©Novel Buddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 268 - 263: The Wrong Answer (Part 1)
Location: Mid Realm — Temple of Light
Date/Time: 19–28 Emberrise, 9939 AZI
Realm: Mid Realm / Radiant Realm
The reports arrived at dawn.
Sharlin read them standing. She never read intelligence seated — sitting suggested patience, and patience suggested that bad news could be absorbed comfortably. Bad news should hurt. It should arrive while you were already upright, already braced, already prepared to move.
The first report was three pages. Clean handwriting, professional formatting, the particular dryness of a field hunter’s assessment stripped of interpretation. Mixed-blood settlements. The outcast communities scattered across the Mid Realm’s no-man’s-land — the disputed territories between the Ironveil Kingdom and the Silverleaf Territories, where neither royal house patrolled and where abominations bred freely in their squalid little villages.
Six weeks ago, Sharlin hadn’t known they existed. Not really. Mixed-blood outcasts squatting in the primordial forests — beneath notice, beneath contempt. They’d been someone else’s problem. King Aldren’s problem, petitioning the Temple every season to help eradicate "the vermin breeding on crown land."
Then the entity raised its quota. Five hundred souls per quarter, and Sharlin couldn’t pull three hundred and twelve from the eastern provinces without drawing investigations. She’d been pacing her study, calculating diminishing returns and growing scrutiny, when the shadow guard had mentioned the mixed-bloods. Aldren’s petition. Eight hundred thousand people that no kingdom claimed, no royal house protected, no one would miss.
Cattle, she’d thought. They’re cattle. An endless supply.
She’d moved fast. Plans drafted in hours — children sorted by essence potential, breeding-age females kept as stock, the rest disposed of. Thirty days. Efficient. Clean. The answer to every quota problem she’d face for the next century.
And now the scouts were telling her that her cattle had vanished.
Empty.
Not destroyed. Not burned. Not the aftermath of violence or plague or the hundred other endings that befell populations who lived beneath the notice of greater powers. Just... empty. Food on tables, some of it still edible. Cook fires recently cold. Gardens tended. Animals fed and then released — someone had taken the time to open pens and coops before leaving, which meant the departure was organized. Deliberate. Planned.
Every settlement on the list. Fifty-five communities. Eight hundred thousand people, gone.
Sharlin’s green eyes moved across the pages. Her study in the Temple of Light was pristine — white marble floors, gold-veined pillars, shelves of crystal intelligence spheres organized by realm and priority. The morning light through the arched windows cast everything in warm gold. She wore white and gold robes that cost more than most settlements earned in a decade, and her auburn hair fell in lustrous waves past her shoulders, perfectly maintained even at this hour.
Her hands shook.
She pressed them flat against the desk. Nails — manicured, painted with pearl lacquer — bit into polished wood. The tremor stopped. Controlled. Buried.
The second report was worse. Witness interviews — border town residents near the vanished communities. A tavern owner in Greenveil, established for two years, respectable. Three merchants along the eastern trade roads. Farmers on the outskirts.
They all told the same story.
"We saw them. Thousands. Heading east. Families. Children." The tavern owner’s testimony was the most detailed. "They looked terrified. They said someone was coming for them and there was nowhere safe."
East. All heading east.
The third report was the one that made her nails draw blood from her palms.
A trail. Not faint — the opposite. Abandoned wagons on the eastern roads. Dropped belongings — clothing, children’s toys, cooking pots. The kind of things people leave behind when they’re running and can’t carry everything. Thousands of footprints converging on the same destination.
The Riftmaw.
Camp evidence at the approach perimeter. Cook fires, cold. Bedrolls. Supply caches half-eaten, abandoned in haste. And footprints — thousands of them — leading into the lightning field.
Footprints in. None out.
***
Melindra arrived at the ninth bell.
The elderly advisor moved slowly — ironbark cane tapping marble, grey hair pulled back in its perpetual severe bun, her lined face carrying the particular expression of someone who had already heard the bad news and had spent the walk over composing exactly how many of Sharlin’s decisions she intended to question.
"High Priestess." Melindra settled into the chair across the desk without being invited. Her joints protested. She ignored them. "I’ve read the preliminary reports."
"And?"
"Eight hundred thousand people don’t walk into the Riftmaw willingly." Melindra’s grey eyes were steady. "The Riftmaw’s survival rate is less than one in a hundred thousand. That’s not an escape route. That’s mass suicide."
"Unless someone led them through."
Melindra’s cane tapped once. "Who could navigate the Riftmaw?"
Sharlin didn’t answer immediately. She stood at the window, looking down at the Temple of Light’s pristine architecture — white spires, gold domes, the institutional beauty of divine power made manifest. Beyond the Temple, the Mid Realm’s capital stretched in orderly terraces. Beautiful. Controlled. Hers.
"The Riftmaw is a temporal fracture. Space and time bleeding through where the barriers never healed after the Sundering." Her voice was precise. Analytical. The voice of a woman reassembling a puzzle from pieces she didn’t want to touch. "Lightning and thunder that haven’t stopped in forty thousand years. Dimensional discharge that can disintegrate an Apexblight cultivator. Nobody survives passage. Nobody navigates it."
