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Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 92: The Midnight Meeting
The silence in Lin Tian’s room felt heavier than usual after the refectory. He sat on the edge of his bed, rolling his right shoulder.
A phantom ache, leftover from the Frost Serpent weeks ago, throbbed in time with his heartbeat. Or maybe it was just the lingering chill of the Spirit-Quenching Ice, now fully digested and converted into a cool, steady reserve in his dantian.
Showy, he thought, closing his eyes. Maybe too showy.
A pulse of warmth brushed against his mind, familiar and concerned. Xueya. He sent back a wave of reassurance, picturing the frozen stream in the garden. I’m fine. They’re just testing.
Another pulse, this one sharper, tinged with fire. Su Lan. It wasn’t words, more a sense of focused attention, like someone had turned to look directly at him from across a crowded room.
A soft knock came at his door, three precise taps.
He knew who it was before he called out, "It’s open."
The door slid aside. Su Lan stood in the corridor, still in her formal Discipline Hall uniform, the dark blue fabric stark against the pale stone walls. Her expression was neutral, the perfect picture of a physician on a routine check. Only her eyes, sharp and assessing as they scanned him, gave her away.
"Senior Sister Su," Lin Tian said, not moving from the bed.
"Disciple Lin." She stepped inside and closed the door behind her. Her fingers flickered in a quick, intricate pattern, and a faint shimmer passed over the walls. The Veil of Tranquil Mist she’d helped him install hummed to life, stronger than before. "The suppression array in your room is inadequate. I’ve reinforced it."
"Thank you."
She walked over and stood before him, arms crossed. "Eating Spirit-Quenching Ice in public. That’s a new form of recklessness. Even for you."
"I was hungry."
"Don’t." Her voice lost its professional edge, becoming flat. "Feng Jian’s faction is scrambling. They called an emergency meeting after you left the refectory. They know the poison didn’t work. Now they’re trying to decide if you’re immune, or if you used a forbidden art."
Lin Tian met her gaze. "And what do you think?"
"I think," she said, uncrossing her arms and placing a hand on his wrist, her fingers cool against his skin, "that your pulse is too steady for someone who just consumed a toxin designed to cripple cultivation. Your Ice Flame Qi is... calm. Suspiciously calm."
She was reading his energy through their bond, he realized. The link between them, now stabilized at sixty-five percent, was a two-way street. He could feel the banked heat of her Flowing Ember Body, a steady furnace beside the glacial presence of Xueya in his mind.
"It’s handled," he said.
"For now." She released his wrist. "But the pressure is mounting. Mu Chen will not wait three days. He’ll apply more force. The betrothal ritual is a formality they think they can control. Your public display today makes you a variable. Variables get removed."
"What are you suggesting?"
Su Lan looked toward the door, as if she could see through the wood and the formations to the watchers beyond. "We need to talk. Somewhere the sect’s eyes and ears cannot reach. Somewhere your energy fluctuations won’t be logged by every monitoring stone on the mountain."
Lin Tian understood. "The vents."
"Liang Shu gave you a key for a reason. The geothermal channels beneath North Peak are a blind spot. The maintenance arrays are ancient, built by a different sect entirely. The current council only knows the main access points." She reached into a fold of her robe and produced a simple iron key, different from the one Liang Shu had provided. "I have a... private entrance. And I know a chamber that doesn’t appear on any map."
He stood up. "Now?"
"It’s almost midnight. The patrols shift then. It’s the best time." She tossed him a bundle of dark, coarse-woven cloth. "Put this on. It’s a groundskeeper’s outer robe. It masks your silhouette and has a minor obscuring enchantment. Not enough to fool a dedicated search, but enough to avoid casual notice."
Lin Tian caught the robe. He didn’t ask how she’d gotten it. He simply pulled it on over his disciple garments. The fabric smelled of damp earth and cold stone.
Su Lan did the same, concealing her uniform beneath an identical dark robe. With her hair tucked up and her posture slightly stooped, she looked like any other low-level servant moving through the sect at night.
"Follow me," she said. "Stay three paces back. Don’t use any qi unless I signal. The trace on your wrist is dormant, but we can’t risk it."
They left his room, slipping into the shadowy corridor of the Outer Candidate Quarters. The hour was late, and most disciples were either cultivating or asleep. The few they passed were hurrying, heads down, paying them no mind.
Su Lan led him not toward the main paths, but along a narrow service alley behind the refectory. They passed stacks of firewood and barrels of kitchen waste, the air growing colder and sharper. The towering peaks of the inner sect loomed above, their tops lost in a veil of swirling snow.
