©Novel Buddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 203 - 198: Departure
Location: Dark Forest → Forest Edge
Date/Time: Day 789 (Since Nexus Contract) - 25 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm
Dawn hadn’t broken yet when Jayde stepped out of the cave for the last time.
The Dark Forest breathed around her—ancient trees exhaling moisture into the pre-dawn chill, nocturnal creatures settling into their daylight rest, the first tentative birdsong beginning somewhere in the canopy above. The air tasted of moss and old wood and the particular mineral tang she’d come to associate with home.
Home.
Strange word. Strange concept. But this cave had earned it.
(This is where we learned to be strong. Where we stopped being afraid all the time.)
And now we leave it behind. The strategic value has been compromised. Departure is correct.
Jayde turned back for one last look.
The cave mouth gaped dark against the grey stone, unremarkable to anyone who didn’t know what it contained. Water stains ran down the rock face from some ancient spring. Moss grew in the crevices. A few hardy ferns clung to the entrance where morning light sometimes reached. Nothing special. Nothing memorable.
Inside, the Pavilion entrance shimmered—a doorway to a pocket dimension that housed training facilities, medical bays, archives, and living quarters. Everything she needed, everything that mattered, compressed into a space that existed outside normal reality.
The Pavilion is soul-anchored. It goes where I go. This departure costs nothing except familiarity.
The cave was just stone. A shell. The real treasure traveled with her.
Reiko bounded up beside her, his bulk warm and solid in the pre-dawn air. The mercury rune on his forehead blazed with predawn excitement, pulsing silver light that reflected off nearby stones. Through their bond, she felt his mixture of anticipation and anxiety—new places, new smells, new hunting grounds, but also leaving the only safe territory he’d ever known.
The rune.
Problem.
Jayde frowned, studying the liquid silver marking. In the forest, surrounded by shadows and ancient trees, it had been easy to overlook. The darkness swallowed most of its glow. But on open roads, in towns, around people who would remember details and share descriptions...
A lion-sized shadowbeast is already conspicuous. A lion-sized shadowbeast with a glowing magical rune is unforgettable. Every guard, every innkeeper, every traveling merchant will remember that detail. Descriptions will spread. We might as well announce our route.
"Wait here," she told him.
She stepped back into the Pavilion—just for a moment—and made her way to the medical stores. The shelves held hundreds of preparations, organized by function and potency: healing salves for wounds of various severity, cultivation supplements to aid advancement, essence stabilizers for those who pushed too hard, too fast. And there, in a section she’d cataloged weeks ago during one of her systematic explorations, exactly what she needed.
Essence-muting salve. Suppresses both the visual manifestation and the magical signature of surface markings. Duration: three to four days per application. Side effects: mild sensory dampening at application site.
She grabbed the clay jar and returned to where Reiko waited, tail swishing with impatience, rune still blazing its distinctive silver.
[What’s that?] he asked through their bond. [Smells weird. Smells like plants that don’t want to be noticed.]
"Something to help you blend in." Jayde unscrewed the lid, revealing a thick grey paste that smelled of bitter herbs and something faintly metallic. "Your rune is too distinctive. This will dull it."
[But I like my rune.] His mental voice carried a note of protest. [It’s mine. It shows what I am.]
(I know. But we need to be invisible right now. Just for a while.)
Tactical necessity overrides aesthetic preference. Explain once. Then proceed.
"I know it’s part of you," Jayde said aloud. "But right now, being memorable could get us killed. This is temporary. Once we’re somewhere safe, you can let it shine again."
Reiko grumbled but lowered his massive head, allowing her to smear the salve across his forehead. The paste was cold against her fingers, tingling slightly as it made contact with the magical marking. The mercury rune flickered once, twice, then dimmed like a candle running out of wax. Within moments, only a barely-visible shadow remained beneath his dark fur.
[Feels strange,] he complained through their bond. [Muffled. Like wearing a blanket on my head. Like part of me is wrapped in fog.]
"You’ll get used to it. We’ll need to reapply every few days."
[Don’t like it.]
"Noted." Jayde wiped her hands on a cloth and tucked the jar into her pack, making a mental note of the application date. "But you’ll like being captured less."
Reiko had no argument for that.
***
"Ready?" Yinxin’s voice came from behind—softer than usual, rougher. The Veil of the Forgotten had transformed her completely. Brown hair instead of silver-white. Dark eyes instead of gold. Features pleasant but utterly forgettable.
"Ready," Jayde confirmed.
The white kitten perched on her pack, blue-tipped ears twitching in the half-light, tracking sounds too subtle for human hearing.
"Move out," Jayde said quietly. "Stay quiet until we’re clear of the immediate area."
The woman who’d been a dragon queen fell into step beside her. The shadowbeast bounded ahead, his dulled rune now just another shadow among shadows.
Behind them, the cave sat empty and silent.
Waiting.
***
High in the canopy, invisible among the darkness and leaves, something ancient watched them go.
