MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 161: THE KING WHO RETURNED
Chapter 161 — THE KING WHO RETURNED
Snow fell for three days without pause.
The mountain did not quiet.
It did not settle.
It groaned.
The summit remained split where the cave had once been—stone jagged like torn flesh, black and white residue still faintly streaking the rock face like frozen lightning.
And the Shadow King did not return.
On the fourth day—
He walked out.
No avalanche warning.
No sound of stone shifting.
He simply appeared from the misted ridge.
Alone.
The five saw him first.
Kieran’s breath caught in his throat. Rhea narrowed her eyes sharply. Damon straightened like a drawn blade. Silas stopped mid-step.
The teenage boy froze.
Long Hao descended without hurry.
No limp.
No stagger.
No frostbitten fingers.
His cloak moved naturally with the wind, snow parting around his boots like it did not dare cling.
His face was calm.
Too calm.
Kieran stepped forward first.
"What happened in there?"
Long Hao stopped three paces away.
Snow melted faintly around him, steam barely visible.
"I found what I was looking for."
Rhea’s eyes flicked to the broken peak behind him.
"And?"
"It wasn’t meant to be opened."
Silence.
Damon frowned. "That’s it?"
"Yes."
The teenage boy stepped closer.
"You were gone for three days."
"I know."
"What did you see?"
Long Hao looked at him.
Not harshly.
Not coldly.
But distant.
"Nothing that concerns you."
The boy flinched as if struck.
The wind grew louder.
Kieran studied him carefully.
"You sure you’re alright?"
Long Hao’s gaze held steady.
"Yes."
The answer ended the conversation.
But it did not end the unease.
The Return
When the iron gates of the Shadow Realm opened, the entire courtyard seemed to inhale.
He walked through.
Alive.
Alone.
The previous Shadow King stood waiting at the center of the courtyard, posture straight despite age. Shadow Queen stood beside him, eyes fixed on the son she had raised.
The elders gathered in semicircle formation.
No cheers.
No applause.
Just calculation.
"The mountain fractured," one elder said immediately.
"The shockwave reached the southern ridge."
"What did you awaken?"
Long Hao stepped forward without bowing.
"Nothing that threatens us."
"That is not an answer."
"It is sufficient."
Murmurs stirred.
The previous Shadow King lifted a hand slightly.
Silence fell again.
"What did you find?" he asked calmly.
Long Hao held his gaze.
"A chamber."
"And?"
"It sealed."
Shadow Queen stepped forward slightly.
"Did you open it?"
A pause.
Just long enough to matter.
"Yes."
The courtyard stiffened.
"And?" the previous King asked.
Long Hao’s eyes did not waver.
"It was empty."
The lie fell softly.
So softly that it almost sounded like truth.
The elders exchanged glances.
But there was no proof.
No visible damage.
No corpse.
No missing limb.
Only the fractured mountain.
"Then we move forward," the previous King said at last.
But his eyes did not leave Long Hao’s.
The Shift
Days passed.
Then weeks.
Long Hao resumed command.
Contracts continued.
Operations refined.
But subtle changes rippled through the Realm.
He reinforced internal security layers.
Restricted access to certain vaults.
Removed three elders from strategic oversight.
No explanation.
Kieran cornered him in the upper corridor one evening.
"You’re isolating yourself."
"I’m restructuring."
"You’re cutting them out."
"I’m protecting this Realm."
"From what?"
Long Hao didn’t answer.
His gaze shifted toward the northern horizon beyond the mountain.
"You don’t trust them anymore?" Kieran pressed.
"I trust what I see."
"And what do you see?"
Long Hao turned away.
"That they’re not ready."
"For what?"
Silence.
Kieran watched him leave.
The distance had grown.
Not in authority.
In presence.
The Chamber Below
One month after the expedition—
Long Hao descended alone into the deepest vault beneath the stronghold.
Past sealed archives.
Past forgotten relics.
To a chamber he had ordered constructed without explanation.
Circular.
Stone.
Silent.
At its center—
An eclipse symbol carved directly into the floor.
Black and white intersecting.
Perfectly symmetrical.
He did not remember carving it.
But he knew he had.
He stood at its center.
Closed his eyes.
Placed his palm against the cold stone.
Nothing.
Then—
A faint vibration.
Not from the floor.
