Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 144 - 139: Home at Last
Location: Pavilion → Dragon Sanctuary
Time: Day 572/211 (Subjective/Actual) - Early Afternoon
Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)
The weight of planetary survival pressing on her shoulders, Jayde stood from the table where scrolls and diagrams still lay scattered. Her mind buzzed with information about psionic attacks and mental fortification techniques, but Green raised a hand.
"Enough for now," the healer said gently, her fractured emerald eyes reflecting concern. "You’ve absorbed more information in one morning than most cultivators process in a week. Your mind needs rest before we begin actual training."
[She’s right,] Isha agreed, though his translucent form still carried tension. [Besides, we never finished what we started before Mother’s arrival interrupted everything.]
Jayde blinked, confusion clearing some of the tactical fog. "The sanctuary?"
[The sanctuary,] Isha confirmed, his presence brightening noticeably. [Did you forget that the upgrade completed yesterday morning? You saw the hologram when we designed it, but seeing it in person...] He trailed off meaningfully. [It’s different. Better. You should see what your points created.]
Through their bond, Yinxin’s presence shifted—curiosity threading through lingering grief. [The real version? Not just the projection?]
In Jayde’s pocket, Takara perked up with interest.
Sanctuary? What kind of space could warrant such reverence from an ancient artifact spirit and a silver dragon?
"Let’s go," Jayde said, grateful for the distraction from thoughts of upcoming battle and possible death.
She walked toward the ornate door—carved wood depicting dragons in flight, silver inlay catching lamplight. Reiko padded beside her, tail swishing with interest. Yinxin followed, her massive form moving with surprising grace.
Isha touched the door with one translucent paw. [Ready?]
"We designed it," Jayde said. "We know what to expect."
[Knowing and experiencing are different things,] Isha said cryptically, and pushed the door open.
Jayde stepped through and stopped.
They’d designed this. Spent hours playing with the holographic interface, moving mountains, lakes, and forests around like divine architects. She’d seen every angle, every detail rendered in perfect three-dimensional projection.
But seeing it in reality...
"Oh," she breathed.
***
From his vantage point in Jayde’s pocket, Takara felt his breath catch.
The hologram had been accurate. Ten square kilometers of rolling hills and meadows, ancient forests and crystal lakes, mountains with snow-capped peaks rising against an impossible sky.
But the life of it...
By all the gods. This is dimensional folding at a level I’ve only seen in Upper Realm imperial palaces. And this child created it with artifact points?
The way grass rustled under a breeze that carried scents of wildflowers and clean earth. The weight of sunlight—real sunlight, somehow—warming everything it touched. The sound of a waterfall cascading down obsidian cliffs, the splash and spray of water hitting the lake below.
Birds singing in the forest canopy. Insects buzzing through meadow flowers. The rich, loamy smell of soil that had never known corruption.
This isn’t just spatial expansion. This is a complete ecosystem. Self-sustaining. Perfect. The kind of sanctuary that takes master craftsmen centuries to create, and she’s built it in days.
He peeked out from the pocket, his innocent blue eyes taking in everything while his five-thousand-year-old consciousness catalogued defensive capabilities, escape routes, and tactical advantages.
Perfect place to hide dragon young. Perfect place to train without observation. Perfect place to...
He stopped that thought, focusing instead on maintaining his adorable kitten facade.
***
The air itself felt different—charged with vitality and magic in concentrations that made Jayde’s enhanced senses sing. She could feel Doha’s essence here, filtered through Pavilion systems and concentrated into something pure and perfect.
Spatial expansion technology can recreate environments. But this... this feels alive in ways Federation simulations never managed.
[It’s...] Yinxin’s mental voice caught. [The hologram showed us what it would look like. But this... I can feel the earth beneath my feet. Real earth. Real sky. Real wind.]
The silver dragon moved forward slowly, as if afraid the vision would shatter. Her talons touched grass that bent beneath her weight but didn’t crush, springing back when she lifted her foot. She extended one wing, then the other, testing the space they’d carved out with such care.
And then she launched.
Powerful legs drove her upward. Wings spread wide, catching air that shouldn’t exist but did. She rose into that impossible sky, climbing higher and higher until she was just a silver speck against blue they’d programmed to mimic Doha’s natural light.
