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Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 252 - 247: Takara’s War
Location: Secret Realm Deep Zone
Date/Time: 30 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm — Obsidian Academy Territory (sub-dimension)
The crack of stone splitting was the only warning.
Takara dropped the disguise mid-stride, and the world changed.
White kitten fur dissolved into midnight black, liquid white-gold lightning flooding across the darkness in hypnotic, churning patterns. Bones lengthened. Muscles thickened. The mane crackled outward — actual electricity, not essence mimicry, not the parlour tricks of lesser cultivators but the fundamental expression of what a Lightning Panthera was — three meters of apex predator walking out of a crack in the rock with the unhurried precision of something that had been killing since before this realm’s oldest formation was carved.
Amber eyes opened. Not the wide blue of a kitten pretending to be helpless. The ancient fire of a Peak Eternalpyre warrior who’d watched civilisations build themselves up and tear themselves down and build again, and who had never once needed to hurry.
The mouse saw him.
It was enormous. Rodent-shaped but wrong in every proportion — shoulders hunched with dense muscle, forelimbs thick as tree trunks, essence radiating outward in the oppressive pulse of a Peak Blazecrowned beast that had owned this territory for decades. Its whiskers twitched. Processing. A kitten had entered the crack. Something else had walked out.
Takara kept walking.
The sound came first. Not the crack of lightning — not yet. The low, building hum of essence gathering in a body that had spent five millennia refining the art of gathering it. The air thickened. Charged. Static crawled across the stone floor in tiny arcing forks, and the mouse’s whiskers stood rigid as the atmospheric pressure shifted hard enough to pop ears.
The mouse charged.
Fast. Genuinely fast. Blazecrowned reflexes, the kind of speed that made Lower Realm cultivators look like they were moving through mud. Forelimbs wide, jaws open, the essence signature of something that had chased a talented Inferno-tempered student for half a day and fully expected to finish the job with whatever this new thing was.
Takara stepped left.
Not dodging. Redirecting. Five thousand years of combat didn’t produce dodging — it produced economy. The mouse’s momentum carried it through the space he’d occupied, and his right forepaw came down on the back of its neck with the precise, surgical weight of a blow designed to sever the nerve cluster between the third and fourth cervical vertebrae.
Lightning discharged on contact. White-gold, blinding, the crack of it splitting the air like a physical slap. The mouse’s body spasmed once — a full-body seizure as its nervous system received approximately ten thousand times the electrical impulse it was designed to handle — and then it was falling, sliding, momentum carrying the carcass another six meters before friction and gravity conspired to stop it.
Silence.
Takara stood over the body. One paw still raised. Mane crackling. The ozone smell of discharged lightning filled the corridor, sharp and clean.
The mouse that had chased Jayde for half a day. The beast she’d run from — flat out, no pretense, a Blazecrowned predator she couldn’t fight and knew she couldn’t fight. She’d run until the ground swallowed her.
Ninety-three seconds.
He lowered his paw. Shook the numbness out of his forelimb — not from effort, from restraint. He’d pulled the strike. Significantly. Full power would have detonated the corpse, and he needed the core intact.
One claw, precise as a scalpel, opened the chest cavity. The beast core sat against the spine — dense, heavy, pulsing with residual Blazecrowned essence. He extracted it, set it aside. Clean work. The kind Kioshi had drilled into him before he’d developed opinions about anything, back when the world was younger, and Lightning Panthera didn’t have to pretend to be house pets.
Takara sat. Listened.
The deep zone answered. Distant impacts. The scrape of scaled bodies over stone. Something large breathing in a cavern two hundred meters east. Something larger not breathing at all three hundred meters north, which was worse, because things that didn’t need to breathe in places like this were rarely things you wanted to meet.
