©Novel Buddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 223 - 218: Beast Tide
Location: Ironspine Mountain Pass — The Narrows
Date/Time: 10-11 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm
They came out of the dark like a broken wave.
The first beast hit the wagon barricade before the last cart had finished turning, and the sound it made—the wet, splintering crunch of corrupted bone against wood—was worse than any battle cry. Jayde had heard artillery bombardments that carried less wrongness than the noise that erupted from the pass mouth. Not a roar. Not a scream. Something between, ragged and overlapping, as if a hundred throats were trying to produce the same sound and getting it catastrophically wrong.
Contact. Multiple hostiles. Varied size and configuration. Estimating sixty to eighty in initial wave—more behind.
The narrows saved them. Four meters of gap between stone walls, plugged with three wagons angled into a wedge. Not elegant, not pretty, but functional. The beasts funneled through, their corrupted bodies smashing against each other as much as the barricade—snapping at companions, tearing fur and scale from anything close enough to reach.
"Formation!" Gareth bellowed, and the man finally looked like what he was—not a caravan guard with more boredom than ambition, but a soldier who’d done this before. His sword was already bloody. "Spears at the gaps! Don’t let them climb!"
The potter’s wife—the potter’s wife—shoved a sharpened pole through a gap between wagons and caught something with too many legs in the throat. It shrieked, a sound like tearing metal, and went down thrashing. Two more scrambled over its body.
On Jayde’s shoulder, Takara held perfectly still.
Chaos-touched corrupted fauna. Mixed species—I’m identifying what were probably ridge deer, stone boars, and mountain wolves. All showing advanced corruption: bioluminescent fracturing along major muscle groups, ocular displacement, and additional limb growth. His claws gripped Jayde’s cloak, tiny pricks of pressure through leather. Classification: moderate threat to Ashborn and Sparkforged civilians. Negligible threat to my charges.
Which would matter more if I could actually DO anything without blowing every cover within a hundred kilometres.
He sent through the encrypted mental link—the one that connected him to his team, tight-banded and undetectable: [Canirr. Report.]
The response came clipped. Professional. [Confirmed. Approximately three hundred in the tide. We’re handling the vanguard—the larger ones, Flamewrought equivalent and above. Suki’s taken four. Prota’s engaging a corrupted ridge bear, big one, Inferno-tempered range. Amaya’s running the western flank to prevent encirclement.]
[Casualties?]
[Theirs, not ours.] A pause. Then, drier: [How’s the kitten holding up?]
I will demote you. I will demote you so far down the ranks you’ll be cleaning latrine pits in dimensions that haven’t been INVENTED yet.
[Focus on the perimeter,] he sent instead, because five thousand years of command discipline meant something even when one’s dignity had been reduced to atoms.
***
Jayde dropped from the wagon with her blade already moving.
The first beast—something that might have been a mountain cat before corruption twisted it into a four-eyed nightmare—lunged through a gap in the barricade. She took its front legs at the knee joints, clean cuts that dropped it thrashing, then drove the blade through its skull before it could scream.
Efficient. Minimal essence expenditure. Maintain cover—Entry Inferno-tempered combat capability only. Use Torrent essence only. Do not exceed established parameters.
That was the discipline. The constant, exhausting calculus of fighting at a fraction of her capability while people died around her. A cultivator at her actual level could have cleared this pass in minutes. Jayde Ashford, frontier orphan, had to struggle.
So she struggled. Convincingly.
She let a corrupted boar drive her back three steps before gutting it. She took a glancing blow from a twisted wolf that she could have dodged in her sleep, letting the impact spin her sideways—selling the hit, eating the bruise. She fought the way a talented Inferno-tempered student would fight: competent, determined, a little overwhelmed.
It was the hardest kind of combat. Not the fighting. The acting.
[They’re everywhere,] Reiko sent through the bond, and his mental voice vibrated with controlled fury. His lion-sized body tore through corrupted fauna with an efficiency that drew stares from everyone who could spare the attention. Shadow-dark fur, silver eyes blazing, jaws that crushed corrupted bone like dry wood. [Three on the left flank. I’m going.]
He surged left. A corrupted ridge deer—antlers grown into spiraling bone spurs that glowed with sickly green light—caught his shoulder. Reiko pivoted, sank his teeth into its throat, and wrenched. The deer went down. He was already moving to the next.
Through the bond, Yinxin’s thread pulsed hot with barely contained power. [There are too many. I should—]
(No.)
