Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 151 - 146: Breaking Point
Location: Training Halls → Dragon Sanctuary → Training Halls
Time: Day 578-579/212 (Subjective/Actual) - Days 7-8
Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)
Day seven dawned with Jayde’s head still pounding from the previous evening’s endurance drilling.
She woke on a practice mat in the Training Halls—had apparently collapsed there after the thirty-two minute test, and didn’t remember Green moving her. Dried blood crusted her upper lip, and her meridians ached like she’d been running Ember Qi through damaged channels.
Which, technically, she had been.
Physical status: Fatigued but functional. Mental defenses: Strained but intact. Ember Qi reserves: 67% after night’s rest. Assessment: Continue training.
(Of course, continue training. What else would I do? Take a vacation?)
"Awake already?" Green’s voice came from across the hall, where the healer sat studying scrolls by magical light. "I’m impressed. Most cultivators would need twelve hours recovery after what you endured yesterday."
"Most cultivators have common sense," Jayde muttered, sitting up slowly. Her vision swam for a moment before steadying. "I appear to have misplaced mine somewhere around the Telia mission."
"Misplaced nothing. You simply prioritize differently than most." Green set aside her scrolls, moving over with a healing potion that glowed faintly green. "Drink. It’ll help with the meridian strain."
The potion tasted like earth and spring water, settling into Jayde’s core with gentle warmth. Within moments, the worst of the aching eased.
"Three more days," Green said quietly. "Then it’s real. No simulations, no controlled conditions, no safety net. Just you, Yinxin, and enough parasitic worms to kill you both if anything goes wrong."
"Motivational as always," Jayde said dryly.
"I prefer ’realistic.’" Green studied her with clinical precision. "How’s your mind block? Truly?"
Jayde did a mental self-assessment, checking the walls she’d built from trauma work and reinforced through psionic defense training. They were still there—solid, flexible, adaptive like Green had taught her.
But they’d been tested hard yesterday. Pushed to limits she hadn’t known existed. There were cracks now, tiny stress fractures that healing potions couldn’t touch because they weren’t physical damage.
"Holding," she said honestly. "But barely. If I’d gone one more minute yesterday, something would’ve broken permanently."
"Which is why today we focus on recovery and refinement rather than pushing harder." Green helped her stand. "You’re not building endurance anymore—you’re maintaining what you’ve achieved while letting your mind heal enough to actually use it."
She gestured to where Yinxin lay curled in the corner, the dragon still sleeping with her massive head resting on silver paws.
"She pushed just as hard yesterday. Successfully completed the full purification weave for the first time, which means she burned through enormous amounts of Ember Qi, maintaining that complexity for forty minutes straight. Both of you need rest today."
(Rest. What a concept.)
"What about combination practice?" Jayde asked. "The merge technique, sharing fire while maintaining defenses—we only managed twelve minutes under assault. Need to push that higher."
"Tomorrow," Green said firmly. "Today, you recover, review techniques mentally, and spend time with the wyrmlings. They haven’t seen much of either of you in ten days, and emotional stability matters as much as technical preparation."
***
The dragon sanctuary felt like stepping into a different world after seven days in the Training Halls’ austere spaces.
Jayde walked through the ornate door with Yinxin beside her, both of them tired to their bones but desperate for the comfort of seeing the wyrmlings safe and happy.
What greeted them was chaos of the best kind.
Tianxin, Shenxin, and Huaxin had grown noticeably in seven Pavilion days—each one nearly twice the size they’d been when first introduced to the sanctuary. Still young, still small by dragon standards, but visibly stronger, healthier, and more confident.
And absolutely delighted to see their mother and Jayde.
[MOTHER!] Tianxin’s mental squeal was ear-piercing in its enthusiasm. The wyrmling launched herself from the meadow’s edge, small wings flapping furiously as she attempted flight and managed something closer to an extended leap.
She crash-landed into Yinxin’s chest, chirping and purring and wriggling with pure joy.
Shenxin and Huaxin followed more carefully—their brush with death on Telia had left them slightly more cautious—but no less excited. They swarmed Yinxin’s legs, rubbing against silver scales and making rumbling sounds that vibrated through the bond with overwhelming affection.
[We missed you!] Huaxin sent, his mental voice stronger than it had been before. Seven days of good food, clean water, and freedom had done wonders for his development. [You’ve been gone forever!]
"Seven days," Jayde said, crouching down and getting immediately tackled by Shenxin, who’d apparently decided she deserved wyrmling attention too. "We’ve been training."
[For what?] Tianxin asked, finally releasing Yinxin and turning curious golden eyes on Jayde. [Why train so hard, you smell like blood and hurt?]
Yinxin exchanged a glance with Jayde. How much did you tell wyrmlings about battles that might kill their mother?
"We’re going to help Doha," Yinxin said carefully. [There are... bad things hurting the planet. Things that need to be stopped. Your Auntie Jayde and I are going to stop them.]
