MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 130: THE FACE THAT WILL NOT FORM
Chapter 130 — THE FACE THAT WILL NOT FORM
The second collapse was quieter. That was what made it worse.
The tower chamber had settled into uneasy stillness after the recalibration. The glow beneath Long Hao’s skin had dimmed to a faint shimmer. His breathing had evened out. The tremors outside the wall had ceased entirely.
Zehell had refused to leave.
She sat beside him on the stone bench, back against the wall, one knee bent slightly, watching his face the way soldiers watch horizons.
He had insisted he was stable.
She did not believe him.
The desert wind whispered faintly beyond the narrow window slit.
Then—
His breathing changed.
Not labored.
Not strained.
Gone.
Zehell leaned forward immediately.
"Long Hao?"
His eyes were open.
But empty.
No tension. No focus.
Just a hollow stillness.
"Long Hao."
No response.
Inside—
The triangular lattice did not shatter this time.
It stilled.
The silver-amber fragment dimmed to near transparency.
Longyu’s black-gold light flickered once.
Then—
Darkness.
Not collapse.
Not fracture.
A void without geometry.
Without sound.
Long Hao did not feel pain.
He felt... absence.
Then—
Sand.
Warm.
Golden.
But not the Ruinsand frontier.
This sand was softer.
Brighter.
Sunlit.
The sky above it was a clear blue.
No tremor.
No Sovereign construct.
No pressure.
He stood barefoot in it.
"Long Hao."
He turned.
Zehell stood a few steps away.
But not armored.
Her green hair was loose, falling over one shoulder in soft waves. She wore simple desert robes, light fabric tied at the waist. No spear in hand.
No tension in her shoulders.
She looked... younger.
Not in age.
In weight.
He knew immediately this was not real.
And yet—
His chest tightened.
"You’re staring," she said calmly.
The faintest curve touched her lips.
He swallowed.
"This isn’t Ruinsand."
"No."
She stepped closer.
He noticed the ring on her finger.
Silver.
Simple.
Unadorned.
His breath caught.
Behind her—
A small figure ran across the sand.
Laughing.
The sound hit him like a physical force.
A child.
A little girl.
Her hair was dark like his.
Her height barely reaching Zehell’s waist.
She stumbled slightly in the sand, then laughed again.
"Father!"
The word detonated through him.
He turned fully toward her.
She ran straight into him without hesitation.
His arms moved instinctively.
He caught her.
Light weight.
Warm.
Real.
He knelt automatically to her level.
Her face tilted upward—
Blank.
Not shadowed.
Not blurred.
Blank.
Like unfinished paint.
Like something the world had not allowed to exist yet.
His heart tightened painfully.
"Why can’t I see you?" he whispered.
The child giggled, unaware.
Or perhaps beyond awareness.
Behind him, Zehell approached slowly.
"You’re not supposed to."
He looked up at her sharply.
"What is this?"
"Possibility."
The word was soft.
Not threatening.
Not mystical.
Simply true.
Inside the void—
The silver fragment stirred faintly.
Longyu’s voice returned in a whisper.
"Memory projection."
"Future probability."
The silver fragment added:
"Unstable timeline branch."
Long Hao looked back at the child in his arms.
She tugged on his sleeve playfully.
"Come home."
Home.
The word felt heavier than Sovereign authority.
He stood slowly.
Zehell walked beside him.
The desert shifted around them.
The sand gave way to stone walls.
Not guild battlements.
A house.
Simple.
Warm light glowing through open windows.
The little girl ran ahead and pushed the door open.
Inside—
Laughter.
Food.
The scent of spice and warm bread.
Zehell moved naturally in this space.
Not warrior.
Not guardian.
Just—
Her.
She brushed past him in the doorway.
Their shoulders touched lightly.
No tension.
No hesitation.
He looked at his hand.
Another ring.
Matching hers.
The child climbed onto a wooden bench and looked back at him expectantly.
"Father."
The blank face tilted slightly.
Waiting.
Inside—
The silver fragment pulsed.
"Emotional anchor intensifying."
Longyu whispered:
"Host consciousness drifting."
Long Hao felt it too.
The warmth was seductive.
Not in power.
In belonging.
No Sovereign trial.
No planetary imbalance.
No fracture.
Just—
Life.
He sat beside the child.
She leaned against him without fear.
Zehell placed a bowl in front of him.
Their fingers brushed briefly.
Natural.
Familiar.
He felt his chest ache.
"Is this real?" he asked quietly.
Zehell met his gaze.
In this place, her eyes were softer.
"Not yet."
The child tugged his sleeve again.
"Father, look."
She lifted a small wooden carving.
Crude.
Imperfect.
A spear.
Zehell laughed lightly.
