Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 101 - 96: The Alpha’s Fall
Location: Direwolf Territory
Time: Day 512 | Telia: Day 3
Realm: Telia (Feudal World)
The Alpha moved through the forest with the confidence of an apex predator who’d never known defeat.
Massive. Scarred. Every line of his body radiating dominance and power. Dark gray fur rippled over muscles built from years of hunting and fighting, and golden eyes scanned the territory with predatory intelligence that made Jayde’s skin prickle.
Target acquired. Inferno-tempered Early tier confirmed. Optimal strike window: Thirty seconds.
She crouched in the branches of a copperleaf tree, completely still, barely breathing. Twenty feet up, hidden by dense foliage, downwind of the patrol route. Federation training combined with cultivation-enhanced stealth made her nearly invisible.
The Alpha paused beneath her tree, nose twitching. Testing the air. Listening.
(He knows something’s wrong. Predator instinct.)
But he couldn’t pinpoint the threat. Couldn’t see her. Couldn’t smell her through Reiko’s Voidshadow manipulation that bent scent trails away from the wolf’s sensitive nose.
[Ready,] Reiko sent from his position thirty meters away, melded completely with the shadows between two boulders.
[On my mark,] Jayde replied.
The Alpha took another step. Another. Positioning himself perfectly beneath the tree, exposed, vulnerable for just a handful of heartbeats.
Now. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖
[Mark.]
Jayde dropped from the branch, hands already channeling Qi, phoenix bloodline surging with golden fire that burned hotter than normal Inferno essence. The flames wrapped around her palms, condensed into twin spheres of destruction—not red-orange like standard Sparkcasting, but brilliant gold laced with white.
She hit the ground in a crouch, ten feet from the Alpha, and thrust both hands forward.
"Flame Strike!"
Golden fire exploded from her palms in a concentrated blast.
The Alpha’s head whipped toward her, eyes widening—prey doesn’t ambush predators—and he tried to dodge. But he was massive, and momentum worked against him, and the phoenix fire caught him square in the shoulder.
His hide resisted.
For maybe half a second.
Then the golden flames punched through fur and flesh like they were paper, superheated tissue boiling from the inside, and the Alpha howled—a sound of shock and agony that echoed through the forest like thunder.
Primary strike successful. Target wounded but combat-capable. Expect aggressive response.
The wolf’s golden eyes locked on Jayde with absolute killing intent.
Then he charged.
(Oh gods, he’s fast—)
Evasive action impossible. Defensive posture required. Activate dragon scales NOW.
Jayde’s body responded before conscious thought finished forming. Dragon bloodline surged, responding to mortal danger with instinctive protection. Her skin rippled, and suddenly scales erupted across her torso and arms—translucent silver-white like crystal, overlapping in perfect geometric patterns that gleamed in the afternoon light.
The Alpha slammed into her like a battering ram.
CRACK
The impact drove the air from her lungs, lifted her off her feet, and sent her flying backward into a boulder with bone-crushing force. Pain exploded through her back, her ribs, her arms where she’d crossed them defensively.
But she didn’t break.
The dragon scales held. Distributed the impact across their surface, prevented penetration, and turned a killing blow into something survivable.
Jayde hit the ground hard, gasping, vision swimming.
The Alpha stood five feet away, staring at her with something that might have been confusion. His prey should be dead. Should be crushed and broken. Should be meat.
But she was standing up.
Defensive success. Dragon scales withstood Inferno-tempered impact. Blazecrowned-tier durability confirmed. Counter-attack window: Three seconds before Alpha recovers.
(Can’t breathe right. Ribs bruised. Maybe cracked. Doesn’t matter.)
"My turn," Jayde rasped.
The Alpha snarled and lunged again—jaws wide, going for her throat.
Reiko exploded from the shadows behind him.
