Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 284 - 279: Academy Deepening (Part 1)

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Chapter 284: Chapter 279: Academy Deepening (Part 1)

Location: Obsidian Academy

Date/Time: Mid-Late Sparkfall, 9939 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm

Forty-seven badges between the dormitory gate and the Refining classroom.

Jayde counted them the way she counted everything — automatically, without appearing to count, her brown eyes tracking the pale gold circles pinned to collars and stitched onto book bags and clipped to the hems of sleeves like tiny suns that didn’t know they were burning. The Radiant Path badges. Small. Tasteful. Glowing faintly with Radiance essence — just enough warmth to feel intentional, not enough to seem aggressive. The kind of glow that said I belong somewhere without saying, and you don’t.

Three weeks ago, when Instructor Lanhua had first offered her support groups, the count had been a dozen. By the time the study circles launched, it’d climbed to a third of the student body. Now — Jayde passed a cluster of second-years comparing badge placements, one girl adjusting another’s pin with the easy familiarity of a shared ritual — now it was closer to half.

On her shoulder, Takara’s ears were forward. His large blue eyes tracked the same badges she did, the three ribbons — pink on the left, pale blue on the right, gold around his neck — shifting with each minute rotation of his head. He looked like a kitten watching something shiny. He wasn’t.

His head turned left. Right. Left again. Methodical. Counting.

Whatever Takara was — and she’d stopped pretending she’d ever find out on his terms — he was counting them too. Good. She could use another pair of eyes.

The badges weren’t the problem. The badges were the symptom.

The problem was what the badges represented: a parallel infrastructure that had grown inside the Academy like a second skeleton. Lanhua’s support groups had evolved. They weren’t just emotional check-ins anymore — they’d become study circles, meditation sessions, community meals, shared cultivation tips, and group formation practice. Everything the Academy provided, the Radiant Path now provided too. But warmer. More personal. With better tea and a teacher who remembered your name before you told her.

Institutional capture. Stage 3 initiated. The social infrastructure IS the ideology now — the group provides belonging, and belonging requires conformity. Not joining equals not belonging. The choice architecture has shifted from opt-in to opt-out, and the social cost of opting out increases daily. Timeline acceleration: faster than initial projections. This operator is exceptionally skilled.

A teacher crossed the courtyard ahead — Instructor Zhao, the Formations lecturer, fiery red hair catching the morning light. He wore a Radiant Path badge on his lapel. Not prominently. Tucked against the collar, almost hidden. But there.

(He wasn’t wearing that last week.)

No. And the significance isn’t that he’s wearing it now. It’s that he probably doesn’t think it’s significant. The teachers who attend Lanhua’s sessions have started unconsciously favouring Temple-affiliated students — not maliciously. They’ve been given community too. Shared meals with colleagues who listen. A sense of purpose beyond curriculum delivery. They genuinely believe they’re being supportive.

That’s what makes it work. The kindness is real. The warmth is real. The belonging is real. And because it’s real, no one questions what it’s attached to.

Jayde reached the Refining classroom and sat in her usual seat — three rows back, left of centre. Takara hopped from her shoulder to the desk, circled twice, and settled on her notebook with the proprietary air of a creature who considered all flat surfaces his personal territory.

On the windowsill beside her desk, something glinted. She looked.

A spirit cricket. Dead. Fat. Iridescent wings still shimmering. Beside it, another. And another — seven in total, arranged in an enthusiastic pile that suggested less precision kill and more look what I found, isn’t it GREAT. One had been half-eaten and then apparently abandoned in favour of catching more.

This was getting ridiculous. Last week, a pile of luminous beetles on her courtyard wall — squashed flat with the joyful thoroughness of something that had discovered a new hobby. Before that, a small mountain of candied grasshoppers stolen from a street vendor’s cart, deposited on her windowsill, still in the paper cone. The vendor had been blaming Academy students.

Takara opened one eye. Looked at the crickets. Looked away. His expression, if a kitten could have expressions, suggested profound professional embarrassment.

(You know who’s doing this.)

He began grooming his paw with aggressive disinterest.

(Thought so.)

She flicked the crickets off the windowsill. Whatever stray cat had adopted her as a gift recipient would eventually get bored. Probably.

She pulled out her formation brush. Began the day’s preparatory exercises. Looked like every other diligent first-year.

And kept counting.

***

"She’s not just recruiting anymore."

Ryo’s voice was pitched low — barely above the ambient noise of the mess hall, calibrated with the unconscious precision of someone who’d grown up in a house where walls had ears. He sat across from Jayde and Eden at their usual table, back to the wall, tawny amber eyes fixed on the bowl he wasn’t eating from. His posture said relaxed student at lunch. His jaw said something else.

