Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 226 - 221: The Vision of Souls

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Chapter 226: Chapter 221: The Vision of Souls

Location: Thornhaven Village - Training Clearing

Date/Time: 15 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI

Realm: Mid Realm

"Again," Vaelith said. "But slower this time. Feel for the roots."

Lyria closed her eyes. The clearing smelled of wet earth and pine resin, the scent sharp and grounding after three days of rain. Beneath her crossed legs, moss cushioned the ground in a thick, damp carpet. She could feel the wardstones Vaelith had placed at the four compass points around them — faint pulses of protective essence, steady as heartbeats.

The exercise was simple. Vaelith had explained it in terms Lyria could hold onto: before reaching outward with prophetic sight, you anchored yourself to the present. Roots first, always. Physical sensation. The weight of your body against the earth. The air moving through your lungs. The specific, particular texture of now.

Then — only then — you extended.

"What do you feel?" Vaelith asked.

"Moss. Cold. My back hurts from sitting this long." Lyria shifted, and her wings rustled against the tree trunk behind her. "The wardstone to my left is warmer than the others."

"Good. That’s the one closest to the ironbark root system. The tree’s essence warms the soil." Vaelith’s voice carried the patience of someone who’d taught this skill before, long ago, to students who no longer existed. "Now. Hold those sensations. Don’t let them go. They are your tether. Your way back."

Lyria nodded. Moss. Cold. Backache. Warm wardstone. She catalogued each one like tiles in a mosaic, building the floor she’d stand on when she reached for sight.

"I’m going to touch your prophetic rune," Vaelith said. "Just essence contact. It will feel like pressure — not painful, just heavy. I want to see how your channels respond to guided activation rather than the uncontrolled bursts you’ve been experiencing."

"Alright."

Warm fingers settled against Lyria’s forehead. The touch was gentle. The essence behind it was not — a deep, rolling wave of life-force that pressed against the silver rune like a palm testing a door. Lyria felt her prophetic channels stir. Not the violent slam she was used to, the visions that hit like fists and dragged her under. This was different. Controlled. Vaelith feeding essence into the channels at a measured rate, easing them open the way you’d stretch a muscle that had been clenched too long.

"Good," Vaelith murmured. "Your channels are responding well. The scar tissue from the second session is already softening. You heal remarkably fast."

Lyria kept her eyes closed. Moss. Cold. Backache. Wardstone. The anchors held.

"Now. I want you to reach — gently, gently — toward the nearest thread. Whatever your sight wants to show you. Don’t chase it. Let it come. And keep your roots."

Lyria reached.

The future unfurled in soft silver light. Threads of possibility branching outward like capillaries, each one carrying a different version of what might be. She’d done this three times in the last two days under Vaelith’s guidance, and each time the threads had shown her small things — weather patterns, a merchant arriving tomorrow, the fox that lived beneath the meeting hall digging a new den entrance.

Small things. Safe things. Training wheels.

She followed the nearest thread. Felt it thicken under her attention, gaining detail and texture the way a painting gained depth when you stepped closer. The vision coalesced slowly: Thornhaven’s market square, two days from now, Elder Torvald arguing with a tinker about the price of—

Something pulled.

Not the thread. Not any thread she was following. Something else. A force from outside the branching pathways, vast and sudden, hooking into her prophetic channels like fingers closing around a rope.

Lyria’s anchors vanished.

Moss gone. Cold gone. Backache gone. Wardstone gone. Everything that was now stripped away in a single violent wrench, and she was falling — not downward but through, pulled sideways into a current of sight that was nothing like the gentle threads Vaelith had taught her to follow. This was a river. A torrent. A force that grabbed her prophetic gift and used it, dragging her consciousness across distances that should have been impossible.

She tried to reach for the anchors. Tried to remember the exercise. Moss. Cold. Back—

Gone.

She was somewhere else.

***

The room was white.

Not clean white. Not bright white. The white of things that had been scrubbed so many times, the original surface no longer existed — replaced by layers of chemical residue that gave the walls a waxy, suffocating sheen. The air tasted of herbs she couldn’t name, sharp and medicinal, underlaid with something sweeter that clung to the back of her throat.

There were cribs.

Hundreds of them. Rows stretching back into a space too large for any building Lyria had ever seen, each crib identical — iron frames, thin mattresses, white sheets that might once have been clean. The ceiling was high and vaulted, lit by formation-stones that cast an even, shadowless light across everything, leaving nowhere for darkness to hide.

In every crib, a baby.