[Will it be dangerous?] Shenxin’s voice carried worry that made Jayde’s chest tight.
"Yes," Jayde said honestly. She’d never lied to the wyrmlings, wasn’t about to start now. "But we’ve trained hard. Learned powerful spells. We’re as ready as we can be."
[When?] Huaxin pressed against Yinxin’s leg, as if trying to keep her from leaving.
[Three more days of training,] Yinxin said softly. [Then we go. But today is ours. Today we spend together.]
And they did.
For hours, they played in the sanctuary that had become the wyrmlings’ home. Jayde and Yinxin took turns flying—well, Yinxin flew while Jayde rode on her back, which was terrifying and exhilarating and exactly what she needed after days of intense training.
They swam in the crystal lake, water so clean and pure it made Jayde’s skin tingle with ambient Qi. The wyrmlings splashed and dove with growing confidence, their swimming improving noticeably from when they’d first discovered water.
Reiko joined them eventually, the shadowbeast emerging from the forest with leaves in his fur and what looked suspiciously like feathers stuck between his teeth.
[Having fun hunting?] Jayde asked, amused.
[The forest is AMAZING,] Reiko gushed, bouncing with enthusiasm. [Real prey that runs and hides and makes me work for it! And the trees are perfect for climbing, and there’s a cave system in the mountains that—]
He stopped, noticing Jayde’s exhausted state.
[You look terrible,] he said with the bluntness only a very young shadowbeast could manage. [Are you okay?]
"Just tired." Jayde ruffled his fur. "Training’s been... intense."
[For the worm fight?]
"Yeah."
Reiko pressed against her side, offering wordless comfort through their bond. [You’ll win. You always do.]
"I appreciate the confidence."
[It’s not confidence. It’s fact.] His golden eyes were serious despite his youth. [You fulfilled my mother’s last wish when she was dying. Saved Yinxin and the wyrmlings on Telia. Saved an entire village. You don’t lose when it matters.]
(I hope you’re right. Because this time, losing means more than just personal failure.)
They had lunch by the lake—Jayde pulling preserved food from her spatial ring while the wyrmlings gnawed on the deer Reiko had apparently hunted earlier. The meat was fresh and clean, and the wyrmlings devoured it with enthusiasm that made Yinxin purr with maternal satisfaction.
[They’re thriving,] the dragon sent to Jayde privately. [Look at them. Happy, healthy, growing strong. This is what you gave them. What you gave all of us.]
"What we gave," Jayde corrected. "I just provided the space. You’re the one keeping them safe, teaching them, loving them."
[We’re partners in this.] Yinxin’s golden eyes were warm. [In everything. Which is why we’ll survive. Because partners don’t let each other down.]
Afternoon faded to evening, and reluctantly, they had to return to the Training Halls. Green was waiting with what looked like impatience mixed with understanding.
"Better?" the healer asked.
"Much," Yinxin said, settling onto the training floor with visible contentment. "Needed that. Needed to remember why we’re doing this."
"Good. Because tomorrow gets harder."
***
Day eight brought a combination practice that made the previous sessions look gentle by comparison.
"Full integration," Green announced, her fractured emerald eyes gleaming with intensity that promised suffering. "Ward up. Strikes ready. Earth spirits on standby. Merge with Yinxin. And I’m simulating not hundreds, but thousands of worms attacking simultaneously."
Jayde’s stomach dropped. "Thousands?"
"The colony Mother described has somewhere between five and eight thousand individual worms. Maybe more." Green’s expression was deadly serious. "If even half focus their psionic assault on you, that’s thousands of coordinated attacks. You need to be ready for that level of pressure."
Tactical assessment: Facing coordinated psionic assault from 2,500-4,000 hostile entities simultaneously. Survival probability: Unknown. Insufficient data.
(No data because this is insane. Completely, utterly insane.)
But what choice did they have?
Jayde summoned Earth Dragon Ward, the brown-gold sphere blooming around her with practiced ease. Shaped three Strikes, holding them ready to throw. Reached out with Terracore essence to the earth spirits, feeling their acknowledgment waiting in the background. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶
Thunder Core Ward snapped into place around her Crucible Core—blue-white electricity crackling through geometric patterns of protective Radiance and electrically-charged Galebreath.
Then connected with Yinxin through their bond, sharing phoenix fire that amplified the dragon’s silver magic by three times its natural potency.
"Yinxin, begin the spell," Green commanded. "Jayde, protect her. Thirty minutes. Go."
Yinxin’s scales began glowing as she started the complex purification weave. Silver light built around her, essence flows creating patterns that made the air shimmer with power.
And Green unleashed hell.
The simulated psionic assault hit like a hammer to the skull.
Not gradual. Not building. Just immediate, overwhelming pressure from thousands of sources at once, each one trying to crack her mental defenses and reach the vulnerable mind beneath.