Kiran was beside him, hunched over his own bowl, dark hair falling past his jaw in that blue-green shimmer he never acknowledged. Sea-green eyes on the table. Eating fast, methodical — the habit of someone who’d learned early that meals weren’t guaranteed.

"There’s a first-year," Ryo said. "Farm kid. Torrent affinity. He turned down the support group invitation three times." He pushed a piece of congee around his bowl. "Politely. Said he was fine. Thanked them for asking."

Eden’s blue eyes were steady. Her hands — surgeon-precise, always — were still around her tea. "And?"

"His study partners stopped sitting with him. Not all at once — that’d be obvious. One dropped out of their study pair. Then another switched to a Temple circle. Within a week, he was studying alone." Ryo’s voice stayed flat. Controlled. The cold anger of someone who catalogued injustice the way other people catalogued weather. "Then his lab materials were unavailable. Twice. The supply clerk said they were reserved for the study circle participants. Academy resources, allocated through Lanhua’s programme."

(That’s not a coincidence. That’s architecture.)

"His ranking dropped," Ryo continued. "Two places. Not catastrophic. Just enough to feel it. And now the invitation isn’t polite anymore. It’s concerned. ’We’re worried about you. You seem isolated. The group could really help.’"

Silence at the table. Around them, the mess hall hummed — the clatter of bowls, the scrape of benches, the overlapping conversations of two hundred students who were eating and laughing and not thinking about the machinery operating beneath the surface of their social lives. Several tables over, a cluster of badge-wearing students shared notes with the easy warmth of people who’d found their tribe.

"It’s not fair," Ryo said. Quietly. The words flat enough to be a statement, sharp enough to be an accusation aimed at something he couldn’t name.

Eden set down her tea. "It’s not meant to be fair," she said. Her voice was even, precise — the voice she used when she was thinking in straight lines. "It’s meant to be effective."

(Ryo sees injustice. Eden sees methodology. Both right. The question isn’t whether to act — it’s when, and how, and what exposure we can afford.)

Resource gatekeeping through social infrastructure. Classic escalation — Stage 2 enforcement. The operator doesn’t need to threaten. She controls the environment, and the environment applies the pressure. Deniable. Systematic. The farm kid isn’t being punished. He’s being guided toward the only path that leads to the resources he needs to survive.

Jayde looked at Ryo. He was watching the room — not obviously, but his gaze tracked movement the way hers did. He’d been counting too. She’d noticed weeks ago that he sat where she sat: back to a wall, eyes on doors, watching patterns instead of people. Noble’s son. Trained since birth to read rooms for threats.

"We keep watching," Jayde said. "We protect our own. We don’t engage the apparatus directly."

"For how long?" Ryo’s jaw tightened. Not challenging. Measuring.

"Until we understand the full scope of what we’re dealing with."

Ryo held her gaze for a beat. Then he nodded — once, precise, the economy of a gesture that said he’d accepted the decision without accepting the situation. He went back to his congee.

Under the table, Takara’s tail curled around Jayde’s wrist. Brief. Warm. Then his head turned toward the supply counter — ears rotating, locking onto someone specific. He stared for three seconds. Turned back.

She glanced where he’d looked. The supply clerk. Wearing a badge she hadn’t been wearing four days ago.

Of course, he’d noticed. He always noticed.

***

The study period lasted two hours. The classroom held forty students, arranged in clusters of four and five around low tables covered in formation papers and cultivation diagrams. Instructor Zhao circulated between groups, his enthusiasm undimmed by the fact that half his students were struggling with concepts he found self-evidently beautiful.

Kiran sat alone.

Not at a table by himself — the Academy didn’t have single desks in the study hall, so he’d positioned himself at the end of a four-person table where the other three seats were empty. Elbows drawn in, shoulders up — the posture of someone who’d learned to occupy less space than his six-foot frame required.

The Temple-affiliated study circle occupied the three tables nearest the instructor’s station. Eleven students, badges visible, notes shared, voices low and productive. They’d claimed the best light, the newest brushes, the formation templates that were supposed to be communal but had migrated to their corner with the quiet inevitability of resources flowing toward organised groups.

Kiran hadn’t been told he couldn’t join. That was the precision of it. No one had said you can’t sit here. No one had refused him anything. He simply hadn’t been invited — and in a system where invitation was the mechanism of inclusion, non-invitation was exclusion wearing a different face.

He didn’t look at the group. Jayde noticed that — the discipline of it. He’d learned not to look. Looking meant acknowledging the empty chairs around him, and acknowledging meant it was real, and if it was real, then it had happened again, in a new place, and the letters from home still hadn’t come.

