©Novel Buddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 207 - 202: Voresh Closes In
Location: Mid Realm - Trading Town near Thornhaven
Date/Time: 28 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Realm: Mid Realm
The trading post smelled of spiced meat and desperation.
Voresh noted this as data. Smell: cooking fat, unwashed bodies, cheap ale, fear-sweat from the merchant arguing with a guard over tariff rates. The fear-sweat was strongest. Humans leaked their emotions through their pores, advertising weakness to anyone with the senses to read it.
Once, that observation would have sparked something. Pity, perhaps. Or contempt. Or the particular melancholy that came from watching mortals struggle through their brief, burning lives.
Now it was simply information. Filed. Catalogued. Dismissed.
The common room held fourteen occupants, excluding himself. Three merchants comparing routes and complaining about bandit activity on the eastern roads. Two caravan guards nursing injuries from a beast attack, their bandages stained with the particular yellow of healing salve applied too late to prevent scarring. A family relocating from somewhere worse to somewhere marginally less terrible—the children pressed close to their mother, eyes too old for their young faces. And in the corner, nursing a drink that had gone warm hours ago, the informant he’d come to meet.
The building itself was unremarkable. Wooden construction, perhaps eighty years old based on the weathering patterns. Structural integrity adequate. Two exits visible, a third likely through the kitchen. Defensible position in the corner where the informant sat—back to solid wall, clear sightlines to all entrances.
The man had chosen his seat deliberately. Professional habit, survival instinct, or simple paranoia. Any of the three indicated someone worth speaking to.
Voresh crossed the room. His movements drew no attention—thirty thousand years of scout training rendered him forgettable to anyone not specifically watching. His six-foot-four frame should have commanded notice, but something in the way he moved, the way he occupied space without seeming to fill it, made eyes slide past him like water around stone.
Bronze skin marked him as demon-touched, but the Mid Realm had enough mixed-blood population that the coloring earned only brief glances. His copper-brown hair, streaked with the black and white of triple-essence affinity, stayed covered beneath a traveler’s hood. The tarnished copper of his eyes—aged beyond what any human could recognize—remained shadowed.
The informant looked up as Voresh sat across from him. Human. Middle-aged. The particular weathered features of someone who’d spent their life between civilization and wilderness, belonging to neither. Scars on his hands suggested blade work. The calluses on his fingers indicated bowstring. A survivor, then. Someone who’d learned that information was safer currency than violence.
"You’re the one asking about seers." Not a question.
Voresh nodded once. "You have information."
"Might do." The informant’s eyes flicked to the coin pouch at Voresh’s belt. Calculation. Assessment. Greed tempered by survival instinct—the recognition that the demon across from him could end him between heartbeats if the meeting went wrong. "Depends on what it’s worth to you."
Once, Voresh might have felt impatience at this dance. Might have considered simply taking the information through force or intimidation. Might have weighed the moral implications of either approach, felt the tug of conscience against the pull of efficiency.
Now he simply pulled three gold coins from his pouch and set them on the table. Adequate compensation for reliable intelligence. Standard rate for information brokers in unstable territories. The emotional calculus of fair dealing versus exploitation required feelings he no longer possessed.
The informant’s hand covered the coins. Made them disappear with practiced speed.
"Village east of here," he said, voice dropping to a murmur beneath the common room’s ambient noise. "Called Thornhaven. Outcast settlement—mixed-bloods, exiles, the usual refuse that pure-blood kingdoms don’t want. Maybe two hundred souls. Sits in no-man’s-land between Ironveil and Silverleaf territories, where neither royal house bothers to patrol."
Voresh waited. The informant would provide the relevant details or he would not. Prompting served no purpose.
"Few weeks back, something happened there. Power surge that every cultivator within fifty miles felt. Like someone had rung a bell made of lightning—couldn’t miss it if you were paying any attention at all." The informant’s voice dropped further. "The whole village went into lockdown after. Guards on the perimeter, no one in or out without Elder Torvald’s say-so. They’ve been tight as drums ever since."
"The surge’s source?"
"Young girl. Local family—father’s pure elf, mother’s some kind of aetherwing mix. Wings on the girl, pointed ears, the usual signs of breeding across bloodlines." The informant leaned closer, the wood of his chair creaking with the movement. "Word is she had some kind of episode. Woke up screaming in the middle of the night, whole village heard it. And when she stopped..."
He paused. Dramatic effect. Humans enjoyed such theatrics. Voresh simply waited.
