MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 146: DARLING, YOU ARE FINALLY AWAKE

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Chapter 146: DARLING, YOU ARE FINALLY AWAKE

Chapter 146 — DARLING, YOU ARE FINALLY AWAKE 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂

Beep.

Beep.

Beep.

The sound was steady.

Mechanical.

Unforgivingly real.

Long Hao did not move at first.

He listened.

Air hummed through a vent above him. Fabric brushed faintly against his skin when he shifted even slightly. Something tugged at the back of his hand.

His fingers twitched.

Just a little.

A reflex.

Warmth tightened around his hand instantly.

A sharp inhale—

Then—

"Darling...?"

His eyes opened fully this time.

Zehell was awake.

Not the warrior on a desert battlement.

Not the spear-wielding guardian beneath a collapsing cavern.

A woman sitting beside a hospital bed.

Her hair longer, tied loosely. Her face older—beautiful in a way shaped by years. There were faint shadows under her eyes, as if sleep had not been kind to her in a very long time.

She leaned forward, gripping his hand with both of hers.

Her voice trembled.

"Darling, you are finally awake."

Her eyes filled.

Actually filled.

She had been strong in caves.

Unflinching before dragons.

But now—

Her lips trembled.

Her breath hitched.

And she cried.

Not silently.

Not composed.

Tears fell freely down her cheeks as she leaned over him.

"We were waiting for you so long..."

Her shoulders shook.

"I thought you would never wake up."

The monitor beside him began beeping faster.

His heart rate had spiked.

Darling?

We?

Long Hao’s throat felt raw.

He swallowed painfully.

The ventilator was gone, but breathing still hurt.

He stared at her.

Ten years older.

At least.

The realization hit him like a delayed shockwave.

He tried to speak.

"What..."

His voice cracked.

"What just happened?"

She laughed weakly through tears.

"You woke up."

"You woke up."

"No," he rasped.

"I mean—"

His eyes darted around the room.

White walls.

Fluorescent lights.

Medical equipment.

Clear plastic tubing.

An IV drip connected to his arm.

The air smelled sterile.

Not sand.

Not stone.

"What happened to the anchor?"

Her tears slowed.

Her brows knit together.

"What?"

"The cave."

His breathing became uneven.

"What happened to the cave?"

She blinked.

"Cave?"

"The ruins."

"The dragon."

Her grip on his hand tightened—not in reassurance this time.

In confusion.

"Long Hao... what are you talking about?"

His pulse surged again.

"What happened to the anchor?" he repeated hoarsely.

"What happened to the rune stone?"

Her face went pale.

"Rune stone?"

"Yes."

"The Anchor."

"The great dragon."

Her eyes filled with something else now.

Fear.

Not of him.

For him.

"Long Hao..."

She leaned closer, her voice careful.

"There was no cave."

"No dragon."

"You were in a car accident."

His heart thudded hard against his ribs.

"No."

"Yes."

Her voice cracked again.

"You were twenty."

"You were driving back from the research site."

"Your car was hit."

"They said the brain injury was severe."

"You never woke up."

The words felt heavy.

Wrong.

"Research site?" he whispered.

She nodded faintly.

"You were obsessed with that project."

"Something about ancient cosmology."

Her lips trembled again.

"You kept saying there was something beyond structure."

Beyond structure.

His breath caught.

"No," he murmured.

"I was in Ruinsand."

"In the desert."

"I fought golems."

"I fought a dragon."

"I merged with the Anchor."

Her grip tightened again, but this time she looked at him as if he might shatter.

"I don’t understand what you’re saying."

He stared at her.

"You don’t remember?"

"Remember what?"

"The Bronze Squad."

"Colby."

"Marek."

She shook her head slowly.

"I don’t know those names."

His mind reeled.

"What are you even talking about?" she whispered.

Her tears had stopped.

Now she was just confused.

Concerned.

Long Hao swallowed hard.

His thoughts felt fractured.

The desert had felt real.

The battles had felt real.

The dragon’s eyes had burned into his soul.

He remembered Ruinsand’s stone walls.

The research facility beneath the anchor.

The Black Steel Dragon.

The Sovereign fragment.

He remembered Longyu.

Longyu—

He looked inward instinctively.

Silence.

Nothing.

He looked back at Zehell.

She wasn’t dressed in armor.

She wore a soft sweater.

Her nails were short, unpolished.

There was a ring on her finger.

A wedding band.

His gaze dropped slowly.

His own hand.

There was a ring there too.

His breath caught.

"Darling," she whispered again.

"Talk to me."

He forced himself upright slightly.

Pain shot through his torso.

She immediately moved to support him.

"Careful."

"What are you saying?" she asked again.

"What cave?"

"What dragon?"

"What anchor?"

He stared at her.

"You don’t remember Ruinsand Kingdom?"

"No."

"You don’t remember the desert wall?"

