©Novel Buddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 255 - 250: Old Friends, New Eyes
Location: Secret Realm — Forest Zone
Date/Time: 4-8 Emberrise, 9939 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm (sub-dimension)
The forest smelled like rot and green and the particular ozone-afterburn of a beast that had died badly.
Jayde crouched beside the carcass — a scaled viper, mid-Sparkforged at most, coiled in a heap of iridescent blue scales with its skull caved in from a single strike. Not hers. Something bigger had been through here, maybe an hour ago. The territorial scraping on nearby trees was fresh, the sap still wet.
Predator overlap. Two territories converging on a water source. The viper was defending, lost.
She catalogued the viper’s beast core — small, blue-green, already dimming — and slid it into her pack beside the eleven others she’d collected over the past two days. Not impressive by Academy standards. She was being selective, taking only cores that wouldn’t raise questions about how a Torrent-only Entry Inferno-tempered student had killed beasts well above her registered level.
On her shoulder, Takara sat with the specific gravity of a kitten who weighed almost nothing and observed everything. His blue-tipped ears swivelled independently, tracking sounds she couldn’t hear. The pink ribbon on his left ear had acquired a small leaf. The blue ribbon on his right was immaculate, because of course it was.
She scratched behind his ears. He purred. She felt the slight tension in his body that said I am monitoring three potential threats in a two-hundred-metre radius and you are scratching my ears and she scratched harder because she could, because the mutual knowledge between them had made everything both simpler and funnier.
Eight days in. Six remaining. Current haul: twelve beast cores, six jade slips, assorted spirit herbs. Adequate cover for registered tier.
(More than adequate. We’re fine.)
Agreed. The concern is exposure, not yield.
From the quiet space in her soul where Vael’kir rested, Kazren’s presence pulsed once. Faint disapproval. He’d been doing that for two days — the sword spirit’s version of commentary on her decision to use a borrowed academy-issue blade instead of the weapon he’d spent forty thousand years preparing. The borrowed blade was mediocre steel, poorly balanced, with an edge that needed resharpening every few hours. It was also completely unremarkable, which was the point.
"I know," she murmured. To Takara. To Kazren. To neither of them specifically. "I know it’s not ideal."
Kazren pulsed again. Understatement, the pulse seemed to say.
Takara mewed.
She stood, adjusted her pack, and moved deeper into the forest.
***
The sounds of fighting started twenty minutes later.
Essence discharge — the sharp crack of techniques colliding, the duller thud of bodies hitting earth. Not a beast fight. Human-scale, human-speed, the ugly cadence of cultivators going at each other with intent. Jayde’s feet slowed. Takara’s ears locked forward, swivelling toward the sound.
She stopped. Listened. Four against one, by the footwork. The one was losing. Not quickly — whoever it was had training, was making the numbers work for them, using terrain — but four-on-one had an arithmetic that didn’t care about technique.
Academy students. Internal dispute. Not our concern.
(Agreed. We have enough problems.)
Jayde changed direction. Away from the fight. She’d taken three steps when the voices carried through the trees — raised, ragged, the careless volume of people who thought their blocker made them invisible.
"—hold her down, hold her down—"
"She broke my ash-rotting nose!"
"Good. She fights like a feral. Now hold her still — we need to cripple her channels before the blocker runs out."
Jayde stopped.
(Cripple her channels.)
Cultivation channel destruction. Permanent. Irreversible at their skill level.
(I heard them.)
"The headmaster said no killing and no maiming—"
"And who’s going to know? Cards can’t track void-all while this is running." Something metallic clinked — a device, formation-etched, pulsing with the signature of a monitoring blocker. "Just some village healer’s word against ours. She told us to make sure this ash-eating wretch can’t cultivate anymore. So that’s what we’re doing."
They.
(I know.)
This is not our—
(I don’t care.)
Jayde changed direction again. Toward the fight this time. Fast and silent, each footfall placed on moss and root, Takara flattening on her shoulder, claws sinking in, weight shifting with hers.
She reached the tree line, and what she saw turned cold fury into something with teeth.
Four students. Three males, one female. Academy grey. They had someone pinned against a rock face — the stocky one sitting on her legs, the female holding a Terracore restraint on her right arm, the tall one crouching with his hands positioned over her left forearm, essence gathering at his fingertips in the specific pattern of channel disruption.
The someone was fighting. Hard. Even pinned, even with a fractured left arm and essence reserves running dry, she was fighting — bucking, twisting, her free right hand clawing at the Terracore bind, blood running from a cut above her eyebrow and from the nose of the student sitting on her legs.
