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Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 213 - 208: Seeds of Hope
Location: Demon Realm - Royal Palace, Obsidian City
Date/Time: 4 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Upper Realm
The communication crystal dimmed, and Ren stood alone in his private chambers, Voresh’s words still echoing through his mind.
I have found my truemate.
After ten thousand years of nothing. After watching his people slowly fade, one leaf at a time. After presiding over countless Kael’thros ceremonies, honoring demons who chose death over devil transformation.
Hope.
For the first time in millennia, actual hope.
Ren closed his eyes and reached for the common path—the mental thread that connected him to every demon in existence. Eight million, seven hundred and forty-three thousand souls. Each one a gossamer strand anchored to his consciousness, a weight he’d carried alone since the last demon king fell.
The pressure was constant. Crushing. Like holding an ocean in cupped hands while the water slowly leaked through his fingers.
He found the five threads he needed and pulled.
Zharek. Tharek. Kael’vor. Drazhen. Sorvak. Attend me. Now.
The summons rippled outward, carrying the urgency of a king’s command. Through the common path, he felt each warrior’s immediate response—confusion giving way to obedience, whatever they’d been doing abandoned in an instant.
Good. They understood the weight of a king’s direct summons.
***
They arrived within minutes.
The twins materialized first—Zharek’s crimson hair, streaked with white and black, still smoking faintly from whatever forge he’d been working near. Tharek’s deep blue locks, threaded with green and black, dripped water from an interrupted bath. Even their jade-white skin showed their essence affinities: Zharek’s molten red eyes burned like contained fire, while Tharek’s azure gaze held the shifting depths of deep water.
Eight thousand years old. The youngest demons alive—born in the final desperate years before the fertility crisis claimed even the possibility of new life. They’d never known a world where demon children played in the streets, where pregnant females walked the gardens, where the sound of infant laughter echoed through palace halls.
They’d only known silence. Fading. The slow death of a race that had forgotten how to be born.
Kael’vor came next, solid as the mountain stone his Terracore essence embodied. Forest-green hair cropped military short with copper and black streaks, deep emerald eyes steady and waiting. His bronze-tinted skin spoke to his earth affinity. Fifteen thousand years of loyal service had taught him patience—the kind that could wait centuries for a single opportunity.
Drazhen’s arrival was silent despite his size—six and a half feet of bronze-tinted warrior with silver hair worn in intricate braids, streaked with copper and black. The faint metal-vein patterns on his arms caught the candlelight as he moved into position, his steel-silver eyes scanning for threats even here, in the heart of the royal palace. Twenty thousand years had honed those instincts to a razor’s edge.
Sorvak appeared last, though Ren suspected he’d been there longest, watching from shadows before revealing himself. Snow-white hair streaked with black and deep blue, pale eyes the color of winter sky that never stopped moving, lean jade-white frame built for speed rather than power. Twenty-five thousand years as a scout had made him more shadow than demon, more wind than flesh.
All five dropped to one knee, fists pressed to hearts.
"My king," they said in unison.
"Rise." Ren studied them—these five warriors from Voresh’s bloodline, trained by his mentor across millennia. Each carried the weight of their years differently. The twins still burned bright, their vor’kesh vines full and green with leaves that had barely begun to yellow. The older three... their leaves had thinned considerably. Not Vor’shal yet, not down to that final trembling leaf, but fading. Always fading.
"What I’m about to tell you does not leave this room until I say otherwise."
They straightened. Waited. Through the common path, Ren felt their curiosity—carefully controlled, held tight against their mental shields, but present nonetheless.
"Voresh has found his Zhū’anara."
Silence.
Absolute, ringing silence.
The common path went still. For one crystalline moment, it was as if every thread in Ren’s consciousness held its breath.
Then Zharek’s molten red eyes—blazing like banked coals—went wide. "What?"
"His truemate," Ren repeated. "The first recognition in ten thousand years."
All five warriors moved in unison—right hand pressed flat to heart, then lifted palm-up toward the ceiling in the ancient gesture of offering light back to its source.
"Vor’kaleth zhu’mar," they intoned together. Praise be the Light.
The common path trembled. Even without speaking, Ren could feel their emotions bleeding through the threads that connected them to him—shock, disbelief, and beneath it all, rising like dawn after endless night...
Hope.
The same hope that burned in Ren’s own chest. The same impossible, fragile, desperate hope that he’d thought dead for ten thousand years.
"Vor’kaleth," Tharek breathed, lowering his hand. His azure eyes, deep as ocean trenches, had gone bright with unshed tears. "By the Light. Voresh? He was planning Kael’thros. He had one leaf left."
"He still has one leaf. But it’s no longer falling." Ren allowed himself a small smile. "The first strand of trust has already formed. His vine is stabilizing."
Kael’vor—steady, unshakeable Kael’vor—actually swayed. His deep emerald eyes closed briefly, and when he spoke, his voice was rough with emotion that fifteen thousand years of discipline couldn’t quite contain. "After thirty thousand years. He finally found her."