[Jayde, I could end this in seconds. One burst of—]
(If you shift, we all die. Not from the beasts. From what comes AFTER. Every dragon faction on Doha will feel a silver queen’s signature. Every hunter, every sect, every throne. The wyrmlings, Yinxin. Think of the wyrmlings.)
Silence. The bond trembled with the effort of restraint.
[I know,] Yinxin sent, and the words tasted like ashes. [I know. I hate it.]
(So do I. Fight as Mei. Stick to basic Torrent techniques. Nothing flashy.)
From behind the second wagon, "Mei" stepped forward and drove a Torrent-infused palm strike into a corrupted wolf that had scrambled over the barricade. The beast flew backward, hit the stone wall, and didn’t get up. Her muted hazel eyes held murder.
Takara watched from Jayde’s shoulder—where he’d been deposited on top of a supply crate behind the defensive line, supposedly cowering in terror—and catalogued everything with the systematic focus of a being who had spent five millennia studying the art of war from every conceivable angle.
The dragon queen is maintaining cover. Barely. She’s hitting approximately three times harder than her disguise should allow, but in the chaos, no one’s calibrating.
The Beast Lord cub is magnificent. Young, sloppy, over-committing on the follow-through—but the instincts are unmistakable. Lord Fahmjir has waited millennia for an heir that survives long enough to claim the title. So many before this one. All dead. All too weak, too slow, too unlucky. A pause in his internal catalogue. This one is different. If he lives long enough.
And he WILL live long enough. Because if he doesn’t—if she loses him—
He didn’t finish that thought. He’d seen the prophecy threads. He knew what Jayde would become without her anchors. The very thing that would crack Doha like an egg.
So the Beast Lord cub lives. Whatever it takes. Even if Lord Fahmjir never asked me to keep him alive. Even if I haven’t told him why I’m doing it.
And my primary charge...
He watched Jayde take a hit she didn’t need to take, sell a stumble she didn’t need to sell, and fight with one hand tied behind her back while people screamed around her.
She’s going to get herself killed protecting her cover, and the irony will haunt me for eternity.
[Prota,] he sent through the link. [Status on the ridge bear?]
[Down.] Prota’s mental voice carried the same flat calm it always did—the scarred veteran had seen too many battles to waste emotion on anything below apocalyptic. [Moving to intercept a cluster of four heading for the narrows. Inferno-tempered equivalents. They won’t reach the barricade.]
[Confirmed. Amaya?]
[Western flank is clear! Also—Commander? You should know there’s something bigger behind the main wave. Much bigger. I’m tracking it by ground vibration. Whatever it is, the other beasts are running FROM it as much as toward the caravan.]
Takara’s blood went cold.
The source of the tide. The thing they’re fleeing.
[All units. Priority target incoming from the northwest. Unknown classification. Prepare for—]
The ground heaved.
***
It came through the pass mouth like a siege engine made flesh.
Jayde saw it, and her Federation mind went blank for half a heartbeat—not from fear, but from the sheer wrongness of the thing. It had been a mountain drake once, maybe. The basic skeletal structure was still visible beneath the corruption: four legs, heavy body, armoured head. But whatever had gotten inside it had rewritten the blueprint with a madman’s hand. Bone spurs erupted from its spine in jagged rows. Its hide had split in places, revealing muscle that glowed with pulsing violet light. One eye was gone, replaced by a cluster of smaller orbs that tracked independently. The other eye—the original—wept black fluid.
It was the size of a house.
Threat classification revised. Single large hostile, estimated upper Inferno-tempered to lower Blazecrowned. Corrupted mountain drake variant. Significant structural enhancement from chaos energy. This exceeds caravan defensive capability.
The beast shouldered through the narrows, smashing one of the barricade wagons aside like kindling. The impact sent the potter’s wife flying—she hit the stone wall and crumpled. Her husband screamed her name.
Gareth threw himself at the thing’s flank with more courage than sense. His blade skidded off corrupted hide, leaving a white scratch. The drake swung its head—casual, almost lazy—and the impact flung him twenty feet. He hit the ground rolling, alive but broken.
The scholar moved.
Jayde had pegged him days ago—the quiet man with too-good posture and hands that knew weapons. Academy teacher, probably. Maybe former military. He stepped forward with a technique that was clean, precise, and significantly above anything else in the caravan. Twin strikes of concentrated Ember Qi hit the drake’s injured eye.