Small. Dark-haired. Blue eyes blazing with a fury that went beyond fear into something Jayde recognised — the cold, systematic rage of someone trained to fight and losing anyway.
Eden.
Eden.
(Those cowards.)
Jayde stepped out of the tree line.
***
She didn’t use Vael’kir. The borrowed blade was enough. The borrowed blade was appropriate — because what she was feeling right now, the white-hot fury that had compressed into something cold and precise behind her ribs, didn’t deserve a divine weapon. It deserved mediocre steel and broken bones.
The tall one saw her first. Started to turn, mouth opening—
The borrowed blade came up. Not a flat-side strike. Not a gentle disarm. The edge caught his wrist at the exact angle where radius met ulna, and the bones broke with a crack that echoed off the rock face. His hand spasmed open. The monitoring blocker tumbled from his fingers. He screamed.
Good.
She was past him before the scream finished.
The second student — stocky, Inferno affinity, essence flaring, panicked and uncontrolled — threw a fireball. She redirected it with the flat of the blade, sent it spinning into the canopy, closed the distance, and drove her knee into his solar plexus. He folded.
The third and fourth attacked together — some coordination, the female throwing Terracore restraints while her partner closed for melee. Jayde dropped low, let the stone-binding pass over her head, came up inside the melee fighter’s guard, and hit him once with the pommel. He went down. The female saw her partner drop and froze.
Jayde let her freeze. Turned her back on the female — deliberately, insultingly — and walked toward the tall one.
He was on his knees, cradling his shattered wrist against his chest, face white with pain and shock. The monitoring blocker lay in the dirt beside him, still pulsing. Jayde picked it up. Examined it. Pocketed it.
Then she crouched in front of him. The borrowed blade rested across her knees. Her brown eyes were very still.
"Now," she said. Quietly. The kind of quiet that was worse than shouting. "What were you saying about crippling her cultivation?"
He opened his mouth. Nothing came out.
"That’s what I thought."
She stood. Looked at the other three — two on the ground, one frozen. The nervous one had crawled to his knees, hands fumbling at his belt, eyes wild with the particular terror of someone who’d signed up for easy cruelty and discovered it wasn’t easy anymore.
His hand found his emergency extraction talisman. Crushed it.
He vanished in a flare of white light.
The other two followed in seconds — the female first, then the melee fighter, scrambling for their talismans and crushing them with the desperate urgency of people who wanted to be anywhere else. Three flares of white. Three bodies gone. They’d reappear at the realm’s entry point, minus any jade slips or cores they’d collected. The realm’s penalty for emergency extraction.
The tall one was last. Still on his knees, broken wrist pressed to his chest, staring up at Jayde with an expression that had passed through pain into something colder.
"She’ll hear about—"
"Then she can come herself next time." Jayde’s voice was flat. "Tell her I said so."
He crushed his talisman. The fourth flare took him.
The forest went quiet.
Jayde stood in the clearing. Breathing. The fury hadn’t left — it sat in her chest like an ember, hot and patient, and part of her wanted to follow them to the entry point and finish the conversation. The borrowed blade hummed faintly in her grip, resonating with the intent she was feeding it — protection, rage, the simple absolute conviction that nobody touches what isn’t theirs.
From her soul space, Kazren pulsed once. Not disapproval. Something closer to acknowledgement.
She sheathed the blade. Turned to Eden.
***
The healer was staring at her.
Eden had her back against the rock face still, dark brown hair half-pulled from its tie, blue eyes blazing. Not with fear — the fear had been burned out of her face by whatever she’d been fighting with for the past several minutes. Blood ran from a cut above her eyebrow and from split knuckles on her right hand. Her left arm hung wrong — fracture, radius probably — and her robes were torn at the shoulder where she’d wrenched free of a hold. Bruising was already darkening along her jaw.
She’d fought. Outnumbered four to one, outclassed, running dry on essence, and she’d fought until they’d had to pin her down. The stocky one’s broken nose was proof of that.
She was looking at Jayde the way people looked at things they didn’t expect to exist.
"Your arm," Jayde said.
Eden didn’t answer. Her blue eyes tracked Jayde’s face — searching, cataloguing, doing that thing they did when she encountered something that didn’t fit her categories. Her mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
"You came back for me." Not a question. A statement of fact, spoken with the quiet bewilderment of someone who’d stopped expecting that.
"You were outnumbered."
"I was a target. Associated with you. Coming back for me makes you a bigger target."
"I don’t care."
Something moved behind Eden’s eyes. That flicker again — the candle-behind-glass quality that Jayde had noticed before, visible and untouchable. But stronger now. Brighter. Eden’s jaw worked. Her blue eyes went glassy.
