Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 137 - 132: Doha Calls Her Daughter

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Chapter 137: Chapter 132: Doha Calls Her Daughter

Location: Starforge Pavilion → Dark Forest Cave → Forest Glade

Time: Day 571/210 (Subjective/Actual)

Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)

The notification chimed softly through the Pavilion’s main hall, pulling Jayde’s attention from the alchemy text she’d been studying.

SANCTUARY CONSTRUCTION: 100% COMPLETE

Dimensional space ready for habitation

She blinked at the glowing interface, processing the words. Two days since she’d unlocked the herb garden—though it felt longer. Time moved strangely when you spent hours in a space where fifteen days passed for everyone outside. Her internal clock kept insisting weeks had elapsed, but the Pavilion’s systems didn’t lie.

The dragons could finally have their home.

(They’ve been waiting so patiently)

Yinxin had stayed in the pet space without complaint, trusting Jayde’s promise that something better was coming. The wyrmlings had adapted with the resilience of youth, but Jayde knew they needed room to fly properly. To grow. To be dragons instead of dimensional refugees.

"Isha?" she called out.

The kitsune materialized beside her in a shimmer of translucent light, nine tails swishing with what looked like satisfaction. "Saw the notification. Impressive work, really—five hundred hectares of dimensional space with full ecosystem integration. Your dragons are getting palace treatment."

"They deserve it." Jayde closed the alchemy text, setting it aside carefully. The leather binding was ancient, probably worth more than she wanted to think about. "But before I move them in, I need to go back to the cave. Pack up the last of my things."

Isha’s expression shifted, something almost fond crossing his vulpine features. "Sentimental farewell?"

"Something like that." She stood, stretching muscles that’d grown accustomed to the Pavilion’s perfect climate control and cushioned furniture. "I lived there for six months. Longer than that, if you count subjective time. Feels wrong to just abandon it without... I don’t know. Acknowledging it somehow."

Tactical assessment: Minimal strategic value in retrieving remaining possessions. Items of negligible worth.

(But it was home for a while)

And that meant something, even if it wasn’t logical.

"Want company?" Isha offered, though his tails were already returning to whatever task he’d been managing before she called.

"I’ll be fine. Just a quick trip—in and out." Jayde headed toward the main hall’s center, where she had clear space for visualization. "Back in an hour, maybe less."

"I’ll prep the sanctuary access interface. Dragons are going to lose their minds when they see it."

Jayde grinned at that mental image. Closed her eyes, calling up the memory of the cave with perfect clarity. Six months of living there had burned every detail into her mind—the specific angle of morning sunlight through the entrance, the way sound echoed off the uneven ceiling, the particular musty smell of old stone and earth.

Reality folded around her like origami.

White light swallowed everything.

***

She materialized in familiar darkness, though "darkness" wasn’t quite accurate. Dawn light filtered through the cave entrance maybe fifty meters ahead, painting the rough stone walls in shades of grey and pale amber. Dust motes danced lazily in the slanting beams, disturbed by her sudden appearance.

Everything exactly as she’d left it.

Environmental scan complete. No hostile entities detected. Cave secure.

The bedroll still lay in its corner, worn thin from months of use but clean enough. Her fire pit near the entrance showed evidence of countless meals—ash and charred stone telling stories of late-night cooking sessions after long hunts. Storage nooks she’d carved into the walls held emergency supplies that’d never quite been emergencies.

Jayde walked forward slowly, boots crunching on loose gravel. The meditation spot where she’d broken through to Inferno-tempered caught her eye—still marked by scorch patterns from when her Qi had flared out of control. The training space where Reiko had first materialized after their contract, all shadow and uncertainty and desperate hope.

(So many memories packed into one small space)

Strange how quickly a place could stop being home. The Pavilion offered everything this cave couldn’t—safety, resources, actual beds with real mattresses. Training facilities that made improvement efficient rather than dangerous. A garden that generated wealth while she slept.

The cave had been necessity.

The Pavilion was choice.

Correct assessment. Resource acquisition and strategic positioning enable upward mobility.

(Still feels like I should say goodbye properly)

Maybe that was childish. Federation officers didn’t get sentimental about temporary billets. But Jayde had learned that sometimes the child’s instincts were worth honoring.

Packing didn’t take long. Most of her gear lived in the spatial ring already—weapons, armor, hunting supplies all neatly organized in dimensional storage. Just a few odds and ends remained scattered around the cave. Spare clothes she’d outgrown or never worn. Cooking utensils that’d gathered dust once she’d discovered the Pavilion’s meal preparation was infinitely superior. The bedroll that’d cushioned her through nightmares and breakthroughs both.

