Ultimate Magus in Cultivation World

Chapter 132: Trials of Spear XI



The silence was sharp enough to cut. For a breath, no one moved. Disciples shifted, glancing between one another, none daring to rise. To face Long Aotian was no chance at glory—it was a sentence to be measured, broken, and discarded.

Then—

"I will."

A young man strode forward, shoulders taut, every step a battle against the weight pressing from Aotian’s still aura. His name, murmured among the crowd, carried little renown. A competent disciple, yes. Talented, perhaps. But not a prodigy.

The elder’s brow twitched, just slightly, as if recognizing both courage and futility. Still, he gave no protest.

The boy mounted the stage. His spear trembled once in his grip, then steadied. He inhaled, qi flaring, earth erupting beneath his feet in jagged spires—his intent to anchor himself, to weather the storm.

Aotian’s gaze slid toward him at last. Cold. Unwavering.

The prodigy raised his spear—not with flourish, but with inevitability. His aura swelled, oppressive, an ocean crashing down on a single rock.

The boy grit his teeth and roared, "I won’t fall without striking!"

The match began.

The ground heaved as the earth disciple lashed forward, spear backed by stone and stubborn will. Spires jutted upward, trying to pin Aotian, to deny his advance.

Aotian did not retreat. He moved once, a single step—

—and the stone shattered.

ᴛhis chapter is ᴜpdated by 𝕟𝕠𝕧𝕖𝕝⚑𝕗𝕚𝕣𝕖⚑𝕟𝕖𝕥

His spear descended like a decree, not a strike. Each motion clean, stripped of waste, as though the weapon itself rejected defiance. The boy parried, blocked, endured—but each defense was broken in the same instant it was formed.

The hall fell silent. The duel was not a contest. It was a lesson written in flesh and force.

At last, Aotian’s spear kissed the boy’s chest. No killing thrust, only enough to blast him from the stage, sprawling and gasping, his will broken before his body.

The elder’s voice was calm. "Defeat."

The boy’s body was dragged away by attendants, his breath ragged, his eyes hollow with the weight of realization.

But the elder’s voice did not pause.

"Next."

And so they came.

One after another, disciples stepped forward—some hesitant, others burning with desperate pride, each hoping to carve their name into the moment.

One wielded lightning, his spear howling with crackling arcs. He struck fast, relentless, bolts cascading like a storm seeking to overwhelm. But Long Aotian did not bend; his spear carved through the thunder, dispersing it as if it were mist. The lightning-wielder was flung back, stunned into silence.

"Defeat."

Another came, her qi blooming with petals of radiant wood, vines swirling into barriers. She fought bravely, weaving roots and blossoms to shield and strike. Aotian’s eyes barely shifted. One thrust split her forest apart, vines unraveling like paper in a flame. She staggered, choking on disbelief.

"Defeat."

Then fire. Then water. Then steel.

Each duel was shorter than the last. Aotian grew neither weary nor wild—his movements remained precise, terrifying in their restraint. There was no wasted flourish, no indulgence in cruelty. Only inevitability.

Every clash was not a battle but an unveiling of the gap. Each spear, no matter how bright with intent, was reduced to kindling against the blade of inevitability.

The crowd shifted from awe to dread. Whispers dulled, laughter stilled. Even those who once cheered victories now kept silent, the weight of the prodigy’s dominance crushing down on the hall.

A dozen fell. Then more. Some were struck down in heartbeats, others in a few desperate exchanges, but none stood longer than a minute.

By the time the elder’s hand rose again, the atmosphere had shifted into reverent fear.

"Enough," the old man declared, his tone final.

He did not need to name the next challenger. Every soul in the chamber knew who remained.

His gaze turned, and so did every eye in the hall.

Toward the boy who had sat unmoving through it all, his spear resting across his knees, calm as if the storm outside did not exist.

"Tian Lei."

The name struck the air like thunder, though no lightning followed.

For a breath, the hall was silent—too silent. The disciples who had been whispering, trembling, even clutching their spears... now only watched. Their eyes locked on the lone figure who had not moved through all the blood and glory.

Tian Lei opened his eyes.

No grand aura burst forth. No pressure weighed down the crowd. He simply rose, every motion quiet, measured, like the steady drip of rain before a flood. His hand closed around his spear. The polished shaft caught the faint jade glow of the dueling stage as though it had always belonged there.

Step.

The echo rang louder than it should have.

Step.

Each footfall was calm, yet the silence that followed grew unbearable.

Where Long Aotian had crushed the crowd beneath the sheer inevitability of his dominance, Tian Lei drew them into stillness, into breathless waiting. Not suppression—anticipation.

He mounted the stage without flourish, his expression unreadable, his stance as natural as standing in his own courtyard.

Across from him, Long Aotian finally stirred. His gaze sharpened, the calm in his eyes shifting into a glint of recognition—as if acknowledging at last that the play was over, and the true duel had arrived.

The elder’s voice carried low, solemn.

"The final match of the trial. Witness carefully—this is the measure of spear and will."

The words barely ended before the air itself seemed to hold its breath.

Two prodigies stood upon the jade.

The storm contained. The silence before thunder.

Long Aotian’s spear tilted, its polished edge gleaming like a predator’s fang. His lips curled into the faintest trace of a smile—mockery veiled beneath calm.

"Tian Lei," he said, voice low enough that only those straining to hear could catch it. "Your silence is arrogance. But words won’t matter when your spear shatters."

Tian Lei did not answer. His grip shifted, smooth as flowing water, the spear in his hand neither raised nor lowered—merely present, as though the weapon itself had been born from his stance.

The elder’s gaze narrowed, and for the first time in the trial, a flicker of heat touched his eyes. Yes... this was the duel worth waiting for.

"Begin."

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