Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 135 - 130: A Home for Dragons

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Chapter 135: Chapter 130: A Home for Dragons

Location: Starforge Nexus Pavilion - Living Quarters → Central Hub

Time: Day 569/208 (Subjective/Actual)

Realm: Dimensional Fold Space

Something nudged Jayde’s shoulder. Insistently.

"Jayde. Jayde, wake up."

She groaned, pulling the blanket over her head. "Too early."

"It’s morning. Technically." Isha’s voice carried barely contained excitement. "And I’ve been reviewing upgrade packages all night, and I can’t wait any longer."

Jayde cracked one eye open. Isha’s translucent fox form hovered inches from her face, practically vibrating with energy. His nine tails swished in rapid patterns that suggested he’d consumed entirely too much caffeine—if foxes drank caffeine.

"You said first thing in the morning," he continued. "Well, it’s morning. First thing. Let’s go build a dragon sanctuary."

Assessment: Guide experiencing extreme enthusiasm. Sleep deprivation irrelevant for incorporeal entities.

(He looks like he’s about to explode.)

"What time is it actually?" Jayde asked, sitting up.

"Early. Very early. But I found the perfect package combinations, and if we don’t start now, I’m going to burst." Isha paced mid-air. "I spent all night calculating optimal configurations. Terrain diversity, ecosystem balance, spatial efficiency—I have spreadsheets, Jayde. I made spreadsheets."

Despite her exhaustion, Jayde smiled. "You made spreadsheets about dragon housing?"

"Three different scenarios with cost-benefit analyses." He looked insufferably proud. "I’m very thorough when properly motivated."

"Alright, alright." She swung her legs out of bed. "Give me five minutes to get dressed."

"Four minutes would be better."

"Isha."

"Fine. Five minutes. But I’m timing you."

***

Four and a half minutes later, they walked through crystalline corridors toward the central hub. Isha talked the entire way, words tumbling over each other in his eagerness.

"So I was thinking we start with the five-hundred-hectare package—gives dragons room without being excessive. Mixed terrain is obviously optimal, provides environmental diversity. Then the advanced ecosystem, because wyrmlings need hunting practice, but nothing too dangerous, and the respawn mechanics ensure sustainable populations—"

"Breathe," Jayde suggested.

"Don’t need to breathe. Translucent. Technically incorporeal." But he paused anyway. "Sorry. I’m excited."

"I noticed."

They entered the central hub—a massive chamber with crystalline walls that seemed to extend forever. Morning light filtered through surfaces that didn’t technically have windows, creating patterns of gold and white across the floor.

Isha led her straight to the far wall where the trading interface lived.

"Right. So." He took what would have been a steadying breath if he needed air. "You’ve got enough points for a comprehensive sanctuary. I recommend we start with—"

"Isha." Jayde placed a hand on his translucent shoulder. "Show me what you found. Walk me through it."

His eyes brightened. "Really? You want the full presentation?"

"You spent all night on this. I want to see your work."

The fox’s entire form glowed with pleasure. "Alright. Let’s do this properly." He turned to the wall. "Activate Trading System."

***

The screen materialized, displaying information in crisp golden text. Jayde’s eyes went to the number at the top.

NEXUS MERITS: 32,260.10

Still hard to believe. Yesterday, she’d been fighting beasts in a feudal village. Now she had wealth beyond most contractors’ dreams.

"First purchase is mandatory," Isha said, all business now. "Contractual Pet Access. Without this, dragons can’t leave your pet space while inside the Pavilion. It’s the foundation everything else builds from."

He navigated to Dimension Upgrades, then a submenu labeled

Contracted Beings - Habitat Creation.

CONTRACTUAL PET ACCESS

Allows bonded creatures to enter dimensional space

Provides life support and environmental comfort

Enables long-term habitation

Cost: 1,000 Points

"One thousand points," Jayde confirmed, and tapped purchase.

POINTS: 32,260.10 → 31,260.10

Golden light flared across the screen.