She looked away. Fast. The way people looked away when they didn’t want you to see what was on their face.
(She’s shaking. Not from the fight — from after.)
Post-combat adrenaline response. Normal. But the emotional component suggests—
(She’s upset. That’s what it suggests.)
"Hey." Jayde’s voice came out gruffer than she intended. She wasn’t good at this — the softness, the comfort, the part that didn’t involve hitting things until problems stopped existing. She crouched in front of Eden, keeping her hands visible, the way Green had done for her once. "You’re safe. They’re gone. They can’t come back — emergency extraction dumps them at the entry point, and they lose everything they’ve collected."
Eden nodded. Tight. Controlled. But her eyes were still glassy, and her good hand was pressed hard against her thigh, and the trembling had moved from her fingers to her shoulders.
Jayde waited. The forest breathed around them. Takara sat between them, blue eyes moving from one face to the other, quiet for once.
"Sorry," Eden said. Her voice cracked on it. She wiped her cheek with the back of her good hand — quick, almost angry, the way you wiped tears you hadn’t given permission to fall. "It’s not — I’m not scared. It’s not that."
"Okay."
"You just—" Eden stopped. Swallowed. Her blue eyes found Jayde’s brown ones, and the thing behind her gaze was naked now, unguarded, the raw edge of a grief so old and so deep that it lived in her bones. "You reminded me of someone. Someone who was really dear to me. The way you — defended me. Without thinking about it. Without calculating whether it was worth the risk." Her voice dropped. Rough. Barely held together. "She was like that. Always defending the weak. Always putting herself between people and the things that would hurt them."
(She lost someone.)
Yes.
(Someone important.)
Yes.
Jayde didn’t ask who. Didn’t push. She knew what grief looked like — had worn it, breathed it, carried it across lives that no one on this world knew about. Whatever Eden had lost, it was still alive in her. Still burning.
"She sounds like someone worth remembering," Jayde said. Quietly.
Eden’s eyes closed. The tear track on her cheek caught the light through the canopy. She breathed in. Breathed out. When her eyes opened, the rawness was still there but controlled again — packed down, tucked away, the professional composure of someone who’d had years of practice putting grief in a box and sitting on the lid.
"She was." Eden’s voice was steady now. Almost. "Your arm technique is sloppy, by the way. The redirect on the fireball was good, but your follow-through on the pommel strike telegraphed by a heartbeat."
Jayde blinked.
She’s... critiquing your combat form. While crying.
(I think I like her.)
"My arm technique is fine," Jayde said.
"It’s adequate." Eden wiped her cheek again. Final. Done. "Help me set this fracture and we’ll discuss your footwork over dinner."
***
Eden’s left arm was a clean break — radius, mid-shaft. She diagnosed it herself, set it herself, and bound the splint with the efficient precision of someone who’d done this a hundred times. Jayde watched her do it and filed the observation alongside every other thing about Eden that didn’t fit the cover story of a village healer from Millhaven.
That reduction technique is textbook. No village healer sets bones like that. File it.
(Filed.)
They made the deal over the splint materials. No elaborate negotiation. No Academy posturing.
"I need a combat specialist," Eden said. "You need a healer who can identify spirit herbs without poisoning you."
"Deal."
Takara mewed. Approvingly. Or possibly sarcastically. With him, it was hard to tell.
***
They fell into rhythm faster than either of them expected.
Four days. That was all it took. Four days of moving through the Secret Realm’s forest zone, hunting, gathering, surviving, and the partnership that should have been awkward and provisional became something that felt — wrong word, dangerous word — natural.
Jayde hunted. Eden healed. Jayde chose campsites, set perimeters, and tracked beast movements. Eden identified herbs, prepared poultices, and managed their supplies with the meticulous efficiency of someone who’d survived on rations before. They didn’t discuss the division of labour. It happened the way breathing happened, each of them filling the space the other left.
She’s rationing our water at a rate that suggests training. Not village training. Something structured. File it.
(Filed.)
That is the fourth entry in the file, Jayde. At what point does a file become a pattern?
(When I decide it does. Not before.)
Eden’s arm healed faster than it should have. Two days, and the splint came off. She flexed her fingers, rotated her wrist, nodded once with a satisfied precision that seemed far too practised for someone her age, and said "good bone density response" in a tone that Jayde filed alongside every other observation that didn’t add up.
(Filed.)
The jade slips accumulated. Eden found three in herb patches that Jayde had walked past — the healer’s eye for botanical anomalies catching what combat instincts missed. Jayde found four more in beast lairs, clearing threats that Eden couldn’t handle alone, returning to camp each evening with cores and materials that Eden sorted and catalogued with a system that was — filed — suspiciously organised.
