Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 153 - 148: The Battle for Doha (Part 1)

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 153: Chapter 148: The Battle for Doha (Part 1)

Location: Dark Forest - Worm Colony Glade

Time: Day 583/213 (Subjective/Actual)

Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)

The glade was peaceful.

That was Jayde’s first thought as the teleportation array’s light faded, leaving them standing on soft grass beneath ancient trees. Sunlight filtered through the canopy in gentle streams. Birds sang somewhere in the distance. A light breeze carried the scent of flowers and earth.

It looked like paradise.

Tactical assessment: Deceptive. Colony underground. Surface conditions irrelevant to threat level.

(But it’s so pretty. How can something so horrible hide under something so beautiful?)

Jayde’s hand went to her Crucible Core, checking the Thunder Core Ward one final time. Blue-white electricity crackled in geometric patterns around her core’s foundation—already active, cast in the Pavilion before they’d left. Self-sustaining. Protecting the absolute center of her cultivation even if everything else failed.

Two hours of protection. Plenty of time.

Or so she hoped.

"Positions," she said quietly, her voice steady despite the fear clawing at her throat.

Yinxin moved to the center of the glade, silver scales gleaming in the dappled sunlight. The dragon’s massive form settled onto the grass with practiced ease, wings folding against her sides, golden eyes reflecting both determination and terror in equal measure.

Reiko circled the perimeter, shadowbeast form melting into the forest’s edge. [I’ve got outer patrol,] he sent, his mental voice trying for confidence and almost succeeding. [Nothing gets through.]

Before Jayde could respond, she felt a small weight leave her pocket.

Takara—still in adorable kitten form—dropped silently to the grass and immediately bolted for the tree line. The ancient Lightning Panthera moved with speed that shouldn’t be possible for something so small, disappearing into the undergrowth before anyone could comment.

[Where is he going?] Yinxin asked, confused.

"Probably scared," Jayde said, though something in her gut suggested otherwise.

"He’ll hide and wait for us to finish."

Jayde pulled the ward stones from her spatial ring.

Twelve of them, each one carved from Pavilion crystal and infused with protective formations. She’d practiced this deployment sequence a hundred times over the past three days. Fifteen seconds on her best attempt.

She had maybe thirty before the worms sensed their presence and attacked.

Jayde ran.

First stone—northeast. Slam it into the earth. Channel Ember Qi. Watch the runes flare gold as the formation activated.

Second stone—east. Ground cracked under the impact. More Qi flowing. Runes burning bright.

Third stone—southeast.

Fourth—south.

Her hands moved with mechanical precision, muscle memory taking over. Federation training and cultivation magic working together. Each stone placed perfectly, each activation smooth and efficient.

(Please work. Please, please, please work.)

Eighth stone. Ninth. Tenth.

The air began to shimmer as the formation took shape—a protective perimeter that would contain the battle, prevent the worms from escaping, and keep their psionic assault focused inward, where Jayde could endure it rather than spreading outward where it might kill Reiko or damage the forest.

Eleventh stone—northwest.

Twelfth stone—north.

The formation snapped into place with a sound like thunder.

Thirteen seconds.

New personal record.

Too bad she was too terrified to appreciate it.

***

Jayde moved back to Yinxin’s side, drawing Terracore essence through their bond. The earth responded immediately—patient, ancient, steady as mountains.

Earth Dragon Ward bloomed around her like a flower opening to sunlight.

Brown and gold light swirled together, forming a sphere that pulsed with living rhythm. Not solid, not rigid—breathing. Expanding and contracting like lungs drawing air. Organic and adaptive, ready to flex with impact rather than shatter against it.

The Ward settled into a steady rhythm around her, a second skin of protective magic that hummed with power borrowed from the planet itself.

Not enough. Not nearly enough.

"Essence of Earth," Jayde whispered, kneeling and pressing both palms to the grass.

She didn’t command. Didn’t demand. Simply... asked.

I need your help. Please. There are parasites here draining Doha’s life. Help me protect what you’ve nurtured for eons.

The ground beneath her hands began to glow.

Earth spirits rose from the soil like steam from hot springs—dozens of them, maybe hundreds, each one a flickering manifestation of pure Terracore essence. They swirled around her in patterns that felt almost joyful, almost playful despite the gravity of what was coming.

[We answer,] came the collective impression. Ancient voices speaking as one. [We lend strength to protect the earth from corruption.]

Power flooded Jayde’s meridians.

Not her own Ember Qi but something older, steadier, patient as continents drifting across millennia. It filled spaces she hadn’t known before that were empty, reinforced her foundation like steel supporting concrete, made her feel heavier in the best way—grounded, connected, immovable.

The spirits sank into her skin, becoming part of her temporarily. Lending strength that would help her endure when her own power failed.

Jayde stood, and the earth itself seemed to rise with her.

[Ready,] she sent to Yinxin through their bond.

[As I’ll ever be,] the dragon replied, fear threading through her mental voice but determination underneath it like bedrock. [Let’s save our home.]