CONTRACTUAL PET ACCESS ACTIVATED

Bonded creatures may now enter dimensional space

Please configure habitat areas for optimal health

"Perfect." Isha’s tails resumed their excited swishing. "Now comes the good part."

A new submenu opened: Area Upgrades.

The list went on forever. Dozens of categories, hundreds of options, more variations than Jayde could track. Her eyes widened.

"I know," Isha said. "Overwhelming. But I’ve done the research. Trust me?"

"Always."

***

"Area size first," Isha began, pulling up his mental spreadsheet. "Five hundred hectares. Gives the wyrmlings room to grow, Yinxin space to properly fly, and we can expand later if needed. Fifteen thousand points."

He selected it without hesitation.

"Mixed terrain package—mountains for lairs, lake for swimming, forest for cover, meadows for flight. Everything dragons need. That’s included in the base cost."

The display showed a preview—mountains rising, water flowing, trees spreading across a virtual landscape.

"Advanced ecosystem for twenty-five hundred points. Self-sustaining wildlife. Deer, rabbits, and boar for hunting. Wolves and foxes for variety. Fish in the lake, birds throughout. Plus automatic respawn mechanics so they never run out of prey."

Sophisticated ecological engineering. Federation terraforming doesn’t approach this complexity.

"Special features," Isha continued, clearly enjoying himself. "Waterfalls for five hundred points—dragons love flowing water. Hot springs for three hundred—wyrmlings will play in warm water for hours. Fruit trees for four hundred, berry bushes for two hundred—natural food sources. Herb patches for three hundred. Cave networks for six hundred with enhanced features for proper lairs. Scenic viewpoints for one hundred because even dragons appreciate a good view."

Jayde watched him work, selecting options with practiced confidence. Each addition made sense, served a clear purpose, and contributed to creating an actual home rather than just adequate housing.

"Small cottage for you," he added. "Two hundred fifty points. Kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, and garden outside. Somewhere you can visit them properly, not just summon and dismiss."

The idea made Jayde’s chest tighten. A place to just... be together. As family.

"Dragon lair improvements for five hundred. Upgrades the natural caves with smooth floors, temperature control, water features, and proper nesting areas. Everything adult dragons and growing wyrmlings need."

He pulled back, reviewing the compiled list.

"And finally—moderate Qi infusion for one thousand points. Doubles the ambient Qi throughout the space. Dragons grow faster, recover better, and any herbs planted will thrive."

Isha turned to her, expression serious despite his excitement.

"Total cost: twenty-one thousand, seven hundred fifty points. Leaves you with ninety-five hundred in reserve. It’s a significant investment, but..." He hesitated. "But it’s the right thing to do."

Economic assessment: Over two-thirds of available resources. Substantial commitment.

(They’re worth it. They’re family.)

"Before we finalize," Jayde said quietly. "Should we ask what they want?" 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

Isha’s expression softened. "Always ask."

Jayde touched the bond connecting her to Yinxin.

[Yinxin? Can you come out? We want your input on something.]

Warmth flowed through the connection—curiosity, trust, agreement.

Silver light erupted in the central hub.

Yinxin materialized, thirty feet of magnificent dragon filling the chamber. Scales gleamed like liquid moonlight, golden eyes ancient and warm. Her wings folded tight, but even contained, she was breathtaking.

Isha made a small sound—wonder mixed with reverence.

"Good morning," Jayde said, smiling up at her. "We’re building your home. Want to see?"

[A home?] Yinxin’s voice carried disbelief. [You mean...]

"Look." Jayde gestured at the holographic projection Isha had pulled up—a rotating 3D model of the planned sanctuary. Mountains rose in miniature, forests spread, and water filled the lake basin. All spinning slowly above the screen.

Yinxin stared. Her massive head lowered, bringing golden eyes level with the projection. For several heartbeats, she said nothing.

[This is for us?] Her voice barely whispered.

"What do you think?" Jayde asked. "What do you need? Is anything missing?"

The dragon studied the model with intense focus, ancient intelligence analyzing every detail.