"Thirty thousand years," Drazhen echoed quietly. His silver braids caught the light as he shook his head in wonder. "I remember when he was young. When his vine was still full. He trained half of us, you know. Taught us how to survive."
"He taught us how to hope," Sorvak added, his pale eyes finally still. "Even when hoping hurt."
Ren let them have their moment. They needed it. The demon realm had endured ten thousand years of nothing but loss—of watching their brothers fade, of attending Kael’thros ceremonies that came more and more frequently, of wondering if they’d be next. To hear that someone had actually found their truemate, that the impossible had happened...
It was like seeing the sun rise after an eternal night.
"Which brings me to why you’re here." Ren’s expression shifted to something harder. More regal. "You five have been chosen as her quintet."
Another ripple of shock.
The twins exchanged glances—that silent communication of brothers who’d spent eight thousand years fighting side by side. Drazhen’s steel-silver eyes gleamed with barely contained emotion. Sorvak’s constant scanning actually stopped as he processed the words.
"Her quintet," Drazhen repeated, voice carrying its characteristic metallic edge. "You honor us, my king."
Zharek shifted, exchanging a quick glance with his brother. "My king... forgive the question, but—why us?" His voice had lost its usual warmth, gone serious in a way that revealed the warrior beneath the sometimes playful exterior. "Tharek and I are the youngest demons alive. Eight thousand years is nothing. There are warriors three times our age, stronger, more experienced—"
"Your age is precisely why I chose you." Ren stepped closer to the twins. "Yes, there are stronger warriors. But Zharek, you have one of the strongest Inferno affinities I’ve seen in millennia. Your flames burn hotter than demons three times your age. And Tharek—your Torrent mastery rivals the ancient water-singers of the pre-Sundering era."
The twins stood straighter, pride warring with humility in their expressions.
"More importantly, you’ve spent five thousand years perfecting your teamwork. Fire and water in perfect opposition, devastating when combined." Ren’s voice softened slightly. "You’re still vibrant. Still feeling. A young prophetess who’s spent her life hiding among mortals needs protectors who remember what joy feels like. Who can make her laugh as well as keep her safe."
Tharek’s throat worked. "We won’t fail her, my king."
"Or Voresh," Zharek added, his crimson hair still faintly smoking with the heat of his emotions. "He trained us. Made us what we are. When everyone else saw two young demons too foolish to know despair, he saw warriors worth forging."
"Which is the other reason you were chosen." Ren turned to address all five. "You are Voresh’s bloodkin. Demons he trained, fought beside, saved, or was saved by. Your loyalty to him is absolute—and by extension, your loyalty to his Zhū’anara will be equally absolute." 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎
Kael’vor stepped forward, his bronze-tinted skin seeming to absorb the candlelight. "What can you tell us about her?"
"Her name is Lyria." Ren moved to the window, gazing out at the obsidian spires of his capital. The eternal twilight of the demon realm cast everything in shades of purple and grey, the twin moons hanging low on the horizon. "She’s fourteen years old. Half-Aetherwing, half-elf, living in an outcast village in the Mid Realm. She’s the new Prophetess—the one the Temple is hunting."
Stunned silence.
"Half... Aetherwing?" Drazhen’s steel-silver eyes had gone wide. "No demon blood at all?"
"None that we can detect."
The five warriors exchanged looks of utter bewilderment. Kael’vor’s deep voice rumbled through the silence. "My king... in all our history—never, not once—has there been a Zhū’anara without demon blood. Our truemates have always been pure-blooded demonesses. Always."
"I’m aware of the history." Ren’s voice was carefully neutral.
"Then how—" Zharek started.
"I don’t know." Ren turned to face them. "It shouldn’t be possible. And yet Voresh recognized her. The ritual words came unbidden. His vor’kesh is responding." He let that sink in. "The bond is real, regardless of her bloodline."
Tharek pressed his palm to his heart in the reverence gesture, then lifted it toward the ceiling. "The Condex works in ways beyond our understanding."
"Perhaps." Ren’s expression hardened. "But this information does not leave this room. Not yet. If word spreads that truemates can be found among other races... eight million unmated males would flood the realms searching. It would be chaos. It could start wars."
"We understand, my king," Kael’vor said gravely.
"She may have a hidden demon bloodline we simply cannot see. Or the rules may be changing. Until we know more, we protect her—and we keep her origins quiet." Ren moved back toward them. "Now. What else should you know?"
"Her age," Sorvak murmured. His pale white eyes had sharpened, the scout in him already assessing threats and vulnerabilities. "Fourteen. Young. Vulnerable."
"And already burning her life force on uncontrolled visions." Ren’s jaw tightened. "She looks nineteen. She’s been sacrificing years of her life because no one taught her how to control her gift."