Jayde reached deeper through their bond, finding the connection to her phoenix fire. Not pulling it away from Yinxin—that would weaken the dragon. Instead, opening a channel. Sharing. Letting Yinxin access the golden flames that burned at the core of Jayde’s being.

Phoenix fire from lords long gone. Pyratheon’s legacy woven into her very essence.

The bond flared open like a dam breaking.

Yinxin’s silver scales began to glow.

Not just reflecting sunlight—actually luminous, shining with power that made the air shimmer. Silver light built around her massive form, growing brighter with each passing second as phoenix fire amplified her natural magic.

Three times normal potency. Maybe more. Jayde could feel the power building through their connection, could sense Yinxin’s spell taking shape in ways that would’ve been impossible without the amplification.

The dragon’s eyes blazed molten gold as she began the purification weave.

Complex essence flows spiraled outward from Yinxin’s core. Silver light traced patterns in the air—geometric and organic simultaneously, mathematical precision meeting natural growth. The spell was beautiful in its complexity, terrifying in its power.

This was what they’d trained for.

This was what would save Doha.

Or kill them both trying.

***

The ground twenty meters ahead erupted.

Black writhing mass surged upward like oil bubbling from a ruptured well. Thousands—maybe tens of thousands—of parasitic worms boiling out of the earth in a wave of corruption that made Jayde’s stomach turn.

Each worm was roughly the length of her forearm, segmented body glistening with toxic slime that hissed where it touched grass. No eyes, no recognizable features—just segmented flesh and mouths that opened to reveal concentric rings of teeth designed for burrowing through rock and flesh alike.

But worse than their appearance was the feeling they gave off.

Wrongness. Corruption. Death made manifest. These things didn’t just kill—they drained. Sucked life from everything they touched and left nothing but desiccated husks behind.

And there were thousands of them.

Tactical assessment: Enemy force size matches intelligence estimates. 5,000-8,000 hostiles. Recommend immediate offensive action before they organize.

(So many. There are so many. How are we supposed to—)

No time for fear.

Jayde shaped an Earth Dragon Strike, pulling Terracore essence through her bond and weaving it with Radiance borrowed from Yinxin. The lance of brown-gold light coalesced in her hand, pulsing with hungry energy that wanted to drain vitality and return it to the earth.

She threw.

The Strike slammed into the black mass with the force of a battering ram.

Worms screamed—not with voices but with psionic pulses that made Jayde’s teeth ache. The lance didn’t just damage them. It drained them. Pulled stolen vitality from their parasitic bodies and forced it back into Doha’s soil where it belonged.

Golden streams of life force flowed from dying worms into the earth like water soaking into thirsty sand.

Twenty worms dissolved to ash. Thirty. Fifty.

The colony barely noticed.

They were slow to react—sluggish, perhaps still waking from whatever torpor they’d been in. That bought precious seconds.

Yinxin’s purification weave reached critical mass.

The silver dragon reared back, wings spreading wide, scales blazing with light so intense Jayde had to shield her eyes. Power built around Yinxin’s massive form like a physical thing—dense, terrible, beautiful.

Then she released it.

SILVER LIGHT EXPLODED OUTWARD.

The purification spell hit the worm colony like divine judgment made manifest.

Corruption burned. Not with heat but with absence—the spell didn’t destroy so much as erase. Worms caught in the blast simply ceased to exist, their parasitic essence purged from reality itself by magic specifically designed to cleanse planetary corruption.

Thousands died.

Jayde watched through dragon-enhanced vision as the black mass dissolved. Worms by the hundreds, by the thousands, burning away like morning mist under harsh sunlight. Silver light washed over them and left nothing—not even ash. Just clean earth where corruption had been.

(We’re doing it. We’re actually doing it!)

Assessment: Effective opening strike. Enemy numbers reduced by approximately 40%. Recommend continued—

The worms realized they were under attack.

And they screamed.

***

The psionic assault hit like a sledgehammer to the skull.

Not gradual. Not building. Just immediate, overwhelming pressure from thousands of sources simultaneously—every surviving worm focusing their hatred and hunger directly at Jayde’s mind.

PAIN.

Agony lanced through her head with the precision of surgical knives. Every nerve ending in her brain screamed. Blood vessels burst from the pressure—she felt them pop like overinflated balloons, felt warm wetness begin trickling from her ears.

The Earth Dragon Ward absorbed most of the impact. The brown-gold sphere pulsed with each blow, breathing in the assault and dispersing it through its organic structure rather than trying to resist directly.

But enough got through to hurt.

(It hurts it hurts it HURTS—)

Mental barriers: 89% integrity. Ward holding. Thunder Core Ward stable. Earth spirits compensating. Continue offensive operations.

Blood leaked from Jayde’s ears. Her vision blurred at the edges. But the defenses held.

Barely.

She threw another Strike. Then another. Terracore lances flying into the black mass, each one draining vitality from dozens of worms and returning it to Doha. The attacks were enhanced now—earth spirits lending their power, making each lance hit harder, drain deeper.

Yinxin launched another purification blast.

