MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 98: THE FLAME BATTLE
Chapter 98 — THE FIELD BREAKS BEFORE THE FIRE DOES
The first thing to fail was not stone.
It was order.
A thin, almost inaudible whine rippled through the Grand Arena, like a glass stretched too far. The stabilizing formations—ancient, layered, overengineered to withstand divine talents and overlapping domains—flickered once. Then again. The light running through their sigils stuttered, no longer smooth, no longer synchronized.
Those who felt it froze.
Those who didn’t feel anything at all were already in danger.
The ground lurched.
Not violently. Not yet. Just enough for everyone standing to realize the arena had stopped pretending to be solid.
High above, the announcer’s voice cut off mid-breath.
In the instructors’ chamber, a Vermillion formation master shot to his feet. "The stabilizers are desyncing."
"That’s impossible," another snapped. "They’re rated for—"
"For isolated domains," Mei Ying said sharply. "Not three authorities trying to rewrite the battlefield at once."
On the arena floor, the consequences arrived immediately.
A wide crack split open near the center, stone plates separating with a grinding shriek as molten-red formation lines flashed beneath. A fighter from a minor academy stumbled, barely catching themselves before sliding into the widening gap.
The crowd screamed.
The ground tilted.
Not metaphorically.
Physically.
The arena was no longer a flat plane. Sections of terrain began to slope, rise, and sink as stabilizers failed in sequence rather than all at once. Platforms shifted independently, turning the battlefield into a broken landscape of moving zones.
A voice boomed through the arena, amplified and furious.
"STABILIZATION FAILURE DETECTED. ALL PARTICIPANTS—MOVE."
Move.
That was the warning.
And it came too late for anyone standing still.
Luo Qinghe’s Verdant Sovereign’s Embrace reacted instinctively. Vines surged downward, thickening into anchor-roots that plunged deep into the arena’s fractured understructure. Green light flared as the domain attempted to hold the collapsing terrain together.
For a heartbeat, it worked.
Then fire tore through it.
Rong Yueran’s flames erupted outward in a sweeping arc, not wild, not panicked, but decisive. She wasn’t burning randomly anymore. She was cutting—slicing through plant anchors that threatened to dominate the entire collapse.
"Don’t you dare turn this into your forest," she said, voice calm, eyes sharp.
Her phoenix flames condensed into tight spirals that lashed downward, severing roots cleanly. Where plant control tried to stabilize, fire forced release. Where stone wanted to settle, heat kept it fluid.
The stabilizers screamed louder.
The arena split again.
A massive section near the eastern quadrant dropped several meters, forming a slanted basin that immediately began to slide. Two fighters lost footing and tumbled together, colliding hard before sliding across the boundary line as the section continued to sink.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
The crowd roared, half terror, half exhilaration.
"This isn’t part of the plan!"
"THE ARENA’S FALLING!"
"IS THIS STILL LEGAL?!"
From the VIP chamber, the Dragon Turtle dean laughed, loud and unbothered.
"HAHA! NOW IT’S A REAL TEST!"
The Azure Dragon dean rubbed his forehead. "...I hate this tournament."
On the battlefield, Ouyang Xue’er adjusted instantly.
She slammed her staff into the ground as ice surged outward, freezing unstable stone plates in place, locking shifting terrain into rigid structures just long enough to be usable. Where sections threatened to slide, ice bridged gaps. Where cracks widened, frost sealed them temporarily.
But ice cracked too.
The temperature fluctuations from Rong Yueran’s flames caused violent stress fractures. Ice bridges shattered seconds after forming, forcing constant movement.
Ouyang felt the strain.
Not exhaustion.
Timing.
She couldn’t hold everything.
And that was when several fighters noticed something else.
With the terrain collapsing, with domains clashing, with fire and ice rewriting paths—Long Hao was still standing where he had been.
Not frozen.
Not trapped.
Just... there.
On a narrow, slightly elevated stone plate that hadn’t shifted yet.
Unclaimed.
Uncontested.
Unthreatened.
A Silvermoon fighter noticed first.
Then another.
A Vermillion striker narrowed his eyes.
"...Why is he untouched?"
The answer didn’t matter.
Instinct took over.
Two fighters moved toward Long Hao at the same time, leaping across a narrowing gap as the stone beneath them fractured.
Long Hao exhaled.
Longyu’s voice snapped inside his head, sharp and urgent. "MOVE. NOW."
He stepped.
Not back.
Sideways.
The stone plate beneath his original position dropped instantly, slamming downward as if responding to his absence. One of the approaching fighters missed their landing by a fraction of a second and fell, vanishing into the collapsing section before being spat out beyond the boundary by emergency formations.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
The second landed.
And attacked.
A fast, desperate slash aimed for Long Hao’s throat.
Long Hao tilted his head.
The blade passed where his neck had been.
He didn’t counterattack.
He placed his foot.
The stone beneath the attacker’s heel cracked, shearing off at the edge. The fighter lost balance, momentum carrying them sideways into open air.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
Long Hao stood still again.
