Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 147 - 142: Learning to Breathe
Location: Pavilion - Training Halls
Time: Day 572/211 (Subjective/Actual) - Late Morning
Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)
The parchment unfurled, revealing intricate diagrams that seemed to shift when Jayde looked at them directly. Flowing script in a language she couldn’t read but somehow understood—the Divine Tome’s translation ability activating automatically, converting ancient formulae into concepts her enhanced mind could process and comprehend.
Earth Dragon Ward.
The spell’s structure bloomed in her awareness like a flower opening to sunlight, each petal revealing deeper layers of complexity. Terracore essence woven with Radiance in patterns that spoke of roots seeking water, of stone enduring against erosion, of life persisting despite impossible odds. Not a static wall meant to simply block attacks, but something alive that could adapt, flex, absorb impact without shattering like glass under a hammer.
The Ward wasn’t armor in the traditional sense. It was growing protection that breathed and shifted and fought to maintain itself even when actively under assault. Living defense that wanted to exist, that would struggle to survive the same way any living thing resisted death.
"It’s beautiful," Jayde whispered, genuinely awed by the elegance of the design. Whoever had created this spell understood not just magic but life itself—the fundamental principles that made things grow, endure, persist against entropy.
"It’s brutal," Green corrected, though her voice held appreciation for Jayde’s reaction. "Beautiful things don’t survive psionic bombardment. Delicate spells crack under sustained assault. This will survive. If you learn it properly. If you understand what makes it work instead of just memorizing the pattern."
She set the scroll down carefully, her gaze locking onto Jayde’s with the intensity of someone about to deliver critical information.
"Three days to master the Ward. Two days to learn Strike and Essence summoning. Three days for psionic defense training—mental fortification, pain management, and withstanding simulated attacks. Two days for combination practice and final preparation."
Green’s expression was deadly serious, every word weighted with purpose.
"That’s the schedule. No room for failure. No gentle learning curves. No easing into difficult techniques. You’ll be drilling these spells until you can cast them unconscious and bleeding. Because in that forest glade, facing those worms, you might very well be unconscious and bleeding and the spell still needs to work."
(Comforting. Really wonderfully comforting.)
***
In Jayde’s pocket, Takara had stopped even pretending to sleep.
Three days to master a spell most cultivators would need months to learn properly, he thought with growing concern. Two days for two additional spells. Three days to prepare her mind for attacks that would break most Blazecrowned-tier cultivators.
He’d faced psionic attacks before. Knew what they felt like—the invasive pressure against consciousness, the sense of something trying to peel back your thoughts and reach into your very being. It wasn’t like physical pain, which could be endured through willpower. Psionic assault attacked the foundation of who you were.
She’s going to be hurt, Takara realized with uncomfortable certainty. Badly hurt. Even if she survives—and that’s a significant ’if’—the damage...
He needed to contribute what he could. The Thunder Core Ward spell—a Lightning Panthera technique for protecting the Crucible Core during extreme essence drain. It wouldn’t stop the psionic attacks, but it would keep her cultivation foundation intact even if everything else broke.
I’ll speak with Isha later, Takara decided. When we have privacy. He already knows what I am and why I’m here—Lady Ala made sure of that. We just need to discuss the spell contribution without Jayde overhearing yet.
For now, he remained perfectly still, perfectly silent, and perfectly terrified for the reckless child who kept petting him absently while preparing to walk into impossible odds.
***
[When do we start?] Yinxin asked, her mental voice steady despite the fear Jayde could feel pulsing through their bond like a second heartbeat.
"Now." Green gestured to the vast training floor that stretched before them—smooth stone marked with countless scars from previous training sessions, essence burns and impact craters that spoke of serious magical practice. "Yinxin, you’ll work with Isha on Mother’s spell. He’s studied Luminari magic for hundreds of thousands of years—he can help you decode the formula’s deeper layers, understand the principles behind the pattern."
Isha materialized fully beside Green, his fox form solidifying until he looked almost corporeal rather than translucent. [I’ve already analyzed what Mother imprinted directly into your consciousness. It’s...] He paused, searching for words. [It’s possibly the most elegant spell I’ve ever encountered. Devastating, yes. Horrific in its efficiency, absolutely. But beautiful in how it weaves life and death together—how it uses silver dragon magic to burn parasitic corruption from existence without harming the host organism or the planet itself.]