Lyria’s prophetic sight gave her everything. Not just the visual — the full sensory immersion that her untrained gift delivered, whether she wanted it or not. She could hear them. All of them. Hundreds of infants making sounds that weren’t crying, not exactly. Something worse. A high, thin keening that rose and fell in waves, the sound of bodies that had moved past protest and into a place beyond it.

Women moved between the rows. They wore white robes and cloth masks that covered their mouths and noses. Their hands were gloved. They carried trays.

On the trays: vials. Small, each filled with a liquid that shimmered between gold and green, pulsing with concentrated essence so dense Lyria could taste it from wherever her consciousness floated above the scene. The liquid moved in the vials like something alive. Something hungry.

A woman stopped at a crib. Lifted the baby inside — small, maybe three months old, skin flushed an angry red, limbs swollen to twice their natural size. The baby’s eyes were open. Staring. Not at anything. Just open, the way eyes stayed open when the muscles behind them had stopped working properly.

The woman pinched the baby’s jaw open. Poured the vial’s contents into its mouth.

The baby convulsed.

Every muscle in that tiny body seized at once. The limbs went rigid, fingers splayed, back arching off the woman’s arm. The keening sound spiked into something sharper — a thin, reedy scream that came from a throat too small and too damaged to produce the volume the pain demanded.

The woman held the baby steady through the convulsion. Waited. When the rigid limbs went slack, she placed the child back in the crib, picked up the next vial, and moved to the next crib.

Routine. Mechanical. Shift work.

Lyria tried to close her eyes. She didn’t have eyes here — she was pure sight, disembodied, watching from a vantage point she couldn’t control. The vision held her in place and made her look.

The babies in the nearest row were older. Six months, maybe. Their bodies had changed in ways that were wrong — limbs too thick, skin stretched taut over muscles that shouldn’t exist in an infant, veins visible beneath flesh that had gone translucent from the inside out. Their Crucible Cores were visible to Lyria’s prophetic sight, and what she saw made her stomach drop through the floor of wherever her consciousness existed.

The cores were being forced open. Essence channels that should have remained dormant until natural awakening — years, sometimes decades away — had been torn open by the potions and flooded with cultivation energy their bodies weren’t built to hold. The cores pulsed and swelled, expanding faster than the flesh around them could accommodate. Some had ruptured. In those cribs, the babies were still. The sheets were stained.

The sweet smell was blood. She understood that now. Old blood, scrubbed and scrubbed and never fully gone, soaked into the waxy white walls and the iron crib frames and the thin mattresses that held these small bodies while they were filled with something they were never meant to contain.

The vision dragged her forward.

***

A different room. Connected to the first by a corridor that was exactly as white and exactly as suffocating. Here, the cribs were gone. In their place: tables. Long, stone-topped, with drainage channels cut into the surface that led to collection basins at the foot of each one.

Children lay on the tables.

Not babies anymore. Toddlers. Two years old, three. Their bodies were grotesque — muscles bulging beneath skin that had gone grey, veins black with essence so concentrated it had stopped resembling anything biological. Their Crucible Cores burned like furnaces, cultivation energy raging through channels that had been forced to a level no child should reach.

They were alive.

Lyria knew this because she could see their essence signatures, flickering and unstable, each one a candle flame being fed too much fuel. And she knew this because some of them were moving. Small movements. Fingers curling. Heads turning. One child — a girl, dark-haired, maybe two — opened her mouth and made a sound that wasn’t a word and wasn’t a scream. Something between. Something that meant please in a language that existed before language.

A man in white robes approached the nearest table. He placed his hands on the child’s chest. His essence flowed downward — not healing, not nurturing. Extracting. Lyria watched the child’s cultivation energy drain upward through the man’s palms, pulled from the forced-open channels like water from a well. The child’s body dimmed. The furnace in its core flickered, guttered. The man’s hands moved lower. To the abdomen. To the organs that still held residual essence.

He took everything.

When he was done, the child on the table was grey. Still. The essence signature gone. Not dead — worse. Empty. A body with nothing left inside it that could be called alive.

The body was lifted. Carried through another door. Lyria’s sight followed because it had no choice, because the vision was a current and she was debris caught in its flow.

The next room held grinding stones. Massive, essence-powered, turning with slow, inevitable precision. The bodies went in at the top. What came out at the bottom was powder — fine, grey-white, collected in ceramic bowls by workers who wore masks against the dust.

The powder was mixed with liquids. Pressed into pills. Each pill the size of a thumbnail, pale as bone, with a faint luminescence that Lyria now understood was not essence or cultivation energy or any natural thing.