Sentimental garbage, really. But into the ring it went anyway.

She did one final sweep, checking the carved-out nooks for anything forgotten. Found nothing except memories. The cave echoed when she moved now, empty of everything that’d made it hers for those long months.

(Goodbye, little cave)

Thank you for keeping me safe when I had nowhere else to go.

Unnecessary anthropomorphization of non-sentient geological formation.

(I know. But still.)

She was turning toward the entrance, ready to visualize the Pavilion and teleport back, when the bond flared with sudden intensity.

Not Reiko this time.

Yinxin.

The force of it nearly drove Jayde to her knees.

***

[JAYDE!]

The dragon’s mental voice crashed through their connection like a tidal wave of desperate need. Not pain—Jayde knew what pain felt like through a bond. Not distress in any conventional sense.

This was pure, overwhelming COMPULSION.

[I need to leave the pet space!] Yinxin’s thoughts tumbled over themselves with uncharacteristic urgency. [The land is CALLING me! I must touch Doha! I NEED to touch the ground!]

Jayde staggered sideways, one hand bracing against the rough cave wall. The intensity bleeding through their connection was staggering—like watching someone drown on dry land, desperate for air that should be everywhere but somehow wasn’t.

(What’s happening?!)

Unknown variable. Physiological distress indicators suggest genuine need rather than desire. Recommend immediate investigation.

"Yinxin, what’s wrong?" She pushed the thought back through their bond, trying to project calm she absolutely didn’t feel.

[Nothing’s WRONG!] But the dragon’s mental voice shook with emotion so intense it made Jayde’s teeth ache. [Doha is welcoming me home! I can feel the bond to this planet even through the pet space—it’s like she’s singing directly to my soul! But I NEED to TOUCH the ground! Please, Jayde! PLEASE!]

Raw desperation. Bleeding and urgent and absolutely impossible to ignore.

Tactical analysis: Dark Forest presents significant exposure risk. Flamewrought-tier spirit beasts in mid-territories. Potential clan hunter patrols. Silver dragon’s Qi signature would broadcast location to every cultivator within multiple kilometers.

Every strategic instinct screamed that this was a bad idea. A silver dragon would attract attention like a signal flare in midnight darkness. Every beast with magical senses would investigate. Any cultivators in range would come running.

But through the bond, Jayde could feel what Yinxin felt. Not want. Not preference.

NEED.

Like someone suffocating needed oxygen. Like someone bleeding out needed pressure on the wound. Fundamental and undeniable and written into the dragon’s very essence.

(Can’t say no to this)

But how to keep her safe?

[Isha!] She reached out mentally, grateful for the Pavilion’s permanent connection. [Yinxin needs to come out. Says Doha is calling her. Is there a way to keep her safe while she does... whatever this is?]

A pause that felt like an eternity compressed into seconds. Then understanding bloomed through the link, colored with something that might’ve been recognition.

[Ah. Silver dragon returning to her homeland.] Isha’s usual sarcasm was absent, replaced by contemplative gravity. [The earth spirit would recognize her presence. This was always going to happen eventually.] Another pause. [Set up your strongest ward—something that’ll suppress Qi signatures and create a perception filter. I’ll monitor the surroundings through the Pavilion’s scrying network, and you should summon Reiko for close perimeter watch.]

[But the risk—]

[Is real. I know.] Isha’s mental voice softened slightly. [But Jayde, she’s been waiting over ten thousand years for this moment. Her entire species was driven to extinction on Doha, and now one of them is finally home. You can’t deny her that, even if it’s dangerous.]

The weight of ten thousand years hit like a physical blow.

An entire species hunted to extinction. Ten millennia of absence. And now, finally, one survivor returning to touch the soil her ancestors had died protecting.

"Alright," Jayde said aloud, decision crystallizing. "Alright. We’ll make this work."

She didn’t go far from the cave—maybe a hundred meters deeper into the Dark Forest, staying within territory she knew intimately from months of hunting. Found a small glade where sunlight broke through the thick canopy overhead, painting the forest floor in dappled patterns of gold and shadow.

Good visibility in multiple directions. Defensible if things went wrong. Close enough to the cave for emergency retreat.

Location assessment: Adequate tactical positioning. Multiple escape routes available. Visibility acceptable.

