Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 31: When Azure Snow Descends

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Chapter 31: When Azure Snow Descends

Dawn crept through the curtains in pale gold.

Bai Xueya stirred against him—slow, warm, still half-dreaming. For a moment Lin Tian forgot the world outside. He only knew the feel of her breath feathering his chest, the slight weight of her thigh draped over his, the soft tangle of silver hair spilling across his skin.

She shifted, eyelids fluttering open.

Her gaze met his.

For a heartbeat, she smiled.

Then the outside world crashed back.

A hurried knock struck the door—too sharp, too urgent to ignore.

"Miss Bai—!" A Bai attendant’s voice cracked. "Miss Bai, the Azure Snow envoy is at the gates!"

Silence followed.

Her breath froze against him.

Xueya sat up instantly, the gentleness of moments ago snapping into perfect discipline. Lin Tian watched her pull the robe around her shoulders, fingers steady—too steady. He could see the strain she was masking.

"Already?" she whispered.

He rose beside her, tying his own belt.

"Yes," he said quietly. "They didn’t waste time."

The attendant knocked again, more desperately. "Miss Bai—Elder Shen requests your immediate presence!"

Xueya drew one long breath. It wavered at the end.

Lin Tian reached out.

His hand brushed her wrist, just a momentary touch meant only for her.

"You don’t face them alone," he said.

Her eyes softened—brief, unguarded.

Then the Ice Fairy returned, every line of her posture smooth and controlled.

Before opening the door, she looked once more at him.

"Whatever they ask," she murmured, "remember this: you owe them nothing."

He nodded.

He wasn’t sure he believed it.

But she needed him to.

Their fingers brushed one last time.

Then she opened the door and stepped into the waiting storm.

The Lin clan’s central courtyard was a sea of rigid spines and bowed heads.

Disciples knelt. Servants pressed to the sides. Elders stood in formal rows. Frost hung in the air—not natural frost, but spiritual, the kind that burned cold and pricked the lungs.

At the far end, descending from a floating blade of condensed ice qi, stood the Azure Snow envoy.

Elder Shen.

She was tall, willowy, clad in robes pale as winter morning. Each strand of her hair shimmered with thin frost. Her expression was soft—almost gentle—but the spiritual pressure radiating from her was anything but.

It pressed along Lin Tian’s meridians like a cold fingertip tracing the inside of his bones.

He stood his ground anyway.

Her gaze swept the courtyard.

Lin elders stiffened. Bai attendants straightened. A few disciples lowered their eyes entirely, unable to withstand her presence.

Her eyes found Bai Xueya.

"Disciple Bai," Elder Shen said. Her voice was warm, melodic—and sharpened underneath. "You look well."

Too well was the implication.

Xueya bowed. "Elder Shen."

Then the envoy’s gaze slid to Lin Tian.

She held him there. Not with hostility, nor disdain, but with the terrible patience of someone already calculating.

"So," she murmured. "The one at the center of so many rumors."

Lin Tian bowed deeply. "Elder."

Her eyes narrowed, but she smiled faintly.

"We shall see."

Inside the main hall, the air felt even colder.

The Lin Patriarch greeted Elder Shen with respect that bordered on reverence. Bai representatives offered prepared documents. Elder Mei provided medical records. Everything was structured, orderly, clean.

But none of that mattered.

Elder Shen watched Xueya the entire time.

And when Xueya sat, the envoy’s gaze dipped to her posture, her hands, the pallor of her skin, the faint glow of stabilized qi beneath her ribs.

"Remarkable," Shen said. "You appear healthier than our own healers managed in years."

Xueya inclined her head. "I broke through recently."

"Indeed. And your meridians? Stable now, I hear."

"Yes, Elder."

"And this occurred... here." A slight tilt of her head toward the hall. "In this modest clan."

Lin elders stiffened. Lin Tian did not.

He watched Xueya’s profile.

Calm. Controlled. Beautiful in that cold-burning way.