"Silver mark on her forehead. Glows sometimes, they say. Complex pattern—geometric, like someone drew it with light and left it there. Nothing anyone’s seen before. Nothing anyone can explain."
The description matched. Geometric rune. Silver coloring. Spontaneous manifestation during awakening. Classic prophetic emergence, textbook in every detail except the location—mixed-blood villages didn’t typically produce Prophetesses. The gift chose its vessels without regard for bloodline purity, much to the Temple of Light’s eternal frustration.
"Prophetess," Voresh said. The word came out flat. Clinical. Statement of fact rather than revelation.
"That’s what the village thinks. That’s why they’re hiding her." The informant’s voice held grudging respect. "Temple of Light would kill a mixed-blood seer. Everyone knows that. Pure-blood supremacy doesn’t allow for divine gifts choosing ’lesser’ vessels. So Thornhaven’s keeping her secret. The whole village agreed—they’ll die before they give her up."
Admirable. Once, Voresh would have felt admiration. Would have appreciated the courage of outcasts choosing to protect one of their own against impossible odds.
Now it was simply tactical assessment. The village was committed. They would resist anyone who came for the girl. That complicated direct approaches.
"Her current state?"
"That’s the strange part." The informant frowned, genuine confusion breaking through his mercenary facade. "She’s young. Fourteen, maybe fifteen. But lately..." He shook his head, fingers drumming on the table. "People who’ve seen her say she looks older. Like she aged years in a matter of days. No one knows why. No one’s seen anything like it."
Prophetic sacrifice. The girl had used her gift for something that cost her. Life force expenditure manifesting as accelerated aging—the classic price of forced prophecy, of pushing the sight beyond its natural boundaries. Whatever she’d done, she’d paid dearly for it.
The observation registered without emotional response. Once, Voresh might have felt admiration for such a sacrifice. Might have wondered what vision had driven a child to trade years of her life for... what? Warning someone? Changing a future? What had she seen that made that price acceptable?
Now it was simply data. Relevant to mission parameters. Filed accordingly.
"Location of Thornhaven?"
The informant provided coordinates. Two days’ travel through the primordial forest. Difficult terrain for anyone without cultivation. Manageable for an Apexblight scout with thirty millennia of experience.
Voresh rose. Left additional coins on the table—bonus for useful intelligence, standard practice for maintaining informant networks.
"One more thing," the informant said as Voresh turned to leave. "The girl. They say she’s been having visions. Lots of them. Uncontrolled. Overwhelming." He met Voresh’s copper eyes with something approaching respect. "And she’s not afraid anymore. Like she saw something that changed her. Like she knows something’s coming and she’s... ready for it."
Voresh absorbed this information. A Prophetess who had recently sacrificed years of life, who was experiencing uncontrolled visions, who had somehow moved past fear to acceptance.
If she was truly a prophet, she might have already seen him coming.
The question was what she had seen.
***
The forest outside the trading post offered the particular silence of ancient growth—trees older than human civilization filtering sound into muffled whispers, undergrowth so thick that even noon sunlight barely penetrated the canopy.
Voresh moved through it without thought. His body knew how to navigate terrain like this. Thirty thousand years of muscle memory guided his steps around exposed roots, beneath low-hanging branches, through gaps in thornbush clusters that would shred anyone less experienced.
His mind... his mind existed in the particular emptiness that had become his constant companion.
One leaf.
The knowledge sat in his awareness like a stone at the bottom of a frozen lake. Unchanging. Unignorable. The Vor’kesh around his throat—hidden beneath his high collar, as was proper—pulsed with the faint warmth of that single remaining connection to emotional existence.
Once, the vine had been green. Vibrant. Covered in leaves that rustled with every feeling, every joy, every sorrow, every moment of genuine connection to the world around him.
Now it was black. Ancient. Withered by thirty millennia of accumulated loss.
And one leaf clung to it.
Just one.
When it fell—not if, when—the transformation would begin. Devil emergence. Soul death. Everything that made him Voresh would be consumed by something else. Something hungry. Something that wore his face but contained nothing of who he’d been.
Unless he performed Kael’thros first.
The honor death was already planned. Method: blade through the heart, essence dispersed into the void, soul released cleanly before corruption could claim it. Location: the cliff overlooking Ren’s palace, where he’d stood with his student three thousand years ago and watched the sun rise over a realm they’d rebuilt together. Ritual words: prepared, memorized, waiting to be spoken.
