Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 146 - 141: The Gift of Time

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Chapter 146: Chapter 141: The Gift of Time

Location: Pavilion - Training Halls

Time: Day 572/211 (Subjective/Actual) - Morning

Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)

"Ready?" Green asked, her eyes studying Jayde with the careful attention of someone assessing a patient before surgery.

"No," Jayde admitted honestly, her hand unconsciously reaching into her pocket where Takara had curled up into the smallest, fluffiest ball of white fur physically possible. "But let’s start anyway."

The healer’s lips curved into something that might have been approval. Her petite frame straightened, robes settling around her with the kind of precise movements that suggested every gesture was deliberate, measured, controlled. "That’s the right attitude. Acknowledging fear without letting it paralyze you. Come. We have much work to do and not nearly enough time to do it."

Before Green could take another step toward the training floor, Isha materialized beside them with enough force that his translucent form actually rippled the air. His nine tails swished with barely contained enthusiasm—not the careful, measured movements Jayde had grown accustomed to, but genuine excitement that made him look almost giddy.

[Wait—before we begin, I need to tell you something important.] The kitsune’s presence practically vibrated. [The Pavilion upgrades? The dimensional expansion you paid for to create the dragon sanctuary? It came with benefits beyond just housing Yinxin and her wyrmlings in paradise.]

Jayde turned to him fully, noting how Green’s expression shifted from professional instructor to genuinely curious. Even Yinxin lifted her massive head from where she’d been coiled near the training hall entrance, golden eyes reflecting interest.

[Time dilation enhancement,] Isha announced, clearly savoring the moment like someone about to reveal the winning hand in a high-stakes game. [The Pavilion has always operated on accelerated time compared to the outside world. Standard Nexus configuration—six days here equal one day on Doha. Six-to-one ratio. It’s one of the fundamental advantages the Luminari built into these artifacts, allowing contractors to train longer without losing time in the worlds they’re protecting.]

He paused, his tails moving in patterns that suggested he was enjoying drawing this out.

Jayde waited, patience learned from Federation briefings where superior officers loved their dramatic reveals.

[But,] Isha continued, his voice carrying a note of triumph, [with the massive dimensional expansion you invested in—ten square kilometers of fully realized ecosystem, complete with weather patterns, day-night cycles, flowing water, and self-sustaining magical infrastructure—the entire system had to recalibrate. The power draw increased exponentially. The dimensional anchors needed reinforcement. The temporal mechanics adjusted automatically to accommodate the new load.]

His form brightened noticeably.

[It’s ten-to-one now. Ten full Pavilion days equal one single day on Doha.]

Jayde’s breath caught in her throat.

Ten to one.

The implications cascaded through her mind like dominoes falling in perfect sequence. Ten days of training, preparation, spell mastery, and psionic defense practice—all compressed into what would register as a single day outside these walls. The Demonic Nematomorpha colonies threatening the planet wouldn’t notice any delay. Political movements in the Freehold Clan wouldn’t progress. Seasonal changes would barely register. Everything outside would crawl forward at a snail’s pace while she and Yinxin prepared for war at ten times the normal speed.

Strategic advantage: Substantial, Jayde’s tactical mind analyzed with cool precision. Temporal manipulation technology in Xi Corp laboratories never achieved this level of efficiency. Training time expanded by factor of ten provides exponential improvement in preparation quality.

But it was more than just tactics. It was hope.

Green had said they needed months of training compressed into days. Now they had ten days instead of one. Ten days to become ready enough that "survival" shifted from "unlikely" to "possible."

"That’s actually incredible," Jayde said, and for the first time since Mother Doha’s warning about extinction-level parasites, she felt something other than dread settling in her chest.

[I thought you’d appreciate it.] Isha’s satisfaction was palpable, his entire presence radiating the kind of pride that came from delivering genuinely good news in a situation that had seemed hopeless. [Makes the point investment worth it beyond just housing dragons in luxury. You get a tactical advantage and significantly extended preparation time. One Doha day passes while you gain ten full days of intensive training.]

In Jayde’s pocket, Takara’s ears perked up slightly despite his determination to maintain the appearance of an adorably sleeping kitten.

Ten days, he thought with relief that surprised him. Ten days instead of one. That’s... that actually might be enough time to teach this reckless child how not to get her mind shredded into paste by psionic assault.

He’d been listening to the briefing about the Demonic Nematomorpha with growing horror. Five thousand years of combat experience across multiple realms, and even Takara had never faced creatures quite that horrific. Psionic attacks that could shatter consciousness. Vampiric draining that stole cultivation directly from meridians. Mind control that overrode free will entirely.

And this fifteen-year-old girl was planning to stand in front of thousands of them for thirty to forty minutes while protecting a casting dragon.

Insane, Takara had concluded during the briefing. Absolutely, completely, suicidally insane.