More silver light. More worms dissolving to nothing. The colony’s numbers dropping steadily.

But the remaining worms were learning.

They stopped clustering together where Yinxin’s spell could catch hundreds at once. Started spreading out, making themselves harder targets. And their psionic assault intensified—no longer random attacks but coordinated strikes designed to crack Jayde’s defenses through sheer focused pressure.

The Ward pulsed dangerously with each assault. Brown-gold light flickering. Stress fractures beginning to appear in its organic structure.

Blood began trickling from Jayde’s nose to join what leaked from her ears.

Pain level: 7/10. Mental barriers: 82% integrity and degrading. Ward showing stress. Recommend—

(Keep fighting. No choice. Keep fighting, keep fighting, keep—)

Another Strike. Another wave of silver light from Yinxin. More worms dying, but never fast enough.

The battle settled into a brutal rhythm.

***

An hour passed in agony.

Jayde lost count of how many Strikes she’d thrown. Fifty? A hundred? Each one drained her Ember Qi reserves, forcing her to gulp replenishment potions between attacks. The bitter liquid sloshed in her stomach, threatening to come back up every time a particularly vicious psionic assault hit.

The worms kept coming. Kept screaming. Kept battering at her Ward with hatred that transcended anything she’d experienced in the fighting pits.

They wanted her dead.

They wanted her drained.

And they were willing to die by the thousands trying to achieve it.

Yinxin’s attacks came slower now. The purification weave took enormous amounts of Ember Qi to cast, even amplified by phoenix fire. The dragon was burning through her reserves at terrifying speed, each blast slightly less powerful than the last.

But they were making progress.

The black mass was maybe half the size it had started. Tens of thousands of worms were reduced to thousands. The ground was cleaner now—less corruption, more healthy earth showing through where parasites had been purged.

(We can do this. We can actually do this. Just hold a little longer and—)

The Ward cracked.

Not a small fracture. Not a minor stress line.

A sound like thunder rolled across the glade as spiderweb cracks covered the entire brown-gold sphere. The living rhythm stuttered, stumbled, tried desperately to hold together through damage that should’ve shattered it instantly.

The earth spirits poured more power in, frantically reinforcing the failing structure.

Not enough.

Jayde threw another Strike with shaking hands. Yinxin launched what had to be her twelfth purification blast—silver light washing over the remaining worms and dissolving hundreds more.

Good. That was good. Maybe two thousand left now. Maybe less.

The Ward held for another heartbeat.

Another psionic assault slammed into it.

The cracks widened.

SHATTERED.

Brown-gold light exploded outward in a shower of essence fragments that dissolved harmlessly into the air. The breathing rhythm stopped. The organic protection that had been absorbing psionic attacks for over an hour simply... ceased to exist.

Jayde stood exposed in the center of the glade.

Defenseless.

And two thousand parasitic worms screamed with satisfaction.

***

Hidden in the undergrowth beyond the ward stone perimeter, Takara watched in growing horror.

The child’s Ward had broken. The psionic assault he couldn’t see but could feel through the air’s oppressive weight was about to hit her unprotected.

Thunder Core Ward would protect her Crucible Core. But her mind...

Her mind was about to be flayed open by thousands of hostile entities with nothing between them and her consciousness except mental barriers that were already degraded from an hour of brutal combat.

No, Takara thought desperately. I need to get in there. Need to—

He lunged forward, abandoning stealth for speed.

Hit the ward boundary at full sprint.

And bounced back like he’d slammed into solid steel.

Takara tumbled across the grass, small body rolling before he caught himself. Stared at the shimmering barrier in complete confusion.

(What? That’s—that’s impossible. Ward stones are defensive formations, not exclusion barriers. They keep things contained, not keep rescuers out. I should be able to pass through easily unless—)

Unless they were far more powerful than standard containment wards.

Unless Jayde had used Pavilion crystal. Divine-grade materials. Formations designed not just to contain but to isolate—protecting those inside from outside interference and preventing anything from crossing the threshold without the caster’s explicit permission.

Horror crashed over the ancient Lightning Panthera.

I never tested it. Gods damn it, I NEVER TESTED IT. Five thousand years of tactical experience, and I made a ROOKIE MISTAKE.

He’d assumed standard ward stones. Assumed he could cross if needed. Assumed wrong.

And now he was stuck outside.

Unable to enter. Unable to help. Unable to do the one thing Lord Fahmjir had ordered: protect her.

Takara pressed against the barrier desperately, small paws scrabbling at an invisible force that wouldn’t yield. Tried channeling his true power, just a fraction, just enough to—

The ward pulsed with rejection, throwing him back harder.

(No. No, no, no, this can’t be happening. Not like this. After five thousand years, after countless missions, after never failing once—)

(Is this going to be my first failure?)

All he could do was watch from beyond the barrier as Jayde stood exposed, defenseless, about to be torn apart by psionic assault from two thousand worms.

And pray to gods he didn’t believe in that the stubborn, reckless, extraordinary child would somehow survive what was coming.

Without his help.

Because he’d been an idiot.