Harem Link Cultivation System-Chapter 40: Garden of Frost, Garden of Fire
Dusk arrived slowly, as if even the sun hesitated to leave Cloudcrest under Azure Snow’s shadow.
The sky bled from gold to pale violet, then into the cool indigo that matched the frost in Lin Tian’s veins. Lanterns along the inner corridors flickered to life one by one. Disciples finished their final drills; servants hurried to complete chores before full dark.
And in his courtyard, Lin Tian stood very still.
The folded note lay on the stone table.
"Tomorrow at dusk. Come alone to the medicinal garden..."
He had read it enough times that the ink seemed burned into his eyes.
He didn’t read it again.
Instead, he lifted his right hand and slowly rolled his wrist.
The trace responded.
But he felt it—like a thin ring of cold beneath the skin, circling the meridian where Elder Shen’s testing needle had pressed. It did not hurt. It did not pulse wildly.
It waited.
He closed his eyes and circulated his qi.
The flow was smooth. Seventh level—stable.
As it reached his wrist, the foreign chill stirred faintly, then settled when his aura remained compressed.
"Good," he said softly.
He reached for the simple steel sword his uncle had given him and stepped into the center of the courtyard.
Tonight wasn’t about growing stronger.
It was about becoming untouchable in the way Elder Shen understood.
He began with footwork.
Weight balanced perfectly between hips and shoulders.
Then blade drills—short, tight arcs, no wasted motion. Each swing reinforced not power, but restraint. He kept his aura wrapped tight to his skin, compressed like a second layer of muscle.
When sweat dampened his collar and his arms began to tremble, he didn’t stop immediately. He forced one more perfect sequence.
Then he lowered the blade and exhaled.
The trace remained calm.
Satisfied.
"Good," he murmured again.
He sheathed the sword and washed quickly.
Then he left his courtyard.
He found Bai Xueya in the east pavilion once more.
The pond beneath the stone bridge reflected the fading light in muted colors. The lilies were closed for the night, pale shapes in dark water.
Xueya stood near the railing, looking out over the surface.
When Lin Tian approached, she did not turn immediately.
"You’re going," she said softly.
It wasn’t a question.
"Yes."
Her shoulders remained straight, but her fingers tightened around the stone railing.
"Alone?"
"Yes."
Now she turned.
Her silver eyes searched his face.
"They want you isolated," she said quietly. "They want you reacting without witnesses."
"I know."
She stepped closer.
"Then don’t give them what they want," she said.
Lin Tian almost smiled. "I won’t."
Xueya’s gaze dropped briefly—to his right wrist.
"You can still feel it?" she asked.
"Yes."
She reached out without hesitation and wrapped her fingers around his wrist.
The moment her cool skin touched him, the trace reacted—a faint, sharp pulse under the surface.
Xueya’s brows knit.
"It doesn’t like me," she murmured.
"It recognizes you," Lin Tian said quietly. "Or something about you."
Her lips thinned.
"They’re watching our connection," she said.
"Yes."
Silence stretched between them.
Then she stepped closer still, until there was no space between their sleeves.
"If something feels wrong," she said softly, "leave."
He met her gaze.
"I won’t run."
"That’s not what I said," she replied, voice firm.
He exhaled.
She continued, eyes steady.
"Pride is not worth a trap."
Lin Tian stared at her for a moment, then nodded.
"Alright."
She hesitated.
Then her fingers shifted, sliding into his palm.
The Link pulsed warm and steady between them.
"If you need me," she said quietly, "I will come."
He squeezed her hand gently.
"I know."
He released her and stepped back.
As he turned to leave, she called his name.
"Tian."
He paused.
Her voice softened just slightly.
"Don’t let them decide who you are."
He didn’t answer with words.
He didn’t need to.
The medicinal garden lay deeper within the compound, behind the infirmary hall. Elder Mei’s territory.
The path there was quieter than most. Herbs lined the edges in neat rows—glossy leaves catching lantern light, tiny blossoms glowing faintly with stored qi. The air smelled different here—bitter roots, crushed petals, damp earth.
Lin Tian stepped past the wooden gate and felt it immediately.
A presence.
He stopped in the center of the path.
"Show yourself," he said calmly.
The lantern flames flickered.
A soft rustle came from between the rows of night-blooming herbs.
Then a figure stepped out.
Azure Snow outer disciple robes.
Qiu Ren.
He smiled faintly.
"You came," he said.
Lin Tian’s gaze remained steady.
"You asked."
Qiu Ren tilted his head.
"You’re either brave," he said, "or stupid."
"Neither," Lin Tian replied. "I’m curious."
Qiu Ren chuckled.
"You think this is curiosity?"
He stepped closer, boots silent on soil.
"You’re marked," Qiu Ren said quietly. "Did you know that?"
"Yes."
The disciple’s brows lifted slightly.
"Ah. So you can feel it."
"I can."
Qiu Ren’s eyes sharpened.
"Then you also know Elder Shen doesn’t mark people lightly."
Lin Tian didn’t respond.
Qiu Ren continued, voice calm.
"She suspects your growth. She suspects your connection. She suspects you’re drawing from something you shouldn’t."
Lin Tian’s aura remained tight.
"And you?" he asked.
"I don’t care about suspicion," Qiu Ren replied. "I care about outcomes."
