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Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 175 - 170: Brothers in Shadow
Location: Crimson Hollow (Hidden Sanctuary, Demon Realm)
Time: Day 219 (Doha Actual) - 10 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Realm: Demon Realm
Crimson Hollow existed in a place most demons had forgotten and other races never knew.
Deep beneath the Scorched Wastes, where volcanic heat met demon essence in a fusion that had lasted since before the Cataclysm, a chamber waited. Not large—maybe thirty feet across—but ancient. Walls carved from obsidian that had cooled in patterns resembling reaching flames. Floor worn smooth by millennia of careful feet. Ceiling lost in darkness above, though sometimes essence signatures flickered there like distant stars.
Heiteng materialized through the teleport anchor with practiced ease, obsidian scales gleaming in the crimson light cast by veins of molten rock threading through the chamber walls. The heat would’ve killed most beings. For dragons and demon royalty? Comfortable as a warm hearth.
He shifted to humanoid form immediately, mercury silver eyes adjusting to the familiar space.
And smiled.
Because two figures waited—one leaning against the western wall with the casual arrogance only ten thousand years of absolute power could breed, the other standing straight-backed in formal shadow dragon posture that didn’t quite hide the warmth in his golden eyes.
"You’re late," Ren d’Aar said, purple eyes glinting with amusement. The Demon King looked exactly as Heiteng remembered from their last meeting five years ago—jade white skin that seemed to glow with inner light, raven-black hair falling past his shoulders, features too perfect to be entirely real. Beautiful and terrible and completely at ease in a hidden sanctuary most beings would kill to find.
"I’m precisely on time," Heiteng countered, moving forward with the confident stride of someone who’d walked this space a thousand times. "You just arrived early because you’re paranoid about security."
"Paranoia keeps me alive," Ren replied dryly.
"And yet you trust us with the location of your most secret sanctuary," Xinglong pointed out. The Shadow Dragon Prince stepped forward, golden eyes bright with genuine pleasure. Taller than Heiteng in humanoid form—unusual for shadow dragons—with dark grey scales edged in metallic blue and the silver horns that marked him as royalty. "Which makes you either very wise or very foolish."
"Both," Ren and Heiteng said simultaneously.
Then grinned.
And the formal masks dropped as three ancient beings who’d spent millennia pretending to barely tolerate each other’s existence crashed together in the kind of embrace only true brothers shared.
"Missed you, you arrogant bastard," Heiteng told Ren, clapping the demon’s shoulder hard enough to stagger a lesser being.
"Missed you too, you brooding fossil," Ren shot back. His purple eyes swept to Xinglong. "And you—still playing perfect shadow dragon prince while plotting behind your father’s back?"
"Someone has to maintain appearances," Xinglong said with dignity that lasted exactly three seconds before he laughed. "Ala’s grace, it’s good to see you both."
They separated, but the warmth remained. The ease. The absolute trust that came from knowing these two beings would burn the world to protect each other.
Heiteng had saved Ren’s life during the Fourth Zartonesh Invasion. A young demon king—barely three thousand years old—surrounded by corrupted beasts that had torn through his guards like parchment. Heiteng had been passing through demon territories on reconnaissance, saw the massacre, and dropped from the sky like Ala’s own wrath made flesh.
Twenty minutes of brutal combat. Seventeen dead Zartonesh creatures. One demon king who owed his existence to a black dragon who’d had absolutely no strategic reason to intervene.
"Why’d you save me?" Ren had asked later, bleeding from a dozen wounds, while Heiteng carried him to safety. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚
"Because leaving you to die would’ve been a waste," Heiteng had replied honestly. "And I despise waste."
They’d become allies that day. Then friends. The,n blood-sworn brothers after Xinglong stumbled into their third meeting—literal stumbling, shadow dragon prince fleeing from an assassination attempt orchestrated by bronze sect loyalists—and the three of them had fought back-to-back against overwhelming odds.
That night, in this very chamber, they’d performed the blood-oath ceremony. Sworn to protect each other. To protect Doha. To stand against corruption regardless of which realm it came from.
Ten thousand years of secret friendship. Of coordination, no one else knew existed. Of three powerful beings working behind the scenes to prevent catastrophes while maintaining their public personas.
The Shadow Dragon Prince. The Demon King. The Black Dragon King.