But now... ten days of preparation instead of one? That changed the equation somewhat. Not enough to make the mission safe—nothing could make this mission safe—but enough to shift the odds from "certain death" to "probable survival with catastrophic injuries."

I suppose that’s progress, he thought sourly, then forced himself back into kitten-sleep mode as Jayde absently stroked his fur.

***

Green’s expression showed something that might have been relief, though she remained professionally controlled. The worry lines around her mouth eased slightly, and her shoulders relaxed from the tension they’d been carrying since the briefing began.

"Ten days," she said quietly, as if testing how the words felt. "That’s... that actually changes everything. I was trying to figure out how to compress six months of advanced magical combat training into a single week. Ten days is survivable."

She moved toward the center of the training hall, her green robes with their runic stitching catching the light and reflecting it in patterns that seemed to shift and flow like living things. Her petite frame somehow commanded the massive space, presence expanding to fill areas her physical body couldn’t reach.

"Alright then," Green continued, her voice shifting from sympathetic to determined—the tone of a master instructor who’d just been given enough time to actually do her job properly instead of rushing through critical lessons. "New plan. We use every single hour. No wasted time. No gentle learning curves. No easing into difficult concepts."

She gestured to the space beside her, where three ancient scrolls lay arranged on a stone table with careful precision. Silver ribbon bound each one, glowing faintly with magic that had been preserved through centuries, possibly millennia. The scrolls themselves seemed to pulse with power—not threatening, but present in a way that made the air around them feel heavier, more substantial.

"Earth Dragon Ward. Earth Dragon Strike. Essence of Earth." The healer’s voice shifted into full lecture mode—the tone of someone who’d taught countless students over a very long life and had watched far too many of them fail despite her best efforts. "The three spells Mother Doha mentioned when she explained how you might survive facing the worms. The ones that’ll keep you alive while Yinxin casts her purification spell."

Jayde moved closer to the table, studying the scrolls without touching them. Even from a distance—even without reaching out with essence senses—she could feel power thrumming through aged parchment like a heartbeat. Terracore essence so concentrated it made her skin prickle with awareness. Radiance woven through the earth magic in patterns that spoke of life, growth, and endurance against impossible odds.

The scrolls were beautiful in the way ancient things often were—crafted with care that modern cultivators rarely invested, imbued with purpose that transcended mere function.

"All earth-element," Jayde noted, her mind cataloging details automatically. "Terracore and Radiance. Life essence combined with earth foundation. But I only have Inferno unlocked from the Divine Eightfold Lock. The other seven essences are still sealed away, inaccessible until I reach the cultivation tiers required to break each seal."

She frowned slightly, confusion cutting through her usual analytical calm.

"How am I supposed to cast earth spells when I can’t even access earth essence?"

"Through your bond with Yinxin," Green said simply, as if the answer should have been obvious. "Silver dragons naturally wield Torrent, Terracore, and Radiance. It’s fundamental to their species—water, earth, and life magic woven together in ways unique to their bloodline. Your equal partnership contract allows essence sharing. She provides the earth magic through your connection. You channel it through your meridians and out into spell forms."

Jayde’s frown deepened, her knowledge about cultivation mechanics surfacing with concerning implications. "That would kill a normal cultivator. Channeling incompatible essence types through meridians not designed to handle them—it shatters the pathways. Burns through spiritual channels like acid through paper. I’ve seen it happen in the fighting pits when slavers forced incompatible essences into Thralls. The results were... messy."

"It would kill a normal cultivator," Green agreed, studying Jayde with the intensity of someone looking at a fascinating puzzle. "Standard meridian networks are specialized—designed through years of cultivation to handle one, maybe two compatible essence types. Fire cultivators channel Inferno. Water cultivators work with Torrent. Trying to force earth essence through fire-attuned channels would be like trying to run molten steel through glass pipes."

She paused, a slight smile touching her lips.

"But you’re not a normal cultivator, Jayde. The Harmony Chamber rebuilt your meridian network from the ground up when it upgraded your constitution from Mortal to Refined. And more importantly—" She gestured toward Jayde in a way that encompassed her entire being. "—you were born from a Phoenix Lord and a World Spirit. Divine heritage. Your very existence is an impossibility that somehow exists anyway."

The healer’s voice softened slightly, taking on the quality of someone explaining something profound.

"You were always meant to access all eight essences eventually. The Divine Eightfold Lock just seals them temporarily, releasing each essence as you prove ready to wield that kind of power responsibly. But your body—your meridians, your spiritual channels, your very foundation—all of it was designed to handle any essence type. Most cultivators have specialized pathways. Yours are universal. Adaptable. Capable of channeling anything you can access."

She made it sound simple. Practical. As if being the daughter of beings who shouldn’t have been able to create life together was just another cultivation advantage to exploit rather than an existential crisis waiting to happen.