A collective rumble of anger passed through the five warriors. The thought of a young female suffering—any female, but especially one who was now Zhū’anara to one of their own—struck at something primal in their nature. Male demons existed to protect. To serve. To ensure that no female ever knew fear or pain or want.
And this girl had known all three.
"The Temple hunts her," Drazhen growled, his silver braids swaying with suppressed violence. "They would cage her. Use her gift until it burned her hollow."
"They won’t touch her," Zharek said, flames licking at his fingertips before he controlled them. "Not while we breathe."
"You will protect her with your lives," Ren continued. "But understand this—you’re not just protecting her. You’re protecting Voresh as well. If he loses her now, after finally finding her..." He didn’t need to finish.
"He’d follow her within hours," Drazhen said quietly. "Kael’thros or devil transformation. Either way, we’d lose him."
"Precisely. And even if Lyria hasn’t fully bonded with him yet—even if no formal strands have woven beyond the first—losing him would damage her irreparably. She would feel incomplete for the rest of her existence. She would never find another to settle with, never know peace." Ren turned back to face them. "Two lives hang in the balance. The first recognized truemate pair in ten thousand years—and the first non-demon Zhū’anara ever. Do you understand what that means for our people?"
All five nodded, expressions grave.
What Ren didn’t say—what he couldn’t say yet—was that this gave him hope for his own situation. His Zhū’anara was out there somewhere, a golden thread in his chest that had been growing stronger for months. She, too, was not pure demon—he’d sensed that much through their nascent bond. If Voresh, a Vor’shal with one leaf remaining, could find his truemate against all odds...
Maybe the Condex hadn’t abandoned them after all.
***
Ren produced five crystalline discs from a compartment in his desk—transport formations inscribed with precision that spoke of dwarven craftsmanship. The runes caught the candlelight, shimmering with contained power.
"These will take you to a waypoint half a day’s travel from Thornhaven village—the closest safe arrival point that won’t alert the locals to demon transport magic." He handed one to each warrior. "You have one hour to prepare whatever you need. I want full protective detail around Lyria before dawn."
The warriors accepted the formations with reverent care. Transport discs of this quality were rare—dwarven work from before the falling out three thousand years ago, irreplaceable now that the bronze dragons had pissed off the entire dwarven nation. Using five of them at once spoke to how seriously Ren took this mission.
"A healer and her truemate will be joining you in a few days," Ren added. "Vaelith and Vorketh. They’ll bring additional support."
"Val’thara Vaelith?" Tharek’s eyes widened. "The life healer?"
"The same. The girl needs training in controlling her prophetic gift, and Vaelith studied under our last Prophetess before..." Ren’s expression darkened briefly. "Before the humans killed her."
Though I’ve always suspected Sharlin’s hand behind it. The thought burned, but he pushed it aside. Suspicion wasn’t proof, and even a demon king couldn’t move against the High Priestess without evidence.
"Go," he commanded. "Prepare. Protect."
The five warriors saluted—fists to hearts—and turned to leave.
"Zharek. Tharek." Ren’s voice stopped the twins at the door. "You know what this means. Being chosen for a female’s quintet."
The brothers exchanged another of their silent looks. When Zharek spoke, his voice was steady despite the emotion beneath it.
"If we fall defending her, we’re guaranteed to find our own truemates in the next life." He managed a slight smile, his crimson hair finally ceasing its faint smoke. "It’s what every Shan’kara dreams of, my king. The honor of serving a female demon—or her equivalent—is the highest calling an unmated male can receive."
"The old texts say it clearly," Tharek added, his azure eyes bright. "Those who give their lives in service of a female’s quintet are blessed by the Condex themselves. Their souls go straight to the Tree, and they’re reborn with their truemates already waiting for them."
"Don’t fall if you can help it," Ren said dryly. "I’d rather have you alive and eventually truemated in this life."
Tharek laughed—a sound of genuine joy that had been rare in the demon realm for millennia. "We’ll do our best, my king. Vor’ala kaeth’mar."
"Lumen’kira," Ren replied. "Walk in light."
They left, and Ren felt the shift in the common path as they spread through the palace—the younger twins’ excitement bleeding through their threads, the older three’s more tempered determination. But beneath it all, in all five of them, that precious seed:
Hope.
Kael’vor would already be mentally cataloging weapons and supplies, his methodical mind planning for every contingency. Drazhen would be sharpening blades that were already sharp enough to split moonlight. Sorvak had probably already vanished into the shadows, gathering intelligence through channels only he knew existed.
And the twins... the twins would be talking in that rapid-fire way of theirs, finishing each other’s sentences, already strategizing how best to protect a fourteen-year-old prophetess who didn’t even know she had protectors coming.
Maybe they would find their own truemates someday. Maybe the drought was finally ending.
Maybe the demon race wasn’t doomed after all.
Ren allowed himself exactly thirty seconds to savor that hope before turning to the next task.
He had a healer to summon.