Brothers in all but blood.
Well. Technically, brothers in blood, too, after the oath ceremony. But that was semantics.
"I should’ve known you’d both be here," Heiteng said, settling into the comfortable rhythm of old friends. "Felt that silver pulse and thought ’those two idiots are probably already coordinating.’"
"We’re efficient," Xinglong said primly.
"You’re predictable," Heiteng corrected. Then his expression shifted, mercury eyes going serious. "But we need to be. This is too important for games."
"Agreed," Ren said, straightening from his casual lean. The playful demon vanished, replaced by the tactical mind that had ruled a realm for ten millennia. "Intelligence first. Then strategy."
He moved to the chamber’s eastern wall, where a map had been etched into obsidian—all three realms laid out in perfect detail. His fingers traced territorial boundaries with the precision of someone who’d studied every border, every passage, every potential threat.
"Bronze sect deployed three days ago," Ren began without preamble. "Official story: Heihuo tracking shadow dragon’s quintet with two elite guards. Reality discovered through my spy network: twenty warriors disguised as merchants moving in coordinated formation."
"Small army," Heiteng murmured. "Shanshe’s not subtle."
"Gets worse," Ren continued. "Grandfather doesn’t trust the grandson. Sent three separate enforcement teams to shadow Heihuo’s operation. Nine additional bronze dragons trailing behind, watching, reporting back."
Xinglong’s golden eyes narrowed. "Shanshe suspects Heihuo’s planning something."
"Shanshe suspects everyone of planning something," Ren corrected. "It’s why he’s survived seventy thousand years. But yes—he’s particularly paranoid about his heir right now. Which works in our favor."
"Discord in bronze ranks," Heiteng said approvingly. "Exploitable."
"It gets better." Ren’s smile was sharp. Predatory. "Red sect deployed a full hunting expedition. Eighteen dragons total—broken into six teams of three. Mixed Blazecrowned and Apexblight tiers. Crossed into demon territories yesterday in a coordinated sweep pattern."
"Eighteen?" Xinglong’s eyebrows rose. "That’s a significant investment. Apexblight team leaders?"
"Three Entry, three Middle," Ren confirmed. "Leading squads of Blazecrowned warriors—mix of Entry, Middle, and High sub-tiers. Elder Dalong isn’t taking chances. The teams are spread across a twenty-kilometer radius but close enough to converge if any team finds the target. My operatives have been tracking all six teams since they crossed the border."
Heiteng laughed—genuine amusement mixed with professional appreciation. "And green sect?"
"Fifteen dragons," Ren said. "Five teams of three. Similar composition—Apexblight team leaders with Blazecrowned warriors. Three Entry, two Middle Apexblight. Also coordinating in a sweep formation. Currently in the Charred Plains, thinking they’re being subtle while my people document every move."
His purple eyes gleamed.
"What’s interesting," Ren added, "is that the red and green teams are staying carefully separate. No communication. No coordination. Like they don’t entirely trust this alliance and want plausible deniability if things go wrong."
"So we have bronze heir with twenty warriors plus nine enforcers," Xinglong summarized, "eighteen red dragons in six teams with Apexblight leaders, and fifteen green dragons in five teams also with Apex leaders. All hunting for the same target. All completely unaware they’re being monitored."
"And all about to die," Heiteng said flatly.
Ren’s expression shifted—something darker sliding across those too-perfect features. Something that reminded them both that the beautiful demon king was also one of the most dangerous beings in Doha.
"Not all of them," he said quietly.
Both dragons looked at him sharply.
"Heihuo," Ren continued, each word careful. Controlled. "He’s heading toward Middle Realm territories according to my scouts’ latest reports. Moving fast. Pushing his warriors hard."
"Then he dies first," Heiteng said. "Eliminate the bronze heir, throw Shanshe’s sect into succession crisis—"
"No."
Xinglong’s voice cut through the discussion like a blade.
Both Heiteng and Ren turned to stare at the Shadow Dragon Prince. Xinglong’s expression had gone cold. Hard. Dangerous in ways that didn’t match his usual diplomatic facade.
"Heihuo must remain alive," Xinglong said quietly. Each word precise. Controlled. Hiding rage that simmered beneath like magma under a thin crust. "His life belongs to my sister."
Silence crashed through Crimson Hollow like a physical weight.
