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Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 43: The Sect Above the Clouds [2]
Elder Qiao gestured toward a narrow path leading down the terrace.
"Follow," he said.
Lin Tian obeyed.
They descended along a stone stair carved into the cliffside. The path wound downward, passing beneath arching ice bridges and through corridors cut into the mountain itself. The deeper they went, the less grand the buildings became.
Outer territory.
Still clean, still refined compared to Cloudcrest—
But not the glittering heart of the sect.
Along the way, disciples passed them in small groups.
Most didn’t bow.
They weren’t obligated to.
Some glanced at him openly, eyes flicking down his cultivation, up again to his face.
A few whispered.
One laughed softly.
Lin Tian kept walking.
He simply moved like someone who had learned to endure people’s eyes for eighteen years.
At the entrance to the outer quarters, Elder Qiao stopped.
A small compound of stone buildings sat in a line, each with simple carved doors and narrow courtyards. It wasn’t miserable.
But it was a clear message: You are not one of us yet.
Elder Qiao gestured toward an attendant.
"Candidate Lin Tian. Seventh Level Elementary Spirit. High-grade talent. High-grade roots."
The attendant blinked, surprise flickering before he masked it. "Understood, Elder."
Elder Qiao looked at Lin Tian.
"You will receive a basic room and daily rations," he said. "You will have access to outer training grounds and public libraries, nothing more."
Lin Tian nodded. "Yes."
Elder Qiao narrowed his eyes slightly.
"Do you understand what it means to be a provisional candidate tied to Disciple Bai’s engagement?"
Lin Tian didn’t hesitate.
"It means my actions reflect on her," he said.
"And?"
"It means any weakness I show will be used to pressure her."
Elder Qiao studied him for a moment, then gave a slow nod.
"At least you are not foolish," he said.
He turned away.
"Do not embarrass the sect," he added over his shoulder.
Then he left, robes swaying like a curtain closing.
The attendant led Lin Tian to a room near the end of the compound.
Simple.
A bed. A low table. A small shelf. A narrow window looking out over a sheer drop where clouds drifted like ocean foam.
The air in the room was cold but clean.
Lin Tian stepped inside and closed the door behind him.
For the first time since leaving Cloudcrest, he was alone.
The silence pressed in.
He set his travel bundle down and stood still for a moment, letting his senses extend.
This place was different.
Even the walls carried faint formation lines, subtle enough that ordinary mortals wouldn’t see them, but clear to his new cultivation sense. They regulated temperature, prevented excessive qi leakage, and—he suspected—made it difficult to conceal certain fluctuations.
A cage built politely.
Lin Tian exhaled.
"Fine," he murmured. "Then I’ll grow inside it."
He moved to the window.
Outside, the sect’s outer training grounds sprawled across the terraces below. Disciples trained in pairs, sword light flashing. A few stood alone, meditating beneath frost trees that shimmered faintly.
Higher above, the inner peaks rose like unreachable towers.
Somewhere up there, Bai Xueya was being examined, monitored, measured.
She was back in the sect’s grip.
And he was here, in the outer ring, being judged.
Lin Tian’s fingers curled lightly on the window frame.
A soft chime sounded in his mind.
The System interface unfolded.
[Harem Link Cultivation System — Active]
[Linked Partner: Bai Xueya (1)]
[Synchronization: Stable]
Then a new line appeared, bold and clinical.
[New Arc Mission Detected: Survive Azure Snow]
Lin Tian’s gaze sharpened.
The panel expanded.
Objectives:
Achieve Top 20 in Outer Ranking TrialsMaintain Partner Stability (No Link Instability Events)Avoid Trace Activation (External Detection Risk)
Reward:
[Physique Unlock: Phase 1]
Penalty (Failure):
[Engagement Risk Increased]
[Partner Protection Priority Compromised]
Lin Tian stared.
Top 20.
It wasn’t "pass."
It wasn’t "survive."
It was rank.
The System didn’t want him hidden.
It wanted him visible enough that the sect couldn’t ignore him—but not so reckless that they could label him a parasite.
He dismissed the panel slowly.
His breathing stayed steady.
But the weight in his chest tightened.
He could do this.
He had to.
Not because he cared about the sect’s approval.
Because if he stayed weak here, they could peel Bai Xueya away from him with cold logic and authority.
He turned from the window and began arranging his room.
Not in a nervous way.
In a deliberate way.
He placed his belongings neatly. He hung his outer robe. He set his practice sword against the wall where it wouldn’t be in the way. He cleaned the table even though it was already clean.
Small actions.
Grounding actions.
When he finished, he sat cross-legged on the bed.
He closed his eyes.
Letting his breath sink.
The sect’s spiritual energy in the air was dense, cold, and clean. He drew it in carefully, guiding it through his meridians with the Lin clan’s foundational circulation.
It moved smoothly.