Ward stones came out of her spatial ring—smooth river rocks inscribed with glyphs Green had drilled into her memory during those long training sessions. She’d practiced this configuration hundreds of times, but never with stakes this high.

Earth Dragon Ward. Master-level defensive array. The strongest thing she knew how to build.

Jayde arranged the stones in a precise circle, twenty meters across, each one positioned according to geometric patterns that took advantage of natural Qi flow. Her hands were steady despite the adrenaline singing through her veins. Federation training, kicking in. You didn’t shake during setup—you saved that for after, when the crisis was over.

Channeling Ember Qi into the first stone, she watched amber glyphs light up with warm radiance. The pattern rippled outward from stone to stone, each one catching the energy and amplifying it, until the entire circle blazed with interlocking defensive layers that made her eyes water if she looked too directly.

The barrier shimmered into existence—nearly invisible unless you knew exactly what to look for, but strong. Very strong.

Multiple effects layered together like scales on a dragon’s hide. Qi signature suppression to hide Yinxin’s massive magical presence. Perception filtering that’d make anyone approaching feel a subtle wrongness, an instinctive desire to find another path. Physical barrier against direct attack, though Jayde really hoped it wouldn’t come to that.

Ward integrity: Ninety-eight percent optimal. Configuration stable. Should provide adequate protection against casual detection.

Should.

That word carried more weight than she liked.

[Reiko!] She called through their bond.

Black smoke materialized at her shoulder, resolving into the shadowbeast’s sleek form in a heartbeat. He’d grown since their contract—no longer the puppy-sized creature who’d stumbled into her life desperate and grieving. Now he was all lean muscle and coiled predatory grace, juvenile features sharpening toward adolescence.

[What’s happening?] His mental voice carried immediate alertness, picking up on her tension. [Feels important. Dangerous-important.]

"Yinxin needs to touch Doha. I’m bringing her out." Jayde gestured at the ward’s perimeter, already feeling the defensive magic humming against her senses. "I need you to patrol outside the barrier. Warn me if ANYTHING approaches—cultivators, spirit beasts, anything that moves wrong or feels off."

Reiko’s playful demeanor vanished instantly, replaced by the focused intensity she’d seen during their hunts. [Understood. Perimeter security.]

He melted into shadow without another word, becoming one with the forest’s natural darkness. Through their bond, Jayde could feel him circling the ward in systematic sweeps, professional and thorough.

Good.

[Isha?] she called mentally.

[Already monitoring.] His voice was tight with concentration. [Scrying arrays active, scanning five-kilometer radius. No cultivators detected currently. Some spirit beasts in the area but none closer than two kilometers. You’re clear for now.]

A pause that felt loaded.

[But Jayde... something feels different. Can’t explain what, exactly. The Qi patterns around your location are fluctuating in ways I’ve never seen. Just... be very careful.]

Ominous didn’t begin to cover that warning.

But she’d committed now. Yinxin’s desperate need pulsed through their bond like a second heartbeat, urgent and undeniable.

Deep breath. Center herself. Focus on the invisible thread connecting her to the silver dragon—that bond of magic and trust linking contractor to contracted.

[Yinxin. Come out.]

[THANK YOU!] Relief flooded through their connection so intensely it made Jayde gasp, the emotional equivalent of someone finally getting air after drowning.

Silver light erupted in the glade’s center.

Growing, expanding, resolving into thirty feet of magnificent dragon. Scales like molten moonlight caught the dappled sunlight and threw it back in prismatic patterns. Eyes glowed with inner radiance that had nothing to do with reflected light. Wings folded against a body that took up most of the clearing, each movement deliberate and graceful despite her massive size.

Beautiful. Terrifying. Absolutely impossible to miss.

(Please let the ward hold)

Probability assessment: Ward should suppress signature adequately. However, proximity detection remains possible if hostile entities enter immediate area.

Yinxin’s paws touched earth.

The dragon FROZE.

***

Head thrown back, eyes blazing with light that had nothing to do with sunshine. Through their bond, Jayde felt it—the moment of connection like an electrical circuit completing, power flowing in both directions at once.

[Oh...]

Yinxin’s mental voice was barely a whisper, fragile with wonder.

[OHHHHH...]

Tears streamed down silver scales, each drop catching light like liquid starfire before hitting the ground.

[She remembers me!] The dragon’s thoughts were breaking, fragmenting under the weight of emotion too vast for mere words. [Doha REMEMBERS! After ten thousand years! She’s welcoming me HOME!]