Six days. He’d been sole operative in this realm for six days. Not long by any measure of his life, but six days without support felt longer than six centuries when the support mattered. No mental links — the formations that governed the Secret Realm predated the Lightning Panthera species by geological eras, and whatever ancient intelligence had designed them had not seen fit to accommodate telepathic frequencies that wouldn’t exist for another ten million years. His protect detail — Canirr, Suki, Prota, Amaya — were somewhere outside, doing what they could with what they had, which was nothing. They couldn’t reach him. Couldn’t hear him. Didn’t know if he was alive.
Alive. Alive and irritated, which was the natural state of a five-thousand-year-old warrior forced to operate without support in a hostile sub-dimension while pretending to be a kitten for a girl who’d just been swallowed by a mountain.
The mountain. The sealed stone where the floor had opened beneath Jayde and closed again, smooth as water, leaving him crouching in a crack with a Blazecrowned mouse outside and his charge somewhere below in the dark.
She would come back. She had to come back.
In the meantime, everything within range that might threaten her when she emerged was going to die.
***
The first wave arrived forty minutes later.
Takara had re-sealed his essence the moment the mouse dropped. Combat form, yes — he wasn’t shrinking back to kitten for this — but the Peak Eternalpyre signature compressed, contained, reduced to something that read as merely dangerous rather than apocalyptic. Anything that could sense his true power would have fled the continent. But the beasts that came weren’t sensing him. They were sensing the mouse.
Death-essence. The massive discharge of a Blazecrowned beast dying violently — essence scattering outward through stone and soil, the biological signal that said something large is dead, and its territory is open. In confined ecosystems, that signal drew scavengers, opportunists, and predators bold enough to claim a vacated hunting ground.
Three ridge-stalkers — lean, fast, low-slung predators built for ambush hunting in broken terrain. High Inferno-tempered, maybe Entry Blazecrowned. They came for the mouse’s territory. They found Takara instead.
Takara met them in the open.
Not because he needed the space. Because economy demanded it. Fighting in confined spaces meant containment, which meant deflection calculations, which meant split attention. The open ground east of the cliff face gave him full range of motion and — more importantly — gave him line of sight to the sealed stone. If it opened while he was fighting, he needed to know.
The first ridge-stalker came from the left. He killed it with a foreleg sweep that crushed its skull before it registered the change in his stance. The second leapt — overhead, going for the spine, textbook pack tactics — and he caught it on a rising shoulder, drove it into the ground, and put lightning through its brain stem. The third turned to run.
It made it eleven meters.
Thread of lightning. Hair-thin. The precision technique Kioshi had made him practise until he could split a falling leaf at four hundred metres in a crosswind. The stalker dropped mid-stride, legs still cycling, dead before the body understood.
He extracted the cores. Set them beside the mouse core. Listened.
More coming. He could feel them through the stone — the faint vibration of heavy bodies in motion, drawn toward the growing radius of death-essence the way scavengers were drawn to rot. Each kill added to the signal. Each dead beast’s essence scattered outward, announcing unclaimed territory, undefended resources. They weren’t coming for him. They were coming for each other’s corpses. They just hadn’t worked out that something was killing everything that arrived.
Good.
He would kill them all.
***
The hours passed in violence and silence.
A tunnel-bore — thick-bodied, armoured, the kind of beast that ate through stone and didn’t care what was in the way. Blazecrowned. Takara let it surface, let it commit to the lunge, then drove both forepaws through the gap between its dorsal plates and discharged enough lightning to cook it from the inside out. The smell was appalling. He filed it under unpleasant but necessary and extracted the core.
A pair of shadow-crawlers — eyeless, echolocating, fast in the dark. He killed them in the dark. They navigated by sound. He navigated by five thousand years of killing things in the dark. The shadow-crawlers lost.
Something that didn’t have a name he recognised. Six-limbed, scaled, radiated Blazecrowned essence with an edge of something older and fouler beneath it. He fought that one for almost a full minute, which was long enough to be annoying. It regenerated. Twice. The third time, he didn’t leave anything large enough to regenerate from.
