Yani stood there a while longer, then finally lowered her hand and straightened her robes. Whatever conflicted thoughts lingered were pressed down, buried beneath composure and long habit.
Outside, the sect was already stirring.
By the ti she stepped into the corridor, the quiet intimacy of her chambers had been swallowed by movent and sound. Disciples stread past in steady currents, their voices overlapping in low excitent, whispered speculation, and barely concealed ambition. Robes from different halls and lineages brushed against one another, colors and insignias blending into a restless tide that flowed in a single direction.
The Outer Sect Tournant grounds.
The air itself felt different—thicker, sharper, threaded with anticipation. Qi fluctuations rippled intermittently as cultivators unconsciously released their auras, testing themselves, posturing, or simply failing to contain their eagerness. Sowhere in the distance, a bell rang out, deep and resonant, its echo rolling across the sect like a declaration.
The tournant had begun.
Yani paused at a high vantage point overlooking the main path. From here, she could see the crowds converging toward the arena, elders moving with asured calm, inner sect disciples observing from elevated platforms, their expressions unreadable. This was not rely a competition—it was a sieve. A place where talent was weighed, ambition exposed, and futures quietly rewritten.
Victors would rise.
Failures would be forgotten.
Her gaze drifted unconsciously toward the direction Lingling had gone.
Sowhere within that sea of disciples, she was heading toward her seat—nervous, hopeful, unaware of how many eyes would soon be watching her. Yani exhaled slowly, then turned away, letting the tide carry her forward as well.
High above the arena, banners fluttered in the wind, emblazoned with the sect’s sigil, ancient and unyielding. The stone platforms glead beneath the morning light, inscribed with formations ant to contain the violence that would soon erupt within their bounds.
Lingling POV
Brother Xuanyan... where are you?
The thought surfaced unbidden, carrying with it a faint ache she didn’t quite understand. i Lingling stood quietly among the participants, fingers clasped before her as her gaze drifted across the arena. She searched instinctively, hoping to catch even a glimpse of him.
Her lips pressed together slightly. She had tried her best. Truly. Everything she had done—every breath, every effort—had been for him. The idea that he might be displeased lingered like a thorn beneath her composure.
She exhaled slowly.
No... maybe he’s just sowhere I can’t see yet.
That thought eased her heart a little. After all, Brother Xuanyan didn’t have much reputation in the sect yet. It wasn’t strange that he might blend into the crowd.
She shook her head gently, forcing her thoughts back into order.
Focus.
Her mother was watching.
She straightened instinctively, shoulders squaring as resolve replaced hesitation. Today mattered too much to be clouded by doubt. She would perform well—for her mother... and for him.
I’ve waited for this mont for so long, she thought, a faint smile touching her lips. I won’t waste it.
When her na was called, i Lingling stepped forward.
Cheers erupted the instant she entered the arena.
It didn’t matter whether they were outer sect or inner sect disciples—eyes turned toward her as one. Her figure lacked the mature allure of Bai Shaoyue, but her charm was different. Refined. Pure. Her skin seed to glow faintly beneath the light, her presence soft yet impossible to ignore.
"She truly is beautiful," Elder Ning Ruyan remarked lightly, her gaze flicking toward i Lingyao.
i Lingyao did not respond.
Her attention was fixed solely on her daughter’s smile, maternal instincts imdiately sensing the tension beneath it. Lingling was nervous. Not about the fight—but about sothing else entirely.
She chose not to dwell on it.
Before the murmurs could swell further, the air shifted.
The shift was subtle at first.
Conversations did not stop abruptly. No one shouted a warning. No dramatic announcent echoed through the arena. Yet sohow, the noise dulled, as if the air itself had thickened and swallowed the excess sound.
Disciples who had been whispering monts ago straightened unconsciously, their voices trailing off without knowing why. Even elders paused mid-thought, their attention drawn upward by sothing they felt before they saw.
A sword descended from the sky.
Upon it stood a woman dressed in plain sect robes, her posture relaxed, her expression composed to the point of indifference. There was no arrogance in her gaze, no deliberate display of authority. She looked across the arena as one might observe a familiar landscape—without urgency, without curiosity.
Hei Yuling.
She stepped off the sword and onto the elevated platform with unhurried grace, the blade dissolving into light behind her. The mont her feet touched stone, the formations beneath the arena reacted instinctively, flaring to life as if acknowledging her presence.
No one needed to ask who she was.
Whispers spread—not excited, not frantic, but restrained and careful.
"That’s her..."
"The Sect Master’s disciple."
"Qi Condensation Stage Nine... still stuck there."
The last whisper carried no mockery. Only caution.
Because despite the stagnant realm, no one in the Outer Sect underestimated Hei Yuling. Not after years of watching her preside over disputes, settle conflicts, and quietly redirect matters that should have spiraled into chaos. In this world, numbers mattered—but reputation mattered more. And hers was heavy enough to press down on everyone present.
i Lingling felt it the instant Hei Yuling’s gaze passed over her.
It wasn’t killing intent. It wasn’t suppression. It was sothing subtler—a weight ford not of power, but of authority accumulated through ti and consequence. Her breathing hitched slightly, chest tightening as if the air had grown thinner. This was not brute force. This was presence.
Hei Yuling let her gaze sweep across the arena once more before speaking.
"This Outer Sect Tournant," she said calmly, her voice carrying without effort, reaching even the farthest seats, "will proceed in group stages, followed by elimination rounds, and then finals."
There was no need for Hei Yuling to raise her voice. The arena had already stilled, attention drawn to her without conscious effort.
"Fight fairly," she said, tone calm and unembellished. "Win cleanly. If you lose—Lose with dignity."
Her gaze moved across the platform, lingering just long enough for a few to straighten without understanding why.
"Strength without restraint," she continued, her voice lowering by the slightest degree, "is not virtue."
"It is liability."
The formations carved into the stone answered at once. Lines of light ignited beneath the platforms, weaving together into a vast, intricate lattice as containnt arrays locked into place. The air humd softly, the arena sealing itself as if a verdict had already been passed.
The Outer Sect Tournant had begun.
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