Jayde’s vision whited out.
Pain exploded through her head—every nerve ending screaming, blood vessels in her eyes bursting from the pressure, nose immediately streaming blood in quantities that couldn’t be healthy.
PRESSURE CRITICAL. MENTAL BARRIERS FAILING. RECOMMEND IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL.
(Can’t withdraw. Yinxin needs thirty minutes. Hold. HOLD.)
The Ward flickered but held through sheer determination. Jayde threw Strikes blindly, trusting muscle memory and tactical training to aim properly when her eyes couldn’t focus. Called on the earth spirits desperately.
[We answer!]
Power flooded her meridians—ancient, steady, patient as mountains. The spirits’ essence reinforced her flagging strength, gave her foundation when her own was crumbling under assault.
The Ward stabilized.
Vision cleared slightly, though everything was tinted red from burst blood vessels.
"One minute," Green’s voice cut through the agony. "Twenty-nine to go."
(This is what dying feels like. This is what it means to have your mind shredded from the inside out.)
But Yinxin’s spell continued building. Silver light growing brighter, more complex, more powerful with each passing second. The dragon’s concentration was absolute, her faith in Jayde’s protection complete.
(She’s trusting me. The wyrmlings are trusting us. Doha is trusting us. Can’t fail. Won’t fail.)
Two minutes. Pain level: 9/10. Mental barriers: 73% integrity. Ward holding. Strikes maintaining. Spirit support: Active.
Keep going.
Five minutes. Consciousness flickering. Blood loss: Moderate. Multiple burst vessels. Recommendation: Emergency extraction.
Ignore.
Ten minutes. Mental barriers: 61% integrity and degrading. Ward showing stress fractures. Spirit support compensating.
Endure.
Fifteen minutes. Halfway point. Mental barriers: 54% integrity. Critical threshold approaching.
Hold.
Twenty minutes. Vision tunneling. Auditory hallucinations beginning. Mental barriers: 47% integrity. Approaching catastrophic failure.
Almost there.
Twenty-five minutes. Mental barriers: 41% integrity. Ward flickering. Ember Qi reserves: 23%. Earth spirits straining.
Five more minutes.
Thirty minutes. Mental barriers: 38% integrity. Ward collapsed. Complete system failure imminent—
"Stop!"
The psionic assault cut off instantly.
Jayde collapsed, hitting the training floor hard enough to bruise. Blood poured from her nose, ears, even her tear ducts—crimson streaming down her face in quantities that should’ve been fatal.
But she’d held.
Thirty minutes.
Through thousands of simulated psionic attacks, she’d maintained defenses long enough for Yinxin to complete the spell.
"Thirty-one minutes," Green said, and actual awe colored her voice. "Your mind block was at thirty-eight percent integrity when I stopped. Another two minutes and it would’ve shattered completely, but..."
She knelt beside Jayde, healing magic flowing over burst vessels and strained meridians.
"You did it. You actually held for the full duration under assault from three thousand simultaneous attacks. That’s... that’s extraordinary."
Physical status: Severe trauma. Mental status: Catastrophic strain but intact. Assessment: Survived impossible scenario.
Across the hall, Yinxin’s massive form was shaking—not from exertion but from witnessing what Jayde had just endured.
[You’re insane,] the dragon sent, her mental voice thick with emotion. [Completely, utterly insane. And I’ve never been more grateful for anyone’s existence.]
"Partners," Jayde mumbled through blood and exhaustion. "Don’t let each other down."
[Never,] Yinxin agreed fiercely. [Never.]
***
In his kitten form, Takara watched the aftermath of Day Eight’s brutal test with something approaching reverence.
She’d done it again.
Pushed past every reasonable limit. Endured mental assault that would’ve destroyed cultivators with ten times her experience. Held defenses for thirty-one minutes while her mind literally broke apart under pressure.
And she’d discovered mental integration techniques—multiple consciousness fragments working together instead of competing—that Lightning Panthera spent lifetimes mastering.
A reincarnated soul from another dimension, Takara reflected, watching Green carefully heal burst blood vessels and catastrophic meridian damage. Carrying a warrior’s lifetime of experience in a child’s body. Phoenix-dragon hybrid with divine heritage from lords thought lost.
Of course, she could do the impossible.
She’d already lived through one lifetime’s worth of impossible.
This was just... practice.
Lord Fahmjir, Takara thought with dry amusement as Jayde finally drifted into healing sleep, you owe me hazard pay for this assignment. Protecting someone this determined to break herself for others is more stressful than five thousand years of combat.
But he’d do it anyway.
Because watching her fight for people she loved—wyrmlings who weren’t her blood, a planet that had tortured her, a dragon who’d become family through choice rather than obligation—that was worth protecting.
That was worth everything.
Even if it meant watching her bleed for it.