Takara tracked his charge’s progress with a mixture of relief and growing unease.
They’re actually leaving. Thank the storms.
The timing couldn’t have been closer.
Canirr’s last report had been troubling. A group of hunters had been surveying the Dark Forest for weeks—methodical, patient, closing in with the precision of predators who’d done this many times before.
They smell wrong, Canirr had reported through the Panthera network. Lust and blood. Something old underneath. Something hungry.
Takara didn’t know what that meant. Not yet. But he’d learned to trust Canirr’s instincts over five thousand years of working together. If Canirr said something smelled wrong, it smelled wrong.
One more day, Takara thought, watching Jayde’s veiled form disappear between the trees. One more day, and those hunters would have found her.
He sent a silent pulse to his subordinates: Package is moving. Northeast trajectory toward forest edge. Maintain standard shadow distance. Report any hostile contacts immediately. And watch for those hunters. If they follow, I want to know.
Confirmations flickered back—Canirr from his forward position, Suki and Prota covering the flanks, Amaya on rear guard.
The girl thought she was traveling with a dragon, a shadowbeast, and a kitten.
She had no idea.
***
The forest came alive as dawn broke.
Light filtered through the canopy in shifting golden shafts, illuminating motes of dust and pollen that drifted lazily on air currents too subtle to feel. The temperature rose gradually as they walked, the pre-dawn chill giving way to something warmer. Bird calls multiplied—territorial songs, mating displays, warning cries that rippled outward as their group disturbed the forest’s rhythms.
Jayde moved through the undergrowth with automatic caution, her body flowing around obstacles while her mind cataloged everything. Assessment was as natural as breathing.
Trail markers. Crude but functional. Notched stones at irregular intervals, indicating water sources or territorial boundaries. No standardized navigation system. Entirely dependent on local knowledge passed from generation to generation.
The forest floor was thick with last autumn’s leaves, decomposing slowly into rich black soil that cushioned their footsteps. Mushrooms clustered around fallen logs. Ferns unfurled in patches of dappled sunlight. Life everywhere, dense and interconnected.
They passed a clearing where a massive beast had bedded down—crushed vegetation in a roughly circular pattern, scattered droppings the size of her head, the lingering scent of something large and territorial.
[Big thing,] Reiko reported, sniffing the depression’s edges with professional interest. [Not dangerous-big. Just big. Eats plants. Smells like grass and patience. Left yesterday, maybe day before.]
Herbivore. Transport species, probably.
This world used beasts for everything. Massive creatures bred and trained across generations for carrying cargo. Flying variants for wealthy passengers who could afford the bonding costs. Aquatic species for river commerce. An entire transportation infrastructure built on living things that had to be fed, rested, healed, and eventually replaced.
Entire civilization dependent on magical labor. Interesting vulnerability.
A message bird darted through the canopy overhead, bright plumage marking it as a trained variety used for long-distance communication. Its flight pattern was purposeful—point to point, no meandering.
No electronic communications. Message birds. Information travels at the speed of wing-beats, constrained by weather, by predators, by the simple limits of biological flight.
(But that means privacy. No one tracking us unless they physically follow. No databases. No surveillance networks.)
Correct. Freedom from surveillance as default. Every journey requires commitment. Every secret can actually be kept.
"You’re analyzing."
Yinxin’s voice broke through her thoughts. The disguised dragon walked beside her, plain features watching the forest with quiet attention.
"Always," Jayde admitted.
"What are you seeing?"
"Opportunities. Vulnerabilities. The shape of how things work."
"And what shape is that?"
"Slower than I expected. More dependent on individual power than institutional systems." She stepped over a fallen branch, adjusting her pack slightly. "But also private. Hard to find someone who doesn’t want to be found."
"That’s what we’re counting on."
"Yes."
They walked on in silence, the forest gradually brightening around them as the sun climbed toward midday.
***
By midday, the forest had begun to thin.
Ancient trees gave way to younger growth. Dense canopy loosened, admitting scattered patches of sunlight. The air carried hints of grass and distant agriculture.
Reiko ranged ahead, reporting through their bond: [Trail continues. No threats. Squirrel. Very fast squirrel.]
Squirrels are not tactical priorities.
[But they’re so fast...]
The white kitten had repositioned from pack to shoulder, tiny claws pricking through clothing as it maintained balance. It observed everything, blue-tipped ears swiveling constantly.
"How much further?" Yinxin asked.
"Forest edge by evening." Jayde consulted her mental geography. "From there, roads begin. Towns. Inns."
"Actual civilization."
"Such as it is."
Yinxin’s disguised face showed nervousness. "I haven’t been around large numbers of humans since... since before."
"You’ll be fine. The Veil makes you forgettable."
"That’s what worries me." Her voice was soft. "I spent thousands of years as something memorable. Something powerful. And now I’m..."
"Ordinary."
"Yes."
"Ordinary is camouflage. It’s armor. Every predator focuses on what stands out. Be the thing that doesn’t, and you move unseen."
