Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 243 - 238: The Last Day of the Year

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Chapter 243: Chapter 238: The Last Day of the Year

Location: Obsidian Academy Secret Realm — Deep Interior

Date/Time: 30 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm (Secret Realm sub-dimension)

Jayde woke knowing she was going deeper.

Not a decision, exactly. More like a direction her body had already chosen while her mind was sleeping — the way a compass didn’t decide to point north, it just did, because that was where north was. The pull had been there since arrival, a low hum at the edge of her awareness, and each day it had sharpened. Clarified.

Today, it was a hook behind her sternum.

There’s no tactical justification for pushing further. Our haul should put us well inside Elite range already. The beasts in the deeper zones are Blazecrowned and above. The risk-to-reward—

(I know. We’re going anyway.)

Her tactical mind didn’t argue. It rarely did when the pull was involved. Something about it bypassed the analytical framework entirely.

Jayde broke camp. Packed. Fed Takara, who ate his portion and then sat on a root watching her dismantle the wards with an expression that suggested he was grading her work.

"Deeper today," she told him.

Mew. Both ears forward. Pointed directly into the interior, toward the place where the pull was strongest.

(Even the kitten knows.)

Kittens don’t know things.

(He’s pointing in the same direction I’m feeling.)

...Move.

***

The realm changed as she pushed inward. Not gradually — she’d been walking for two hours through a forest that grew progressively denser, the trees taller, the canopy thicker, the essence heavier in the air like humidity before a storm. And then she crossed a line.

No visible marker. No ward boundary. Just a step where everything on one side was the realm she’d been surviving in for five days, and everything on the other side was something else.

The trees here were different. Their bark was darker, almost black, and the grain patterns weren’t random. Structured. Repeating. Like a language she couldn’t read, pressed into the wood by growth rather than hands.

The ground felt different under her boots. Each step sent vibrations through the soil that didn’t fade the way they should — they lingered, humming, as if the earth were absorbing them and passing them along.

And the formations. The dormant formations Jayde had been sensing since day one were not dormant here. Active. Humming with a low, continuous power she could feel in her teeth, in her fingertips, in the bones of her feet through her boot soles. Not hostile. Just on. Running. The way a river ran, even when nothing stood in its path.

The formation architecture here is distinct from the rest of the realm. Different design language entirely. The realm’s creation formations are built on top of this substrate. Whoever designed the training ground found this already here and built around it.

(How old?)

Older than the realm. Older than the Academy. The design principles don’t match anything in Isha’s library, and Isha’s library covers tens of thousands of years.

Ancient stone pillars appeared within the first kilometre. Not ruins. Not collapsed. Deliberately half-buried, rising from the forest floor at irregular intervals like remnants of a structure meant to be found only by someone looking. The forest had grown over them, around them, through them. Roots wrapped the bases. Moss covered the surfaces. But the stone itself was unmarked by time — smooth, dark, warm to the touch.

Takara was very still on her shoulder. Not his usual stillness. A different kind. His claws were tighter than usual, and his body was angled forward, into the direction of travel.

Or bracing against it.

(The kitten doesn’t like this place.)

He’s probably cold.

(He’s not cold. He’s tense.)

...Noted.

The pillars grew more frequent. The formations hummed louder. The essence in the air took on a quality she didn’t have a word for — not denser, not stronger. Expectant. Like a room where someone had just taken a breath and was about to speak.

Then Jayde heard it behind her.

Not a roar. Roars she understood — territory, threat, dominance.

This was a shriek. High-pitched. Discordant. The sound of something that had no business being that large, making a noise that should have come from something small.

Close behind her.

She turned.

And looked up.

***

The beast crouched between two stone pillars, and it was wrong.

Not wrong, the way dangerous things were wrong. Wrong the way the scale was wrong, proportions were wrong, the fundamental relationship between what something was and how big it was had been violated.

It was a rodent.