An ambush pack — five smaller beasts, coordinated, intelligent enough to attack simultaneously from multiple angles. Intelligent enough to attack. Not intelligent enough to know what they were attacking. He killed the two flankers first, then the centre, then the two who’d broken and tried to flee. Efficiency demanded no survivors. Survivors warned others. Others came prepared. Preparation created complications. Complications wasted time.
Time. Two hours. She had been gone two hours, and he had killed fourteen things.
Takara sat on the high ground east of the cliff face. The rock beneath him was warm — residual heat from a lightning discharge that had cracked the stone in a five-metre radius when the nameless six-limbed thing had tried to swallow him. Blood matted his black coat — none of it his. His mane still crackled, the static discharge of sustained combat keeping his essence channels running hot.
Three kilometres in every direction. Nothing alive. Nothing that wanted to be alive in the vicinity of what he’d spent two hours demonstrating himself to be.
The silence was enormous.
Takara sat in it and let himself feel what he’d been refusing to feel while he was working.
She is underground. You don’t know what took her. You don’t know if she’s alive.
Fahmjir’s orders, delivered in the throne room of Oceanus Domain in a voice that made the walls hum: Guard this child. Secretly. Without revealing who or what you are, unless their deaths are imminent.
This child. This small, fierce, impossible girl who’d run from a Blazecrowned mouse for half a day with Inferno-tempered power and the sense to know she couldn’t win, and been swallowed by a mountain that sealed itself behind her like it had been waiting.
Six days in this realm. Six days without his team. Six days of being the only thing standing between her and everything that wanted to eat her, and he’d failed the one time it mattered. He hadn’t been fast enough. The floor had opened and closed and she was gone and he was standing in a crack in the rock with a mouse outside and nothing — nothing — he could do about it.
Takara missed Canirr’s dry precision. Missed Suki’s silent competence. Missed Prota’s methodical thoroughness. Even missed Amaya’s relentless commentary, which under normal circumstances he endured the way one endured weather — as an inevitable natural phenomenon.
He was the best. Fahmjir’s right hand. Five millennia of service. And he was alone in a hole, waiting for a teenager to come back from whatever had taken her, with no intelligence, no support, no backup, and no plan beyond kill everything and hope.
Professional.
Blood on his chest. Takara cleaned it with precise, economical strokes. Warrior’s hygiene. Even alone. Especially alone. Discipline was the architecture of survival, and the first thing to erode was always personal maintenance.
She would come back. She would come back because the alternative was unacceptable, and he did not accept it.
*** 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
The waiting was worse than the killing.
Takara knew this about himself. Had known it for millennia. Combat was simple — beautiful, even, in its purity of purpose. You assessed. You engaged. You survived. The calculus was clean. The waiting had no calculus. It was just time, stretching, and the thing in his chest that might have been worry if he’d been the kind of warrior who admitted to such things.
He was not that kind of warrior.
Cores first. Takara collected them — sixteen total, the mouse core largest, dense and heavy, the rest arrayed in descending size. Resources. Jayde would need resources. She was building toward something — he’d sensed the driven focus in her movements over the past six days, the intensity of someone who wasn’t just surviving but preparing — and beast cores were currency in a Secret Realm.
The grooming was methodical. Black coat first — tongue and paw, the ancient grooming patterns that Lightning Panthera maintained regardless of form because they were coded deeper than habit, deeper than training, somewhere in the architecture of what they were. Blood out of fur. Grit. The acrid residue of the six-limbed thing’s essence, which tasted like copper and rot.
Then, slowly, with the careful deliberation of a warrior preparing for a different kind of battle entirely — he let the disguise settle back.
Black fur whitened. Three meters of midnight predator compressed, folded, diminished. The mane smoothed into soft kitten fluff. Amber fire cooled to wide, innocent blue. Claws retracted to harmless nubs. The Lightning Panthera essence signature — that enormous, ancient, screaming declaration of I am here and I am death — wrapped itself into nothing. Sealed. Hidden. So perfectly concealed that even a silver dragon couldn’t find the seams.