Then Heiteng understood.
"Xingteng," he breathed.
"Yes." Xinglong’s golden eyes blazed with barely suppressed fury. Hands clenched into fists so tight his talons drew blood from his own palms. "She needs to kill him herself. For her healing. For her justice. For closure that no one else can provide."
He stopped.
Breathed.
When he continued, his voice was rawer. More honest than Heiteng had ever heard from the usually composed prince.
"He hurt her," Xinglong said. "Three years ago. During a diplomatic function at the bronze palace. Attempted to—" His voice cracked. "He tried to force himself on her. She fought him off. Barely. Fled before he could—"
He couldn’t finish.
Didn’t need to.
The implications hung in the crimson-lit air like poison.
"Ala’s mercy," Heiteng whispered.
Ren had gone absolutely still. Purple eyes flat. Demonic. The beast stirring at the thought of someone forcing themselves on—
He cut that thought off hard. Violently. Because his truemate wasn’t Xinglong’s sister and conflating the two would lead to madness.
But the protective rage remained. Controlled. Barely.
"She won’t speak about it," Xinglong continued, each word coming slower. Heavier. "Won’t let anyone help her. Made Yinglong blood-swear never to investigate, never to seek revenge. Just... retreats further into silence every day."
His mercury eyes met theirs.
"But she needs his death," Xinglong finished. "Needs to take it herself. Reclaim what he tried to steal. I won’t—I can’t—deny her that closure."
Heiteng felt old rage stirring. The kind he’d carried for ten thousand years over Juteng’s death. Over Xueteng’s suffering. Over crimes committed by those with power against those without protection.
"Understood," he said simply. His voice carried absolute promise. "Heihuo lives until Xingteng kills him. We’ll deliver him to her intact."
"Alive and aware," Ren added. His voice had gone cold. The kind of cold that preceded volcanic eruptions. "So she can look him in the eyes while she ends him. So he knows exactly why he’s dying and can’t escape into unconsciousness."
Xinglong’s shoulders relaxed fractionally. "Thank you."
"Brothers don’t require thanks," Heiteng said. Ancient words. Ritual phrase from their blood-oath ceremony ten thousand years ago.
They stood in shared silence for a moment. Understanding passing between them without the need for excessive words.
Then Ren shifted, and something changed in his posture. Became more careful. More guarded.
Dangerous.
"I need to ask something," he said quietly. "Something that goes against every instinct I have. Something the beast inside is screaming at me not to do."
Heiteng’s mercury eyes narrowed. "What?"
Ren’s jaw tightened. For the first time since they’d arrived, he looked... vulnerable. Uncertain. Like he was fighting an internal war that had no good outcome.
"An oath," he said finally. "Unbreakable. Binding beyond what we’ve already sworn. Before I tell you what I know about the silver queen."
Xinglong’s golden eyes sharpened. "What kind of oath?"
Ren met their gazes steadily. His purple eyes held desperate sincerity mixed with something that looked almost like pain.
"Two promises," he said. "First: That when you find her—when you locate the silver queen—you bring her to me before anyone else. Before the dragon realm. Before your sects. Before your families know where she is."
Absolute silence.
"That’s—" Xinglong started.
"Treason," Heiteng finished flatly. "You’re asking us to betray our own people. To put demon interests above dragon survival—"
"I’m asking you to trust me," Ren interrupted. His voice carried raw honesty that cut through objections. "I’m asking you to believe I have reasons. Good reasons. Necessary reasons. That bringing her to me first is the best chance she has of surviving what’s coming."
He paused. Breathed.
"Second promise," Ren continued. "That you don’t divulge what I’m about to reveal. Not to your sects. Not to your families. Not to anyone until after she’s safe. Until after the bonding—"
He stopped abruptly.
Too late.
Both dragons had caught the slip.
"Bonding?" Xinglong’s voice was careful. Precise. "What bonding?"
Ren’s jaw worked. Fighting with himself. With the beast. With paranoia that screamed not to reveal weakness, not to expose vulnerability, not to let anyone know his truemate existed because knowledge was a weapon and weapons got used.
But these were his brothers.
Blood-sworn for ten thousand years.
The only beings in Doha he trusted absolutely.
"I can’t explain until you swear," Ren said finally. Each word was forced out like pulling teeth. "The beast won’t let me. It’s taking everything I have not to kill you both just for being male and potentially near her."