A student detached from the Temple circle. Girl. Second-year. Badge prominent. She approached Kiran’s table with the specific smile of someone delivering a message she’d been coached to frame as warmth.

"Hey," she said. "You should come to the Radiant Path session tonight. Instructor Lanhua says everyone’s welcome." She paused. The pause was loaded — rehearsed or instinctive, Jayde couldn’t tell, and it didn’t matter. "Even mixed-heritage students."

Even.

The word hung there. Small. Precise. A pin pushed through the centre of something Kiran carried every day and didn’t talk about. Even — as if his heritage were a threshold, and inclusion were a kindness being extended downward. As if the invitation were charity, and the charity required acknowledging what made him different before it could acknowledge what made him welcome.

"No, thank you." Kiran’s voice was flat. Not angry — emptied. The voice of someone who’d been offered this specific kindness before, in other places, by other smiling faces, and had learned that the warmth came with a price tag printed in ink you couldn’t see until you’d already paid.

The girl’s smile didn’t waver. "The offer’s always open." She returned to her circle. Someone leaned over. Whispered. A glance back at Kiran. Not unkind. Concerned.

The concern was worse than cruelty would’ve been.

After class, the four of them walked the corridor toward the mess hall. It hadn’t been planned — not this time, not the first time. It had just happened, the way formations happen when the components recognise their configuration. Eden fell in on Kiran’s left. Ryo on his right. Jayde a half-step behind, Takara on her shoulder, ears forward.

No one mentioned it. No one needed to. The formation was the response.

(He’s stronger than they think. The isolation is painful but it hasn’t broken his stride. It’s bent his shoulders, not his spine.)

Noted: Kiran demonstrates sustained operational resilience under sustained social pressure. Endurance-type personality. This will matter.

Kiran’s hand went to the braided cord on his left wrist — the elven knotwork his mother had woven before he’d left for the Academy. He touched it once. Didn’t look at anyone.

Ryo’s hand moved too. Subtle. Under his robes, fingers finding the cord around his neck — his father’s signet ring, hidden, never explained. A mirror gesture. Probably unconscious.

Two boys reaching for the things that tethered them to somewhere that wasn’t here.

***

The predawn training grounds were empty except for the cold.

Sparkfall mornings bit — not the deep freeze of Voidmarch or the bitter edge of Ashwhisper, but the clean, thin cold of a season remembering that warmth was temporary. Jayde’s breath misted. The weighted practice sword was heavier than it needed to be, which was exactly why Heizan had chosen it.

He sat on the stone bench at the edge of the training circle, bare feet flat on cold rock, eating a peach. The first suggestion of dawn caught his iron-grey hair — not light yet, just the darkness becoming slightly less certain of itself. His dark eyes watched Jayde the way they always watched: without hurry, without agenda, with the patient attention of someone who’d spent a lifetime learning to see what other people’s eyes slid past.

"Seventh form," he said. "Then ninth. Then seventh again."

Jayde moved. The weighted sword carved arcs through the predawn air — seventh form flowing into ninth, the transition point where her two different training schools met and the seams showed if she wasn’t careful. She’d been working these transitions for weeks. The sword was becoming something she understood not just with her muscles but with something beneath them — the architecture of movement, the way weight shifted through a body like water through a channel.

She held back. Always held back. Not the brute-force suppression of power — Heizan had taught her better than that. The careful calibration of appearing talented without appearing impossible. A second-year who was good. Not a reincarnated commander who’d spent six decades mastering the mathematics of violence.

"Stop," Heizan said.

She stopped.

He set down the peach — half-eaten, balanced on the bench’s edge with the casual precision of a man whose relationship with fruit was both deeply personal and entirely unselfconscious. Then he stood. Crossed to her. Reached out with his damaged left hand and adjusted her grip — one finger. The index. A fraction of an inch forward on the hilt.

The sword’s weight changed. Not physically — the balance shifted. What had been a tool became something with intention. The blade wasn’t heavier, but it said something different now. Something quieter.

"The sword isn’t a weapon," Heizan said. "It’s a sentence. Every movement says something. Your seventh form says I was taught by someone exceptional, and I am holding back the extent of what I know." He adjusted a second finger. "Now it says I am a talented student who is working very hard and progressing well."

The difference was a fraction of an inch. The difference was everything.

(How does he do that?)

From the soul space, a presence stirred. Kazren — ancient, acerbic, perpetually unimpressed by anyone who was not him — had been silent through the drills. He was not silent now.