From his mind.
Snow.
Cave walls etched with thousands of eclipse variations.
The spinning core.
He remembered that clearly.
The voice.
"You found me."
But behind it—
There had been something else.
Further in.
Past the pedestal.
Past the core’s reach.
He saw it again.
For a flicker.
A golden chest.
Massive.
Ancient.
Set against the far wall behind the core.
Inscriptions flowing across its surface like living veins.
Not black and white.
Gold.
Radiant.
Calling.
His breathing grew uneven.
He remembered stepping past the core.
Ignoring its warnings.
Walking deeper.
The chest pulsed.
Not with threat.
With invitation.
He reached toward it.
His fingers hovered over its surface.
The inscriptions glowed.
He heard himself whisper—
"I choose—"
And then—
Pain.
Blinding.
Shattering.
His head split with pressure.
The memory cracked like glass.
He staggered back from the symbol.
The chamber spun.
He pressed his hand against his temple.
Golden chest.
There had been something inside.
Something he had seen.
But it was gone.
Completely.
Not blurred.
Not distant.
Erased.
His heart pounded.
Why would he erase it?
Why would he lie about it?
He walked toward the wall and braced himself.
He did not remember leaving the cave.
He did not remember descending the mountain.
He remembered only snow in his lungs and blood in his mouth.
And the squad staring at him.
He clenched his jaw.
The chest had not been empty.
He had not told the truth.
But he did not know what the truth was.
The Growing Divide
The teenage boy began watching him differently.
Not idolizing.
Observing.
There was something unsettling about the King now.
Long Hao sparred harder.
Spoke less.
Smiled never.
The elders began meeting in private again.
Shadow Queen stood silently at the edge of those gatherings.
She had seen the difference first.
The distance.
The quiet urgency in his gaze.
The way he stared north when he thought no one was looking.
"You went further than you’re saying," she told him one night.
They stood alone in the courtyard.
Long Hao did not deny it.
"What did you see?" she asked softly.
He opened his mouth—
And nothing came.
His mind blanked.
For a moment—
Fear flickered in his eyes.
Not of battle.
Of absence.
"I don’t know," he said quietly.
She studied him.
"You do."
He looked at her.
"I don’t."
The honesty unsettled her more than any lie could have.
Back to the Pale Plane
The stronghold dissolved.
The chamber collapsed into nothing.
Long Hao stood once more before Zehell.
Her laughter echoed, softer now but sharper.
"Oh..."
She tilted her head.
"You remember that much?"
"There was a chest," Long Hao said hoarsely.
"Golden."
"Behind the core."
Zehell smiled slowly.
"Yes."
"You saw it."
His fists clenched.
"What was inside?"
Her laughter stretched across the pale plane.
"You don’t remember what happened in the cave with the chest, right?"
The words twisted.
"What did I do?" he demanded.
She stepped closer.
"You walked past the Anchor."
"You walked past the part of me that was still intact."
"You ignored balance."
Her voice lowered.
"You chose something else."
"What?"
"You opened it."
The pale plane trembled faintly.
"And when you did..."
Her smile faded into something darker.
"Heaven reacted."
His breathing grew heavier.
"I don’t remember."
"No."
She leaned closer.
"Because you tore that part out."
"You erased the consequence."
His heart pounded.
"You’re lying."
She laughed softly.
"You weren’t overwhelmed."
"You weren’t manipulated."
"You made a decision."
"You saw what was inside that chest."
"You saw what you would become."
"And you decided this world wasn’t ready."
Fragments slammed into him—
Blinding gold.
Chains breaking.
A scream not his own.
The mountain fracturing.
The squad shouting.
The teenage boy crying his name.
"You asked for another chance," Zehell whispered.
"You chose fragmentation."
"You created Longyu."
"You split me."
The pale plane cracked faintly.
"And now you stand here pretending you were betrayed."
Her eyes gleamed.
"You betrayed yourself."
Silence swallowed everything.
Golden chest.
Lid lifting.
Light erupting.
And a choice—
One he had made.
One he had erased.
Zehell leaned back.
"You’re still not ready to remember what was inside."
Her smile sharpened again.
"And when you do..."
The wind howled across the empty expanse.
"...you’ll finally understand why they called you monster."
[Chapter ENDS]