A small white kitten sat on the rock.
Takara straightened the pink ribbon on his left ear. The wyrmlings had tied it there — Yinxin’s hatchlings, clumsy with their tiny claws, chattering in that high pitch that only dragon children produced. He’d held still for the ordeal. Had not bitten anyone. Had not set anything on fire. These were accomplishments.
The blue ribbon on his right ear — newer, added by one of the Academy students during the first day of the realm, before the groups had scattered and the hunting began. He straightened that too. Checked the alignment. Adjusted the loop.
Five thousand years old. Peak Eternalpyre. Lord Fahmjir’s elite right hand. Wearing ribbons tied by children.
He would kill anyone who tried to remove them. This was not a contradiction. This was simply what he was now.
The cores he arranged beneath himself. Sat on them. Tucked his paws. Let his tail curl around his body. Composed his face into the expression of a kitten who had been napping peacefully and had accumulated a small pile of interesting objects through methods that definitely did not involve combat of any kind.
One blue eye closed. Then the other. He breathed. Slow. Steady. The heartbeat of a kitten, not a predator.
Takara waited.
***
The smell reached him first.
Ozone. Sharp and clean, the kind produced by high-energy essence discharge — but not lightning, not his signature. Something different. Steel, underneath it. Metal heated to the point of singing. And beneath both, woven through like a thread in fabric, something ancient. Something that hadn’t been on her skin when she went underground.
Takara’s ears rotated. Both of them — blue-tipped, ribboned, absurd — tracking the sound of footsteps approaching from the far side of the mountain. The wrong direction. She’d gone down beneath the cliff face. She was coming from the east, which meant she’d emerged somewhere else entirely and walked around.
He kept his eyes closed. Kept his breathing even. Kitten. Napping. Nothing to see.
The footsteps told a story.
Takara had listened to Jayde walk for six days. Knew her gait the way a musician knew a melody — the hip rotation that betrayed her centre of gravity, the rhythm of someone who’d been trained in precise, grid-pattern movement and was slowly, unconsciously layering something else over it.
The girl who’d gone underground walked like that.
The girl coming around the mountain did not.
Her weight distribution had shifted. Lower. Centred over the balls of her feet instead of the heels. Her stride was shorter but more deliberate — each footfall placed, not stepped. The hip rotation was gone, replaced by something smoother, a fluidity in the pelvis-to-shoulder kinetic chain that spoke of training so thorough it had rewritten her proprioception.
She moved like a swordswoman.
Not a student. Not someone who’d been taught forms and practised them diligently. A swordswoman. The kind of movement that came from thousands of repetitions under pressure — the body restructured by violence into something more efficient than nature had designed.
Two hours. She had been underground for two hours.
She left as a talented student. She came back as a swordswoman. Two hours.
Takara filed it. Deep. In the part of his mind where he kept things that concerned him — and after five millennia, very few things qualified for that designation. Whatever had happened beneath that mountain, whatever had trained her, whatever had restructured her body mechanics and put the smell of ancient steel on her skin, it was beyond his operational scope. He didn’t have enough data. He would report to Fahmjir when he could. He would watch. He would wait.
He would not react.
One blue eye opened. Lazy. Half-lidded. The eye of a kitten waking from a nap because someone was making noise and couldn’t they see he was sleeping.
Jayde came around the edge of the cliff face. Black hair. Brown eyes — the disguise, the veil, the careful nothing that hid whatever she truly was. She looked the same. She was not the same. He could see it in every line of her — the way she held her arms, the way her eyes tracked the environment, the quiet confidence of someone who’d found something in herself that hadn’t been there before.
She saw him.
She saw the cores.
Takara watched her read the space. Watched the assessment happen behind those brown eyes — the claw marks, the scorched earth, the three-kilometre radius of absolute silence that surrounded a kitten sitting on a rock. Watched her arrive at conclusions he couldn’t prevent and didn’t, in the privacy of his own mind, want to.