"Then the mixed-bloods are dead."
"No." Sharlin turned from the window. Her green eyes held the particular brightness of a mind clicking pieces together — the satisfaction of logic, the dangerous pleasure of certainty. "They’re not dead. Someone led them through. Someone who came FROM the Riftmaw. Someone who knew the passages because she’d already survived them."
Melindra waited.
"Six months ago," Sharlin said, "a pulse moved through the realms. Silver dragon essence. A Silver Queen — the first in millennia." She began to pace. Three steps to the window. Three steps back. Robes swishing against marble. "Around the same time, my seers detected a new Prophetess awakening. Somewhere in the Mid Realm. We’ve been hunting both — separately. Two targets. Two searches."
"You’re suggesting they’re connected?"
"I’m suggesting they’re the SAME."
Melindra’s cane stopped tapping.
Sharlin’s pace quickened. The reasoning poured out — cold, precise, each point landing with the click of a lock tumbling open. "Silver Queens historically had prophetic bloodlines — it’s documented. Seer abilities running through the silver dragon lineage for a hundred thousand years. A silver queen with prophetic gifts IS a prophetess. One being. Not two."
"High Priestess—"
"Consider the Riftmaw." Sharlin stopped at her desk, palms flat, leaning forward. "The temporal tears. Things survive in there — things from other times, other eras. Xueteng was hunted to extinction. Every silver dragon queen killed or captured, the entire lineage supposedly eradicated. But what if she or another queen hid something before they fell? An egg. A clutch. Hidden in a temporal pocket where it wouldn’t age, wouldn’t decay, wouldn’t be detectable for millennia."
"That’s... speculative."
"It’s logical." Sharlin’s voice gained the particular edge it took on when she was certain — the dangerous, seductive certainty that had built an empire and blinded her to everything outside its architecture. "An egg hidden in the Riftmaw forty thousand years ago could hatch NOW if the timestream released it. A silver queen emerging from temporal displacement — that explains the sudden appearance better than spontaneous awakening. No lineage. No parents. No territory. Just... emergence. From a place where time itself is broken."
Melindra was quiet. The particular quiet of someone reassessing a position she’d been prepared to argue against — because the logic, laid out like that, was difficult to dismiss.
"She emerged," Sharlin said. "She foresaw my plans — because that’s what prophetesses DO. She warned the mixed-bloods before my deadline. She led them through the Riftmaw to wherever she came from. To safety. Beyond my reach."
"One thing." Melindra’s cane tapped once. "The demon realm sealed its borders. Weeks before the disappearance."
Sharlin paused. "And?"
"And then eight hundred thousand people vanish. The timing is... notable."
"The demons close their borders every few centuries. Ren’s been posturing since before you were born — border closures, trade restrictions, diplomatic silences. It’s what dying species do. They curl inward." Sharlin’s lip curled. "Eight million remnants huddling in their volcanic wasteland. They can barely maintain population contracts. Whatever tantrum prompted their latest closure has nothing to do with my mixed-bloods." 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝓮𝒘𝙚𝙗𝒏𝙤𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝒐𝙢
The name. Even saying it casually made something twist behind her ribs. She’d said it clinically. As though the syllable didn’t taste like ten thousand years of wanting.
"A silver dragon queen doesn’t need demons," Sharlin continued. "Silver queens can create pocket spaces. Dimensional refuges. She could hide a population anywhere — another time, another plane, somewhere the Riftmaw’s tears lead that we can’t map."
Melindra met her eyes. Held them. Then inclined her head — the minimum gesture of deference, performed with the maximum absence of agreement.
"As you say, High Priestess."
***
The orders took three hours to draft.
Sharlin wrote them herself. Every word a commitment. Every commitment a thread in a web that, once cast, could not be easily unspun.
The Riftmaw first. The Riftmaw couldn’t be destroyed — no force in Doha could close wounds in reality that had been bleeding since the Sundering — but it could be warded. She dispatched three Apexblight-tier formation specialists to layer suppression across every accessible entry point. If the silver queen tried to return through her little temporal doorway, she’d find it shut. And if she tried to force it open, every sensor in Sharlin’s network would scream.
"Rath’el var soketh meil’an," Sharlin murmured, writing. Four birds with one stone. The wards sealed the passage, detected any attempted breach, cut off remaining mixed-blood communities from the route, and told the queen — wherever she was hiding — that the Temple of Light was paying attention.
The dual search collapsed next. She’d been hunting a prophetess and a silver queen as separate targets for months. Wasted resources. Wasted time. Now the parameters merged into a single profile: silver dragon essence, prophetic resonance, young, powerful, recently emerged from temporal displacement. One being. One hunt.
She allocated agents across the Upper and Mid Realms — increased security in her own domain, fresh operatives in every major Mid Realm city, and outcast territory. The queen had been operating among the mixed-blood communities. Someone had seen her. Someone had spoken to her. Someone knew where she’d gone.
