CHAPTER 9 — "SYSTEM VS LONG HAO"
Long Hao leaned back on his bed, arms behind his head, watching the faint cracks in the ceiling as if they were constellations only he understood.
The system pulsed.
[Host actions have accelerated suspicion across multiple factions.][Guild monitoring increased.][Recommendation: Reduce public power output.]
Long Hao exhaled through his nose — a slow, amused breath.
"Why do you keep nagging me?" he said.
[Host safety priority.]
Long Hao chuckled. "You're acting like I'm afraid of danger."
Silence.
The system tried again.
[Exposure will result in global-level consequences. Extreme caution is advised.]
He sat up, elbows on his knees, gaze sharpening.
"You're forgetting something," he murmured. "I didn't survive my last life by being cautious."
The room dimmed slightly as Void Flicker subconsciously activated — responding to his irritation. Shadows deepened; the air thickened.
Long Hao smirked.
"Relax. I'm not going to expose the Eclipse talent. I'm not stupid."
[Then why provoke guild hunters?]
"Because," Long Hao replied, standing and stretching, "I hide my talent — not my power."
The system flickered violently.
[Warning: Host intention misaligned with survival protocol.]
Long Hao gazed at the translucent interface, his expression cold and unreadable.
"Survival?" he said. "I've already died once."
The system paused — as if calculating variables it had never encountered.
Long Hao stepped closer to the window, staring at the neon cityscape outside — glowing towers, flying skimmers, drones humming like insects.
"Fear doesn't bind me," he continued. "Threats don't sway me. This world wants to suppress me? Watch me walk through it."
The system processed.
[…Predictive modeling for Host behavior failed in 87% of scenarios.]
Long Hao snorted.
"Even you can't predict me?"
[Correct. Host defies standard awakening, psychological, and survival models.]
"Good," Long Hao whispered. "Adapt."
A long silence followed.
Then—
[System adapting to Host behavior.][New directive: Support Host dominance pathway.]
Long Hao's brows lifted.
"You're learning fast."
[Host power preference detected: Overwhelming suppression of threats.]
He smirked.
"That's more like it."
Long Hao flicked his dagger into the air. It spun once, twice, catching the dim ceiling light before dropping neatly back into his palm. His fingers curled around the hilt with effortless familiarity — the motion of someone born for killing, not awakening ceremonies.
The system hovered quietly, its presence pulsing like a waiting heartbeat.
[Host emotional stability: abnormal. Power resonance elevated.]
Long Hao raised an eyebrow. "Emotional stability?"
[Host displays patterns of amusement in life-threatening contexts. Statistically atypical.]
He laughed quietly — a low, dangerous sound.
"When you die once, everything becomes funny."
The system paused — as if trying to understand a concept beyond calculation.
[…Is death not a deterrent?]
"Death?" Long Hao repeated softly. His eyes dimmed, gazing at the city lights beyond his window. "Death is… familiar. It's waking up again that's the real surprise."
He pushed himself upright, stretching his limbs as Void Flicker crackled faintly around him. The skill responded to his mood like a loyal beast.
"I won't be shackled by your warnings," he said. "Or by guilds. Or clans. Or heaven."
The system responded after a long beat:
[Acknowledged. Host designation updated: Unbounded Path.]
Long Hao grinned.
"Now that," he murmured, "sounds like me."
He closed his eyes, letting darkness wash over him — not as fear, but as an old friend returning to his side.
Tomorrow, the world would see him again.
And tomorrow, someone would learn why the heavens tried to erase the Eclipse.
He collapsed back onto the bed, tossing a dagger into the air and catching it effortlessly.
His eyes glowed faint crimson.
"System," he murmured, "don't bother warning me about danger again."
[…Acknowledged.][Danger warnings suppressed.]
Long Hao grinned.
Even the system had bowed.
But far away, unseen by human eyes, a flicker of light danced across the sky — thin, almost transparent, like a ripple in the heavens.
Something ancient stirred.
And Long Hao's existence had begun waking it.
[CHAPTER ENDS]
