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Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 201 - 196: The Dream That Changed Everything
Location: Pavilion
Date/Time: Day 787-788 (Since Nexus Contract) - 23-24 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm
The nightmare began like all nightmares—with something precious being destroyed.
Jayde stood in a forest clearing she didn’t recognize. Not her cave. Not any part of the Dark Forest she’d explored. The trees were older here, their bark almost black, their canopy so thick that only scattered shafts of light pierced through to the undergrowth below.
She wasn’t alone.
Reiko crouched beside her, fur bristling, mercury rune blazing on his forehead. His lips were pulled back to reveal fangs that could crush bone, and his growl vibrated through the ground beneath her feet.
Threat assessment, the tactical part of her mind noted automatically. Multiple hostiles. Encirclement pattern. Professional formation.
White-gold armor gleamed between the trees. Hunters. Dozens of them. Moving with the coordinated precision of soldiers who’d trained together for years, who’d killed together, who knew exactly how to bring down prey that fought back.
"Surrender," one called. A woman’s voice, smooth and cold. "Come peacefully, and the beast lives."
Jayde felt her lips move, heard her own voice respond—but the words weren’t hers. "You’re lying."
The hunters attacked.
What followed was chaos. Fire erupted from her hands—golden fire, purer than anything she’d ever summoned, hot enough to melt armor on contact. Reiko fought beside her, claws tearing, teeth rending, the bond between them singing with shared purpose.
But there were too many.
The light came from behind. Brilliant. Blinding. Three hunters pouring Radiance essence into a coordinated strike that slammed into Reiko’s flank with the force of a falling star.
Her shadowbeast screamed.
The sound tore through Jayde’s mind like broken glass. She felt the bond shudder, felt something crack in the connection that had become as natural as breathing.
"REIKO!"
She was on her knees. She didn’t remember falling. Reiko lay beside her, dark fur smoking where the light had touched, mercury rune flickering like a candle in a hurricane. His eyes found hers—dark and deep and full of something that looked terrifyingly like goodbye.
No.
The word echoed through every part of her consciousness. Federation and child alike, united in absolute refusal.
No. Not him. Not this. NOT ACCEPTABLE.
And then Reiko’s eyes went dark.
The bond went silent.
And something inside Jayde... broke.
***
Fire.
Fire everywhere.
Fire pouring from her hands, her eyes, her skin. Fire that didn’t just burn but consumed—hungry, mindless, reaching for anything it could devour. The hunters died first. Then the trees. Then the earth itself, cracking and blackening beneath waves of heat that had nothing to do with cultivation and everything to do with grief given form.
She was screaming. She knew she was screaming. Could feel her throat tearing with the force of it. But the sound didn’t matter. Nothing mattered.
Reiko was dead.
Reiko was dead.
The fire spread. Villages appeared in the distance—and then they didn’t, swallowed by golden flames that moved faster than any natural blaze. People ran. People burned. People stopped being people and became ash, became nothing, became fuel for the inferno that had replaced her heart.
She saw Yinxin. Saw the silver dragon trying to shield three small forms with her own body. Saw the fire reach them anyway. Saw tiny wings crumpling, scales charring, small lives extinguished.
She saw the whole world burning.
And somewhere, somehow, she saw herself—standing at the center of the destruction with wings of fire spread wide and eyes that held nothing but emptiness. Not grief anymore. Not rage. Just... nothing. A hollow thing wearing her face, laughing with a sound that had forgotten what joy meant.
LEAVE.
The word slammed into her consciousness like a physical blow.
LEAVE. TOMORROW. YOUR FAMILY’S ONLY HOPE IS THE ROAD.
Images flooded through her mind. The shadowbeast torn apart by light. Dragon babies burning in silver arms. The road stretching away from the forest, away from the cave, away from the trap that was closing around them.
IF YOU STAY, THEY FIND YOU. IF YOU STAY, HE DIES. IF YOU STAY—
The vision shattered.
***
Jayde woke with her hand already reaching for a weapon that wasn’t there.
Darkness. Familiar darkness. The ceiling of her room in the Pavilion, the soft breathing of Reiko curled at the foot of her bed, the distant sounds of the sanctuary’s artificial night-cycle.
Threat assessment: none immediate.
She forced herself to breathe. In. Out. In. Out. The rhythm of a soldier who’d learned long ago that panic killed faster than bullets.
(Reiko. Is Reiko—)
He’s here. Alive. Breathing. I can feel the bond.
The child’s terror eased slightly. But only slightly.
Jayde sat up slowly, careful not to disturb the massive shadowbeast who’d shifted in his sleep, one paw twitching with whatever dreams occupied his unconscious mind. The mercury rune on his forehead pulsed with soft light—healthy, stable, nothing like the flickering death-rattle she’d witnessed in the vision.
