Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 150 - 145: Doha’s Blessing

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Chapter 150: Chapter 145: Doha’s Blessing

Location: Pavilion - Training Halls

Time: Day 577/211 (Subjective/Actual) - Day 6

Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)

Day six brought the final two earth magic spells, and both came easier now that Jayde had mastered the fundamental principles of borrowed essence channeling and proven she could learn complex techniques quickly.

"Earth Dragon Strike," Green explained, demonstrating the weave with casual precision. "Draw Terracore essence, shape it into a lance, infuse it with life-draining properties using Radiance as the carrier, and throw it at the target with enough force to penetrate whatever protection they’re using."

She raised one hand, and Terracore essence coalesced into a spear of brown-gold light that pulsed with hungry energy. The Strike looked simple—just concentrated essence in a projectile form—but Jayde could feel the subtle weaving that made it functional. Life magic woven through earth, creating something that didn’t just damage but actively drained vitality from whatever it hit.

Green threw the Strike at a practice dummy fifty meters across the training floor.

The impact was visceral. Essence slammed into the target with enough force to rock it backward, and Jayde watched with dragon-enhanced vision as golden streams of vitality drained from the dummy in visible currents—stolen life force that sank into the training floor like water absorbed by thirsty soil, returning to the earth instead of dissipating into nothing.

"Against the worms," Green continued, already forming another Strike, "it’ll disrupt their connection to the planetary vitality they’ve stolen from Doha. They feed on death, on corruption, on decay. You’re forcing them to return what they’ve taken. It won’t kill them—only Yinxin’s purification spell can do that permanently—but it weakens them substantially. Makes the final cleansing more effective."

Jayde practiced for eight hours straight, throwing Strike after Strike at targets that regenerated automatically through Pavilion magic. At first, her aim was terrible—missing by meters, hitting walls instead of dummies, and once nearly striking the ceiling when she misjudged the angle catastrophically.

But muscle memory from Federation training kicked in after the first few dozen attempts. Calculate the trajectory based on the distance and target position. Account for projectile drop, even though essence didn’t follow normal physics exactly. Adjust for movement if the target was mobile. Compensate for environmental factors like air resistance and magical interference.

The principles were fundamentally the same whether throwing grenades or launching essence lances.

By hour four, Jayde was hitting stationary targets consistently from fifty meters.

By hour six, she’d extended range to a hundred meters with acceptable accuracy.

By hour eight, she could cast Strike while maintaining Earth Dragon Ward simultaneously—brown-gold sphere pulsing with living rhythm while Terracore lances flew toward targets without the defensive spell suffering noticeably from divided attention.

"Better," Green said, watching Jayde nail three separate targets in rapid succession. "Now add Thunder Core Ward to the mix."

The geometric lightning protection snapped into place around Jayde’s core, crackling with blue-white precision. She threw another volley of Strikes while holding both Wards—defensive earth magic breathing organically, protective wind carrying electrical charge following predetermined circuits, offensive lances draining life from practice dummies.

Three spells active simultaneously. All functioning properly. No degradation in quality or power.

"Good enough," Green finally acknowledged as the afternoon approached. "You won’t have perfect aim during the actual battle—psionic assault will make precision difficult. But you can maintain multiple spells while attacking, which means you can actually fight while defending Yinxin."

***

Late afternoon of day six brought the final spell, and it proved the most fascinating of all.

"Essence of Earth," Green said, unrolling the third ancient scroll Mother Doha had provided. "This one’s different from the others. You’re not creating or channeling magic. You’re calling earth spirits—beings of pure Terracore essence that exist in the spaces between reality and unreality."

She gestured to the scroll’s intricate patterns showing ethereal forms rising from stylized ground.

"They can infuse you with power when you’re depleting. Enhance your spells when you need extra strength. Provide additional essence reserves when you’re running dry. Think of them as temporary allies who lend their strength to your cause."

Green’s expression turned serious.

"But they’re not servants you can command or tools you can exploit. They’re ancient, powerful, and deeply territorial. You ask respectfully, not demand. Show them you’re fighting to protect Doha rather than exploit it, and they might answer. Approach with arrogance or try to force them, and they’ll refuse. Or worse."