[Show me,] Yinxin said simply, her massive form rising to follow Isha toward the far end of the hall.
The dragon and kitsune moved away, already deep in discussion about essence flows and magical theory that went far beyond Jayde’s current understanding.
Leaving her alone with Green.
The healer studied her for a long moment, something unreadable flickering in her eyes—concern, sympathy, determination, and something that might have been regret all mixed together.
"You know you might die doing this," Green said quietly, her voice stripped of professional distance. "Not might fail. Not might get hurt. Might actually die. Your mind could shatter under the assault—consciousness fragmented beyond any healing I could provide. Your Crucible Core could crack from essence drain—cultivation foundation destroyed permanently. Your body could simply give out from sustained trauma—organs failing, meridians burning, life force depleting past the point of recovery."
"I know," Jayde said simply.
"And you’re doing it anyway."
"I am."
Green nodded slowly, as if confirming something she’d already suspected. Then, unexpectedly, she smiled—small and sad and genuinely proud.
"Then let’s make sure you live through it." She raised one hand, and Earth Dragon Ward bloomed around her like a flower opening to sunlight—a sphere of brown-gold essence that pulsed with quiet strength, with living determination, with the kind of patient endurance that stone showed when weathering millennia of erosion.
The Ward was beautiful. Not in the aesthetic sense, but in the way functional things designed with a perfect understanding of purpose could be beautiful. Every element working together, supporting each other, creating something stronger than the sum of its parts.
"Watch carefully," Green said, her voice carrying the weight of someone imparting knowledge that could mean the difference between life and death. "This spell is going to save your life. Learn it like your existence depends on it."
She paused, the Ward pulsing around her with that steady, living rhythm.
"Because it does."
***
The Ward held steady around Green for nearly a minute before she let it dissolve, essence dispersing back into ambient magic with barely a ripple.
"The first thing you need to understand," the healer said, settling into lecture mode with the ease of someone who’d taught this material countless times, "is that this isn’t construction. You’re not building a wall brick by brick. You’re not forcing pieces together through will and power."
She gestured to the scroll, where diagrams showed essence flows in intricate patterns.
"You’re cultivating. Growing. The spell is called Earth Dragon Ward for a reason—it mimics how dragons naturally protect themselves, how earth nurtures life, how living things persist through adaptation rather than rigidity."
Jayde studied the patterns more carefully, trying to see what Green was describing.
"Most defensive spells are static," Green continued. "They create a barrier and hold it in place through constant power expenditure. Hit them hard enough, and they crack. Drain the caster’s Qi, and they collapse. But this—" She tapped the scroll gently. "—this breathes. Flexes. Adapts to each impact without breaking because it’s alive in a very real sense."
"How?" Jayde asked, genuinely curious despite her nervousness about the upcoming training.
"By using the same principles that make the earth nurture plants." Green’s expression softened slightly, taking on the quality of someone discussing something she found genuinely fascinating. "Soil doesn’t fight against seeds. It wraps around them, supports them, and provides what they need to grow. Stone doesn’t resist water through rigidity—it channels the flow, redirects force, endures through patience rather than strength."
She raised her hand again, and the Ward reformed with that same effortless ease.
"Feel how it moves? That pulse you’re seeing? That’s the key. The spell mimics a heartbeat—the fundamental rhythm of life itself. As long as that pulse continues, the Ward adapts to whatever hits it. Absorbs impact. Redistributes force. Survives through flexibility rather than trying to be an immovable object."
Jayde watched the brown-gold sphere pulse with increasing understanding. It really did look alive—not metaphorically, but actually, genuinely alive in the way plants and animals were alive. Moving with purpose, responding to stimulus, fighting to maintain itself through the same instinct that made living things resist death.
"Try it," Green said, letting the Ward dissolve again. "Draw Terracore essence from Yinxin through your bond. Feel how heavy it is, how patient. Then weave in Radiance—light that nurtures rather than burns. And instead of forcing them together, let them find each other naturally."
She stepped back, giving Jayde space to work.
"Remember: you’re not building. You’re growing. Coax the spell into existence the way you’d coax a seed to sprout. Gentle. Patient. Respectful of what it needs to thrive."
***
Jayde closed her eyes, reaching through her bond with Yinxin.
[I need to borrow your earth magic,] she sent to the dragon. [For the Ward spell. Can you—?]
