. And one day, he will sit as patriarch with Bai blood at his side."

Disgust crossed several faces.

"Unacceptable."

The Patriarch’s fist tightened slowly against the armrest.

"He parades his so-called talent," he said icily. "Yet fails to understand the weight of the Ling name."

His gaze swept the room.

"He is not great," he said flatly. "He merely thinks he is."

Silence followed.

Then—

The Second Elder stood.

"I will not deny the past," he said firmly. "Nor the blood we lost. But the young master is still young."

Several elders turned sharply.

"He deserves at least one chance," the Second Elder continued. "A final chance. To choose the Ling Clan over personal emotion."

The Patriarch’s aura flared violently.

"Fine," he snapped.

The lamps flickered.

"If he wishes to remain Young Master," the Patriarch said, voice thunderous, "then he will sever this relationship immediately."

The hall grew tense.

"And we," he continued, "will begin searching for a suitable fiancée."

Names followed.

Daughters of the Five Great Clans.

Bloodlines without stain.

Alliances without ghosts.

"As for the Bai Clan," the Patriarch finished coldly, "they will never bind themselves to Ling blood."

"Not after Ghost Valley."

The elders nodded.

Silence fell again.

The patriarch’s jaw tightened.

"He embarrasses us."

The words were quiet.

But they cut deeper than any shout.

"He fights like someone who believes the world owes him recognition," the patriarch continued. "But the world has not yet corrected him."

An elder leaned forward eagerly.

"Then we must correct him."

Several heads nodded.

"The solution is simple," another said. "Remove him."

A ripple of tension spread.

"Strip him of the title of young master."

"Disown him."

"Declare him unfit."

The patriarch closed his eyes briefly.

For a moment—just a moment—it seemed he might agree.

"He has failed to uphold the dignity of his name," one elder pressed. "If we allow this to continue, the Ling Clan’s authority will erode."

"Worse," another added, "he may grow confident enough to challenge us."

That did it.

The patriarch’s eyes snapped open.

His aura surged.

The blackstone floor cracked beneath his feet.

"ENOUGH."

The hall trembled.

Elders stiffened as pressure flooded the chamber, raw and suffocating.

"Do not presume to speak of challenge," the patriarch said coldly. "He is my son. If he is to be broken, it will be by my hand."

The pressure eased slightly.

He exhaled.

"Still," he continued, voice sharp, "you are correct about one thing."

"He cannot be allowed to continue this farce."

An elder smiled thinly.

"Then you agree. The Bai Clan girl must go."

"Yes," the patriarch said immediately. "That relationship ends."

He turned, hands clasped tightly now.

"He will break it."

Murmurs of approval filled the hall.

"And if he refuses?" an elder asked.

The patriarch’s eyes darkened.

"Then we will make him."

A pause.

"We will begin searching for a suitable fiancée."

Several elders leaned forward eagerly.

"The daughters of the other great clans," one suggested. "The Zhao Clan has—"

"The Mu Clan’s eldest is of age," another added. "Her cultivation—"

"The Han Clan—"

"Enough," the patriarch interrupted.

"We will consider all five great clans except Bai."

The words were final.

"Marriage is not about affection," he said. "It is about alignment."

At that moment, a quiet voice spoke from the side.

"I disagree."

All eyes snapped toward the speaker.

The Second Elder rose slowly.

Older than most present. His back slightly bent. His eyes calm, sharp, and unafraid.

"I believe the young master deserves a second chance."

The hall erupted.

"A second chance?""For what?""For disgrace?"

The patriarch turned, fury flashing for the first time.

"You defend him?"

The Second Elder met his gaze evenly.

"I defend the clan," he said. "And the future."

A scoff echoed.

"He defies tradition."

"He brings shame."

"He is emotional."

The Second Elder raised a hand.

"He is alive," he said quietly. "And growing."

Silence fell.

"You all saw the same battles I did," the Second Elder continued. "You saw his composure. His resolve. His refusal to bend even under pressure."

A war elder sneered.

"Resolve without obedience is rebellion."

The Second Elder shook his head.

"No. It is independence."

The patriarch’s voice hardened.

"Choose your words carefully."

"I am," the Second Elder replied. "Because if you sever him now, you will not lose a liability."

"You will lose an heir."

The words hung heavy.

The patriarch stared at him.

Then he laughed.

A cold, humorless sound.

"An heir who dates without permission?" he snapped. "Who stands beside a Bai Clan daughter like a fool in love?"

The Second Elder did not flinch.

"I still think the young master deserves a last chance."

The hall went still.

"A final chance," the elder continued. "To choose the clan over his emotions."

The patriarch’s aura surged again.

"Fine."

The word cracked like thunder.

"If that is your stance," he said, voice rising with barely contained rage, "then here is his chance."

He turned fully now.

"He will break that relationship."

"Immediately."

"If he does," the patriarch continued, "we will allow him to retain his position."

"And if he does not?"

The patriarch’s eyes burned.

"Then we will take everything from him."

The elders nodded.

Satisfied.

The Second Elder closed his eyes briefly.

Outside the hall—

Far away from ancestral grudges and buried corpses—

Ling Yifan trained in silence beside Bai Qianlan.

Unaware that an old war, long buried, had just been reopened.

PARALLEL — FAR FROM THE HALL

Far away from blackstone walls and poisoned words, the air was clear.

A quiet training ground nestled between stone pillars and flowing water.

Ling Yifan stood at the center, spear in hand, breathing slow and steady.

Across from him, Bai Qianlan adjusted her stance.

"Again," she said calmly.

Ling Yifan nodded.

He moved.

Precision.

His spear cut through the air, smooth and controlled. Bai responded instantly, illusions blooming like petals, weaving light and shadow around him.

He did not hesitate.

He adjusted.

Adapted.

Trusted.

Their movements flowed together, unspoken rhythm guiding them.

"You’re overcommitting on the third step," Bai noted softly.

He corrected it immediately.

They reset.

Sweat dripped. Muscles burned. Breath grew heavier.

But there was no frustration.

Only progress.

Ling Yifan lowered his spear.

"Thank you," he said simply.

Bai smiled faintly.

"You don’t need to thank me."

He hesitated, then spoke.

"Whatever happens," he said quietly, "I won’t regret this."

She met his gaze.

"Neither will I."

They returned to training.

Unaware of the verdict being forged.

Unaware of the choice being prepared for him.

Unaware that his name—his legacy—was being weighed like a bargaining chip.

The spear struck again.

Clean.

True.

And for now, that was enough.

[Chapter ENDS]