©Novel Buddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 163 - 158: A Mother’s Blessing
Location: Dragon Palace - Royal Family Quarters (Dragon Domain, Upper Realm)
Time: Day 214 (Doha Actual) - Dawn | Calendar: 5 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Dawn broke over the Dragon Palace like spilled honey—golden light washing across crystal spires, painting shadow dragon territories in shades of amber and rose. Beautiful. Deceptive. Hiding the rot underneath.
Yulong stood alone in her private chambers, staring at the ornate mirror that had witnessed three thousand years of her life.
The dragoness, looking back, was still beautiful despite age. Deep purple scales with a faint metallic sheen caught the morning light, creating illusions of movement across her skin. Amber eyes that had watched empires rise and fall. Silver horns curved gracefully from her temples—mark of shadow dragon bloodline, proof of ancient queens’ legacy.
She looked like what she was: warrior queen, mother of five, ruler beside her husband.
What the mirror didn’t show was the truth locked inside her.
Sect queen.
Unawakened.
Incomplete.
Yulong’s hands trembled as she touched the private altar she’d maintained for millennia. Five jade figurines representing her children. Carved with her own claws over centuries, polished with maternal devotion, blessed with prayers to queens long dead.
Today, she would send them hunting.
Today she would perform the blessing ritual her instincts whispered she should know—knowledge that came from nowhere, ancient and certain, locked in bloodline memory she couldn’t fully access.
Today, she would mark her children with her essence and pray to queens she’d never met that it would be enough.
Please, she thought to ghosts and memories. Please let them find her. Please let them survive.
Please let them find what I cannot say I need.
***
The family gathered in Yulong’s private sanctuary—a chamber deep within royal quarters where privacy wards layered thick as armor. No spy could penetrate here. No elder could overhear.
Just family. Just truth.
Her five children stood in a semi-circle, morning light painting them in shades of shadow and silver. Each one precious. Each one about to walk into danger, she couldn’t fully warn them about.
Xinglong stood tallest—firstborn, regent, leader even among siblings. Dark grey scales edged with metallic blue and hints of turquoise. Eyes burning fierce orange. Silver horns crowned with red streaks. His mixed bloodline is visible in every scale, every breath. He carried power locked inside him, waiting for the awakening that required—
Don’t think about it. Can’t speak it. Bloodsworn.
Huifu, beside him, broad-shouldered and restless. Grey scales darker than his siblings, marking him as a warrior. Always ready to fight, to charge forward, to protect through violence if necessary.
Hulong on Xinglong’s other side, leaner and analytical. Fox-clever eyes that noticed everything, calculated odds, and planned three moves ahead. A strategic mind that would keep them alive when strength alone failed.
And her daughters.
Xingteng, standing fierce despite three years of withdrawn silence. Dark grey scales showing faint purple undertones inherited from Yulong herself. Eyes that had lost their light, now blazing with purpose for the first time since—
Since Heihuo.
Yulong’s killing intent spiked before she controlled it. Later. After her children left. After the truth was revealed. After the dragon realm burned with justice.
Later, she would find out exactly what bronze dragon filth had done to her daughter.
For now: Xingteng stood tall. Determined. Ready.
And Yinglong anchored to her sister’s side like always. Protective. Loyal. Fierce as her namesake eagle. Amber eyes daring anyone to threaten her family.
Five children.
One quintet.
Shadow dragons’ last, best hope.
"Mother," Xinglong said quietly. "We’re ready."
Were they?
Could anyone be ready for what Yulong was about to reveal?
***
"Before you leave," Yulong began. Her voice steady despite internal trembling. "There are things you need to understand. Things about queens. Things about our family. Things about—"
She stopped. 𝒻𝘳𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝘯𝘰𝑣ℯ𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝘮
Breathed.
How to explain without breaking oaths she didn’t remember making? How to warn without speaking, secrets bloodsworn silence prevented?
"You think you’re protecting a fertility symbol," Yulong said carefully. Each word chosen with precision. "A dragoness who can restore our dying race through biology alone."
She met each child’s eyes.
"You’re protecting something infinitely more important."
Silence. Confusion rippling through her children’s expressions.
"I don’t understand," Hulong said. Always the analytical one. "Silver queens create sect queens, restore fertility, and anchor bloodlines. What else—"
"Everything else," Yulong interrupted. "Queens are—"
The words stuck. Literally. Her throat closed. Ancient oath activating, preventing revelation.
Damn it.
She tried again, choosing different words. "There are different types of queens. Broodmothers—any fertile dragoness. They have natural family bonds, nothing more."
Her children nodded. This they knew.
"Then there are sect queens," Yulong continued. Her heart hammering. "Created by silver queens to anchor specific sects. They should have..."
Again, words froze.
She shifted her approach. "The queens ruling other sects now. The bronze dragon queen. The red dragon queen. The green dragon queen. Have you ever felt comfortable near them?"
Her children exchanged glances.
"No," Xingteng said quietly. "They feel wrong. Like something wearing a queen’s shape but—"
"Hollow," Yinglong finished. "Empty inside."