The shadowbeast was a blur of darkness and silver eyes, Voidshadow abilities making him nearly intangible as he phased through space itself. His jaws clamped on the Alpha’s left hind leg, fangs sinking deep into the hamstring, and he wrenched with all the strength of an Inferno-tempered predator.
Muscle and tendon tore.
The Alpha’s charge turned into a stumbling collapse as his leg gave out, massive body crashing sideways into the ground. He twisted, snapping at Reiko, but the shadowbeast was already gone—melted back into darkness before those crushing jaws could connect.
Mobility compromised. Target vulnerable. Execute finishing strike.
Jayde moved.
Her blade came out in a fluid draw, Inferno essence flooding through the runeinfused steel until it glowed white-hot. Federation combat training took over—assess angle, commit to strike, no hesitation, no mercy.
The Alpha tried to rise, tried to defend, but his ruined leg betrayed him.
Jayde’s blade found his throat.
One clean strike. Horizontal cut that severed the windpipe and carotid arteries in a spray of arterial blood. The runeinfused steel, enhanced with Inferno Qi and phoenix fire, sliced through fur and flesh like they didn’t exist.
The Alpha’s golden eyes went wide. Shocked. He’d never lost before. Never been hunted. Never felt his own mortality until this exact moment.
Then the light faded.
The massive body collapsed, twitched once, and went still.
Target neutralized. Alpha eliminated. Time to kill: Eighteen seconds from initial contact.
Jayde stood over the corpse, breathing hard, dragon scales still shimmering on her arms and torso. Blood soaked the ground around them—most of it the Alpha’s, but some of it hers from where claws had caught her during the charge, shallow cuts that stung but weren’t dangerous.
(We did it. We actually killed him.)
[Jayde,] Reiko sent urgently. [The pack knows.]
Howls erupted from the direction of the den.
Long, mournful, furious howls that spoke of loss and rage and the promise of vengeance. The rest of the pack had felt their Alpha die through whatever mystical bond connected pack hunters, and they were coming.
Fast.
Threat assessment: Multiple hostiles inbound. Estimated arrival: Sixty seconds. Tactical decision required.
"We stand and fight," Jayde said aloud, already channeling Qi to replenish what she’d spent. "This is the plan. Let them come to us."
She knelt beside the Alpha’s corpse, blade still hot from Inferno Qi, and began cutting. The head needed to be removed—proof for Milta, promise fulfilled, evidence that the monster who’d killed her children was dead.
The work was grisly. Brutal. Her blade sawed through vertebrae and tissue while blood pooled around her boots, and the howls grew closer.
But she didn’t stop. Couldn’t stop. This was what she’d promised.
Mission parameters: Complete objective. Survive engagement. Return with proof.
The head came free with a final wet crunch. Massive, heavy, still radiating residual essence even in death. Jayde grabbed a fallen branch—thick, sturdy, roughly the right length—and used strips of leather from her pack to lash the Alpha’s head to it like some macabre trophy.
Can’t use spatial ring. Couldn’t hide the evidence. Had to carry it openly, had to let the village see exactly what she’d killed.
The howls stopped.
Silence fell over the forest like a held breath.
Then three direwolves burst through the undergrowth.
***
The Elders.
Larger than the Warriors, seasoned fighters with graying muzzles and bodies covered in old scars. Flamewrought Peak tier, each one powerful enough to be dangerous alone, and they moved with the coordinated precision of wolves who’d hunted together for years.
Enemy composition: Three Flamewrought Peak opponents. Combat experience: Significant. Coordination: High. Threat level: Extreme.
They spread out immediately—flanking positions, cutting off escape routes, boxing Jayde and Reiko into a kill zone with the efficiency of professional predators.
The largest Elder, a battle-scarred male with chunks missing from both ears, growled low and deep. Not a mindless beast sound. A warning. You killed our Alpha. Now you die.
"Reiko," Jayde said quietly, "shadow harassment. Don’t commit. Just keep them off balance."
[Understood.]
The Elders attacked.