One last mission first.
Ren had given him this—purpose before the end. Something worthy to accomplish before the leaf fell. Find the new Prophetess. Protect her from Sharlin’s hunters. Bring her safely to the demon realm where prophecy could remain free.
His king’s final gift to his mentor.
Voresh registered the sentiment without feeling it. Once, he would have been moved by such consideration. Would have felt gratitude, loyalty, the particular warmth of being valued by someone he’d helped shape.
Now it was simply fact. Ren cared. Voresh could no longer feel that care. But he could honor it through action.
One last mission.
One last purpose.
Then Kael’thros.
Acceptable.
***
Night found him three hours closer to Thornhaven, making camp in a hollow between ancient tree roots. No fire—unnecessary for Apexblight cultivation, and light attracted attention in territories where predators hunted by sight. His bronze-tinted skin maintained core temperature automatically, Terracore essence regulating internal heat with the efficiency of thirty thousand years of practice.
He sat with his back against bark older than most civilizations and let his mind process mission parameters.
Around him, the forest breathed. Night creatures began their calls—hunting cries, mating songs, the endless chorus of life continuing its cycles regardless of the affairs of mortals or demons or gods. Once, Voresh would have found beauty in it. Would have heard music in the overlapping harmonics, felt peace in the ancient rhythm of predator and prey.
Now it was simply noise. Auditory data filtered for relevant threats. Nothing more.
His hand moved to his throat—unconscious habit, repeated ten thousand times over the millennia. The Vor’kesh pulsed beneath his collar. Warm. Steady. The single remaining leaf still attached to the blackened vine that had once been green with vitality.
The Vor’kesh had been with him since birth—a tiny seed at the base of his throat, as all male demons were born with. The sacred mark connected to the soul through ancient magics that no living demon fully understood. As he’d grown, leaves had sprouted naturally, the vine thickening and flourishing as his body matured. By the time he’d reached adulthood, his Vor’kesh had been full and green—the mark of a demon male ready to take his place among the warriors, ready to fulfill the purpose bred into his very blood.
Protector. Defender. Hunter.
Male demons were warriors by nature. Could not be otherwise. The instinct to shield demonesses and children was woven into their souls, unbreakable as law. And demonesses had always been rare—ten males to every female, even in the Golden Era. So males learned the art of war. They fought. They killed. They stood between their people and everything that threatened them.
The Zartonesh had understood this weakness perfectly.
During the invasions, they’d discovered the terrible truth: every demon who fell into devil became their agent, their weapon. So they’d hunted the demonesses—the precious females who couldn’t fight back. Demonesses were empaths by nature, feeling the death of any creature as if it were their own. Killing would drive them insane, the backlash of stolen life shattering their minds. They couldn’t defend themselves. Could only flee, hide, and pray their males reached them in time.
Most hadn’t.
Ten to one had become five thousand to one. The demonesses who remained were ancient, precious beyond measure, guarded by quintets of warriors who would die before letting harm touch them.
And so the males fought on. Protecting what little remained.
But protection came with a price.
Every battle, every kill, every moment spent in the presence of death—it left a mark. Death energy was drawn to the pure life force in a demon’s Vor’kesh like predator to prey. The dark energy seeped into the leaves, corrupting them bit by bit. A fragment of death absorbed meant a fragment of a leaf dying. Over time, the damage accumulated. Leaves withered. Blackened. Fell.
A demon male who hid from battle, who avoided death entirely, who never lifted a blade—his Vor’kesh would remain pristine. But that was impossible. Against their very nature. A demon male who didn’t protect wasn’t a demon male at all.
So the leaves fell.
Thirty thousand years of war. Thirty thousand years of standing between his people and annihilation. Thirty thousand years of absorbing death energy that had nowhere to go, nothing to counteract it.
Because the cure—the only cure—was a truemate.
Female demons carried true life energy. The bond between Zhū’anara and Zhū’kara created a circuit that fed that life energy back to the male, canceling out the death damage, healing what war had broken. With a truemate, a demon male could fight forever and never lose a single leaf.
But they didn’t.
Truemated males were forbidden from the dance of blades. Because the bond cut both ways—when a Zhū’kara died, his Zhū’anara died with him. Instantly. Irreversibly. The only exception was pregnancy; a female carrying a child might survive her mate’s death long enough to deliver. But otherwise, losing one meant losing both.
