Chapter 89 — THE SYSTEM DOES NOT ANSWER
It was night in Vermillion Phoenix Academy.
The arena was quiet now, sealed behind layers of dormant formations, its vast bowl resting like a sleeping beast waiting to be awakened. Most competitors were training. So were ditating. So were pretending to sleep while their minds spiraled through every possible outco of the coming battle.
Long Hao did neither.
He stood alone on one of the outer terraces, far from the training grounds, far from the noise. The city lights of Vermillion burned in the distance like scattered embers, reflected faintly in his eyes.
Stillness had always been his weapon.
In his previous life, stillness ant survival.
In this one, it ant sothing else entirely.
Inside his chest, the Eclipse System pulsed faintly. Not loudly. Not urgently. Just enough to remind him it was there.
Watching.
"You’re unusually quiet," Longyu’s voice finally said.
She did not manifest. Not fully. Her presence hovered at the edge of his perception, more cautious than usual.
"I’m thinking," Long Hao replied.
"That’s never a good sign," Longyu muttered.
He ignored the comnt.
For a while, neither spoke. The wind moved. A formation lantern flickered. Sowhere far below, laughter drifted up from a group of students who still believed tomorrow was sothing distant.
Long Hao broke the silence.
"Show what you were doing," he said.
Longyu paused.
"...Which part."
"The ones you’ve never shown ," he replied calmly.
The air inside his mind tightened.
"There are no—"
"Longyu," he interrupted, voice even, "I didn’t ask if they existed."
Silence.
Long Hao had learned sothing over the past months. The system responded to precision. To certainty. To statents made without doubt.
Longyu sighed.
"...You’re getting annoying," she said. "You know that?"
"Show ."
Another pause.
Then—
The world inside his mind shifted.
Black space unfolded, layered with cascading sigils and data streams. This was deeper than the usual interface. Deeper than stat readouts and unsealing percentages.
A place he had never been allowed to see.
ECLIPSE SYSTEM — ARCHIVAL LAYER
Long Hao’s eyes narrowed slightly.
"You’ve been busy," he said.
Longyu did not reply imdiately.
Instead, a series of entries began to scroll past him. Not text alone. Images. Projections. Possibilities.
Tilines.
Paths.
Deaths.
He saw himself standing amid ruins, alone, surrounded by corpses that did not decay.
He saw himself walking through a city where people looked at him with fear instead of reverence.
He saw himself facing sothing vast and indistinct, the sky fractured above him, blood running down his arm as he smiled.
Every path shared one thing.
Isolation.
"...What is this," Long Hao asked quietly.
"Predictions," Longyu said at last. Her voice was subdued now. "Outco simulations."
"For what."
"For you."
He watched as another path resolved.
In that one, he stood victorious at the end of Stage Three. Alone. The crowd cheering, then slowly falling silent as sothing unseen pressed down on them. He felt the pressure even now, like a mory that had not yet happened.
"Every path ends the sa," he said.
"Yes."
"Why."
Longyu hesitated.
"Because," she said carefully, "you are not ant to exist quietly."
Long Hao’s expression did not change, but sothing inside him shifted.
"In my last life," he said, "I was hunted because I was useful."
"Yes."
"In this life," he continued, "I’m being guided toward sothing that scares even you."
Longyu went silent.
That was answer enough.
"So tell ," Long Hao said. "Did I reincarnate... or was I deployed."
The word hung between them.
Longyu’s form flickered briefly, as if the system itself rejected the question.
"I can’t answer that," she said.
"Won’t," Long Hao corrected.
"...Yet," she anded.
He let out a slow breath.
"All these paths," he said. "They assu I keep following you."
"Yes."
"What happens if I don’t."
The data froze.
For the first ti since he had known the system, the Eclipse interface... stuttered.
OUTCO: UNKNOWN
That made him smile.
"That’s new," he murmured.
"It’s dangerous," Longyu snapped, suddenly sharp. "Defying predictive convergence creates instability. You could—"
"Die," Long Hao finished calmly. "I’ve done that."
She flared into partial manifestation in front of him, jade-green light coalescing into a sharp-eyed, furious dragon sylph.
"You don’t understand," she said. "These aren’t probabilities anymore. They’re pressures. Every ti you unseal further, every ti you act, the heavens adjust."
"Heavens," Long Hao repeated softly.
"Yes," Longyu said. "Sothing noticed you during Trial Island. More noticed you at Dragon Turtle Academy. Stage Three is going to be... loud."
He looked back out at the city.
"So this is why you’ve been pushing restraint," he said.
"Yes."
"And this," he continued, "is why the system never encouraged to save anyone recklessly."
Longyu did not deny it.
"You were shaping ," he said. "For survival."
"For inevitability," she corrected.
That word sat poorly with him.
Before he could speak again, a sharp sensation rippled across his perception.
Soone was watching.
Not nearby.
Not physically.
A presence brushed against his awareness like a cold finger trailing down his spine.
Longyu stiffened instantly.
"...That shouldn’t be possible," she whispered.
Long Hao’s eyes sharpened.
"What."
"Soone," she said slowly, "just tried to read you."
He felt it now. A probing intent. Careful. Professional.
Not divine.
Human.
"A guild," he said.
"Yes," Longyu confird. "High-tier. Experienced."
A mory surfaced unbidden. The assassin. The poison. The precision.
"They recognized sothing," Long Hao murmured.
"Yes."
"And now they’re deciding," he continued, "whether I’m worth killing."
"Or recruiting," Longyu said grimly.
The presence withdrew as suddenly as it had appeared.
Long Hao stood still.
He knew what ca next.
If he hunted them, he could end the threat cleanly. Permanently. No witnesses. No loose ends.
It would be easy.
The old him stirred, familiar and efficient.
But if he did that—
He would be seen.
If not by people, then by the system.
By whatever lay beyond it.
"Longyu," he said quietly.
"...Yes."
"If I kill them," he asked, "what happens."
She hesitated.
"Several tilines collapse," she admitted. "Others accelerate."
"And if I don’t."
"Risk," she said. "Exposure. Interference. Chaos."
Long Hao smiled faintly.
"In my last life," he said, "I never hesitated."
He turned away from the terrace, walking back toward the shadows of the academy.
"This life," he continued, "is testing whether I should."
Longyu watched him go, unease twisting through her form.
For the first ti since binding to him, she did not know which path he would choose.
Behind him, the Eclipse System pulsed—uncertain.
Above him, the sky remained silent.
But sothing far beyond Vermillion had already adjusted its gaze.
[Chapter ENDS]
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