It bellowed. Turned. The scholar dodged the first swipe, caught the second on a hastily raised barrier that shattered on impact, and went down hard.
Competent, Takara assessed from the supply crate, where he was performing an Oscar-worthy impression of a terrified kitten trembling in a ball. Peak Flamewrought. Trained. But outclassed by an order of magnitude.
[Commander,] Amaya sent through the link, urgent now. [We can take the big one. Prota and I can flank—]
Takara’s eyes tracked the drake. Tracked Jayde. Calculated angles, trajectories, and probable outcomes.
The drake is moving toward the dragon queen’s position. Drawn to her essence signature—even suppressed, she’s the most powerful thing within range. It’s hunting her specifically.
[Hold positions,] he sent. [Do NOT reveal yourselves unless I give Stormbreak. The primary charge’s life must be in genuine mortal danger. We are last resort only.]
[Commander—]
[That is an ORDER, Amaya.]
The drake charged Yinxin.
***
Yinxin saw it coming. Her body knew what to do—three thousand years of draconic instinct screaming shift, SHIFT, burn it to ash—and for one terrible instant, the glamour flickered. Her eyes blazed gold beneath the muted hazel. Scales rippled beneath the skin of her forearms.
Jayde felt it through the bond like an electric shock.
(YINXIN, NO!)
And then Jayde was moving.
Not Jayde Ashford, frontier orphan. Not the careful, calculated performance she’d been maintaining for weeks. The woman who threw herself between Yinxin and the corrupted drake moved with sixty years of war in her bones and the absolute, unshakeable certainty that the people behind her mattered more than she did.
She hit the drake’s path at a dead sprint and drove her blade into the gap between two bone spurs on its neck—one of the split-hide sections where corruption had exposed the muscle beneath. The blade sank deep. The drake screamed, that broken-glass shriek, and its massive head swung toward her.
Brace—
The impact was catastrophic.
The drake’s skull caught her across the ribs. She felt them break—not crack, break, three on the left side snapping like dry branches. The force launched her backward. She hit the stone wall of the narrows with enough force to crater the rock, and for a moment, the world went white.
Then red.
Then pain arrived, and it brought friends.
Damage assessment. Three fractured ribs, left side. Probable internal hemorrhaging. Possible lung compromise. Concussive impact—
(Hurts.)
Just that. The child’s voice, small and honest beneath the tactical analysis. Just a girl who’d been hit too hard and couldn’t breathe.
She slid down the wall. Blood sheeted from a gash across her forehead—the stone had cut her scalp on impact—and pooled in her left eye, turning half the world red. Her blade was gone, still buried in the drake’s neck. Every breath was a knife between her ribs.
On the supply crate, Takara ran calculations at speeds that would have made Isha’s processing cores jealous.
Three fractured ribs. Significant but not fatal. Internal bleeding—moderate. She’s conscious, responsive. The Veil held. No divine signature leakage. Life-threatening? No. Career-threatening? Possibly. But not Stormbreak.
Not yet.
He watched with every fibre of his being screaming to act, and held.
[All units, HOLD. Primary charge injured but not critical. Hold positions.]
[Commander!] Amaya’s frustration bled through the link. [She’s DOWN—]
[She is ALIVE. I said HOLD.]
The drake turned back toward Yinxin, blood and black ichor dripping from the blade still embedded in its neck. Its cluster of mismatched eyes fixed on her with mindless hunger.
And Reiko lost his mind.
***
The sound that came from the shadowbeast’s throat wasn’t a roar.
Jayde, pinned against the wall with broken ribs and blood in her eyes, felt it through the bond before she heard it—a detonation of pure rage that obliterated every other emotion in the shared space between them. Not the hot fury of a young predator. Something older. Deeper. The inherited memory of apex creatures who had never, in all the long millennia of their existence, accepted the concept of surrender.
Reiko hit the corrupted drake like a black comet.
His jaws closed on its throat—not the armoured front, but the exposed underside where corruption had softened the cartilage—and he wrenched. Five hundred kilograms of shadowbeast, every muscle fibre firing with Voidshadow-enhanced strength, twisting with the savage efficiency of a predator who’d been born knowing exactly where things broke.
The drake staggered. Its malformed legs scrambled for purchase. It tried to swing its head, but Reiko held on—claws raking through split hide, teeth sinking deeper. Beneath the essence-muting salve, something burned—Jayde felt it through the bond, a searing heat along his forehead where the mercury rune lived. But the salve held. Whatever Isha had formulated, it was worth every merit, because the mark that should have been blazing like a beacon stayed dark and hidden beneath its dull concealment.