Takara observed everything. He rode on Jayde’s shoulder during travel, curled in Eden’s lap when she was working — the healer had claimed him on the second evening, scooping him up and tucking him into the crook of her good arm while she ground herbs, and Takara had endured this with the long-suffering dignity of a five-thousand-year-old warrior being used as a stress-relief kitten. He purred. He hated that he purred. He purred anyway.
On the third day, Eden said something that made Jayde’s Federation voice go silent.
They were examining a cluster of spirit herbs at the edge of a clearing — medicinal grade, valuable, the kind that would fetch decent merit at the Academy exchange. Eden was cataloguing them, naming species with the rapid precision of someone reading from a textbook, when she paused over a pale blue flower with serrated leaves.
"This one’s contraindicated with essence suppressants," she said. Casually. The way you said something that was obvious. "The alkaloid profile interferes with cultivation channel conductivity. Most healers just avoid it, but if you denatured the active compound first — heat treatment, maybe seventy degrees for three minutes — you could use the base as an anti-inflammatory without the suppressive interaction."
Silence.
That is not herbalism. That is not village healing. That is... something else entirely. File it.
(I know.)
Eden looked up. Caught Jayde’s expression — whatever Jayde’s expression was, behind the brown eyes and the careful blankness that she wore like armour. Something moved in Eden’s blue gaze. Recognition — not of Jayde, not the deep recognition that would come later, but the smaller, sharper recognition of someone who’d just said too much and knew it.
"My village healer was... thorough," Eden said. Carefully.
"Clearly."
A pause. The forest breathing around them, insects and wind and the distant call of a beast neither of them needed to worry about.
"You’re not what you seem either," Eden said. Quiet. Not accusing. Observing. Stating a finding.
"No," Jayde said. "I’m not."
Another pause. Longer.
"That’s fine," Eden said. "I’m not asking."
"I’m not offering."
They looked at each other across the spirit herbs, two people pretending to be less than they were, and something passed between them that was not recognition and not trust and not friendship but was the raw material from which all three could be built.
Eden went back to cataloguing herbs. Jayde went back to scanning the perimeter. Takara purred in the space between them, and if his purring had a quality of smug satisfaction, well, he was a kitten. Kittens couldn’t be smug.
***
Jayde found the seed on the fourth evening while foraging.
She was gathering firewood near an old tree — not spirit-grade, just ancient, its trunk wider than her armspan — when her foot caught on a root and she stumbled, hand bracing against the bark. Something pulsed. Faint. Below the soil.
She dug. Thirty centimetres down, her fingers found it.
A seed. Oblong, the length of her palm, encased in a dark husk that looked like nothing much. Unremarkable. The kind of thing you’d walk past a thousand times.
But it was warm. And when she held it, something resonated — faint, not dramatic, a quiet hum in the place where her deeper essence lived. Like recognition. Like something waking up.
"Eden." Jayde held it out. "What do you make of this?"
Eden took it. Turned it over. Squinted at it with the focused attention of someone running through every reference she’d ever studied. Then she shrugged and handed it back.
"Just a seed. I can’t sense anything from it. No life essence, no cultivation signature, nothing."
Jayde looked at it. Felt the warmth against her palm. The quiet hum.
(This is important.)
We have no data to support that assessment.
(I don’t care. It’s important.)
From the deep quiet of her soul space, Vael’kir hummed. Faint. Not words. Something like an agreement. Kazren stirred but said nothing — the sword spirit’s version of I know what that is, and I am choosing not to tell you.
She slipped the seed into the inner pocket of her pack, next to her ration pouch. Eden had already moved on, arranging firewood, attention elsewhere.
(I’ll figure it out later.)
She didn’t think about it again.
***
Night settled. They sat across the fire — small, efficient, the kind of fire that said we know what we’re doing without either of them needing to explain how they knew. Takara curled between them, blue-tipped ears twitching at sounds in the dark, purring with the involuntary contentment of a creature whose body hadn’t consulted his dignity.
Eden was cataloguing the day’s haul. Herbs sorted by grade, beast cores arranged by essence type, jade slips stacked and counted. Fourteen total between them now. Decent. Not enough to draw attention.
Jayde watched her work. Four days. That was all it had taken for the partnership to stop feeling provisional and start feeling like something she’d have to give up when the realm closed.
(Six days left.)
Five and a half, technically.
(I know.)
She leaned back against the tree behind her. The fire crackled. The forest breathed. And somewhere in the inner pocket of her pack, next to the ration pouch she’d check tomorrow, a seed she’d already forgotten about sat in the dark and waited.