[He is not wrong,] the sword spirit sent. No contractions. Never contractions. Forty thousand years of existence had not softened his diction. [The blade speaks whether the wielder intends it or not. This man understands what most swordsmen never learn: that deception is a discipline, not an absence.]

Structural analysis: the adjustment changes the visible wrist angle without altering the force vector or weight distribution. The biomechanics are identical. Only the optics change. This man understands the gap between function and presentation at an engineering level.

"When you’re watched," Heizan said, returning to his bench and his peach, "move like a talented second-year. When you’re not watched, move like yourself. The distinction will keep you alive longer than any technique I could teach you."

Jayde adjusted her stance. Ran the seventh form again. This time, the sword said what she wanted it to say — competent, earnest, working hard. Not trained by a man who understood weight distribution at a level that shouldn’t exist in a frontier village.

"Better," Heizan said. He bit into the peach. Chewed thoughtfully. "Your ninth is still showing old habits in the hip rotation. Stiffen it. A student at your stated level wouldn’t have that fluidity yet."

"Make it worse on purpose."

"Make it appropriate on purpose. There’s a difference." His dark eyes held hers. "Camouflage isn’t about being less. It’s about choosing what to show. A sword that says nothing is suspicious. A sword that says the right thing is invisible."

She ran it again. And again. Forty repetitions, each one a negotiation between what she could do and what she should appear to do. The practice sword hummed through the cold air, and the sky shifted from black to grey to the first pale suggestion of gold along the mountain’s eastern edge.

Heizan finished his peach. Set the core beside him on the bench, where it joined two others from earlier in the week — a small cairn of consumed fruit that he never cleaned up and no one dared move.

"Same time tomorrow," he said. Not a question.

Jayde wiped down the practice sword. Racked it. The predawn cold had seeped into her fingers, and the sword’s vibration still lived in her palms — that particular resonance that came from forty repetitions of holding yourself to a standard that wasn’t your real one.

Through the bond, Reiko stirred. He’d been a warm weight at the edge of her awareness all morning — awake, restless, probably wedging himself into doorframes again while Isha pretended not to notice. Last night in the Pavilion, he’d insisted on demonstrating his latest size-shift attempt. House-cat to lion in under a second. Only two things had broken.

[Training done?] The mental voice was sleep-rough but alert. Always alert now. The bond between their Nexus Cores hummed constant and bright — nothing like the muffled distance of his transformation months.

Done.

[The fruit man teaches well. He smells like peaches and regret.]

That’s... oddly specific.

[I have been smelling him through the bond for forty minutes. I have opinions.] A pause. [Come home tonight. Yinxin says your wings are overdue. She used the voice.]

The queen voice?

[The voice that means I hide behind White until it passes.]

The dawn light touched the training grounds. Tonight she’d go home — step through the Pavilion entrance and let the disguise fall away, feel her real face settle back into place like breathing after holding your breath all day. Silver-white hair instead of black. Gold eyes instead of brown. Yinxin would insist on wing care. White would be waiting at the training circle, already warmed up, already impatient. Green would have tea ready and a lecture prepared about something she’d done wrong in Formations class three days ago that she hadn’t even realised was wrong.

The wyrmlings would be bigger. They were always bigger. Last visit, Tianxin had singed Reiko’s tail and then hidden behind Jayde’s leg, which worked until Reiko’s leg was also behind Jayde’s leg, and things had escalated from there.

(Home.)

Somewhere below, students were waking to another day of classes and study circles and badges and belonging that cost exactly what it was designed to cost.

Takara stretched on the bench where he’d been sleeping through the entire session — or appearing to. He dropped to the ground, padded to the edge of the training circle, and sat. Stared at a specific point on the rooftop across the courtyard. Held it. Then turned away with the air of a creature who’d just completed a very boring visual inspection of nothing whatsoever.

Jayde followed his sightline. The rooftop was empty. Of course it was.

Except — and this was the thing about Takara that she’d stopped trying to explain — she could’ve sworn she’d caught movement up there a moment before. Something grey-and-white, low to the tiles, gone before she blinked. A bird, probably. The Academy had birds.

(That was not a bird.)

She scooped him up. He draped across her shoulder with the boneless competence of something that had been riding shoulders since before she was born. One ear rotated backward — toward the rooftop — then forward again. Satisfied.

From the soul space, Kazren stirred. [Your ninth form is still two degrees off. I have been observing for the last thirty minutes. The deficiency is in the hip rotation, precisely as the fruit man identified, though his correction was insufficiently aggressive.]

Noted.

[It is always noted. It is never corrected.]

She walked back toward the Elite tier. The badges would be waiting. But so would tonight, and the Pavilion, and the people who knew her real name.

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