All three at once, perfectly synchronized, coming from different angles to overwhelm through sheer tactical superiority.
Jayde’s dragon scales flared as she spun to meet the first Elder—the scarred male, jaws open wide, going for her torso. She crossed her arms defensively, let the scales take the bite, felt teeth scrape across crystal-hard surfaces without penetrating.
The impact drove her back two steps.
The second Elder hit from her blind side, claws raking across her legs. Pain blazed as talons found gaps in her armor, tore through leather and flesh, drew blood.
(They’re too fast—can’t defend everywhere at once—)
Tactical reassessment: Defensive stance insufficient. Offense required. Phoenix fire, area denial.
Jayde channeled Qi and pushed.
Golden flames erupted from her body in a spherical burst—not a shaped technique, just raw phoenix fire expressing through sheer force of will. The Elders yelped and leaped backward, fur singed, eyes watering from the heat.
It bought her three seconds.
She used them to activate Flame Torrent.
Forty-five Qi drained from her Crucible Core as Inferno essence condensed into a sweeping cone of golden fire that roared from her outstretched hands like dragon’s breath. The flames caught the scarred Elder full in the face, and he screamed—a sound of genuine agony as phoenix fire seared through fur and flesh, burning hotter than anything natural.
He stumbled back, half-blind, fur smoking.
The other two Elders circled, wary now. Recalculating. Their prey was more dangerous than they’d anticipated.
Reiko struck from shadow.
The shadowbeast materialized behind the second Elder, jaws clamping on its rear leg, fangs sinking deep. The wolf yelped and spun, but Reiko was already gone—phased back into darkness before retaliation could land.
Pack tactics disrupted. Coordination degrading. Maintain pressure.
Jayde pressed the advantage.
She charged the third Elder—a female, smaller but faster—blade leading, Inferno Qi flooding through the runeinfused steel. The wolf tried to dodge, but Jayde’s Federation training had drilled close-quarters combat into instinct.
Feint left. Strike right. Horizontal slash across the wolf’s shoulder that cut deep, spilled blood, drew a yelp of pain.
The female retreated, limping.
The scarred male, vision clearing, lunged again—desperate, aggressive, trying to regain control through sheer ferocity.
Dragon scales met teeth once more. This time Jayde didn’t just defend—she grabbed the wolf’s lower jaw with her scale-armored hand and pushed, forcing his head down, exposing his neck.
Her blade came around in a brutal arc.
The scarred Elder’s throat opened in a spray of blood.
He collapsed, twitching, dying.
Two remaining.
The second and third Elders exchanged glances. Some wordless communication passed between them, and Jayde saw the decision form—we can’t win.
They broke.
Turned and ran, abandoning their dead Alpha and packmate, survival instinct overriding loyalty or vengeance.
"Reiko!" Jayde shouted. "Don’t let them reach the Warriors!"
[On it!]
The shadowbeast blurred through darkness, moving faster than the fleeing wolves, cutting them off before they could reach the den area where the six Warriors waited.
Jayde sprinted after them, legs burning, ribs aching, dragon scales still shimmering across her torso. Her Qi reserves were dropping—maybe sixty percent remaining—but she had enough for what needed to happen next.
The female Elder tried to dodge around Reiko. The shadowbeast’s jaws closed on her throat, and she went down thrashing.
The second Elder saw his packmate die and skidded to a halt, trapped between Jayde and Reiko, cornered.
He turned to face Jayde, lips curled back from blood-stained teeth, preparing for a final desperate charge.
She raised her blade.
"I’m sorry," she said quietly. "But you killed children."
The Elder lunged.
Her blade took him through the eye.
***
Silence.
Just the sound of Jayde’s harsh breathing, Reiko’s panting, and the drip of blood from multiple corpses.
Three Elders down. Alpha down.
But six Warriors remained.
Threat assessment: Six Flamewrought Mid opponents. Individual capability: Lower than Elders. Collective threat: Significant if coordinated.