After twenty minutes of silent walking, they reached a sheer rock face at the base of North Peak. It looked like a dead end, a wall of rugged granite veined with ice.
Su Lan walked directly up to it, pressed her palm against a seemingly random patch of stone, and pushed.
With a soft grating sound, a section of the rock swung inward, revealing a dark, downward-sloping tunnel. Warm, damp air wafted out, carrying the faint scent of minerals and sulfur.
"The main vents are guarded," Su Lan murmured, stepping inside. "This is a forgotten overflow channel. It hasn’t been used in decades."
Lin Tian followed. The door of stone swung shut behind them, plunging them into absolute darkness.
A moment later, a small, controlled flame sprang to life above Su Lan’s fingertip, casting flickering orange light on the rough-hewn walls. The tunnel was just tall enough to stand in, the floor worn smooth by long-vanished water. The temperature rose steadily as they descended, the biting cold of the surface giving way to a pervasive, earthy warmth.
They walked in silence for what felt like an hour, the path twisting and turning, sometimes branching. Su Lan never hesitated, choosing her course with confidence. She’s been here before, Lin Tian thought. Alone.
Finally, the tunnel opened into a larger cavern. The air here was hot and thick, mist curling from cracks in the floor where water dripped and sizzled on hot stone. The sound of a subterranean river echoed from somewhere below. In the center of the cavern, a natural pool of turquoise water steamed, its surface shimmering with heat.
"This is one of the minor geothermal springs," Su Lan said, her voice echoing softly. "But it’s not why we’re here."
She moved to the far wall, where a curtain of thick, luminous moss hung. She brushed it aside, revealing another, narrower passage. This one was man-made, the walls lined with fitted stone blocks covered in intricate, faded carvings.
"The progenitors," Lin Tian said, recognizing the style from the Legacy Room he’d found during his fall.
Su Lan nodded. "This part of the mountain is older than the Azure Snow Sword Sect. They built on top of it, but they didn’t understand all of it."
The passage ended at a simple stone door. There was no handle, only a circular depression in the center.
Su Lan took Lin Tian’s hand and placed it over the depression. "Use a thread of your Ice Flame Qi. Not much. Just a touch."
He did as she said, letting a wisp of his dual-colored energy flow from his palm into the stone.
The door glowed with a soft, blue-white light. The carvings around it flared to life, depicting interlocking spirals of frost and flame. With a deep, resonant thrum, the door slid sideways into the wall, disappearing completely.
The room beyond was small and circular, perhaps ten paces across. The air was perfectly temperate, neither hot nor cold. The walls were smooth, polished black stone that seemed to drink the light from Su Lan’s flame. In the center of the floor was a raised dais, carved with a complex, dual-sided formation. One half gleamed with icy silver lines, the other with warm, golden ones. They met in the middle in a seamless, swirling pattern.
"A harmonization chamber," Su Lan breathed, her professional detachment finally slipping into awe. "I’d only read about them in forbidden medical texts. They were used by bonded cultivators of the progenitor era to merge and stabilize opposing energies without... without the need for physical intimacy."
Lin Tian stepped inside, the System interface flashing silently in the corner of his vision.
[Location Identified: Ancient Bond Stabilization Chamber. Ambient energy optimal for linked partner synchronization. Detected compatible partners in proximity: Su Lan (Flowing Ember Body). Bai Xueya (Ice Phoenix Divine Beast) – remote connection viable.]
[Passive Benefits: Spiritual recovery increased by 300%. Qi harmonization rate increased by 500%. External surveillance nullified.]
"This is..." he began.
"A sanctuary," Su Lan finished, walking to the dais and running her fingers over the golden lines. "No one in the current sect knows this exists. If they did, they would have destroyed it. Their entire doctrine is built on purifying individual elements, not harmonizing opposites."
She turned to look at him, the flame above her finger guttering out. The only light now came from the faint glow of the formation beneath their feet, casting her face in soft, dual-toned shadows.
"We have until dawn," she said. "Here, we can speak freely. We can plan. And you," she added, her gaze intense, "can finally consolidate the power you’ve been straining to hold back. Without fear of the trace. Without fear of breaking."
Lin Tian looked from the ancient formation to Su Lan’s serious face, then up at the sealed ceiling of black stone. For the first time since arriving at the Azure Snow Sect, he felt truly hidden.
Okay, he thought, stepping onto the dais. The energy in the room hummed in welcome, resonating with the two linked hearts within him. Let’s talk.
End of Chapter 92