Too few demonesses remained to risk such waste. So, truemated males retired from warfare entirely. Became teachers, craftsmen, scholars. Their sole purpose: protect their female. Stay alive so she could stay alive. Let the Shan’kara carry the burden of battle.
Voresh had never found his Zhū’anara. Thirty thousand years of searching, and she had never appeared. He’d never chosen a Kaeth’ara either—never settled for less than the fated bond that might have saved him.
So the death energy had accumulated. Year after year. Century after century. Millennium after millennium. His Vor’kesh had withered from vibrant green to withered black, leaves falling one by one until only a single fragment of life remained.
One leaf.
The last piece of him that could still feel anything at all.
Voresh looked at his hands. Bronze skin, weathered by thirty millennia. Calluses from weapons he’d carried since before most human kingdoms existed. Scars from battles he could no longer remember feeling anything about.
His soul no longer cried.
The phrase was the saddest in the demon tongue. It meant the emotions had frozen so completely that even grief was beyond reach. No joy, no sorrow, no anger, no love. Just... existence. Mechanical continuation without purpose or meaning.
Except for duty.
Duty remained when everything else had frozen. The ingrained habits of service, the trained responses of loyalty, the muscle memory of protecting those he’d sworn to protect. Voresh couldn’t feel his devotion to Ren anymore, but he could still act on it. Could still complete missions. Could still fulfill obligations that his emotions could no longer sustain.
One last mission.
The Prophetess was young. Mixed-blood. Had recently sacrificed years of life for unknown purpose. Was experiencing uncontrolled visions. Was being protected by a village of outcasts who understood that Temple discovery meant death.
Sharlin would be searching for her. The Temple of Light’s seers would have detected the awakening—prophetic surges were impossible to hide completely. Even now, hunters might be converging on the Mid Realm, following leads, eliminating false trails, closing in on Thornhaven with the particular efficiency of fanatics serving a zealot’s will.
Voresh needed to reach her first.
Not to take her. Not to force her cooperation. Not to imprison her the way Sharlin had allegedly broken the old Prophetess over centuries of captivity.
To offer protection.
To show her that not everyone who came for her wanted chains.
A prophet who could see the truth was invaluable. Real prophecy—uncorrupted, uncontrolled by Temple interests—could shift the balance of power across realms. Sharlin had hoarded that advantage for herself through her captive seer. Had killed the old Prophetess when the woman finally broke beyond usefulness, fool that Sharlin was.
Ren would not make the same mistake.
The demon king understood that free prophecy served everyone better than controlled visions. Understood that a Prophetess who chose to share her sight was worth infinitely more than one forced to speak through torture and terror. Understood that genuine alliance required genuine respect.
Voresh would offer that respect. Would explain that the demon realm wanted her free, not chained. Would give her the choice that Sharlin never would.
And if she refused...
She was a prophet. If she truly had the sight, she would see what Voresh offered and what Sharlin threatened. Would see branching futures where trust led to safety and fear led to capture. Would understand, on a level beyond mere words, that the demon with copper eyes came as protector, not predator.
If she was truly a prophet, she may have already seen him coming.
The question was what she saw.
***
Dawn brought grey light filtering through the canopy and the particular quiet of forest creatures not yet stirring.
Voresh rose. Checked his equipment. Verified his position against mental maps compiled from decades of Mid Realm reconnaissance.
One day’s travel remained. By nightfall tomorrow, he would reach Thornhaven. Would find the Prophetess. Would complete his mission.
And then...
His hand moved to his throat. Unconscious habit. Beneath the high collar, the Vor’kesh pulsed with the warmth of that single remaining leaf.
Still attached.
For now.
Voresh began walking. His copper eyes scanned the forest ahead, cataloguing terrain, identifying potential threats, assessing optimal paths. His mind ran tactical calculations without emotional input. His body moved with the efficient grace of thirty millennia of scout training.
Purpose drove him forward. Not hope—he’d lost that centuries ago. Not emotion—that had frozen with the leaves. Just the simple clarity of a task to complete before the end.
The forest swallowed him as he continued toward Thornhaven, toward the young Prophetess who waited there, toward whatever fate had prepared for a fading demon and a girl who had traded years of life for a warning.
Neither of them knew yet what that meeting would mean.
But the Vor’kesh around Voresh’s throat pulsed slightly warmer as he walked, the single leaf catching light that shouldn’t have reached it through the canopy above.
Almost as if something in the universe was paying attention.
Almost as if fate was holding its breath.