Jayde studied the scroll, the Divine Tome, translating ancient concepts into modern understanding. Essence of Earth wasn’t a spell in the traditional sense—wasn’t about forcing reality to bend through application of power and will. It was more like... a prayer. A request made to entities that predated mortal cultivation by eons, asking for their aid in exchange for respecting the earth they embodied.

"How do I call them?" she asked.

"Respectfully," Green said, her voice carrying warning weight. "Kneel. Open yourself to Terracore essence flowing through your bond with Yinxin. Then reach out—not with power or commands but with genuine need. Ask for help protecting Doha. Show them through your intentions that you’re sincere."

***

The first attempt felt awkward.

Jayde knelt on the training floor, reaching out with Terracore essence like knocking on a door she couldn’t see. Trying to make contact with beings that existed in spaces between spaces, that lived in the earth but weren’t quite part of physical reality.

Nothing happened.

She tried again, adding more power to the call. Pushing harder with her essence, trying to force a connection through sheer determination and strength of will.

The floor rumbled ominously—a deep vibration that suggested something ancient and very large was deeply unimpressed with her approach.

Green quickly pulled Jayde back, her small hand surprisingly strong.

"Not like that," the healer said sharply, actual concern cutting through her professional demeanor. "I said respectfully. What you just did was the magical equivalent of kicking down someone’s door and demanding they help you. Earth spirits don’t respond to force—they respond to genuine need combined with proper reverence."

Jayde took a breath, forcing Federation command instincts down. This wasn’t about power. Wasn’t about control or dominance or bending reality through application of superior strength.

On her third attempt, she cleared her mind of tactical thinking entirely. Stopped trying to control, manipulate, or force outcomes through calculated action.

Instead, she simply... asked. Honest and direct, without pretense or manipulation.

I need help. There are creatures threatening Doha—parasites draining the planet’s life force, corruption spreading through the earth itself. I want to protect it, but I’m not strong enough alone. Will you lend me your strength?

For a moment, nothing.

Then the training floor began to glow with gentle brown-gold light.

Small forms emerged from the stone—flickering manifestations of condensed earth essence, each one roughly the size of Jayde’s hand. They drifted upward like embers rising from fire, dozens of them appearing from the floor itself. Maybe hundreds, she couldn’t count them all as they swirled around her in patterns that felt almost curious, almost playful.

[Who asks?]

The voice wasn’t words exactly—it was concepts and impressions conveyed directly to consciousness. Stone enduring against erosion. Soil nurturing seeds. Bedrock holding firm against earthquakes. Earth in all its patient, timeless strength.

"Jayde," she spoke aloud and through essence simultaneously, maintaining the connection with respect rather than force. "I’m trying to save Doha from parasites that drain its vitality. I need power to hold defenses while my partner purifies the corruption. Will you help?"

The spirits swirled faster, conferring in languages that predated human speech. Ancient conversations held in mediums beyond sound or sight, communication through essence and meaning rather than words.

[You carry dragon essence,] one spirit observed, its presence examining Jayde like a jeweler studying a gem. [Phoenix fire from lords long gone. Soul scattered and remade, marked by journey through darkness. Essence from elsewhere woven through being. Many lives contained in single vessel.]

"All fighting for the same thing," Jayde said quietly, honestly. "Protecting what matters. Saving those who can’t save themselves."

[You seek to protect rather than exploit,] another spirit noted, its tone suggesting this was unusual enough to be remarkable. [Request earth strength for defense, not conquest. Ask rather than demand.]

[Rare,] a third spirit added. [Most cultivators take. You ask first.]

There was more conferring, spirits swirling and discussing in ways Jayde couldn’t fully perceive. Then they began flowing toward her, one by one, sinking into her skin like water absorbed by sand. Not invasive, not forceful, just... present. Becoming part of her temporarily, lending their strength willingly rather than being consumed or controlled.

[We lend strength,] the collective impression said, dozens of spirits speaking as one. [Call when true battle comes. We will answer to protect the earth from corruption.]

Power flooded Jayde’s meridians—not her own Ember Qi but something older, steadier, patient as mountains weathering storms across millennia. It filled spaces she hadn’t known were empty, reinforcing her foundation like steel supporting concrete. Making her feel heavier in a good way, more grounded, connected to the earth in ways she’d never experienced, despite carrying Terracore essence through her bond with Yinxin.

When the last spirit faded back into the floor, Jayde felt fundamentally changed. Still herself, but with something extra woven through her very being. Ancient strength that would answer when called, that would help her endure when her own power failed.