[Mountains—yes. High peaks for lair security. Defensible positions.] She pointed with one claw. [Deep lake. The wyrmlings must learn proper swimming, not shallow splashing.]

"Three kilometers in diameter," Isha supplied. "Deep enough for full submersion practice."

[Forest for hunting. Trees dense enough for cover, clearings for landing.] Yinxin’s voice strengthened. [Open meadows for flight training. Room to spread wings without fear—]

Her voice broke.

(She’s been trapped so long. Hiding. Running. Never flying free.)

"Hot springs?" Jayde suggested gently. "For cold days?"

[Dragons enjoy warm water.] Yinxin sounded almost shy. [The wyrmlings would love it.]

"Already included."

[Then...] The dragon lowered her head further, until her snout nearly touched Jayde’s shoulder. [Will they be safe? Truly safe? No hunters, no threats?]

"The ecosystem is controlled. Nothing dangerous enough to hurt them. And the space is inside the Pavilion—no one can reach them here."

Yinxin’s eyes closed. Tears slid down silver scales.

[You’re giving us what I thought we’d lost forever. Safety. Home. Future.] Her voice trembled. [Thank you. Thank you.]

"You’re family," Jayde said simply, wrapping her arms around the dragon’s snout. "Family deserves homes."

[WAIT. WE GET A WORLD?!]

Reiko materialized in a flash of shadow—black form bouncing with barely contained excitement. He stared at the holographic projection, then at Yinxin, then back at the projection.

[This is REAL? Not pretend? Actual WORLD for us?]

"Five hundred hectares," Jayde confirmed, grinning. "What do you think?"

[FOREST!] Reiko practically vibrated. [Dense forest with shadows and trees to climb and—and prey animals? REAL prey?]

"Real hunting," Jayde confirmed. "Safe prey, though. Nothing that’ll hurt you."

[Can I explore? Can I run?] He bounced in circles. [Can I climb ALL the trees?]

"When it’s finished. Forty-eight hours."

[THAT’S FOREVER!]

"It’s two days, drama queen."

[Still forever!] But his tail wagged furiously, giving away his joy.

Tianxin’s voice echoed from the pet space—the wyrmling sensing excitement through Yinxin’s bond. [What’s happening? What’s forever? Can we come out too?]

"After it’s built," Yinxin told her daughter gently. [Then you can play in mountains and swim in lakes and fly without walls.]

The wyrmling’s squeal of delight made everyone smile.

Jayde turned back to the interface. Reviewed everything one final time.

Twenty-one thousand, seven hundred fifty points. Over two-thirds of her total wealth. A massive investment in creatures she’d known for weeks rather than years.

But looking at Yinxin’s tear-streaked face, at Reiko’s unbridled joy, at the promise of three wyrmlings growing up free...

Decision made. Execute.

(This is what power is for. Creating space for others to live safely.)

She confirmed the purchase.

POINTS: 31,260.10 → 9,510.10

The screen flashed brilliant gold.

AREA CREATION INITIATED

DIMENSIONAL EXPANSION IN PROGRESS

The holographic display transformed from model to live feed. Mountains rose from the void—stone forming from nothing, peaks reaching toward the sky that appeared as the space expanded. Water burst forth, carving rivers, filling the lake basin in rushing torrents. Trees erupted from soil that hadn’t existed moments before, growing from saplings to a full forest in seconds of accelerated time.

Animals materialized in groups—deer appearing in meadows, fish spawning in the lake, birds taking flight from branches, still settling into position. The cottage built itself piece by piece, stone and wood assembling like invisible hands crafted every detail.

Caves deepened throughout the mountain range, floors smoothing, water features trickling down enhanced walls. Hot springs bubbled to life, steam rising in graceful spirals. Fruit trees blossomed and bore fruit simultaneously, berries ripened on bushes that had just grown.

And through it all, ambient Qi pulsed—twice normal density, suffusing every inch of the new space with energy that would nurture and strengthen everything living there.