She was ready. He’d known she would be, eventually. He’d hoped it would be later. But ready was ready, and the girl looking at him now was not the girl who’d found an injured kitten in a thornbush and carried him home.
He sat on his cores. Ribbons perfect. Blue eyes wide and innocent. Tail curled. Paws tucked. The performance of a lifetime — or at least of the past couple of months, which in terms of sheer indignity eclipsed most of the preceding five millennia.
She crouched. Slowly. Not reaching for him. Just looking — really looking — with the specific focus of someone who had stopped telling themselves comfortable lies.
He held the pose. Held the act. Held the disguise so perfectly that even Kioshi would have approved, and Kioshi approved of approximately nothing.
"We all have secrets, little one," Jayde said quietly. "You can keep yours."
Five thousand years.
Five thousand years of cover operations, infiltration missions, identity management across six realms, and more wars than he could count without consulting his field journals. He had maintained disguises under torture. Had held covers for decades without a single fracture. Had fooled beings older and more perceptive than this girl by orders of magnitude.
No one had ever blown his cover like this.
Not with accusation. Not with demand. Not with the sharp edge of I caught you that most people wielded when they discovered deception. With grace. The quiet, steady grace of someone saying I see you, and I’m choosing not to look.
Operational assessment: cover compromised. Degree: partial. Subject has identified behavioural inconsistency but lacks specific intelligence regarding identity, species, or mission parameters. Recommended action—
He ignored the assessment. The part of him that had been a warrior for five millennia knew exactly what to do. The part of him that had been a kitten on a girl’s shoulder for months did too. They agreed, for once.
Takara blinked. Once. Long and slow.
Not a kitten’s blink. A warrior’s acknowledgement. The gesture that passed between old soldiers who recognised each other — not with salutes or formal codes, but with the simple, quiet knowing that said I see you too.
Her brown eyes widened. Just slightly. She’d understood.
One heartbeat. Two.
Then Takara mewed. Pitifully. His small body went soft and boneless, and he flopped sideways on his rock with the theatrical helplessness of a kitten who had been alone and terrified and was very, very grateful his person had come back.
He pawed at the air. Tiny claws. Pathetic.
It was, he reflected as he performed this magnificent degradation, the finest acting of his career. Not because the technique had changed — every flop, every mew, every wide-eyed tremor was identical to the performance he’d been delivering for months. But because it was chosen now. Not maintained. Chosen. She’d given him an exit. She’d said you can keep yours and meant it, and he was choosing to keep it, and the act was different when both parties knew it was an act and agreed to honour it anyway.
"Good boy," she said. Her voice was warm. She scooped him up, and he melted against her shoulder, claws hooking into her collar with the grip of something that had never once been in danger of falling. "You survived."
Mew.
He purred. Involuntary, as always, but — different. The vibration of a warrior who had just received something he hadn’t expected and couldn’t categorise. Respect. From a girl who was barely old enough to have opinions. Respect offered without conditions, without demand, without the expectation of reciprocity.
She held him. Warm weight. His heartbeat against her collarbone.
Something had changed. Not the mission — the mission was the same. Protect the child. Guard the goddess. Report to Fahmjir. But the architecture of it had shifted. She wasn’t a charge; he was deceiving anymore. She was a charge who had seen through the deception and decided it didn’t matter.
That was harder. That was worse. Because the kitten act had always been a wall, and walls worked in both directions, and now the wall had a door that she’d opened and walked through without asking permission.
He was going to have a very complicated field report.
Takara purred. Rode her shoulder. Kept his claws hooked into her collar and one ear twitched at every forest sound. The warrior doing what the warrior did — watching, assessing, protecting — while the kitten did what the kitten did, which was be small and warm and held.
Both of them. The same creature. For the first time, not pretending otherwise.