"They accepted you," Green said, and actual surprise colored her voice despite her centuries of experience. "Earth spirits are notoriously selective about who they help. The fact they answered on your first genuine attempt—the fact they accepted you so readily—means they sense your sincerity. Your genuine desire to protect rather than exploit."

She studied Jayde with new appreciation.

"Or they sensed desperation and understood it came from caring rather than fear of personal death. Either way, you have their support now. Don’t waste it."

***

Evening of day six found Jayde sitting on the training floor with Yinxin curled protectively beside her, both of them exhausted but satisfied.

Takara had emerged from Jayde’s pocket and now sat nearby in his kitten form, blue eyes watching them with what seemed like contentment.

"Four spells in six days," Jayde said, marveling at what they’d accomplished. "Earth Dragon Ward, Thunder Core Ward, Earth Dragon Strike, Essence of Earth. That’s... that’s actually impressive."

[It’s insane,] Yinxin corrected gently. [Most cultivators need months to learn what you’ve mastered in less than a week. But you’ve always been exceptionally stubborn about defying reasonable expectations.]

"I prefer ’determined.’"

[Same thing, really.]

Green approached with evening meal and healing potions, setting both down within easy reach.

"You’ve done well today," the healer said, her tone carrying weight that suggested the praise didn’t come easily. "Four complex spells learned in six days. Earth spirits accepting you on your first genuine attempt. That’s... exceptional."

"Thank you," Jayde said, too tired to feel much pride.

Green settled onto the training mat across from her, cross-legged and radiating the stillness that came before difficult conversations.

"But learning the spells was the easy part," the healer continued quietly. "Now we need to see if you can actually use them under the conditions you’ll face in battle."

Jayde’s stomach twisted with sudden apprehension. "I thought psionic defense training started tomorrow?"

"It does. Three full days of mental conditioning." Green’s fractured emerald eyes held something that might have been sympathy. "But tonight we establish a baseline. I need to know your current limits—how long you can maintain everything before mental collapse. Need to understand what we’re working with before we start building endurance."

She gestured for Jayde to stand, to move to the center of the training floor.

"Earth Dragon Ward up. Thunder Core Ward active. Strikes ready. Earth spirits on standby. Then I’m going to simulate psionic assault and see how long you can hold everything simultaneously."

"How long do you expect?" Jayde asked, getting to her feet despite exhaustion.

"Honestly? Most cultivators your age would last five to ten minutes before mental breakdown." Green’s expression was clinical, assessing. "But you have mental barriers that shouldn’t be possible for someone so young. I don’t know how you developed them—trauma builds walls, yes, but yours have a... maturity to them. A complexity that typically takes decades of lived experience to forge."

She paused, studying Jayde with something approaching confusion.

"It’s like observing the mental architecture of someone three or four times your age. I’ve worked with enough cultivators over the centuries to recognize the difference between walls built from suffering and walls built from experience. Yours are both. So maybe fifteen to twenty minutes if we’re lucky."

In Jayde’s pocket, Takara went very, very still.

Wait.

Mental barriers with decades of experience? Complexity that shouldn’t exist in a fifteen-year-old? The way the child sometimes thought in tactical patterns that made ancient warriors look amateur? How she approached problems with the cold calculation of someone who’d seen countless battles?

Oh.

Oh.

The soul wasn’t just scattered and healed.

It was replaced.

Or... no. Not replaced. Added to. That’s what the earth spirits had sensed—"many lives contained in single vessel." Not metaphorical. Literal.

Takara resisted the urge to laugh hysterically in his kitten form. Of COURSE. Of course, Jayde was a reincarnated soul from elsewhere. It explained EVERYTHING. The bizarre combination of childlike vulnerability and veteran competence. The way she could be terrified and tactically brilliant simultaneously. Her ability to endure torture that would break adults twice her age.

She wasn’t just a talented child.

She was a child carrying the consciousness of someone who’d already lived an entire lifetime. Probably a very long, very brutal lifetime if those mental barriers were any indication.

Lord Fahmjir, Takara thought with a mixture of awe and exasperation, you sent me to protect the most complicated fifteen-year-old in existence. No wonder Ala asked for help. No wonder Pyratheon created her this way.

The child wasn’t just phoenix-dragon hybrid.