"Because they’re false," Yulong said. Finally. Words that didn’t trigger the oath. "Artificial creations. Dragons forced through forbidden rituals to mimic queens without actually being queens. They’re corrupt. Unstable. This is why our eggs fail. Why fertility collapses. Why we’re dying."
Shock rippled through the chamber.
"But—" Huifu started.
"The elders created them," Yulong continued. Voice hard. "After the silver queens were—after there were no more silver queens to create real sect queens. They twisted dragonesses into parodies. Convinced the realm that these abominations were legitimate. And we’ve been dying slowly ever since."
"By the gods," Hulong whispered.
Yulong’s hands clenched. "Real sect queens are different. They’re born with queen bloodline but remain dormant until awakened by a silver queen. Enhanced fertility. Natural authority. But most of their power stays locked until—"
She gestured helplessly. "Until proper ritual. Until silver queen activates what’s sleeping inside them."
Xinglong’s orange eyes narrowed. "Mother. Are you saying—"
"I’m saying real sect queens still exist," Yulong interrupted. Not quite answering. Not quite lying. "Unawakened. Hidden among normal dragonesses. Waiting for silver queens to return and unlock what they’re meant to be."
The implications hung in the air like smoke.
"Queens can do more than breed," Yulong said carefully. "They maintain—connections. Between the dragons of their sect. Communication that goes beyond words. Coordination that makes sects unified instead of fractured. Knowledge that passes from generation to generation, ensuring wisdom isn’t lost."
She couldn’t say more. The oath tightened. Warning.
"But only when awakened," she finished. "Only when a silver queen performs the ritual. Only when everything locked inside them finally ignites."
***
Understanding dawned across Xinglong’s face. Then horror. Then determination.
"You’re a sect queen," he said flatly.
Yulong’s breath caught.
"That’s why you could have five children when other dragonesses barely manage one," Xinglong continued. Strategic mind assembling pieces. "That’s why you’re stronger than other dragonesses. That’s why you’ve always known things you shouldn’t know. Felt things others don’t feel."
He stepped forward. "We’re not just searching for a silver queen to save our race. We’re searching for someone to awaken you."
Yulong’s vision blurred.
"I didn’t—" she started. "I couldn’t say. The oath—"
"What oath?" Yinglong demanded.
"Built into bloodline itself," Yulong whispered. "Queens are bloodsworn to silence about certain truths. I can’t speak them even if I wanted to. The words literally won’t form. My throat closes. My voice dies."
She looked at her children desperately. "There are secrets I know that could change everything. Powers queens possess that would make them even more valuable—and even more targeted. I can’t tell you what they are. I can’t warn you properly. I can only say: protect her. Whatever you do, protect her. Don’t let the elders capture her. Don’t let them force her into slavery like they did to Xueteng."
"Because if they learn what queens can really do," Xingteng said quietly, "they’ll never let her go."
"Exactly."
***
Silence fell like snow.
Laolong moved to his wife’s side. Placed one hand on her shoulder. Anchoring. Supporting.
He’d known. Of course, he’d known. Three thousand years of marriage, and he’d recognized what she was even when she couldn’t fully explain it.
"The blessing ritual," Laolong said quietly. "She’s going to bind you as a quintet. Mark you with her essence. It should provide some protection, some connection."
Yulong nodded. "It’s instinct. Knowledge I don’t remember learning. But I know—" She touched her chest. "—I know how to do this. How to mark you. How to create a bond that will help you coordinate, protect each other, and find your way back home."
She moved to the altar. Lifted an obsidian bowl carved with ancient runes that predated even her. Family heirloom passed through shadow dragon queens for millennia.
"I’ll need to cut myself," Yulong said. "Channel essence through blood. Mark each of you with starlight."
"Starlight?" Hulong asked.
"What sect queen blood becomes when channeled properly," Laolong explained. "Even unawakened, she has this. It’s proof of lineage."
Yulong lifted a ceremonial blade. Black metal etched with silver runes. Her mother had used this blade. Her grandmother. Generations of shadow dragon queens stretching back to the first.
She drew the blade across her palm.
Blood welled—deep purple, almost black. Then it began to glow. Silver light bleeding through crimson, transforming it into something ethereal. Starlight made liquid. Ancient power responding to ancient ritual.
Yulong let blood drip into the obsidian bowl. Watched it pool. Watched light intensify.
"Kneel," she commanded. Voice carrying authority she usually suppressed. Queen’s voice. Undeniable.
Her five children knelt without hesitation.
***
Yulong dipped fingers into starlight blood. Moved to Xinglong first.
"You are firstborn," she said. Ancient words flowing from instinct. "Leader. Regent. Bridge between the old world and the new. You carry the heaviest burden."
She traced a symbol on his forehead. Intricate design that burned silver against his dark grey scales. Xinglong gasped as power flooded through him—not painful, but intense. Overwhelming. Like a doorway opening inside his chest.
"I mark you as quintet leader," Yulong continued. "First among equals. Their anchor when the storm comes."
The symbol flared. Settled. Became a permanent mark that only those with the queen’s sight could see.
She moved to Huifu.