No blockages.
No pain.
He could feel the difference between Cloudcrest and here immediately—each breath carried more energy than two breaths back home. The flow in his dantian thickened, richer, steadier.
But beneath it, deeper inside—
That reservoir stirred.
A quiet weight.
Not demanding.
Not pressing.
Just present.
Waiting for him to reach.
Lin Tian did not.
He kept his focus on his own qi.
One circuit.
Two.
Three.
He cultivated until the cold in his room felt less like an enemy and more like air.
When he opened his eyes again, the sky outside had shifted slightly. Clouds drifted past the window like slow waves.
A knock sounded at his door.
Lin Tian’s gaze sharpened instantly.
He rose and opened it.
A young outer disciple stood there, arms folded, expression neutral but with a faint edge of smugness. His robe was clean. His sword was polished. His cultivation was slightly higher than Lin Tian’s—Eighth Level, perhaps Ninth.
He looked Lin Tian up and down with practiced dismissal.
"So you’re the one," the disciple said.
Lin Tian kept his face calm. "I’m Lin Tian."
The disciple’s lips curved. "I know."
He didn’t bow.
He didn’t offer courtesy.
"Outer quarters aren’t friendly to outsiders," he said lightly. "Especially outsiders tied to Senior Sister Bai."
Lin Tian remained still. "And?"
The disciple stepped closer—close enough that his cold aura brushed Lin Tian’s skin.
"Just advice," he said. "Don’t act like you belong."
Lin Tian met his gaze.
"I don’t," he said. "Not yet."
That answer seemed to throw the disciple off balance for a fraction of a second. He had expected arrogance. Or defiance. Or desperation.
Not calm agreement.
His smirk tightened.
"You’ll be tested soon," he said. "Outer rankings. People here don’t like miracles."
"I don’t need them to like me," Lin Tian replied.
The disciple’s eyes narrowed.
For a moment, he looked like he wanted to provoke further.
Then his gaze flicked toward the corridor behind him, as if noticing someone watching.
He stepped back.
"Enjoy your first night," he said, tone thin.
Then he turned and walked away.
Lin Tian watched him go.
He didn’t move until the footsteps faded.
Then he closed the door slowly.
He exhaled.
So it begins.
No councils.
No speeches.
No formal threats needed.
The hostility here lived in small gestures, in denied resources, in whispered words sharpened into weapons.
A sect didn’t crush you with a single blow.
It crushed you with pressure.
With isolation.
With endless tests.
Lin Tian returned to his bed and sat again.
He closed his eyes.
Not to cultivate this time.
To feel.
He reached inward—not to the reservoir, but to the Link.
The connection to Bai Xueya.
It pulsed faintly, warm beneath the cold, like a heartbeat heard through water.
Stable.
Present.
Then—faintly, like a whisper—
He felt her.
Not words.
Not images.
Just emotion.
A thin thread of tension.
A tight control.
Determination held like a blade between her teeth.
She was being examined.
She was being watched.
But she was holding steady.
Lin Tian’s hand curled into a fist on his knee.
"Hold on," he whispered softly, voice barely audible in the cold room. "I’m here."
The Link pulsed once.
Warm.
Steady.
As if answering.
He opened his eyes and stared at the window again.
The inner peaks rose beyond the cloud sea, white stone and blue roofs cutting into the sky.
Somewhere up there was her residence.
Somewhere up there was Elder Shen’s cold gaze.
Somewhere up there was the sect’s grip tightening.
Lin Tian’s expression hardened.
He had been weak his whole life.
Not because his mind was weak.
Not because his will was weak.
Because his body had refused him.
Now his body was no longer his prison.
And the sect was about to learn something.
He didn’t need to be one of them to stand beside Bai Xueya.
He just needed to be strong enough that they couldn’t pull him away like a disposable piece.
He drew in a slow breath.
Then another.
The air was cold.
But he welcomed it.
Because cold could be endured.
Cold could be cut.
Cold could be shaped.
And if Azure Snow wanted to cage him in ice—
Then he would learn to turn that ice into his blade.
Outside, the sky brightened gradually, sunlight spilling across the cloud sea like pale gold.
Inside the outer quarters, Lin Tian sat in stillness, breath steady, eyes calm.
The sect thought it had taken control of the situation.
It thought it had separated them.
It thought it had placed him where he could be measured, diminished, managed.
Lin Tian smiled faintly.
Not with arrogance.
With certainty.
"Top twenty," he murmured.
Then his gaze sharpened.
"Fine."
He closed his eyes again.
This time, when he cultivated, he did not do it like a desperate boy grabbing for power.
He did it like a man laying bricks beneath his own feet.
One circuit at a time.
One breath at a time.
One step at a time.
Because the cage had walls.
But it also had a floor.
And he could build a path on that floor until it reached the sky.
End of Chapter 43