"Yes," she answered evenly.

The envoy’s attention snapped to Lin Tian.

"You," she said. "Rise."

He did.

Her eyes were impossibly clear. Pale, almost silver, reflecting every twitch of his breath.

"You awakened recently."

"Yes."

"You jumped to the Fifth Level immediately."

"Yes."

"Explain."

"Emotional clarity," he said simply.

A murmur rippled through the hall.

Elder Shen drifted closer, steps soundless on the stone.

"Emotional clarity," she repeated, tasting the phrase. "That is rarely sufficient for such progress."

"It was for me."

"And you reached the Seventh Level shortly thereafter."

The air thickened.

Lin Tian’s heart hammered once. "Yes."

"How?"

"I trained," he said. "Harder than I ever have."

He felt Xueya’s gaze flick toward him—brief approval mixed with worry.

Elder Shen studied him for a beat that lasted too long.

Then—

"You do not lie," she said softly. "But you do withhold."

Lin Tian’s jaw tightened.

The envoy turned to Xueya.

"And you, Disciple Bai. Your Frost Yin no longer tears at your meridians. It flows cleanly now—almost warm in places. A change so profound would normally require months of supervision."

The silence after that was painful.

"Explain," Elder Shen said.

Xueya met her gaze without blinking. "I reached enlightenment."

"And?"

"And the spiritual environment was conducive to balance."

"And?"

"That is all, Elder."

Shen’s lashes lowered.

She walked in a slow circle around Xueya, as though examining a sculpture, or a dangerous beast.

Then she asked the question that stabbed the hall into silence:

"Why does your qi calm when he looks at you?"

Xueya froze.

Lin Tian’s breath stopped.

Even the Patriarch looked taken aback.

Shen’s voice stayed soft, almost kind. "Your pulse eased the moment he rose to answer. Your frost receded. Your breathing steadied. Why?"

Xueya’s lips parted. No words came.

Lin Tian stepped forward—

Then stopped himself, muscles locked.

Her fingers twitched. Just once.

Then she said, quietly, truthfully:

"Because I trust him."

The hall inhaled sharply.

Elder Shen’s mask finally cracked—surprise flickering across her face, followed by something darker.

"I see," she murmured.

But her tone said: I see far too much.

"Disciple Bai. A private word."

The envoy’s request was not a request.

The Bai steward stepped back. Xueya followed Elder Shen into a side chamber. The door closed with a quiet finality.

Lin Tian stood outside.

Waiting.

He couldn’t hear the words clearly, but shadows of voices carried.

"...did you share cultivation?"

"...no right to your private—"

"...risk to the sect’s investment—"

"...he strengthens me."

Lin Tian’s hands curled into fists.

Minutes felt like hours.

Finally, the door opened.

Xueya stepped out first. Her face was controlled, but her eyes burned.

Elder Shen emerged behind her with the composure of a blade sheathed in silk.

"Lin Tian."

He turned.

The envoy regarded him like a scholar studying a phenomenon. Beautiful. Dangerous.

"Azure Snow requires a formal evaluation of your cultivation," she said. "Your talent has... grown beyond expectation."

He inclined his head, steady. "I understand."

"You will undergo a full test tomorrow morning."

She let the words settle like frost.

"Failure," she added softly, "or dishonesty... will void your engagement contract."

A ripple of shock ran through the hall.

Xueya’s breath hitched.

Lin Tian didn’t look at anyone else.

He looked only at her.

Her eyes trembled—not with fear, but fury.

He bowed.

"I accept."

Elder Shen’s lips curved. Not warmly. Not kindly.

"Good," she murmured. "Let us see what kind of man dares to stand beside a disciple of Azure Snow."

She turned and strode away, cold wind gathering in her wake.

Lin Tian exhaled slowly.

Xueya moved to his side, her fingers brushing his—just a whisper of contact, hidden from watching eyes.

The envoy had arrived.

Tomorrow, the real test would begin.

End of Chapter 31