The size of a wagon. Maybe larger — hard to tell because the thing was hunched, its massive body a compressed knot of muscle and corrupted essence that crackled across matted grey fur like static. A blunt skull wider than Jayde’s torso, dominated by incisors — two of them, upper jaw, the length of her forearm. Yellowed. Cracked. Curved inward the way rodent teeth curved, except nothing about this was the way anything was supposed to be.

Beady eyes. Small. Black. Furious. Fixed on her.

Whiskers like steel wire. Claws that had gouged trenches in the stone pillars. A tail — thick, scaled — dragging behind it like a weapon.

Peak Blazecrowned. At minimum.

Assessment: cannot win. Overwhelming power differential. Withdraw. Now.

The beast shrieked again. The sound shook leaves from trees thirty metres away.

Jayde turned and ran.

***

The beast was fast.

That was the problem. The fundamental, catastrophic problem. A creature that size should not have been that fast. It should have been slow, ponderous. Instead, it moved with explosive acceleration, its corrupted essence turning mass into momentum. Trees didn’t slow it down. It went through them. Trunks snapping like kindling, the crack-crack-crack marking its path behind her.

Jayde ran the way she’d been trained — angles, terrain, obstacles. She put fallen trunks between them. Threw essence flares to confuse sensory tracking.

Nothing worked. The beast was locked on.

Takara was on her shoulder. His claws were in her collar deep enough to feel through the fabric. His body was rigid — locked, braced. His weight shifted with her direction changes with coordination far too precise for a small animal on a running girl’s shoulder.

She noticed. Filed it. Didn’t have time to think about it.

[This is not happening.]

[I am Commander of Lord Fahmjir’s elite guard. I have killed Eternalpyre beasts with a single strike. I have stood before the God Council without flinching.]

[And I am running from a mouse.]

[On a girl’s shoulder.]

[Wearing a pink ribbon.]

Jayde put a stream between them. The beast went through it without breaking stride, water exploding upward. She dodged between two massive trunks. The beast hit the gap, and the trunks exploded outward, showering her with splinters.

[I could kill it. I could turn around right now and kill it before it took another step.]

[But the girl would see.]

Two minutes at this pace. The terrain ahead is rising — rocky. If there’s a cliff face, a gap too narrow—

(There has to be something.)

The shriek again. Fifteen metres. Jayde felt the displacement of air.

Her lungs burned. Entry Inferno-tempered didn’t have the reserves for sustained sprinting. She was pulling from deeper, and even those were draining.

[This is not happening.]

[There is something fundamentally wrong with this picture.]

[I’m a cat running from a mouse.]

[If Amaya ever learns of this, I will defect to the enemy.]

[The mouse is gaining.]

[THE MOUSE IS GAINING.]

The forest thinned. Soft soil gave way to stone. The canopy opened. Ahead: a cliff wall. Sheer. Dark stone rising beyond the canopy. Running left and right as far as she could see.

Dead end.

No. No, no—

Jayde scanned. The rock face was solid. No caves, no overhangs. Just stone — ancient, dark, the same material as the buried pillars. Smooth. Featureless. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚

The beast crashed through the last trees. Twenty metres. Fifteen. The ground shook. Its incisors were bared, and the shriek was continuous now — a drilling whine that vibrated in her chest.

Ten metres.

(There’s nothing here.)

And then there was.

A crack. In the rock face. Narrow — barely wide enough for a person turned sideways. Jayde would have sworn it wasn’t there a moment ago. Would have sworn the rock was smooth and featureless.

That wasn’t—

(MOVE.)

She threw herself at the crack.

***

Tight. Shoulders scraping raw stone. Armour snagging. Jayde had to exhale to fit, had to angle her hips, turn her head so stone pressed against one cheek.

Takara tumbled off her shoulder on the second squeeze. There wasn’t room — her body pressed flat against rock on both sides, and a kitten on a shoulder was a kitten with nowhere to be. He dropped, hit the narrow floor of the crack, and scrambled upright. She felt his weight leave and couldn’t reach for him, couldn’t even turn her head.