He stopped three paces away.
"Show me," he said.
"Show you what?"
"Your limit."
Qiu Ren’s aura flared suddenly—not fully, but enough to press against Lin Tian’s skin like a cold wind.
The trace at Lin Tian’s wrist twitched sharply.
He felt it like a needle under the skin.
He forced his breathing steady.
He compressed his aura even tighter, keeping it close to bone and muscle.
Qiu Ren’s eyes flicked to his wrist.
There.
That was what he was looking for.
"Interesting," Qiu Ren murmured.
He stepped forward and struck.
A palm strike aimed at Lin Tian’s shoulder, wrapped in controlled frost qi.
Lin Tian pivoted, redirecting the strike, and stepped inside the guard.
His counter was simple—an elbow to the ribs.
Qiu Ren twisted away, smiling.
Lin Tian leapt back, landed lightly, aura contained.
The trace twitched but did not flare.
Qiu Ren’s smile thinned.
"Why are you holding back?" he asked softly.
"Why are you pushing?" Lin Tian countered.
Qiu Ren’s eyes darkened.
He surged forward again—this time with a deliberate spike of qi, trying to force Lin Tian’s instinct to answer in kind.
Lin Tian felt a flash of anger—sharp, hot.
He met the strike not with a surge, but with a step.
His hand shot forward and caught Qiu Ren’s wrist.
The contact lasted only a heartbeat—but in that heartbeat, Lin Tian directed a tight, precise burst of qi.
Qiu Ren staggered back half a step, eyes flashing with surprise.
"You’re not flaring," he said quietly.
"No," Lin Tian replied.
Qiu Ren’s expression shifted.
"You understand the trap," he murmured.
"Yes."
Silence.
Then a new voice cut through the garden.
"That is enough."
Elder Mei stepped from between the herb rows, robes unruffled, expression icy.
Qiu Ren stiffened immediately and bowed.
"Elder Mei."
"You trespass in my garden," she said calmly. "And you provoke a Lin clan under my watch."
Qiu Ren lowered his gaze.
"I meant no disrespect."
"You meant to test him," Elder Mei replied.
Her gaze shifted to Lin Tian’s wrist.
"Show me."
Lin Tian stepped forward without hesitation and extended his arm.
Elder Mei’s fingers pressed lightly against the skin above the trace.
Her qi, sharp and precise, slid beneath the surface.
The mark reacted.
A thin frost-line flickered under the skin.
Elder Mei’s eyes narrowed.
"As I thought," she murmured.
Qiu Ren did not move.
Elder Mei’s voice was calm, but iron lay beneath it.
"Azure Snow has grown bold," she said. "Marking inside another clan’s territory."
Qiu Ren spoke carefully.
"It is only observation, Elder."
"Observation becomes control," she replied.
She withdrew her fingers and looked at Lin Tian.
"You handled it well," she said.
Lin Tian inclined his head.
"I didn’t want to trigger it."
"Good," she said.
She turned to Qiu Ren.
"You have seen what you came to see," she said. "Leave."
Qiu Ren hesitated.
Then he bowed again and stepped back into the shadows of the garden.
When he was gone, Elder Mei exhaled slowly.
"Foolish," she murmured. "They think control is subtle."
She gestured to a low stone bench.
"Sit."
Lin Tian obeyed.
Elder Mei retrieved a small lacquered box from a shelf near the herb beds and returned.
She opened it to reveal thin silver needles and a vial of deep green liquid.
"This will not remove it," she said bluntly. "But it will dampen it."
She dipped a needle into the liquid.
"Hold still."
Lin Tian didn’t flinch as she pressed the needle lightly into a point just above the trace.
The trace pulsed sharply—once—then dimmed.
Elder Mei placed two more needles along his meridian, guiding qi in precise, measured flows.
Lin Tian focused on breathing.
He felt the mark dull slightly—like frost losing its edge under early sunlight.
Elder Mei withdrew the needles after a few breaths.
"It will not scream now unless you force it," she said.
Lin Tian looked down at his wrist.
The chill was still there.
"Can it be removed?" he asked.
"Yes," Elder Mei replied. "But not cleanly at your current level."
She met his gaze.
"You must either outgrow it," she said, "or use something rare enough to overwrite its imprint."
Lin Tian nodded.
Elder Mei studied him for a moment longer.
"Do not chase reckless breakthroughs to do so," she warned.
"I won’t."
She believed him.
That alone meant something.
She closed the lacquered box and handed him a small pouch.
"Powder," she said. "If it flares painfully, mix it with water and apply to the skin. It will suppress reaction for a short time."
Lin Tian accepted it.
"Thank you, Elder."
She sniffed lightly.
"Do not thank me yet. You are still walking into a sect that does not trust you."
"I know."
Her gaze softened, just barely.
"Then make them regret doubting," she said quietly.
Lin Tian rose.
As he left the garden, the air felt different.
The trace at his wrist remained.
But it no longer felt like a blade.
It felt like a weight he could carry.
At the garden gate, he paused and looked back once.
Elder Mei stood among her herbs, small and sharp against the darkness.
He bowed slightly.
Then he turned and walked into the night.
Three days.
Two left.
And now—
he understood the leash.
Which meant he could start cutting it.
End of Chapter 40