Bond provides essence source. Divine heritage provides compatibility. Harmony Chamber provides infrastructure, Jayde analyzed. Conclusion: Borrowed essence channeling viable. Risk level: Acceptable given alternatives.

(Partners. In every sense of the word.)

"So I borrow Terracore and Radiance from Yinxin through our contract bond," Jayde said slowly, working through the mechanics in her mind. "Channel the earth magic through my universal meridians. Cast spells using essence I don’t personally possess but can access through our connection."

She paused, a thought occurring.

"Wait—I’m also bonded to Reiko through our Bonded Nexus Core. Why can’t I borrow Voidshadow from him the same way? That would give me access to three essence types instead of just two."

Green’s expression went very serious, her gaze hardening with something that looked like fear.

"No. Absolutely not." The healer’s voice carried a weight that made it clear this wasn’t negotiable. "You’re bonded to Reiko, yes. Your cores are linked. Theoretically, you could access Voidshadow through that connection. But you won’t. You can’t. Not yet. Possibly not ever."

She moved closer, making sure Jayde understood the gravity of what she was saying.

"Voidshadow isn’t like the other essences, Jayde. It’s not just another element to learn and master. It’s corruption given form. Darkness that consumes. The void between stars made manifest. There’s a reason it’s sealed as your eighth and final lock—the one that won’t open until you’ve mastered all seven others first."

Green gestured to Jayde’s chest, where the Divine Eightfold Lock resided invisibly.

"The seal on your essences isn’t arbitrary. It’s protection. Each lock opens when you’re ready—when your cultivation, your maturity, your understanding reaches the point where you can wield that power responsibly without it destroying you. Inferno opened first because fire is the most natural to your phoenix heritage. The others will open in sequence as you prove ready."

Her voice softened slightly, but the seriousness remained.

"But Voidshadow? That’s last for a reason. It’s the most dangerous essence by several orders of magnitude. Channeling it before you’re ready—before the seal judges you capable—would corrupt your meridians, twist your cultivation foundation, possibly fracture your consciousness entirely. It feeds on darkness, and everyone has darkness inside them. Use it too early, and it’ll consume you from within."

***

In Jayde’s pocket, Takara had gone absolutely still.

Divine Eightfold Lock, he thought with shock that bordered on reverence. She has a Divine Eightfold Lock. Only the gods themselves can cast that seal. Only divine beings with power beyond mortal cultivation, beyond even most immortals.

He’d heard of the Divine Eightfold Lock in inherited memories passed down through Lightning Panthera bloodlines—ancient knowledge from the era when gods still walked among mortals. A seal so powerful it could contain essence types that would normally destroy their host, releasing them only when the vessel had grown strong enough to survive what they carried.

But who cast it? Takara wondered, his small kitten form trembling slightly with the implications. Which god deemed this child important enough to personally seal her essences? And why?

He needed to see it. Needed to examine the seal directly to understand what he was dealing with.

Takara waited until Green became absorbed in explaining cultivation theory to Jayde, then slipped out of the pocket with the silent grace of a predator who’d spent five thousand years learning to move undetected.

He padded around behind Jayde, his small form completely unthreatening as he positioned himself where he could examine her essence channels directly without drawing attention.

Then he opened his senses fully—not just surface observation but deep scanning, the kind of detailed examination that would reveal the fundamental structure of her cultivation foundation.

And there it was.

The Divine Eightfold Lock, exactly as his inherited memories described it. Eight separate seals arranged in a perfect geometric pattern, each one locking away a specific essence type. Seven locks currently sealed. One lock opened—Inferno, blazing golden-red through channels designed to eventually handle all eight elements.

The craftsmanship was divine. Literally divine. No mortal cultivator, no matter how skilled, could create seals this intricate. The pattern was perfect, the essence containment absolute, the release mechanisms precisely calibrated to open only when specific conditions were met.

This was definitely cast by a god, Takara confirmed. No question. The signature is unmistakable.

But...

He looked closer, examining the fundamental essence structure of the locks themselves.

Something was wrong.

Not wrong exactly. Different. The seal looked like the Divine Eightfold Lock from his inherited memories—same basic pattern, same geometric arrangement, same divine craftsmanship. But the power level was... off.

Stronger. Significantly stronger than it should be.

Traditional Divine Eightfold Locks were cast by lesser gods or powerful immortals who’d achieved divine status. They were impressive but not overwhelming. Standard divine magic, if such a thing existed.

This seal radiated power that made traditional versions look like children’s practice exercises.

What in all the realms...?

Takara examined the locks more carefully, comparing what he sensed to the inherited memories his bloodline carried. Same structure. Same appearance. But the fundamental power backing the seal was orders of magnitude greater than anything his ancestors had encountered.