Thank the stars for Nexus-grade alchemy.
[JAYDE!] His mental voice was barely recognizable—shredded with rage, with terror for her, with something primal and absolute that transcended language. [DON’T YOU DIE. DON’T YOU DARE.]
He bit deeper. Twisted harder. The drake’s thrashing grew desperate, uncoordinated. One massive leg buckled.
Then Reiko found the spine.
His jaws shifted—instinct guiding him with impossible precision to the exact junction between vertebrae—and he closed them with everything he had. Bone shattered. The drake’s hindquarters went slack. It crashed forward, crushing corrupted earth beneath its mass, and Reiko rode it down with his teeth still locked in its neck.
It twitched once. Twice.
Then something fell out of it.
A core. Beast cores weren’t unusual—most creatures above Flamewrought developed them naturally. But this one was wrong. It rolled free of the drake’s shattered throat and sat in the bloody dirt, pulsing with light that shifted between violet and black. The energy coming off it felt like standing too close to a bonfire that burned cold instead of hot. It hummed with a frequency that made teeth ache.
Reiko released the drake’s throat. His muzzle was coated in black ichor. His sapphire eyes were blown wide, still blazing with rage and adrenaline—and then they fixed on the core.
Through the bond, Jayde felt something shift.
Not a thought. Not a decision. Something beneath thought, beneath decision—a compulsion written into the deepest layer of Reiko’s being, in the blood of his mother and her mother and every primordial shadowbeast that had ever walked Doha’s surface.
Consume.
"Reiko—" Jayde’s voice came out wet. Broken. She tried to push off the wall, and her ribs screamed, and the world tilted, and she caught herself on one knee with blood dripping from her chin. "Reiko, don’t—"
He swallowed the core whole.
For a single, suspended moment, nothing happened.
Then Reiko convulsed.
His entire body seized—back arching, legs locking, jaws snapping shut with a crack that echoed off the narrows walls. Through the bond, Jayde felt the rune on his forehead burning like a brand beneath the salve—hot enough that it should have been visible, should have been screaming his lineage to anyone with eyes. But the concealment held. On the outside, he was just a shadowbeast in distress. His eyes rolled back. Through the bond, Jayde felt a cascade of something she couldn’t name—not pain, not power, but memory. Ancient. Vast. Pouring through their shared connection like floodwater through a cracked dam.
He collapsed.
His massive body hit the ground and went still, flanks heaving with rapid, shallow breaths. Through the bond, his presence didn’t vanish—but it changed. Turned inward. Folded into itself like something wrapping around a new thing it had found.
[Jayde...]
The mental voice was barely a whisper. Thin. Exhausted. Already fading.
[I have to sleep. The memories... they’re... waking up...]
(Reiko. Stay with me.)
[Can’t. It’s too big. Too old. I have to...]
His eyes closed. Through the bond, she felt the burning on his forehead ease—settling from a roar to a low pulse, steady as a second heartbeat, falling deeper.
[...be fine. Promise.]
Then silence.
***
The battle ended the way beast tides always did—not with a climactic last stand but with a gradual thinning, the corrupted creatures breaking against the narrows like a wave that had finally exhausted itself. The smaller beasts fled first, their broken instincts reasserting just enough to tell them the thing they’d been running from was dead and there was no longer any reason to run forward. The larger ones—the ones that hadn’t been quietly eliminated by invisible forces in the mountains above—fought on for another ten minutes before the last of them went down under a combined assault from the scholar, two merchants who’d found spears, and the old hunter who turned out to be significantly more dangerous than his weathered appearance suggested.
Thirty-seven people alive out of forty-three. The potter’s wife would live—concussed, shoulder dislocated, but breathing. Gareth had a broken collarbone and was swearing about it with impressive creativity. Three of the guards were dead. Two merchants had been dragged from overturned wagons with injuries that the caravan’s basic healer was already working on.
Jayde leaned against the blood-smeared wall and couldn’t stand.
Adrenaline crash imminent. Blood loss approximately—
"Shut up," she whispered, and the Federation voice went quiet.
She could feel Reiko through the bond—distant, muffled, like hearing someone speak through deep water. Alive. Breathing. But gone somewhere she couldn’t follow.