She was phoenix-dragon hybrid, plus whatever soul got woven into her during that scattering and healing process.

Absolutely ridiculous.

Absolutely fascinating.

And absolutely explained why she kept doing impossible things.

Freen paused, making sure Jayde understood the stakes.

"But you’ll need to hold thirty to forty minutes in the actual battle. Which means we have a lot of work ahead of us. Tonight just tells me where we’re starting from."

***

Jayde summoned Earth Dragon Ward, the brown-gold sphere blooming around her with practiced ease. Thunder Core Ward snapped into place around her Crucible Core—blue-white electricity crackling in geometric precision through pathways of protective Radiance. She shaped three Strikes, holding them ready. Reached out to the earth spirits, feeling their acknowledgment.

[Ready,] she sent to Green.

"Yinxin," Green called across the hall. "Begin your purification weave. Don’t complete it—just maintain the spell at steady state so Jayde has something realistic to protect."

The silver dragon moved into position, scales beginning to glow as essence flows started building around her massive form.

"Jayde, your job is simple," Green said, her voice taking on the cold precision of a medical examiner. "Protect Yinxin. Maintain all active spells. Endure the psionic assault without mental collapse. I’ll track the time. You focus on survival."

She raised both hands, power building between her fingers in ways that made the air feel heavy.

"Begin."

The first simulated psionic attack hit like a slap—sharp, sudden, designed to shock rather than truly harm.

Jayde’s concentration wavered but held. The Ward pulsed slightly but maintained its breathing rhythm. Thunder Core Ward continued crackling with geometric precision.

"That’s ten worms," Green said calmly. "Fifty worms."

The pressure increased. Not gradually—each jump was immediate, overwhelming, forcing Jayde to adjust her mental defenses on the fly.

Pain bloomed behind her eyes. Her nose started bleeding—just a trickle at first, but enough to notice.

"One hundred worms. Two minutes elapsed."

Vision blurred slightly. Jayde threw a Strike blindly, trusting muscle memory to aim properly. The earth spirits pulsed with supportive energy, reinforcing her flagging strength.

"Two hundred worms. Five minutes."

The Ward flickered dangerously. Jayde poured more focus into maintaining its living quality, pulled harder on the earth spirits’ ancient strength.

Pain level: 6/10. Mental barriers: 81% integrity. Ward holding. Thunder Core Ward stable. Strike accuracy: Moderate.

"Five hundred worms. Ten minutes."

Jayde’s ears started bleeding. The pressure in her skull felt like it might crack bone. Her consciousness fragmented at the edges—thoughts scattering, her tactical mind analyzing even as the child inside whimpered with pain.

But the defenses held.

"One thousand worms. Fifteen minutes."

Vision tunneled. Everything was tinted red from burst blood vessels. Blood streamed from her nose in quantities that would’ve been alarming if she had spare attention to notice.

The Ward showed stress fractures—cracks appearing in the brown-gold sphere that the earth spirits frantically reinforced. Thunder Core Ward flickered once but snapped back into stable patterns.

Mental barriers: 67% integrity and degrading. Pain level: 8/10. Blood loss: Moderate. Recommendation: Withdraw before permanent damage.

(Can’t withdraw. Need to know my limits. Need to prove I can do this.)

"Fifteen hundred worms. Twenty minutes."

Across the training floor, Yinxin’s spell continued building—silver light pulsing with complex patterns that would purify corruption if ever completed. The dragon’s concentration was absolute, her faith in Jayde’s protection complete.

(She’s trusting me. Can’t let her down. Won’t break.)

"Two thousand worms. Twenty-five minutes."

Jayde’s consciousness started fragmenting seriously now. Jade was screaming in terror, while that tactical side of her was running damage assessments with concerning detachment. Everything was hurting in ways that transcended physical pain into something purely mental.

But somewhere beneath the agony, something clicked. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮

The fragments didn’t need to be forced back together. They just needed to know they were all part of the same whole. Federation veteran and frightened child and dragon-blooded hybrid and phoenix legacy—all existing simultaneously, supporting each other instead of competing.

Integration. Real integration.

The mental barriers stabilized despite the degradation. Not stronger, but more flexible. Absorbing impact rather than trying to resist it completely.

"Twenty-eight minutes. Twenty-five hundred worms."