It was like looking at two swords—both forged in the same style, both appearing identical, but one made of normal steel while the other was crafted from materials that shouldn’t exist, by techniques that transcended normal smithing.

Maybe my ancestors’ knowledge is incomplete, Takara thought slowly, confusion warring with awe. Maybe there are variations of the Divine Eightfold Lock I’ve never heard of. Stronger versions cast by greater gods. Or maybe...

He stopped that thought, unwilling to follow it to its logical conclusion.

Because if his inherited memories were accurate—if the Divine Eightfold Lock really only existed in the form his ancestors described—then what Jayde carried wasn’t a Divine Eightfold Lock at all.

It was something else. Something that looked similar but was fundamentally more powerful.

Something that would require a god of truly terrifying strength to cast.

Who created you, little human? Takara wondered, staring at the impossibly powerful seals wrapped around Jayde’s essence channels. What kind of being has that much power? And why did they invest it in you?

He slipped back into Jayde’s pocket, his kitten facade perfect despite the profound questions churning through his ancient consciousness.

I need to speak with Isha about this, Takara thought. He’ll want to know what I found. And I need to discuss the Thunder Core Ward spell—she’ll need that protection if she’s going to survive what’s coming.

***

"—which is why you can’t use Voidshadow," Green concluded, her tone brooking no argument. "Not until the final lock opens naturally. Not until you’re ready. Attempting to force access before then could kill you. At minimum, it would corrupt your cultivation foundation beyond my ability to repair."

"Understood," Jayde said, though her expression suggested she wasn’t entirely happy about the restriction. "No Voidshadow. Stick to Terracore and Radiance borrowed from Yinxin."

"Exactly." The healer’s expression shifted, becoming more serious. "Which means you’ll need to maintain the merge with Yinxin for the entire battle. Full bond connection, essence flowing constantly between you. Break that connection for even a moment, and you lose access to the earth magic. The Ward collapses. The Strikes stop working. Everything fails."

Single point of failure, Jayde thought with clinical precision. Bond disruption equals mission failure. Priority: Protect bond integrity above all else.

"That’s not accidental," Green continued, moving to stand beside the scrolls. Her fingers traced the silver ribbon binding the first scroll with reverence that suggested she understood exactly how precious these spells were. "Mother Doha chose earth magic deliberately. Life essence counters psionic corruption better than anything else in existence. Foundation versus dissolution. Growth versus decay. Creation versus consumption."

She looked up at Yinxin, and something almost like grief flickered across her features—an expression that suggested she’d lost people to psionic attacks before, knew exactly what those mental assaults could do to consciousness, to cultivation, to everything that made a person who they were.

"The worms feed on death. They drain vitality from everything they touch. Earth magic—true earth magic, woven with life essence the way silver dragons create it—disrupts that fundamental connection. Interferes with their ability to consume. Makes them vulnerable in ways fire or water or lightning never could."

She paused, taking a breath that seemed to steady herself.

"And you’ll be learning the spell Mother gave you," Green said to Yinxin directly. "The purification weave that can actually kill these abominations permanently instead of just driving them back temporarily."

Yinxin’s massive form shifted, silver scales rippling with nervous energy that made light dance across her body in patterns that would have been beautiful under other circumstances. [I’ve been studying the formula she imprinted directly into my mind. It’s... complex doesn’t even begin to describe it. More intricate than any dragon magic I’ve ever seen or heard of. Weaving life and death together in ways that should be impossible but somehow work. Thirty minutes minimum to cast if everything goes perfectly. Possibly forty minutes for large colonies where the corruption runs deep.]

"Which means Jayde needs to hold her defenses for at least that long," Green said bluntly, her voice carrying the weight of someone who refused to soften harsh truths. "Thirty to forty minutes of sustained psionic assault from thousands—potentially tens of thousands—of hostile entities. All of them trying to shred her mind, drain her essence, and break through her defenses to reach you."

(When she puts it that way, it sounds absolutely insane.)

Survival probability during extended defensive hold against overwhelming psionic assault, Jayde’s tactical mind started calculating, then seemed to give up. Insufficient data for accurate prediction. Estimates range from catastrophically low to marginally possible depending on variables beyond current analysis capabilities.

"We have ten days," Jayde said, forcing confidence she didn’t quite feel into her voice. Ten days sounded like a lot when Isha announced it. Now, hearing the scope of what she needed to learn, it felt desperately inadequate. "Ten days to make those odds better."

"Ten days to make them survivable," Green corrected, her emerald gaze holding Jayde’s with uncomfortable intensity. "Not good. Not comfortable. Not safe. Just survivable."

She moved to the scrolls, picking up the first one with the kind of reverence usually reserved for handling relics or holy texts. Her small hands—delicate despite the strength Jayde knew they contained—carefully unrolled ancient parchment.

"So let’s not waste a single hour."