Lower Realm.
Sharlin’s quill paused.
"Barbarian territories," she murmured. "No infrastructure for a population that size. No political structures capable of hiding eight hundred thousand people. Irrelevant."
She moved on. The Lower Realm received nothing. Minimal coverage. The same handful of agents who’d been planted there years ago — fifty cultivators who’d accepted permanent cultivation damage to cross realm barriers, scattered across a vast wilderness of savages and beasts. Not worth reinforcing.
She set the quill down. Sealed the directives with Radiance essence — her personal signature, unmistakable — and summoned the guard.
"Commander Voss."
The guard at the study door stepped in. Broad-shouldered, silver-masked, the professional blankness of a man who had learned early that expression was a liability in Sharlin’s presence.
"These directives go to the Riftmaw team immediately. Priority escort. And—" She paused. Considered. "The witnesses from the eastern border towns. Seven of them gave consistent testimony. Too consistent. People who watch eight hundred thousand refugees march past their doors don’t tell the same story with the same words. They disagree on details. They remember different things. They argue."
She tapped the witness report. The tavern owner from Greenveil. Two years established. Respectable. Detailed testimony that painted a picture of terrified families fleeing east. It was perfect. And perfection was suspicious.
"Bring the tavern owner from Greenveil to the Quiet Garden. If his memories were seeded, I want to know who planted them."
Voss didn’t react visibly. But something shifted behind the mask — a micro-adjustment of posture, a jaw tightening beneath silver. The involuntary response of a man who had seen what the Quiet Garden did to its occupants.
"At once, High Priestess."
He left. The study door closed with the soft precision of expensive hinges.
Sharlin stood alone. Her green eyes moved to the directives on her desk. Riftmaw warded. Agents redirected. The silver queen–prophetess hunted across two realms. The Greenveil tavern owner on his way to the Quiet Garden.
Four birds. One stone. Her father had taught her that — economy of force, every action serving multiple ends. Before she’d had him killed.
***
She waited until the corridor was silent. Until the Temple’s ambient hum — Radiance essence flowing through formation-laced walls — was the only sound.
Then she crossed to the eastern wall.
The landscape painting hung where it had hung for five thousand years. Unremarkable — a valley scene, distant mountains, technically competent but emotionally vacant. The kind of art that existed to fill space. No one looked at it twice.
Sharlin pressed the lower-left corner. The painting swung outward on concealed hinges, revealing the alcove behind.
Purple eyes looked back at her.
The portrait was old. The pigments had deepened over five millennia — raven-black hair darker now, jade-white skin warmer, the shadows along the jaw more pronounced. The artist had been the finest in the Radiant Realm, and the result captured something no amount of talent should have rendered: the specific quality of stillness that Ren carried. The weight of him. The way he occupied space as though reality had been designed around his presence and was only now fulfilling its purpose.
He wasn’t smiling. He was simply present. Caught in a moment of unguarded attention thirteen thousand years ago, looking at something beyond the frame with an expression that held neither joy nor sorrow but both — balanced on the edge of whatever thought had occupied the demon king when the artist had seen him and known: this. This is the moment.
Sharlin’s composure cracked.
Not dramatically. Something quieter. The slow giving-way of a structure bearing too much weight for too long. Hairline fissures spreading through stone that looked solid from the outside but was riddled with stress from within.
She touched the frame. Gold leaf worn thin where her fingers always rested — exposed wood, five thousand years of contact eroding gilding meant to last forever.
"Two left," she whispered. To the painting. To the purple eyes that would never look at her. "The queen-prophetess I’ll capture. She’ll serve me the way the old one did — chained, broken, prophesying on command. I’ll control every future she sees."
Her fingers traced the painted jaw. Dried pigment under pearl-lacquered nails.
"And the other one. Your truemate." The word came out ugly. Mangled by ten thousand years of hatred for a woman she’d never met — a woman who didn’t deserve him, who would never deserve him, whose very existence was an insult to everything Sharlin had built and suffered and sacrificed. "I’ll find her, my love. And when I do, I won’t just kill her. I’ll unmake her. Burn the soul so completely that the bond has nothing left to reach for."
Her voice barely carried past her own lips. The composure fractures let something through that she never showed anyone — not Melindra, not her guards, not the screaming occupants of the Quiet Garden. Something raw. Something that had been sixteen years old once, standing in a crowd of awestruck humans watching a demon king cross the Radiant Bridge, and had felt the entire architecture of her future rearrange itself around a single pair of purple eyes.
"And then it will be just us, my love. The way it was always meant to be."
She stood there. The morning light moved across the study floor, marking time she refused to count.
Then the composure reassembled. Piece by piece. Green eyes hardening. Jaw setting. Shoulders squaring beneath white and gold robes. The High Priestess of the Temple of Light, architect of an empire that spanned realms, master of intelligence networks and divine suppression, and the quiet machinery of children ground into pills for the thing she served.
She closed the alcove. The landscape painting swung back into place.
Unremarkable. Technically competent. Emotionally vacant.
Just like her.