Blood poured from Jayde’s nose and ears. Her vision went almost completely dark. Hands shook violently. The Ward flickered like a candle in hurricane wind.

But it held.

Mental barriers: 52% integrity. Pain level: 9/10. Consciousness fragmentation: Moderate but stable. Assessment: Approaching absolute limits.

"Thirty minutes. Three thousand worms."

The world shattered.

Jayde’s body stopped responding to commands. Blood streamed from tear ducts, nose, ears—crimson painting her face in quantities that should’ve been fatal. The Ward showed catastrophic stress fractures, barely holding together through sheer force of will and the earth spirits’ desperate support.

But she was still conscious. Still maintaining. Still protecting Yinxin.

"Thirty-two minutes. Three thousand worms. You’re breaking."

Mental barriers: 41% integrity. Complete system failure imminent. Recommendation: Emergency extraction or permanent damage likely.

(Just. A. Little. Longer.)

"Thirty-two minutes, thirty seconds. Stop."

The psionic assault cut off instantly.

Jayde collapsed.

Hit the training floor hard enough that she dimly registered the impact as her body crumpled like a puppet with cut strings. Blood everywhere—streaming from her face, pooling on the practice mat beneath her, more than should’ve been survivable.

Consciousness flickering. Vision gone completely. Hearing reduced to muffled ringing. Everything hurting in ways that made the fighting pits look gentle.

Green’s voice filtered through the haze, distant and clinical: "Thirty-two minutes, forty-three seconds under assault from three thousand simulated worms. Mental barriers at approximately forty percent integrity when terminated. Extraordinary. Absolutely extraordinary."

Hands on her face—cool healing magic flowing over burst blood vessels, repairing catastrophic damage that would’ve killed anyone without immediate intervention.

"You exceeded every expectation," Green continued, her voice carrying something that might have been awe. "Most senior cultivators would’ve broken at fifteen minutes. You held for more than double that. Your mental integration at the end—that’s an advanced technique that takes decades to master. You discovered it instinctively under pressure."

The healing magic stopped the worst of the bleeding, sealed the burst vessels, and prevented permanent damage. But it couldn’t touch the exhaustion, couldn’t repair the mental strain, couldn’t erase the memory of having her mind nearly shredded apart.

"Sleep now," Green said softly. "You’ve proven you can endure. Tomorrow, we build on that foundation. Tomorrow, we make sure you can do this not just once, but repeatedly. Tomorrow, we prepare you for the real thing."

Jayde tried to respond, but unconsciousness claimed her before words could form.

The last thing she registered was Yinxin’s mental voice, thick with emotion: [You’re insane. Completely, utterly insane. And I’ve never been more grateful for anyone’s existence.]

Then darkness.

***

In his kitten form, Takara watched Green carefully position Jayde’s unconscious body on the practice mat, ensuring she’d sleep without further injury.

Thirty-two minutes.

The child had held defenses for thirty-two minutes under assault that would’ve destroyed cultivators twice her age. Had discovered mental integration techniques spontaneously that Lightning Panthera spent decades mastering.

And had pushed herself to absolute breaking point to prove she could protect her partner.

Remarkable, Takara thought, settling nearby to keep watch through the night. Absolutely remarkable. And absolutely reckless.

The Thunder Core Ward would protect her cultivation foundation during the actual battle. But her mind was still vulnerable—stronger than it had any right to be for someone so young, but still vulnerable.

Three more days of training remained. Three days to transform "can endure" into "can survive repeatedly." Three days to prepare for a battle that might kill them all, despite every preparation.

Lord Fahmjir’s orders echoed in his ancient mind: Keep her alive. Don’t reveal yourself unless absolutely necessary.

Watching her lie unconscious and bleeding on the practice mat, Takara wondered if those orders might eventually conflict.

If the moment came when he had to choose between maintaining his cover and saving her life...

Well. He’d dealt with difficult orders before.

For tonight, she’d survived. Proven herself capable of the impossible. Earned rest through suffering most would never endure.

Tomorrow would bring more training. More pain. More pushing past reasonable limits in the name of saving a world.

But tonight, she slept.

And Takara kept watch over the stubborn, reckless, extraordinary child who’d somehow earned the loyalty of ancient beings despite being only fifteen years old.

She’d survived today.

He’d do everything in his power to ensure she survived tomorrow as well.

Even if it meant eventually breaking orders to do it.