It was what was left of a soul after you took everything else away.

Soulbloom Pills. Row after row, packed into silk-lined cases. Beautiful cases. Lacquered wood and silver clasps. The kind of packaging that said luxury. That said exclusive. That said worth the price.

Carts carried the cases through wide doors into sunlight — and Lyria’s vision expanded outward, following the supply chain like a river following its tributaries. Markets. Auction houses. Private sales in gilded rooms where cultivators examined the pills with essence-sight and nodded with satisfaction at the purity of what they were buying.

They didn’t know.

They ground them between their teeth and swallowed the dust of children and felt their cultivation surge and called it a miracle.

***

The vision shifted.

Deeper now. Darker. The white rooms and the grinding stones fell away like scenery stripped from a stage, revealing something underneath that had been there all along — the machinery beneath the horror, the purpose beneath the purpose.

A chamber. Underground. Vast, but not in a way that made sense to Lyria’s spatial awareness. The walls were too far apart. The ceiling was too high. The proportions were wrong, as if the room existed in a space that had been folded or stretched to accommodate something that didn’t belong in physical dimensions.

At the center of the chamber: a container.

Not a jar. Not a vessel. Something that existed at the intersection of physical and metaphysical — half-visible, half-felt, its surface shifting between solid and translucent like oil on water. Inside, light moved. Not essence. Not cultivation energy. Something that pulsed and writhed and pressed against the container’s walls with the desperate, animal urgency of things that wanted out.

Souls.

Hundreds of them. Thousands. Compressed into a space that shouldn’t have been able to hold a fraction of their number, packed so tightly that individual lights blurred together into a mass of undifferentiated agony. Lyria could hear them. Not with ears — prophetic hearing, deeper and worse, the frequency at which suffering existed before it became sound. A pressure in her chest. A vibration in her teeth. A scream that wasn’t a scream because the things producing it no longer had the apparatus to scream.

A woman stood before the container.

Auburn hair. Green eyes. White robes that fell to the floor in pristine folds, unmarked by the horrors that produced what she was offering. She held the container in both hands, lifting it the way a priestess lifts a sacrament.

Sharlin.

"As promised," she said. Her voice was steady. Conversational. The tone of someone completing a transaction. "The quarterly yield. Three hundred and twelve."

She was speaking to something.

Lyria’s sight tried to focus on what stood — existed — occupied the space before Sharlin, and her gift recoiled. Not a choice. A reflex, the way a hand pulls back from a hot surface before the mind registers pain. Her prophetic channels spasmed, the silver rune on her forehead flaring so hot she would have screamed if she’d had a throat.

She looked anyway.

There was a shape. She knew this because the space it occupied was no longer space — it was absence. A hole in reality shaped like something that might once have been a being but had consumed itself so thoroughly that what remained was the opposite of presence. Not darkness. Not shadow. Voidshadow had texture, had depth, had the character of something that existed in its own right. This had nothing. This was the place where something had been and where nothing now lived instead.

It was vast.

The chamber was large enough to hold a cathedral, and the thing filled it the way water fills a bowl — not by having shape, but by occupying everything that wasn’t already occupied. It pressed against the walls. Against the ceiling. Against the floor. Against the boundaries of the vision itself, and Lyria felt her prophetic gift straining at the edges like a canvas stretched too tight.

And it was hungry.

Not metaphorically. Not as a concept. The hunger was physical — a force, an emanation, a gravity that pulled at everything around it the way a drain pulls at water. Lyria could feel it tugging at her consciousness. At her sight. At the part of herself that had extended outward to witness this, the thread of prophetic awareness that connected her to the vision and the vision to her body and her body to—

To—

The container opened.

Sharlin’s hands moved, and the souls poured upward — not falling, not flowing, but being pulled. Torn from the vessel in streams of light that twisted and distorted as they crossed the threshold between container and entity, stretching like taffy, elongating, thinning, each individual light losing shape and cohesion as it was drawn into the absence.

Consumed.

The hunger ate. Each soul disappeared into the void-that-was-not-void, and as it did, Lyria felt the nothing expand. Fractionally. Imperceptibly. Growing by increments so small they shouldn’t have been measurable, but which her prophetic gift registered with the nauseating precision of a sensor measuring radiation.

Three hundred and twelve souls. Children’s souls. Ground from their bodies, compressed into pills, and now — having served their purpose as a vehicle — extracted from the pills’ residual essence and funneled into a thing that ate and ate and ate and was never full.

Sharlin watched with the expression of someone observing a routine industrial process. When the last soul vanished into the absence, she lowered the empty container.