"It’s crooked."
"It’s perfect," he said automatically.
The child beamed—
Blank face glowing in warm light.
And that was when it hurt the most.
Because he could feel her expression.
But not see it.
"Why can’t I see her face?" he demanded suddenly.
The room dimmed slightly.
The warmth flickered.
Inside—
The silver fragment answered.
"Probability undefined."
Longyu added softly:
"Future dependent on survival."
The words cut clean.
The house blurred.
The sand returned beneath his feet.
The little girl stood a few steps away again.
Wind stronger now.
The sky darker.
"You’re not supposed to stay," Zehell said gently.
He looked at her sharply.
"You knew."
She smiled faintly.
"In every possibility."
The child reached for him again.
"Father."
He stepped forward.
The world cracked.
Not violently.
But like glass under pressure.
The little girl’s hand passed through his.
Sand rushed upward.
The sky split into silver and black-gold lines.
Inside—
The triangular lattice flickered back into existence.
But unstable.
Longyu’s voice sharpened.
"Return."
The silver fragment pulsed.
"Host consciousness exceeding safe depth."
Long Hao forced himself upright within the void.
The desert house vanished entirely.
Only darkness remained.
Then—
A sensation.
Warm.
Solid.
Real.
Outside—
Zehell’s hand was still holding his.
Her other hand cradled the back of his head.
He had collapsed fully this time.
Not onto the bench.
Onto her.
She had caught him before he hit stone.
And now—
His head rested in her lap.
Her back pressed against the wall.
One hand tangled lightly in his hair without her realizing it.
"Long Hao," she whispered.
His lashes fluttered.
Slowly.
His eyes opened.
Focused.
For a moment, he didn’t move.
Because he recognized the warmth.
He tilted his head slightly.
And realized.
Zehell’s face hovered above his.
Concern breaking through her usual composure.
"You blacked out again," she said quietly.
Her voice steadier than she felt.
He blinked once.
Then again.
"You’re real," he murmured.
Her brows drew together slightly.
"Of course I am."
He exhaled slowly.
A faint smile tugged at his mouth.
"You’re... softer."
She stiffened.
"I’m what?"
He blinked again, clarity returning fully.
And then—
Realization.
His head was in her lap.
Her hand still resting against his temple.
Their proximity undeniable.
For half a second—
Neither moved.
The silence was different from before.
Not heavy.
Not tense.
Charged.
Zehell was the first to break it.
"You collapsed."
"Yes."
"You scared me."
He looked up at her properly.
The vulnerability in her voice had slipped through.
Unfiltered.
"I’m sorry."
She looked away briefly.
Then back down.
"You don’t get to apologize for something like that."
"I can try."
She exhaled quietly.
"You were gone."
"How long?"
"Long enough."
Her fingers had not left his hair.
He noticed.
She noticed him noticing.
But neither commented.
Instead—
He lifted one hand slowly and touched her wrist lightly.
Not to remove it.
To steady it.
"I saw something," he said quietly.
Her expression sharpened slightly.
"What?"
"You."
She didn’t react immediately.
"And?"
He hesitated.
Then:
"Our daughter."
The word hung between them.
Her breath hitched faintly.
"...What?"
"She was small."
He swallowed.
"Her face was blank."
Zehell did not laugh.
Did not dismiss it.
Her thumb moved unconsciously through his hair.
"What does that mean?"
"It means she doesn’t exist yet."
Silence.
Then—
A faint flush crept up her neck.
"You’re delirious."
"Maybe."
His voice was softer now.
"But it felt... real."
She looked at him carefully.
Not teasing.
Not guarded.
Just—
Looking.
"And?" she asked quietly.
"And I want her face to form."
Her hand stilled completely.
The desert outside remained calm.
The Sovereign construct silent.
Inside—
The silver fragment observed.
Longyu remained quiet.
For once.
No warnings.
No calculations.
Just—
Watching.
Zehell swallowed.
"You nearly died," she said finally.
"And you’re talking about children."
He held her gaze.
"That’s the point."
She looked down at him for a long moment.
Then—
Slowly—
She shifted slightly so he was more comfortable.
Adjusted his head gently in her lap.
"You’re not allowed to die," she said quietly.
"I’m not planning to."
"Good."
Her hand resumed its motion through his hair.
Unconscious now.
Natural.
Outside—
The desert wind carried no tremor.
No correction pulse.
For the first time since the breach—
There was no immediate threat.
Only something quieter.
More dangerous.
Attachment.
Inside the fractured void—
The triangular lattice rotated slowly.
Stable.
For now.
And somewhere in the probabilities that stretched beyond time—
A child laughed.
Her face still waiting.
[Chapter ENDS]