That wasn’t a dream.
The thought crystallized with uncomfortable certainty. Dreams were fuzzy. Fragmented. They slipped away like water through fingers, leaving only impressions and emotions behind.
This was different.
Every detail remained sharp. The exact positions of the hunters. The precise angle of the light that killed Reiko. The words—leave, tomorrow, your family’s only hope is the road—burned into her memory like brands.
This was structured. Intentional. The visual quality was too consistent, the narrative too coherent. Dreams don’t work like that. This felt more like... intelligence. Like someone was transmitting tactical data.
(Then what was it?)
Unknown. Insufficient data. The tactical voice paused, an unusual hesitation. But whoever sent it wanted us to remember. Wanted us to act on the information.
(Sent it? Someone SENT that nightmare?)
Working hypothesis. The specificity suggests intelligence gathering and transmission. Someone saw possible futures and projected them into our sleeping mind.
Jayde pushed the blankets aside and rose from the bed. Her body moved automatically—checking the room’s exits, cataloging potential threats, running through the security protocols that had kept her alive through sixty years of warfare and seventeen years of survival on a world that wanted her dead.
Nothing seemed amiss. The Pavilion hummed with its usual ambient energy. Beyond the walls of her private quarters, she could sense the familiar presences: Yinxin in the dragon sanctuary with the wyrmlings; the small white kitten curled on its favorite cushion in the common room; Green and White in their respective training halls.
Everyone safe. Everyone alive.
For now.
Need more information, the tactical voice insisted. Isha will have context we lack.
(What if it’s a trap? What if someone’s trying to make us run into danger instead of away from it?)
Valid concern. But the cost-benefit analysis favors investigation. If the vision is accurate, staying here results in catastrophic loss. If it’s a trap, leaving gives us mobility and options. Stagnation in an uncertain threat environment is suboptimal.
Jayde pulled on clothes without conscious thought. Dark fabric, practical cut, nothing that would restrict movement or catch on obstacles. Her fingers found the familiar weight of her veiling artifact, settling it into place around her neck.
Time to find Isha.
***
The Pavilion’s central chamber never truly slept.
Ambient light shifted through gentle cycles—warmer tones during what passed for day, cooler blues during the artificial night—but the space itself remained active. Cultivation arrays hummed in the walls. Training equipment stood ready for use. The vast library spiraled upward into shadows, its countless scrolls and tomes waiting for seekers of knowledge.
Isha materialized from the shadows near the main entrance, his kitsune form coalescing from wisps of silver light. Nine tails fanned behind him, each one tipped with ethereal flame that cast no heat but plenty of illumination.
"Contractor." His voice held neither surprise nor concern—simply acknowledgment. "You are awake earlier than expected."
"I had a dream." Jayde kept her voice steady. "Except it wasn’t a dream."
Something shifted in Isha’s ancient eyes. A flicker of... recognition? Interest? It was hard to read emotion in a face that had existed for millennia.
"Describe it." 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂
She did. Every detail, every image, every word that had been seared into her consciousness. The hunters in white-gold armor. Reiko’s death. Her own transformation into something that burned worlds. The voice—urgent, desperate, feminine—commanding her to leave.
LEAVE. TOMORROW. YOUR FAMILY’S ONLY HOPE IS THE ROAD.
When she finished, silence hung between them.
Isha’s tails had gone still. His form seemed somehow denser, more present than usual—as if the spirit had gathered himself for something significant.
"This was not a dream," he said finally. "Nor was it a vision of your own making."
"I’d figured that much out myself." Jayde kept her voice level despite the tension coiling in her gut. "What I need to know is what it was. And whether I should act on it."
"It was a seer-sent vision." Isha moved closer, his movement fluid and unhurried. "A true prophet reached across distance—considerable distance, given the clarity you describe—to deliver a warning directly into your sleeping mind."
Prophet, the tactical voice noted. Federation had theoretical research on precognitive abilities. Never proven, but not dismissed either. This world has magic. Prophecy may be a genuine phenomenon here.
(A prophet sent me a nightmare about Reiko dying?)
"How is that possible?" Jayde asked aloud. "I didn’t think seers could just... reach into someone’s mind like that."
"They cannot. Not normally." Isha’s expression grew grave. "Receiving visions is one matter—the gift chooses what to show and when. But sending them? Projecting across realms to touch a specific consciousness?" His tails resumed their gentle swaying. "That requires drawing on something beyond cultivation. It requires burning life itself."
The words landed like stones in still water.
"Life itself," Jayde repeated carefully. "You mean..."