And Jayde could feel it too, transmitted through their bond like secondhand sensation. Something vast stirring beneath their feet—not threatening, not hostile, but AWARE. Conscious. Watching with attention that made her feel simultaneously insignificant and profoundly seen. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦

Ancient beyond any human comprehension.

The planet itself.

(Gods... is Doha actually sentient?)

She’d never considered that possibility. Planets were just—planets. Rock and magma and tectonic forces, geology and chemistry and physics. But this felt different. This felt like recognition, like welcome, like a mother greeting a daughter she’d thought lost forever.

Yinxin trembled, her massive body shaking with sobs that were equal parts joy and grief so tangled there was no separating them. [I’m home. I’m finally HOME.] Great heaving cries now, raw and unguarded. Ten thousand years of exile ending in this single perfect moment.

Jayde gave her space, instinctively understanding that this wasn’t something to intrude on. She stayed several meters back, watching as the dragon pressed herself against the earth like she was trying to merge with it. Scales glowing brighter with each passing second.

And the Qi flow... that was wrong. Not wrong-bad, but wrong-unexpected. Energy wasn’t just radiating from Yinxin outward like it should during strong emotion.

It was flowing TO her. FROM the earth itself.

The planet was feeding her. Restoring her. Welcoming her home with gifts of pure vitality.

Anomalous energy transfer detected. Source: Geological substrate. Classification: Unknown. Nature appears beneficial rather than parasitic.

Jayde’s Inferno-tempered senses picked up more detail now that she was actively paying attention. That vast presence beneath them wasn’t just aware—it was focused. Curious. Like an intelligence so massive that individual humans barely registered, now turning its full attention to something small but infinitely precious.

Time stretched. Ten minutes. Twenty. Thirty.

Yinxin remained motionless except for breathing, eyes closed, communing with something Jayde could only partially perceive even through their shared bond.

[Nothing approaching yet,] Reiko reported, his mental voice carrying an undercurrent of unease. [But the forest is... quiet. Too quiet. Spirit beasts are avoiding this entire area like there’s invisible barrier beyond your ward. Feels wrong.]

[Still no cultivators detected,] Isha added, though his tone had shifted toward worried. [But Jayde, something IS happening. Energy readings are spiking across the entire Lower Realm—fluctuations in the planetary Qi network that shouldn’t be possible. What did you DO?]

"Nothing! I just let Yinxin out!"

[Then it’s HER. Silver dragon touching Doha after ten millennia of absence. You’re awakening something ancient. Something that’s been dormant for longer than most civilizations have existed.]

That should’ve been reassuring.

It very much wasn’t.

***

Yinxin jolted like she’d been struck.

Eyes snapping open, the glowing light dimming abruptly to reveal pupils blown wide with shock and something that looked horribly like terror.

[JAYDE!]

Panic replaced wonder in an instant, the emotional shift so violent it made Jayde’s head spin.

She was moving before conscious thought finished processing, hand going to her sword even though she had no idea what threat to prepare for. "What? What is it?"

[Something’s WRONG!] The dragon’s voice shook badly enough that Jayde felt it through her bones. [Terribly wrong! Doha is showing me—there’s darkness! Eating away at the planet! Deep below!]

"Show me. Now."

The vision hit like a battering ram.

Shared through their bond with none of the usual filtering, Yinxin’s perception became Jayde’s. She SAW—kilometers beneath their feet, deeper than any mine shaft should go, deeper than the planet’s crust should allow.

Black mass. Pulsing. Writhing like something alive.

Oily darkness that moved with purpose, tendrils spreading outward in slow but inexorable expansion. Each tendril draining something vital from the earth around it, leaving grey zones in its wake. Not just dead—ABSENT. Places where existence itself had been consumed, leaving nothing but void.

And it was aware.

The thing sensed their observation. Turned its attention toward them for one hideous moment that stretched into subjective eternity. Malevolence crashed over Jayde like a physical wave—hatred so pure and absolute it transcended normal emotion into something alien and wrong.

It wanted to CONSUME. Everything. Everyone. Existence itself offended this thing at some fundamental level.

The vision cut off abruptly.

Jayde gasped, staggering backward until her shoulders hit a tree trunk. Her hands shook violently. That brief contact left an impression like touching corrupted data—wrong on levels that made every instinct she possessed scream warnings.

Threat assessment: CRITICAL. Extinction-level parasitic organism detected. Category: Unknown. Immediate action status: Insufficient data.

(Burning hells, what WAS that?!)