That admission hung in the air like a confession.
Heiteng exchanged a long look with Xinglong.
Ten thousand years. Ten thousand years of fighting together, bleeding together, keeping each other’s secrets while the world tried to tear them apart.
If Ren said he needed this—if the demon king who’d survived millennia through cunning and strength was asking for trust—
"The oath better be worth it," Heiteng growled.
"It is," Ren promised. His purple eyes blazed with terrible sincerity. "I swear on Suzarin’s memory—it is."
That name—Ren’s first truemate, dead ten thousand years, the wound that had never fully healed—carried more weight than any other oath could.
"Alright," Xinglong said slowly. "We’ll swear. But Ren—whatever this is about—"
"I know," Ren interrupted. "I know how it sounds. I know what I’m asking. And I’m sorry. But I can’t—the beast won’t—"
He stopped. Fists clenched. Purple eyes showing the internal war between rationality and instinct.
"Just trust me," he finished quietly. "One more time. Please."
The ceremony was more formal than their original blood-oath. More binding. More dangerous.
They cut their palms—dragon talon and demon claw drawing blood that hissed when it hit the obsidian floor. Mixed it together while speaking words that were older than any of them, older than the Cataclysm, older than most civilizations that had risen and fallen on Doha’s surface.
"By blood spilled in darkness, by trust forged in fire, by oaths that bind essence to will—we swear. Bring the silver queen to Ren d’Aar before all others. Speak not of what is revealed until her safety is secured. May reality itself enforce this vow. May our essences shatter if we break faith."
The chamber pulsed.
Not gently.
The walls themselves seemed to pulse with recognition. Ancient obsidian remembering oaths sworn here before. Acknowledging this new binding. Weaving it into the fabric of their essence signatures until breaking the promise would require breaking themselves.
Done.
Irreversible.
Enforced by reality itself at fundamental levels.
Xinglong and Heiteng felt the weight of it settle into their Crucible Cores. Felt the oath become part of them. Irrevocable as gravity. Inescapable as death.
"Now talk," Heiteng demanded.
Ren took a breath. Let it out slowly. Visibly fighting the beast that still screamed not to reveal, not to expose, not to share.
But the oath was made.
They’d sworn.
And now—finally—he could tell them the truth that had been tearing him apart for three days.
"The silver queen," Ren said carefully, each word chosen with precision, "is almost certainly my truemate."
The silence was absolute.
Shocked.
Complete.
Then—
"That’s impossible," Xinglong breathed. "Truebonding requires compatible bloodlines. Demons and dragons can’t form that kind of connection. The essence signatures don’t align—"
"They don’t," Ren agreed. "For pure-blood dragons and pure-blood demons, you’re absolutely right. The bond can’t form."
He paused. Let the implication sink in.
"But if the dragon has demon ancestry?" His purple eyes blazed. "Mixed heritage from ancient interbreeding before the Sundering separated our species into distinct realms? Enough demon lineage—enough genetic compatibility—to trigger the recognition?"
Understanding dawned in Xinglong’s golden eyes. "Then it becomes possible."
"Rare," Ren said. "Incredibly rare. But possible."
Heiteng’s mind raced through implications faster than thought. "You’re saying the silver queen has demon blood? That she’s mixed heritage?"
"I’m saying she has enough demon lineage to trigger my truemate bond," Ren corrected. His hand pressed against his chest where the golden thread pulsed warm and steady. "I felt her dying three days ago. Felt the bond screaming that my mate was seconds from death. The beast inside went absolutely mad—nearly killed my Kael’shira trying to cross dimensions to reach her."
His purple eyes met theirs.
"Then someone saved her," Ren continued quietly. "The bond stabilized. Started strengthening. And when she recovered—when her power came back fully—"
He gestured sharply at the space around them.
"That’s when the pulse hit. Pure silver essence flooding across all three realms. Strong enough that every dragon with silver heritage felt it respond in their blood."
Silence.
Absolute silence as the weight of that statement settled over Crimson Hollow’s ancient walls.
Heiteng and Xinglong stared at Ren. Then at each other. Then back at Ren.
Because something wasn’t adding up.
And Crimson Hollow held its breath as three ancient minds began assembling pieces of a puzzle that would change everything.