"You are a warrior," Yulong said. "Strength when others falter. Shield when darkness falls. You protect through violence when mercy fails."
Different symbol. Same starlight blood. Same burning. Same gasp as a connection formed.
"I mark you as quintet blade," Yulong declared. "Their weapon. Their courage."
To Hulong next.
"You are a strategist," Yulong said. "Mind when others react on instinct alone. You see patterns. Calculate odds. Plan three moves ahead while others see one."
Mark. Burn. Connection.
"I mark you as quintet mind," Yulong finished. "Their wisdom. Their caution."
Then Xingteng.
Yulong’s hand trembled as she marked her daughter. This child who’d suffered. Who’d been broken. Who stood here now, fierce and determined despite trauma that would have destroyed weaker dragons.
"You are heart," Yulong whispered. Voice cracking. "You understand vulnerability. You know what it means to be hunted. To be afraid. To need protection desperately."
Xingteng’s eyes filled with tears.
"I mark you as quintet heart," Yulong said. "Their empathy. Their reminder that queens are people, not prizes. You will understand her in ways your brothers cannot."
The mark blazed brighter than the others. As if recognizing a kindred spirit. As if approving.
Finally, Yinglong.
"You are a protector," Yulong said. "Fierce. Loyal. You guard what you love with everything you have. You would die before letting family fall."
She traced the last symbol.
"I mark you as quintet guardian," Yulong declared. "Their shield. Their unwavering devotion."
***
Five marks. Five children. Five points of a constellation.
Yulong placed her bleeding palm in the center of the circle her children formed.
"I bind you," she said. Power rising. Starlight blood glowing brighter. "Quintet of shadow. First circle of protection for the silver queen who walks among us. You are bound as siblings. Bound as warriors. Bound as sacred guard."
The marks began to resonate.
"You will feel each other," Yulong continued. "Not thoughts—I cannot give you that without awakening. But presence. Location. Danger. When one of you is threatened, the others will know. When you need to find each other, the bond will guide you."
Silver light connected the five marks. Formed geometric pattern floating in the air between them. Ancient. Sacred. Beautiful.
"I give you what I can," Yulong said. Tears streaming now. "It’s not enough. It’s not what a real quintet bond should be. But it’s all I have until—"
Until silver queen awakens me.
Until I can give you the Sect Path.
Until I’m what I’m supposed to be.
"—until we find her," Yulong finished. "Then everything changes."
The light flared one final time.
Then settled into skin. Into bone. Into essence itself.
Permanent. Unbreakable.
Five children bound as one.
***
They rose slowly. Each touching their marked forehead. Feeling a connection, humming like a second heartbeat.
"I can sense you," Xinglong said wonderingly. "All of you. Like—like compass pointing home."
"I feel stronger," Huifu said. "Like your strength is backing mine."
"I can almost hear you," Hulong murmured. "Not words. Just... presence."
"It’s warm," Xingteng whispered. Tears tracking down her face. "Safe."
"We’re pack now," Yinglong said. Fierce satisfaction in her voice. "Real pack. Unbreakable."
Yulong watched them discover the bond she’d created. Watched them realize what it meant.
And felt her heart breaking.
Because she was sending them to find a silver queen.
Because she couldn’t tell them they were searching for her own salvation.
Because when they succeeded—if they succeeded—everything would change.
They’d discover their mother was an unawakened sect queen.
They’d watch a silver queen perform the ritual.
They’d see Yulong transform into what she was meant to be.
They’d witness Shadow Dragon Sect Path ignite for the first time in ten thousand years.
And they’d finally understand why she’d sent them hunting.
Not just for the species.
Not just for the realm.
For her.
For the power locked inside her that could save them all.
Selfish, whispered guilt. Sending your children to find your own awakening.
Necessary, answered ancient instinct. Species needs awakened queens. Both kinds.
Yulong closed her eyes.
"Go," she said quietly. "Find her. Protect her. Bring her home safely."
She opened her eyes. Met each child’s gaze with fierce maternal love.
"And come back to me alive," she finished. "All five of you. That’s an order from your queen."
From the sect queen who loved them more than power.
From a mother who would burn the realm to ash if they died.
From the dragoness who was sending them into danger, she couldn’t fully explain.
***
They left at midday.
Five shadows departing Dragon Palace. Humanoid forms to avoid suspicion. Traveling separately to different realms, planning to reconverge once they’d gathered intelligence.
Yulong watched from her chambers as they disappeared into the distance.
Felt the quintet bond stretching but holding. Five points of constellation spreading across realms. Connected. Protected.
Find her, Yulong thought desperately. Please find her.
Find the last silver queen.
Find my salvation.
And behind her, in the palace corridors where spy shadows had already begun slipping away toward elder territories, three separate messages were being prepared.
Bronze dragons sharpening claws.
Red dragons gathering intelligence.
Green dragons cultivating patience.
All three converging on the same target.
All three about to discover that shadow dragon quintet was hunting too.
And that unawakened sect queen had just marked her children with power that would make them far more dangerous than anyone expected.
The hunt had begun.
May the best hunters win.