Then she dove—plummeting with wings folded tight—before spreading them at the last moment and soaring across the valley. Banking. Rolling. Performing aerial maneuvers that spoke of pure joy, of freedom she hadn’t known for years.
A roar echoed across the landscape—not threat, not anger, but sheer exultation.
[I can fly!] Her mental voice carried wonder and tears. [Without fear of hunters. Without worry about clan patrols. Without—] 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮
She couldn’t finish, emotion overwhelming words.
***
Takara watched the silver dragon soar and felt something twist in his chest.
Ten thousand years since Lady Ala lost her children. Since the genocide. And now one survives—one daughter lives—and she’s discovering freedom for the first time in who knows how long.
He watched Yinxin perform aerial loops that spoke of skills honed over centuries, of dragon instincts finally unleashed without fear.
This is why Lady Ala asked for help. Why Lord Fahmjir sent me despite my... reluctance. Because this dragon deserves to survive. Deserves to raise her young without terror. Deserves...
He felt his kitten form purr involuntarily—a sound of approval and understanding that Jayde would interpret as contentment, but carried so much more depth.
I will protect them. Whatever it takes. Even if it means revealing my true form. Even if my subordinates learn that I spent weeks pretending to be an adorable pet. These beings deserve safety.
Lady Ala chose well when she chose this human child to save her daughter.
***
Jayde felt tears burning her own eyes. They’d designed this space together, yes. Had known intellectually what it would provide. But seeing Yinxin free—truly free for the first time since Telia—hit differently than any hologram could capture.
From her pocket, she felt Takara shift slightly, his small body warm against her side. She reached down absently, stroking soft white fur, finding comfort in the simple gesture.
The kitten purred louder, nuzzling her hand.
Adorable pets provide emotional support. That’s part of the mission parameters Lord Fahmjir outlined. Emotional comfort supports mental resilience. Therefore, purring is tactically sound.
"We should get the wyrmlings," Jayde said quietly, her hand still gently petting Takara.
[Yes,] Yinxin sent, already descending. [They need to see this. To feel what real safety means.]
***
Jayde returned to the small chamber where Tianxin, Shenxin, and Huaxin had been resting. The three wyrmlings looked up as she entered, silver scales gleaming in the soft light.
"Want to see your new home?" Jayde asked, crouching down. "Your real home, not the cramped pet space. Your mother’s waiting."
All three wyrmlings chirped excitedly, their young voices carrying pure joy.
In her pocket, Takara’s eyes widened.
Dragon wyrmlings. Actual dragon young. I haven’t seen hatchlings in...
He couldn’t remember the last time. Dragons were rare in the Upper Realm, and they jealously guarded their young, kept them hidden from potential threats. To see three silver dragon babies this close...
They’re so small. So vulnerable. How did they survive on that hostile world? How did...
Then he understood. The human. Jayde. An adolescent girl had traveled to another dimension and saved a dying dragoness and her young because it was right.
No wonder Lady Ala approves of her.
***
Jayde summoned the wyrmlings into the pet space briefly for transport, then released them in the dragon sanctuary.
The reaction was immediate and overwhelming.
Tianxin squealed—an ear-piercing sound of pure delight—and immediately took off running across the meadow. Her small wings flapped uselessly, not quite ready for flight, but she ran with abandon that spoke of joy beyond words.
Takara flinched at the volume, his sensitive feline ears ringing.
Loud. Very loud. But...
He watched the tiny wyrmling race through grass that came up to her chest, stumbling occasionally but never stopping, never slowing. Pure, unfiltered happiness radiating from every awkward movement.
This is what childhood should look like. Before battles. Before responsibilities. Before the weight of five thousand years. Just... joy. Discovery. Safety.
Shenxin and Huaxin followed more slowly, still careful, still healing from their brush with death. But their eyes were wide with wonder. They’d been dying in darkness on Telia, had known nothing but cold caves and fear and hunger.
Now they stood in paradise.
Yinxin descended rapidly, landing beside her children with grace that belied her massive size. She curled around them protectively, her silver form encompassing all three as they chirped and squeaked and pressed against her scales.