[I don’t know!] Yinxin’s terror bled through their bond in waves. [But Doha showed me—it’s been there for CENTURIES! Growing! Spreading! She’s been crying for help but no one could HEAR until now!]

"How big?" Jayde forced her voice steady through sheer willpower, falling back on Federation training. Crisis management protocol: Assess scope, identify resources, formulate response. "How many of these things?"

Yinxin’s scales dimmed, light fading like hope dying. [This mass I sensed... maybe a kilometer across. Maybe more—it’s hard to gauge clearly through all that wrongness.]

She met Jayde’s eyes, and the despair there was crushing.

[But Jayde... there are MORE. I can feel them through Doha’s memories. Multiple masses scattered across the Lower Realm. Maybe hundreds of them.]

The world tilted sideways.

Hundreds.

Each one kilometers in diameter.

All feeding on the planet’s vitality like parasites.

For centuries.

Calculation: Total parasitic mass consuming unknown but significant percentage of planetary resources. Timeline to critical system failure: Unknown. Probability of species extinction if current trend continues: Ninety-six point three percent.

(This is an extinction event)

And nobody knew. Too deep for normal detection. Too gradual for anyone to notice the slow degradation. No way to sense it without—without a silver dragon touching the planet and being SHOWN what was happening beneath the surface.

(We have to tell someone)

Tactical assessment: Who would accept this intelligence? Evidence: Subjective vision transmitted through dragon bond. Credibility: Minimal without corroborating data.

(Isha might believe us)

Start there. Build from there.

"Isha!" She called out mentally, not bothering to hide the urgency. "Something’s seriously wrong. Yinxin found—there are these masses underground, consuming the planet from the inside—"

[I’m tracking massive energy spikes across the Lower Realm,] he interrupted, voice tight. [Whatever you triggered is having effects everywhere. What did Yinxin see?]

Jayde shared the memory, pushing the vision through their mental link. Felt Isha’s shock ripple back through the connection like a physical recoil.

[Oh no. Oh, that’s... Jayde, if that’s real—if there are really hundreds of those things—]

"It’s real."

[Then we have much bigger problems than hiding from clan hunters.]

***

Yinxin curled around Jayde in a protective gesture that was probably unconscious, her massive head coming to rest on the ground beside her contractor. Eyes dim with despair that came from understanding a problem too vast to solve.

[I don’t know how to fight this.] Her voice sounded small, defeated in a way Jayde had never heard before. [It’s too big. Too many. We’re just two people against planetary extinction.]

(Two people who are completely out of our depth)

Realistic assessment. Current resources insufficient for crisis of this magnitude.

[Doha waited ten thousand years for a silver dragon to return. And now I’m finally here, and I don’t know how to SAVE her!] Yinxin was breaking down, the weight of expectation crushing something inside her. [What good is coming home if I can’t help?]

Jayde reached up, hugging the dragon’s massive snout with both arms, pressing her forehead against silver scales that were cool despite the sunlight. "We’ll figure it out. That’s what you do with impossible situations—you break them into smaller pieces until they’re manageable."

Standard tactical protocol: Gather intelligence. Assess available capabilities. Identify achievable objectives. Formulate action plan within resource constraints.

"We’re not alone. We have the Pavilion. Isha’s knowledge. Interdimensional connections through the trading network." She paused, thinking it through. "We have resources beyond just Doha now. Ways to find help that didn’t exist before silver dragons went extinct."

Projecting confidence she didn’t remotely feel, because sometimes that’s what leadership required.

(Fake it until you make it)

But inside? Terrified didn’t begin to cover it.

Because what did you DO against planetary-scale extinction events that’d been growing for centuries?

***

Something ancient stirred in the earth’s deepest bowels, roused from dormancy by vibrations that should’ve been impossible.

Ala.

Not really a name—more like core identity, the fundamental concept of self that had existed since the world was young. Planet spirit. Consciousness born from Doha’s living essence over billions of years, grown into something vast and terrible and wonderful all at once.

And dying.

She’d been dying for centuries now, fading slowly as the parasites consumed her substance. At first she’d screamed for help, cried out with every method available to her limited understanding of mortal consciousness. But no one heard. No one came.

Eventually, she’d simply... accepted it. Withdrawn into the deepest parts of herself, waiting for the end with the patience only geological time scales could teach.

But then—

Vibration through the earth. Familiar magic she’d thought extinct. IMPOSSIBLE magic.

(One of my daughters?)