Jayde scanned the forest, Qi flowing through her pathways in preparation for the next engagement.
Nothing.
No movement. No sounds. No howls or growls or padding feet.
[They scattered,] Reiko sent. [I can smell them. Running in different directions. Panic.]
(The hierarchy collapsed. Just like we predicted.)
"Track them," Jayde ordered. "We can’t let any escape."
[You’re injured.]
"I’m functional. Track them. We end this now."
***
The first Warrior died an hour later.
Young male, maybe two years old, Flamewrought Mid cultivation, but no real combat experience. He’d run east, toward what he probably thought was safety, and Reiko had tracked him by scent alone.
They found him huddled in a small cave, shaking, all aggression gone.
Jayde felt a moment of pity. He was barely more than an adolescent. Hadn’t chosen to be born a direwolf, hadn’t chosen to be part of a pack that killed children.
But he’d been there. Had participated in hunts. Had eaten human flesh.
Her blade ended it quickly.
One.
The second and third Warriors tried to ambush them.
Coordinated attack from two directions, probably siblings based on similar coloring, attempting what their Alpha had taught them—pack tactics, overwhelming force, and exploiting numerical advantage.
It might have worked against normal prey.
But Jayde had sixty years of Federation combat experience, and Reiko had apex predator instincts. They read the ambush before it landed, countered with lethal efficiency.
Phoenix fire caught one mid-leap. Reiko’s jaws closed on the other’s spine.
Three.
The fourth Warrior made it furthest—almost two kilometers from the den before exhaustion forced him to stop.
He was older than the others, maybe approaching Elder status himself, and he turned to fight when cornered. Brave. Defiant. Going down with teeth bared and claws extended.
Jayde’s Flame Lance punched through his chest.
Four.
The fifth and sixth Warriors were found together.
Littermates, probably. A male and female who’d stayed together even in flight, pack bonds stronger than survival instinct.
They were young. Too young. Maybe their first year.
(They’re just babies. They didn’t—)
They killed. They ate human children. Compassion is dangerous. Complete the mission.
Jayde’s hands trembled as she channeled Qi.
The female tried to protect her brother, putting herself between him and the threat.
It didn’t matter.
Phoenix fire didn’t discriminate based on age or intent.
Six.
***
Sunset painted the forest in shades of blood and gold.
Jayde stood in the middle of the massacre, surrounded by ten direwolf corpses, her armor torn and bloodied, dragon scales finally fading from her skin now that the threat had passed.
She was exhausted. Bone-deep, soul-deep exhaustion that went beyond physical fatigue. Her Qi reserves hovered around thirty percent. Her body ached from a dozen minor wounds and one major bruising across her ribs. Her hands shook.
But it was done.
The pack was eliminated. Every single wolf, from the massive Alpha to the youngest Warriors. None had escaped. None would terrorize Tardide again.
[Jayde,] Reiko sent gently. [We should collect the bodies.]
"Yeah." Her voice sounded hollow. "Yeah, we should."
She pulled out her spatial ring—couldn’t use it openly in the village, but here in the forest, with no witnesses, efficiency mattered more than maintaining cover.
One by one, she stored the corpses. Valuable materials—pelts, claws, teeth, organs. The Nexus market would pay well for Flamewrought-tier direwolf components, and she’d earned every merit.
But she left the Alpha’s head on its pole. That was for Milta. That was the promise fulfilled.
The wooden pole dug into her shoulder as she lifted it, heavy with the weight of the massive head. Blood dripped down the wood, staining her armor further.
"Let’s go home," Jayde said.
[Home?]
"The village. Dragons after. But first..." She looked at the Alpha’s head, its golden eyes glazed in death. "First, I keep a promise to a mother who lost her children."
They walked through the darkening forest, two predators who’d just eliminated an entire pack, carrying proof of victory like some ancient tribal warrior.
And overhead, the first stars began to appear.