Too still.
Longyu hissed. "You’re attracting attention."
"I know," he murmured.
Across the battlefield, Ling Yifan felt it.
Not danger.
Focus.
Eyes were shifting. Calculations updating. The spear in his hand tightened slightly as he adjusted position, moving toward Long Hao’s general direction without breaking stride.
At the same time, Luo Qinghe made a decision.
His domain could no longer stabilize the field alone. Fire was cutting his anchors. Ice was interfering with his growth patterns. The arena itself was becoming unreliable.
So he stopped trying to control everything.
And compressed instead.
Verdant Sovereign’s Embrace folded inward.
Roots withdrew from wide areas and surged toward a smaller core zone where Luo Qinghe stood. The greenery thickened, condensed, becoming denser, tougher, more aggressive.
The moment the outer zones were released, the arena gave way.
A massive section collapsed entirely, dropping several meters and forcing every fighter nearby to sprint or leap to safety.
Yue Hanran adapted instantly, ground reinforcement surging beneath his feet as he stabilized a narrow path for himself—but others weren’t so lucky.
A fighter stumbled.
The ground vanished.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
Rong Yueran watched the collapse with narrowed eyes.
"So that’s your answer," she said softly.
She raised both hands.
The phoenix flames changed color.
Not brighter.
Deeper.
The air warped as heat compressed, flames coiling inward around her body instead of expanding outward. The temperature spiked sharply, not across the field, but in a focused radius.
The stabilizers screamed again.
A Vermillion instructor shouted, "She’s overloading the arena!"
The Dragon Turtle dean leaned forward eagerly. "LET HER!"
Rong Yueran stepped forward.
And burned the battlefield.
Not indiscriminately.
Deliberately.
Flame surged downward into the fractured terrain, fusing broken stone plates together into molten bridges that cooled instantly into blackened obsidian. She carved new paths, not safe ones, but decisive ones.
Where ice froze, fire tempered.
Where plant withdrew, flame claimed.
The battlefield didn’t just collapse anymore.
It reformed.
Under her authority.
Several fighters misjudged the new terrain and were caught mid-transition, slipping, colliding, or being forced into bad engagements.
Two more eliminations rang out in quick succession.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
The crowd was screaming now, voices hoarse.
"This is insane!"
"THEY’RE REMAKING THE ARENA!"
"WHO CAN EVEN STAND NOW?!"
Ling Yifan moved through the chaos like a constant.
He didn’t rush.
He didn’t stall.
When a section collapsed, he stepped where it would be stable next. When fire flared, he passed just after it receded. When ice cracked, he crossed before it shattered.
The spear was an extension of his intent.
A fighter lunged at him in panic.
The spear tapped their shoulder.
They stumbled backward into a collapsing gap.
ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.
Ling Yifan didn’t slow.
Ouyang Xue’er felt her control thinning. Ice could no longer dictate the field—it could only respond. She adjusted, shifting from wide-area control to precision denial, freezing just enough to cut off pursuit or force mistakes.
She saw Long Hao again.
Still untouched.
Her eyes narrowed slightly.
"...He’s reading the collapse."
From above, Mei Ying noticed too.
"He’s not reacting late," she muttered. "He’s moving before failure."
Long Hao stepped again, narrowly avoiding a surge of phoenix flame that fused stone where he would have been standing.
Longyu’s glow flickered violently. "This is past safe thresholds. If you keep doing this without acting—"
"I know," he said quietly.
Across the battlefield, the remaining fighters were fewer now.
Stronger.
Meaner.
Closer.
Luo Qinghe’s compressed domain surged once more.
Rong Yueran’s flames answered.
The arena did not scream when the final stabilizer failed.
It sank—slowly, deliberately—like a beast choosing to kneel rather than collapse.
Stone plates slid past one another, not breaking, but separating, opening gaps that glowed faintly with formation light far below. Heat shimmered upward from the depths. Wind rushed through newly born chasms, howling like a warning that came too late.
For a single heartbeat, no one moved.
Then the ground shifted again.
A massive section peeled away and dropped, vanishing into the abyss beneath the battlefield. The shockwave rippled outward, throwing dust, heat, and loose debris into the air as emergency formations flared violently to prevent deaths rather than defeats.
Somewhere, an alarm wailed and cut off.
The crowd fell silent.
Not in fear.
In realization.
This was no longer a battlefield.
It was a sorting ground.
Only the ones who could read collapse before it happened...only the ones who could move without relying on stability...only the ones who could fight while the world beneath them gave up—
would remain.
Ling Yifan tightened his grip on the spear.
Ouyang Xue’er steadied her breath.
Rong Yueran’s flames burned lower, denser, more dangerous.
Luo Qinghe closed his eyes for a fraction of a second—and smiled.
And Long Hao, standing where the ground had not yet decided to fail, felt the Eclipse System pulse once—slow, heavy, unmistakable.
The arena had stopped asking who was strongest.
Now it was asking who deserved to stand when nothing else did.
[Chapter ENDS]