[Look,] she sent to them, her mental voice warm with love. [This is ours. Forever. No one can take it away. No one can hurt us here.]
Takara felt something uncomfortable lodge in his throat.
Forever. She actually believes that. Believes this human child can protect them forever. Believes...
He looked up at Jayde’s face, saw the determination there, the fierce protectiveness.
Maybe she can. Maybe with help, this child actually can give them forever.
And I’ll make sure she survives long enough to try.
***
Tianxin wriggled free and bounced toward the lake, chirping questions about water, fish, and swimming. Shenxin and Huaxin huddled closer to their mother, still processing, still overwhelmed by sensory input after so long in darkness.
Reiko sat beside Jayde, watching the dragon family with his silver eyes reflecting complex emotion.
[It’s perfect,] he sent quietly. [Everything they needed. Everything they deserved.]
"Yeah," Jayde agreed softly, absently scratching behind Takara’s ears.
The kitten leaned into the touch, purring contentedly while his ancient mind calculated optimal positioning for monitoring multiple threats simultaneously.
Adorable. Harmless. Completely non-threatening. That’s the mission. That’s the cover. Even if I want to tell them all that Lady Ala sent protection, that they’re not alone, that...
No. Orders were clear. Observe. Protect. Reveal true nature only if death was imminent.
So he purred, nuzzled, and played his part perfectly.
***
They watched in silence as Tianxin convinced Shenxin to join her at the lake’s edge. The two wyrmlings peered into crystal-clear water, startling when fish swam past. Huaxin remained with Yinxin, not quite ready for adventure but watching her siblings with interest.
And Jayde felt something shift in her chest.
If I fall fighting those worms, at least they’ll be safe here. Yinxin and her children. Reiko. They’ll have this sanctuary. This home. Whatever happens to me, they’ll survive.
The thought should have been terrifying. Should have made the upcoming battle feel even more impossible. But instead, it brought strange comfort.
In her pocket, Takara stiffened slightly, his sensitive hearing catching the shift in Jayde’s heartbeat, the change in breathing pattern.
She’s planning her death. Calculating survival probabilities for those she’ll leave behind. Accepting potential sacrifice.
Just like the Luminari. Just like the ancient warriors who walked into battles knowing they might not return, but going anyway because someone had to.
This child is fifteen years old and thinking like a soldier preparing for a final deployment.
His respect for her increased exponentially.
***
[Jayde?] Reiko’s mental voice carried concern. [You’re thinking dark thoughts. I can feel it through our bond.]
"Just... contingency planning," she said quietly, her hand stilling on Takara’s fur. "Making sure everyone’s provided for."
[You’re not going to die,] Reiko said firmly. [We won’t let you.]
"I hope not," Jayde said honestly. "But hope isn’t a strategy. And I need to know they’ll be safe. If the worst happens."
She looked at Isha, who’d been hovering nearby in translucent fox form.
"Isha, can we talk? Privately?"
His presence flickered with concern, but he nodded. [Of course. This way.]
He led her away from the lake, toward a grove of ancient trees at the forest’s edge. Far enough that Yinxin and the wyrmlings wouldn’t overhear.
Reiko started to follow, but Jayde shook her head.
"Stay with them. Please. I’ll be right back."
She reached into her pocket, gently lifting Takara out and setting him on the ground. "You too, little guy. Go play with Reiko and the dragons. I’ll be back soon."
Takara mewed softly—the perfect picture of a confused kitten being separated from his person.
Perfect. She thinks I’ll stay here like a good pet.
Jayde smiled despite herself, scratching his head once more before walking away with Isha toward the trees.
Reiko padded toward the dragon family.
And Takara, after waiting exactly three seconds, began following Jayde and Isha with the silent stalking skills of a five-thousand-year-old predator.
I’m her guardian. That means I guard. Even during "private" conversations where she’s clearly planning succession and contingencies.
Especially during those conversations.
He moved through the grass without disturbing a single blade, his paws making absolutely no sound, his white form blending with scattered sunlight filtering through leaves.
Adorable kitten by day. Elite shadow operative by necessity.