"No."

"The hunters?"

"No."

"The Sovereign system?"

Her confusion deepened.

"Sovereign...?"

His voice dropped to a whisper.

"Heaven."

She swallowed.

"Long Hao, you’re scaring me."

He fell back against the pillow slowly.

The monitor steadied slightly.

He closed his eyes.

Breathed.

Thought.

Either—

The hospital was illusion.

Or—

The desert was.

He opened his eyes again.

"Okay."

His voice was steadier now.

"Listen."

Her face softened slightly at the shift in tone.

He squeezed her hand weakly.

"I need you to listen to everything."

She nodded.

"Okay."

He began slowly.

"I was born in another world."

Her lips parted slightly, but she didn’t interrupt.

"I was called Shadow King."

Her brows furrowed faintly.

"I was an orphan."

"I was adopted by the Shadow Family."

"An assassination house."

She shook her head faintly.

"I don’t—"

"Just listen," he said gently.

Her confusion didn’t leave, but she nodded again.

"I trained from childhood."

"I fought Heaven."

"I broke divine chains."

"I fractured myself instead of ascending."

He watched her face carefully.

There was no recognition.

No flicker.

Only concern.

"I reincarnated."

"Into the Long Clan."

She blinked slowly.

"What clan?"

"In another world."

"I awakened the Eclipse System."

"I fought through stages."

"I entered Ruinsand."

"I found the Anchor."

"I met the great dragon."

Her breathing grew uneven.

"Long Hao..."

"Please."

"I need you to understand," he said urgently.

"I touched the rune stone."

"I was stabbed by blankness."

"There was a white filament."

"And then—"

He looked around the room.

"Here."

Silence filled the space between them.

The beeping monitor was the only constant.

She stared at him.

Long.

Hard.

Then she whispered,

"I don’t understand what you’re saying at all."

He felt something sink inside him.

Not despair.

Disorientation.

"None of that happened," she said gently.

"You were a graduate student."

"You studied cosmology."

"You believed there was something beyond spacetime."

"You said structure couldn’t be the origin."

Her eyes shimmered faintly.

"You worked yourself to exhaustion."

"Then the accident happened."

He stared at her.

Graduate student.

Cosmology.

Beyond structure.

His breath slowed.

In the other world—

He had fought Heaven.

He had defied structure.

He had questioned origin.

Here—

He had studied cosmology.

He had questioned structure.

The parallels aligned too neatly.

He whispered slowly,

"What year is it?"

She told him.

The number echoed in his mind.

Ten years.

Ten years in a coma.

She squeezed his hand again.

"You were gone."

"For so long."

"I talked to you every day."

"I told you about everything."

She laughed faintly through tears.

"I didn’t know if you could hear me."

He stared at her.

"You stayed."

"Yes."

"Why?"

Her expression shifted.

Hurt flickered faintly.

"Because you’re my husband."

The word landed heavier than any cosmic revelation.

Husband.

His mind raced.

"Did we—"

She nodded.

"Before the accident."

"We were married for two years."

He swallowed.

"So you’re—"

"Yes."

Her voice trembled again.

"I’m your wife."

Silence settled heavily.

He searched her face.

There were faint lines at the corners of her eyes.

Her hands were rougher than he remembered.

She had aged ten years.

Waiting.

He whispered slowly,

"I don’t remember that."

Her breath hitched again.

"Memory loss is normal."

"The doctors said you might lose years."

She brushed her thumb gently over his knuckles.

"You’ll remember."

He wasn’t sure.

He looked around the room again.

Monitors.

IV lines.

Bandages.

Real.

Solid.

But so had the desert.

So had the dragon.

He whispered faintly,

"What just happened?"

She didn’t have an answer.

She just held his hand tighter.

"I don’t know."

"Maybe you’re dreaming."

"Maybe your mind made stories."

"Ten years is a long time to be asleep."

He closed his eyes again.

Ten years.

Dreaming.

Was Ruinsand a dream?

Was Shadow King a dream?

Or was this—

The deeper layer?

The Anchor had said—

You will get to know the truth of your existence now.

Was the truth—

That he had always been here?

That the other worlds were projections of a mind seeking origin?

He felt dizzy.

He whispered,

"If that wasn’t real..."

She leaned closer.

"What?"

"Then why does it feel more real than this?"

She didn’t answer.

Because she couldn’t.

He looked at her one more time.

Confusion in her eyes.

Love in her grip.

Ten years of waiting carved into her face.

He whispered softly,

"What happened to the anchor?"

She shook her head again.

"I don’t know what that is."

He stared at the ceiling.

White.

Flat.

Ordinary.

And somewhere deep inside him—

A quiet, terrifying thought formed.

If this was the origin—

Then everything else—

Had been layers.

He swallowed hard.

And for the first time since waking—

He didn’t know which reality he belonged to.

[Chapter ENDS]