[Already flowing,] Yinxin interrupted, and Jayde felt Terracore essence rushing through their connection like water through an opened dam.
Heavy essence. Dense and patient, carrying the weight of mountains and the stillness of deep earth. It filled her meridians with power that felt fundamentally different from the fire she was accustomed to—slower, steadier, more enduring.
Then Radiance followed—bright and warm and alive, light that nurtured rather than consumed, illumination that helped things grow instead of burning them to ash.
And she tried to force them together, tried to weave them into the pattern she’d seen in the scroll—
The essences rejected each other violently, dispersing in opposite directions like oil and water.
"Stop," Green said calmly. "You’re fighting them. Trying to control every aspect. Let go of that Federation training that makes you want to micromanage every detail."
Jayde opened her eyes, frustration making her jaw tight. "I need to control it. Without control—"
"Without control, the spell finds its own balance," Green interrupted. "Trust the magic to work the way it’s designed to work. Your job isn’t to force every element into place. Your job is to set the foundation and let the spell grow from there."
She moved closer, her voice gentling slightly.
"Think about Yinxin. Your bond with her. You don’t control every aspect of that connection, do you? You trust her to be herself while you’re yourself, and together you’re stronger than either alone."
(Partners. Not controller and controlled.)
"Try again," Green said. "But this time, stop trying to force outcomes. Offer the essences a pattern to follow, then trust them to find each other within that pattern."
***
Second attempt.
Terracore essence flowing through her meridians from Yinxin, heavy and patient as stone. Radiance following, bright and warm and nurturing.
And instead of trying to force them into specific positions, Jayde simply... offered them space to exist together. Created channels where they could flow. Established rhythm—that heartbeat pulse Green had demonstrated. Set the foundation pattern.
Then let go of trying to control every detail.
The essences found each other slowly, cautiously, like dancers learning to move together. Earth seeking light, the way roots sought sun underground. Light needing foundation, the way plants needed soil to anchor themselves.
Not opposing forces fighting for dominance.
Symbiotic partners making each other stronger through connection.
The Ward flickered into existence around Jayde—unstable, fragile, barely holding together, but there. Actually, there for the first time.
"Good," Green said, genuine approval in her voice. "That’s the foundation. Now hold it. Let it stabilize. Feel how it wants to pulse, wants to breathe. Don’t fight that—help it. Encourage the rhythm."
The Ward pulsed once, twice, then collapsed as Jayde lost focus from sheer surprise that it had actually worked.
But it had worked. For a few seconds, she’d successfully cast Earth Dragon Ward using borrowed essence channeled through universal meridians that shouldn’t exist in any normal cultivator.
"Again," Green commanded. "And again. And again, until you can hold it for thirty seconds without thinking about it. Then we’ll drill for a minute. Then five minutes. Then thirty."
She crossed her arms, expression shifting back to stern instructor.
"You have three days to master this spell completely. We’re not wasting a single hour. Begin."
***
Across the training hall, Isha and Yinxin were deep in discussion about the purification spell, silver light dancing around the dragon as she practiced weaving essence in patterns that made reality itself shiver.
And in Jayde’s pocket, Takara watched everything with the careful attention of someone who’d spent five thousand years learning to recognize when people were pushed past their limits.
She’ll break if they’re not careful, he thought with concern. The training schedule is brutal even for experienced cultivators. For a fifteen-year-old, no matter how talented...
He needed to talk with Isha about the Thunder Core Ward. Needed to contribute what protection he could before this reckless child walked into a battle that would almost certainly cripple her even if she survived.
But that conversation would wait until they had privacy.
For now, he watched Jayde attempt the Ward again and again, each attempt lasting slightly longer than the previous one, her determination evident in the set of her jaw and the sweat beginning to bead on her forehead.
Stubborn, Takara thought with reluctant admiration. Absolutely, completely stubborn. Just like her father, I suspect.
The thought made him pause.
He’d never met Pyratheon, the Phoenix Lord who’d somehow created life with a World Spirit. But he’d heard stories from those who had—tales of a being so stubborn, so absolutely convinced of his own correctness, that he’d made the impossible happen through sheer refusal to accept that some things couldn’t be done.
Jayde had definitely inherited that particular quality.
Whether that would be enough to survive what was coming...
Takara supposed they’d find out in ten days.
For Jayde’s sake—and for the sake of the planet depending on her success—he hoped that stubborn determination was enough.