"Takara—"

The mouse hit the rock face.

The impact shuddered through the stone. Dust fell. A massive paw thrust through the opening — claws longer than her hand, scraping stone, sparks flying. The paw swiped blind. Jayde pressed deeper. The tips passed inches from her face.

The incisors came next. Wedged into the opening, grinding against the stone edges with that horrible drilling shriek. Enamel on mineral. The beast was trying to bite through solid rock.

She scrambled backward. The crack widened into a small pocket — enough room to stand, to breathe. The mouse’s fury was a thrashing chaos of claws and teeth in the gap. It couldn’t reach her. The rock held.

Takara was at her feet. Jayde scooped him up. He was rigid in her hands — not trembling, not limp. Rigid. She held him against her chest.

"It’s okay. We’re—"

The ground took her.

No warning. No rumble. No shifting or cracking or groaning. One instant, she was standing on stone with a kitten in her hands, and the next, the stone wasn’t there. It opened beneath her feet — only her feet, a circle exactly her width — and she dropped through it like water through a drain.

Takara was in her hands. Then he wasn’t. The edge of the opening caught him — scooped him off her chest the way a doorframe catches a cat being carried through it. She felt his claws rake across her shirt, felt the weight of him there and then gone, and then the stone closed above her head, and there was nothing.

Dark. Falling. Alone.

***

Silence.

In the narrow pocket of rock, a small white kitten crouched on sealed stone. Pink ribbon. Blue ribbon. Blue eyes fixed on the place where the floor had been open and was now smooth and closed.

The mouse scraped at the crack outside. Shrieking. Stupid. Persistent.

[She’s gone.]

[The ground took her. Opened for her and closed behind her, and I was right there, and I couldn’t—]

[I couldn’t follow.]

A long silence. The mouse scraped. Dust fell on white fur.

[I have guarded seventeen charges across nine deployments.]

[I have never lost one.]

He pressed a paw against the sealed stone. Pushed. Nothing.

[The ground opened for her. Only for her. The stone reformed — seamless. Whatever is down there wanted her specifically.]

[That means design. That means purpose. Purpose is not the same as malice.]

[That is not enough.]

[But it is what I have.]

He turned toward the crack. Toward the mouse. Its beady eye appeared in the gap, searching, furious.

[She will come back.]

He walked toward the opening. Small. White. Pink ribbon. Blue ribbon. Claws clicking softly on stone.

[I am having a very bad day.]

[You are about to have a worse one.]

***

Not fast.

That was the first thing Jayde registered. The fall was not fast. Something was slowing her — not a formation, not a ward. Something gentler. Like sinking through warm water. Like being set down by hands.

Darkness. Complete. The stone had sealed above her without a seam. No crack. No light. Just rock above and dark air below, and her body drifting downward through it.

She reached for Isha.

The thread that had been muffled since entering the realm — faint, barely functional — was gone. Not muffled. Gone. The place where it connected to her was smooth and empty. Like touching a wall where a door used to be.

She reached for Reiko’s bond. The hum that had been her constant since the Nexus Contract, distant but always present.

Silence.

She reached for anything. Any thread, any connection, any whisper of the bonds that had grown around her over the past two years.

Empty. All of it. Whatever she had fallen into existed outside of everything.

Just her. Falling through the dark. Alone.

(I’m scared.)

I know. So am I.

(I’m really scared.)

The fall is controlled. Something is catching us. Whatever is down here went to considerable trouble to bring us here — the crack appearing, the floor opening. This isn’t random.

(How do you know it’s not hostile?)

Hostile things don’t catch you gently.

Her feet touched ground. Soft. Like being placed. Like the last inch was a hand setting her down with exactly the right amount of care.

Stone beneath her. Cool. Smooth. Worked. Carved. Not rough-hewn — precise.

Dark all around. No sound except her breathing.

And ahead — far ahead, at the end of what felt like a long, narrow space — a faint light. Warm. Steady. The colour of embers.

(What now?)

We walk.

Jayde walked.