A progress bar appeared at the bottom: 0%... 5%... 10%...

ESTIMATED COMPLETION: 48 HOURS

ACCESS WILL BE GRANTED UPON COMPLETION

"It’s beautiful," Isha whispered.

Yinxin made a sound halfway between a laugh and a sob. She stared at the display, watching mountains take shape, seeing the future manifesting before her eyes.

[My wyrmlings will grow up free.] Her voice broke. [They’ll learn to fly without fear. Hunt without starvation. Live without hiding.]

She turned to Jayde, golden eyes swimming with tears.

[You’ve given us more than life. You’ve given us hope.]

Jayde pressed her face against Yinxin’s snout, arms wrapped around silver scales that felt like warm metal. "Just be happy. That’s all I want."

[We will be. Because of you.]

Reiko pressed against her side, unusually quiet—even his energy subdued by the moment’s weight.

Isha watched them, translucent form flickering with emotion. When he spoke, his voice was thick.

"Previous contractors took. Consumed. Demanded." He stared at the construction display, watching life take root in empty space. "They drained the artifact dry. Built weapons, torture chambers, and prisons. Used contract bonds to enslave."

He turned to Jayde.

"You build. You give. You create homes, not cages." His emerald eyes gleamed with something that might have been tears if he could cry. "The artifact has been waiting centuries for someone like you. Someone who understands what power is really for."

Assessment: Artifact entity experiencing profound relief. Query: How many contractors have disappointed him?

(We’re not destroying. We’re creating.)

For the first time in two lives—child’s desperate survival, soldier’s calculated warfare—Jayde was building something permanent. Not fighting, not hiding, not killing to protect herself.

Building. Creating space for others to flourish.

The progress bar ticked upward. 15%... 18%... 20%...

"Two days," Yinxin said softly. [Then my family will never have to hide again.]

"Two days," Jayde agreed.

Reiko’s tail started wagging again. [I’m going to explore EVERYTHING. Every tree. Every shadow. Every—]

"We know," Jayde and Yinxin said simultaneously, then laughed.

They stood together in the central hub—girl, dragon, shadowbeast, and translucent fox—watching creation unfold in holographic light. Mountains rose. Water flowed. Life took root in earth that hadn’t existed minutes before.

Somewhere in that display, three wyrmlings would soon tumble through meadows, splash in warm springs, spread wings in open sky without walls or fear. Somewhere in that space, a dragon mother would finally rest without constantly scanning for threats. Somewhere in that home, the family would gather.

Not bound by slavery. Not trapped by circumstance.

Free.

The word resonated through Jayde’s mind in both voices—child’s wonder and soldier’s hard-won satisfaction.

Mission objective achieved: Sustainable sanctuary established. Long-term contract viability secured.

(We built something good.)

Yes. For once, they’d built instead of merely survived.

It felt like hope.

"While the construction processes," Isha said eventually, composing himself, "there’s something else you should see."

Jayde raised an eyebrow. "More surprises?"

"Good surprises." His usual sarcasm returned, though warmth remained underneath. "The herb garden that unlocked from your mission assessment. You haven’t actually visited yet."

"The botanical garden?"

"That’s the one." His tails swished with anticipation. "I think you’ll appreciate it. And we need to discuss income potential."

"Income?"

"Trade management." Isha grinned, fox-sharp and pleased. "You focus on missions and cultivation. I’ll handle making you wealthy through interdimensional commerce."

Yinxin rumbled softly—dragon laughter. [Your guide has entrepreneurial spirit.]

"He really does," Jayde agreed.

"I prefer ’economically strategic,’" Isha said primly. "But yes. Come on. Let me show you what a self-sustaining magical herb garden looks like."

They left the central hub, progress bar still ticking upward in the background. 25%... 28%... 30%...

In forty-eight hours, dragons would fly free.

But for now, there was a garden to explore, wealth to understand, and a future to plan.

The journey continued, one step at a time.

And this step—building homes, creating safety, establishing foundations—felt like the right direction.

Finally.