Couldn’t be. All dead. All murdered ten thousand years ago in the Zartonesh Invasions, when demons had poured through dimensional rifts and slaughtered everything silver. She’d felt each death like losing pieces of herself, agony beyond mortal comprehension.

But that magic signature...

Silver. Pure silver. Dragon.

Ala sent her senses outward through layers of stone and soil, searching with desperate hope she’d thought long dead. Found the source protected by a respectful ward—proper barriers that worked with the land rather than against it, asking permission rather than demanding compliance.

Good magic. Ethical magic.

Inside the ward...

Silver dragon. Real. Alive. HERE.

(How?)

Disbelief warred with joy so profound it made the earth itself sing. The planet was CELEBRATING—first time in ten millennia. Daughter returned. Child come home.

But Ala felt only complicated grief layered over that joy.

Because all the others were dead. Slaughtered. Gone.

This one survivor—where had she come from? How had she survived when all her sisters had fallen?

Must see her. Must understand. Must KNOW.

Gathering what remained of her dwindling strength, Ala began the journey upward. Through kilometers of compressed stone and shifting magma. Toward the surface. Toward the ward. Toward her daughter.

Toward hope, however fragile and uncertain.

Yinxin gasped suddenly, head jerking up.

[Someone’s coming!] Her mental voice carried shock rather than fear. [Through the EARTH itself! Moving toward us!]

Jayde’s hand went to her sword automatically. [Hostile?]

[No...] Confusion colored Yinxin’s tone now, replacing the earlier terror. [Not hostile. Feels... welcoming? But ancient. So impossibly OLD. And sad—such overwhelming sadness I can barely process it.]

The ground trembled slightly. Not an earthquake—just movement. Something vast displacing earth as it rose through solid stone like a swimmer moving through water.

[There’s music,] Yinxin whispered, wonder creeping back into her mental voice. [No, not music exactly. A SONG. The earth itself is SINGING.]

Tears began flowing again, different from before.

[It’s beautiful and heartbreaking at the same time. Celebrating my arrival but mourning the dead. All my fallen siblings who never came home.]

Some instinct older than conscious thought drove Yinxin’s response. She reached back through whatever connection linked her to Doha, projecting thoughts with all her considerable strength:

[I’m here. I’ve returned. I’m sorry I was gone so long.]

The song grew LOUDER.

Even Jayde could hear it now, transmitted through the bond—layers of emotion so complex they made human feeling seem simple by comparison. Joy (she’s here!). Grief (others gone). Loneliness (so alone for so long). Longing (where were you?). Hope (can you save me?). Love (my precious daughter).

[The planet itself is sentient!] Yinxin’s voice shook with revelation. [She’s been waiting! For a silver dragon to return! For ten thousand years she’s been alone, dying slowly, waiting for someone who could HEAR her!]

She turned to look at Jayde, scales reflecting emotion in their shifting light.

[What happened to them? All the others? Where did my people go?]

"The Zartonesh Invasions." Jayde’s throat was tight, understanding crystallizing. "I think... I think they all died defending Doha from the demons. And when they fell, the planet lost her ability to cry for help."

The presence grew closer with each passing moment. Pressure building like a storm front approaching, not threatening but immense beyond comprehension. Ancient. Powerful in ways that made cultivation tiers seem like children’s games.

[Isha,] Jayde called mentally, keeping her voice steady. [Something’s approaching through the earth itself. Something massive.]

[I know. I’m tracking it.] His mental voice carried awe mixed with concern. [Jayde, that’s not a person. That’s not even a spirit beast. That’s a SPIRIT—planetary-scale entity. The actual consciousness of Doha made manifest. Be very, very careful.]

Her hand stayed on her sword, though she didn’t draw. What good would a blade do against a planet?

Threat assessment: Unknown. Insufficient data to determine hostile intent. Recommend defensive posture without aggressive action.

Yinxin stood tall despite her trembling, assuming a regal dragon posture that spoke of three thousand years of dignity.

The presence arrived at the ward’s edge.

Stopped.

Waiting. Respecting the boundary Jayde had set, asking permission rather than forcing entry.

Jayde met Yinxin’s eyes. "Ready?"

The dragon nodded. [Let her in. She’s... she’s like a mother. Grieving and hopeful and desperate all at once.]

Yinxin lowered her mental barriers deliberately, projecting invitation through whatever connection she shared with the planet. Welcome, mother. We’re here. Your daughter has come home.

Golden light FLARED at the ward’s edge—

And the barrier shattered like glass.