Yinxin considered this. "You speak from experience."
"I’ve learned that survival often means being invisible until the moment you choose not to be."
The forest continued to thin around them.
***
Evening painted the sky in shades of amber and rose as they reached the forest edge.
Jayde stood at the treeline, looking out over a landscape she’d never seen.
Rolling hills stretched toward the horizon, covered in a patchwork of cultivated fields and wild grassland that rippled in the evening breeze like a golden ocean. The fields were organized in irregular plots—some freshly tilled, dark earth turned and waiting; others green with winter crops; still others left fallow, dotted with distant grazing animals.
A road wound through the terrain, packed earth rather than game trails, connecting distant smudges that might have been villages or trading posts. Smoke rose from some of those smudges—thin grey columns speaking of hearth fires, evening meals, ordinary lives being lived far from the dangers that followed her.
The sky itself seemed larger here, no longer filtered through leaves and branches. The sunset spread across it in bands of color—deep orange near the horizon, fading to pink, then purple, then the first hints of evening blue where early stars were beginning to emerge.
Open ground. Reduced cover but improved mobility. Sight lines extend for kilometers in every direction.
(It’s beautiful. So much sky. So much space. We’ve never seen anything like this.)
Reiko bounded back, tongue lolling with happy exhaustion from a day of running and exploring. His forehead remained dark, the salve holding steady, the mercury rune hidden beneath its dulling effect.
[Big open!] he announced. [So much space! Can run for hours without hitting trees!]
"Stay close once we’re on the road," Jayde reminded him. "Even without the rune visible, you attract attention."
[I can be small,] he offered, shrinking himself slightly and flattening his ears in an approximation of harmlessness that wouldn’t fool anyone who looked closely.
Points for effort.
Yinxin emerged from the treeline beside her, plain features touched with wonder. For a moment, her disguise seemed almost irrelevant—the awe in her expression belonged to her true self, not the ordinary woman the Veil projected.
"I’d forgotten how big the world was," she murmured. "In the forest, everything felt bound. Contained."
"It’s a big world," Jayde agreed. "And we’re going to see a lot of it."
The Pavilion hummed against her consciousness—a constant presence, a reminder that she carried her safe haven wherever she went. Training facilities. Medical stores. Secure quarters. All of it soul-anchored, all of it traveling with her, all of it accessible the moment she needed it.
The cave was never home. The Pavilion is home. And the Pavilion goes where I go.
"Let’s move," Jayde said, starting down the slope toward the road. "We’ll find a camping spot before full dark."
Behind them, the Dark Forest stood silent and patient.
Waiting for whoever came next.
***
They came at dusk.
The last light of day filtered through the canopy in bloody streaks, painting the forest floor in shades of red and shadow. The air had cooled rapidly as the sun set, carrying the first hints of night’s chill.
Twelve figures in white-gold armor emerged from the undergrowth, moving with the coordinated silence of predators who’d hunted together for years. Their armor gleamed even in the failing light—polished to a mirror shine, maintained with the obsessive care of those who believed appearance reflected worth. They moved with patience measured in lifetimes, spreading out to secure the perimeter with automatic precision.
Their leader walked at the center—a tall man with bronze-tinted skin that seemed to drink in the fading light, copper-brown hair streaked with bands of black and white that spoke of age his unlined face denied. His eyes were the color of old blood, and they held something hungry. Something patient. Something that had waited a very long time.
Vaerun stopped at the cave mouth.
His nostrils flared, catching scents that lingered in the cooling air. Recent habitation—the particular smell of people who’d lived in one place for months, leaving traces of themselves in every surface. Multiple occupants. And beneath it all, threaded through the stone itself like silver wire through grey cloth...
Her.
"They were here," one of his operatives reported—a forgettable man in matching armor, voice carefully neutral. "Evidence suggests departure within the last day. Trail leads northeast toward the forest edge."
Vaerun barely heard him.
His hand moved to his chest, fingers finding the hard shape beneath his tunic with the automatic familiarity of a gesture repeated ten thousand times. The scale. His inheritance. His father’s before him, and his father’s father, and all the hunters who came before, stretching back through centuries of desperate hope.
Cold now. The scale was cold against his heart, where it had rested for decades.
But he remembered when it had been warm.
He drew it out slowly, reverently—a single silver scale, no larger than his palm, its surface still holding an impossible sheen despite the centuries since it had been torn from living flesh. The edges were worn smooth from generations of handling, but the scale itself remained perfect. Eternal. As if the dragon who’d once worn it had simply stepped out of time and left this piece of herself behind.
His fingers traced those worn edges, and the familiar weight settled into his palm like a promise. Like hope. Like everything he’d never dared to believe he deserved.
The pulse.
Weeks ago. During his visit to collect the offerings. Standing in the Temple’s lower chambers while children wept in their cages and priests counted souls like merchants counting coins.
And then—