"I mean that whoever sent you this warning likely sacrificed years of their own existence to do so. For someone so young—and the signature felt young, newly awakened—the cost would have been catastrophic. It might have cost her life, or at least a significant portion of it."
Years of existence. That’s not a trivial investment. Someone burned their own lifespan to warn me about a possible future.
(Why? Who would do that for a stranger?)
"I felt the birth of a new Prophetess several days ago," Isha continued. "A pulse of prophetic awakening somewhere in the Mid Realm. Young. Powerful. Untrained." His eyes met Jayde’s. "If she is the one who sent this vision, she may have paid with years of her natural life. Perhaps more. The signature I sensed afterward was... diminished. Changed."
Years.
Someone had traded years of their life to send a warning to a stranger.
That’s not the action of an enemy. Enemies don’t pay in blood and years for the privilege of warning you.
"How do I know this isn’t a trap?" Jayde asked anyway. The question needed to be voiced, even if the answer seemed increasingly obvious. "Someone trying to manipulate me into fleeing toward danger rather than away from it?"
Isha’s expression shifted—something that might have been respect flickering in those ancient eyes. "Because a trap wouldn’t cost the trapper years of their life. Deception is cheap; what you received was purchased at an extraordinary price." His tails swept in a slow arc. "Someone with prophetic sight nearly destroyed themselves to warn you. That is not the action of an enemy. That is the action of someone who saw a future terrible enough to justify any sacrifice to prevent it."
Concur with assessment. The cost-structure of this communication argues strongly for genuine warning rather than manipulation.
(She saw Reiko die. She saw me become... that thing. And she cared enough to hurt herself, warning me.)
Jayde was quiet for a long moment, processing. The Federation part of her mind ran calculations—threat assessments, probability matrices, tactical options. The child part simply trembled with the remembered image of Reiko’s eyes going dark.
"The vision showed hunters finding us here," she said finally. "White-gold armor. Radiance essence. They knew exactly where we were and came in force."
"Temple hunters." Isha’s voice hardened. "Sharlin’s instruments. If they’ve located you..."
"Then staying is death." Jayde straightened, feeling the familiar weight of command settling onto her shoulders. "Academy enrollment is three months away. But the vision said tomorrow. Said leaving is our only hope."
"She sacrificed part of herself to give you this warning," Isha said quietly. "That is not done lightly. Listen to it."
The calculus is simple. Unknown individual paid an extraordinary cost to warn us. Ignoring that investment would be tactically foolish. More than that—it would be dishonorable.
(She gave years of her life for me. For Reiko. For people she’s never met.)
"Then I’d be a fool to ignore it." Jayde met the spirit’s eyes, her own gold-amber gaze hardening with resolve. "Whatever it costs, whoever gave that warning—I won’t let their sacrifice be meaningless."
Isha inclined his head. "What will you do?"
The question hung in the air between them. Beyond the central chamber, the Pavilion continued its quiet rhythms—the hum of cultivation arrays, the whisper of essence flows, the distant sounds of a sanctuary that had become home.
A home she might have to leave behind.
Decision point. We have received intelligence from a credible source at significant cost. The source had no apparent motivation for deception. The warning is specific: location compromised, timeline urgent, action required.
(Reiko. Yinxin. The wyrmlings. Everyone I care about.)
Everyone we care about. If the vision is accurate, staying means watching them die. Leaving means uncertainty—but uncertainty is survivable. Death is not.
Jayde drew a deep breath. Let it out slowly.
"I need to gather everyone," she said. "There’s a decision to be made. And it’s not one I can make alone."
Isha nodded once, his form already beginning to shimmer at the edges. "I will ensure they are awake and assembled. Take what time you need to prepare yourself—but do not take too long. If the prophet’s warning is accurate, every hour matters."
He dissolved into silver light, leaving Jayde alone in the Pavilion’s heart.
She stood there for a long moment, surrounded by the soft glow of ancient magic and the weight of a choice that would change everything. Somewhere in Doha, a young woman had paid in years and blood to send a message across impossible distances. Had paid to save strangers she’d never met. Had paid because she’d seen a future terrible enough to justify any sacrifice to prevent it.
LEAVE. TOMORROW. YOUR FAMILY’S ONLY HOPE IS THE ROAD.
(I don’t know your name,) the child’s voice whispered into the silence. (I don’t know your face. But I hear you. I’ll listen.)
We honor sacrifices by acting on them. The time for deliberation is ending.
The time for action approaches.
Jayde turned and walked toward the common room, where her family would soon gather to hear news that would upend everything they’d planned.
The prophet had given her a warning.
Now she had to decide what to do with it.