"The next shipment will be larger," she said. "We’ve expanded the nurseries."

The absence shifted.

Not movement. Something worse. Attention. The void where a being should be developed a focal point — not eyes, not a face, not any feature that Lyria’s mind could assign a name to. But a direction. An orientation. A sense that something infinite and empty had turned its hunger toward a specific point.

It was looking at Sharlin.

No.

Past Sharlin.

At Lyria.

The hunger hit her like a wall. Not pain — something more fundamental. A pulling at the core of what she was, at the thing that made her her, the irreducible kernel of selfhood that existed beneath personality and memory and body. Her soul. The thing that animated everything else. The thing that would survive death and pass on and carry the echo of Lyria through whatever came after.

The entity was pulling at it.

Gently. Curiously. The way a child picks up an insect to examine it. Not malicious. Worse than malicious. Indifferent. It pulled at her soul the way it pulled at the children’s souls — with the same absent, bottomless appetite, the same complete lack of recognition that what it was consuming had ever been alive.

Lyria tried to pull back. Tried to find the thread that connected her to the vision, to follow it home, to leave. But the anchor — moss, cold, back ache, wardstone — the anchors she had never set because the vision had seized her before she could, the anchors that Vaelith had spent three days teaching her were the only thing between a prophet and oblivion—

They weren’t there.

There was nothing to pull her back. Nothing tethering her consciousness to her body. Nothing connecting the Lyria who existed in this vision to the Lyria who sat cross-legged in a clearing in Thornhaven with moss beneath her legs and rain-scent in her lungs. The thread that should have been there — the lifeline, the return path, the roots — had never been planted.

She was untethered.

And the entity was pulling. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

Her soul moved. Not a metaphor. Not a feeling. A physical displacement of the thing that made her alive, shifting in her chest the way an organ shifts when something pulls on it. Sliding toward the absence. Toward the hunger. Toward the place where children’s souls went and never came back.

No.

She pulled. With everything she had. With the prophetic gift and the cultivation and the power in her blood that she couldn’t name and the stubbornness that had kept her alive through three weeks of vision-burns and life-force hemorrhaging and the slow, grinding terror of knowing she was dying.

NO.

The entity pulled harder.

Her soul slipped. An inch. A mile. The distance didn’t matter — what mattered was that it moved, that the thing at the centre of Lyria shifted in a direction it was never meant to go, and the body it left behind would be what those children on the tables had been. Grey. Still. Empty.

She couldn’t hold on.

The last thing she felt before everything went white was her soul tearing free — not all the way, not completely, but enough. Enough that something fundamental broke. Enough that the thread between body and self stretched past the point where it could pull back on its own.

Enough that she started to die.

***

Sound returned first.

Not vision. Not touch. Sound. A voice she didn’t recognise, speaking words in a language she didn’t understand — demon tongue, the melodic, rolling syllables that Vaelith used when she wasn’t thinking in trade common. The words carried essence. Life. They pressed against the fraying thread between Lyria’s soul and her body like hands pressing against a wound.

Another voice. Deeper. Raw.

Voresh.

He was saying her name. Over and over. Not in demon tongue — in common, as if some part of him understood that she needed to hear words she knew, words that connected to the Lyria who existed in a village in the Mid Realm and not the Lyria who was dissolving into the hunger of something that should not exist.

"Lyria. Stay. Lyria. Stay."

She couldn’t see. Couldn’t feel her body. Couldn’t feel anything except the terrible, stretched-thin connection between soul and flesh, pulled taut as wire, vibrating with the strain of holding together when everything in it wanted to snap.

Vaelith’s essence poured into her. Warm. Alive. Green. The essence of growing things, of roots in dark earth, of seeds that split stone to reach sunlight. It flooded the thread and thickened it, bought time that Lyria’s body didn’t have, held open a door that was closing.

But it wasn’t enough.

Lyria could feel herself going. Not outward — not toward the entity anymore; the vision had shattered when her soul ripped loose, and whatever connection had existed between her and that underground chamber was severed. But the damage was done. Her soul wasn’t seated properly. It drifted in her chest like a ship torn from its mooring, bumping against the walls of a body it no longer fully inhabited.

She was dying.

Not in the slow way Vaelith had warned about — the fifteen to twenty years of gradual deterioration. Dying now. Dying here. In a clearing that smelled of moss and pine resin with wardstones pulsing uselessly at the four compass points around a body that was rapidly becoming a thing without a person inside it.

Voresh’s voice cracked.

"Lyria."

She heard it. She heard him. She just couldn’t find her way back.

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