"The beast." She grabbed the scholar’s sleeve as he passed. The man looked down at her with an expression she recognised—the careful assessment of someone who’d just watched a seventeen-year-old girl throw herself in front of a mountain drake and was re-evaluating several assumptions. "My beast. He ate something—a core. It was—"
"I saw." The scholar’s voice was steady. Quiet. The kind of quiet that came from years of watching students do inadvisable things. "I’ve never seen a beast core like that. The corruption—"
"Is he dying?"
"I don’t know. His vitals are stable. Heartbeat’s strong." The man hesitated. "But there’s something happening inside him. His essence signature is... reorganizing."
Hands got her into a wagon. She didn’t remember whose. The world went grey at the edges, then came back, then went grey again. Someone pressed a cloth against the gash on her forehead. Someone else tried to examine her ribs, and she bit down on a scream that would have embarrassed her.
They put Reiko beside her.
His massive body took up most of the wagon bed. She worked her hand into the fur along his neck—warm, still warm, his heartbeat steady against her fingers—and pulled him close. Or as close as you could pull a lion-sized shadowbeast when you had three broken ribs and couldn’t breathe without tasting copper.
Isha.
The Nexus responded immediately. Not through the Pavilion—Jayde couldn’t access it without drawing attention, not with witnesses this close—but through the deeper channel, the one that existed between contractor and system regardless of physical proximity.
What happened to him?
The response came measured. Careful.
The core he consumed contained residual chaos energy, but also something older. A fragment of primordial essence—the kind that hasn’t existed freely on Doha for millennia. His body recognized it. His bloodline recognized it. A pause that carried the weight of ancient knowledge. He’s not in danger. Something in that core triggered a dormant aspect of his ancient lineage. Think of it as... a key finding a lock that’s been waiting to be opened.
How long?
Days. Perhaps a week. His body needs time to integrate what it’s absorbed. Another pause. He’ll be different when he wakes, Jayde. Not fundamentally. But... more. More of what he was always meant to be.
(He’s going to be okay?)
She couldn’t help it. The child’s voice, rising through the exhaustion, because Reiko was her family, and he wasn’t moving, and she couldn’t feel him properly through the bond, and that scared her more than three broken ribs and blood in her lungs.
He’ll be fine. Something triggered his ancient bloodline. It’s accelerating a process that would have happened naturally over the next several years. He’s simply... getting there faster.
(Promise?)
I don’t make promises I can’t keep. But I’ve seen this before—in beings far older than your shadowbeast. He’ll wake. He’ll be himself. Just... more.
Jayde closed her eyes.
The wagon lurched into motion. The caravan was moving again—slowly, painfully, leaving the narrows behind with its dead beasts and broken wagons and the blood that would stain the stone until the next rain washed it clean.
On the supply crate that had been transferred to this wagon, a white kitten sat in a tight ball, blue-tipped ears flat, blue eyes half-lidded.
Takara watched his primary charge slip into unconsciousness with her hand buried in her shadowbeast’s fur and her blood soaking through the makeshift bandages faster than the caravan healer could replace them, and he composed his after-action report with the meticulous detail of someone who was absolutely not panicking.
[After-Action Summary: Beast Tide, Ironspine Pass. Hostile count: approximately three hundred, mixed corruption levels. Casualties: three civilian guards KIA, seven wounded. Primary charge: three fractured ribs, moderate blood loss, concussive trauma. Status: stable. Shadowbeast companion: consumed anomalous beast core, undergoing spontaneous bloodline activation. Status: stable but unconscious. Dragon queen: uninjured, cover maintained. Kitten operative: uninjured, dignity nonexistent.]
[Addendum: Primary charge threw herself in front of a corrupted mountain drake to protect the dragon queen. She did not hesitate. She did not calculate. She simply moved.]
[In five thousand years, I have served many charges. Warriors. Kings. Beings of immense power and terrible purpose.]
[None of them have scared me as much as this girl.]
He tucked his nose under his tail and kept watch through the night. Tiny. Ridiculous. Utterly committed to the absurd duty of a kitten guarding a sleeping soldier and a dreaming beast in a creaking wagon rolling through the dark.
Outside, unseen, four shadows paced the caravan—Canirr in the air, Suki on the left flank, Prota on the right, Amaya trailing behind. A perimeter of ancient predators protecting a battered column of mortals who would never know they’d been saved.
The stars wheeled on. The wagon creaked. Jayde’s hand stayed tangled in Reiko’s fur.
And somewhere deep inside the sleeping shadowbeast, something very old finished waking up.







