Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 154 - 149: The Battle for Doha (Part 2)

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Chapter 154: Chapter 149: The Battle for Doha (Part 2)

Location: Dark Forest - Worm Colony Glade

Time: Day 583/213 (Subjective/Actual) - Continuous

Realm: Lower Realm (Doha)

The assault hit like being dropped into molten metal.

THOUSANDS of psionic attacks slammed into Jayde’s unprotected mind simultaneously. No Ward to absorb the impact. No brown-gold sphere breathing and flexing to disperse the pressure. Just her mental barriers—already degraded to 82% integrity—trying to withstand focused hatred from two thousand parasitic entities that wanted her dead.

Jayde’s vision went white.

Blood exploded from her nose. Not trickling now—gushing. Crimson streaming down her face in quantities that painted her chin red, dripped onto her training clothes, and pooled on the grass beneath her feet.

PAIN LEVEL: 10/10. MENTAL BARRIERS: 74% INTEGRITY AND FAILING RAPIDLY. CRITICAL DAMAGE IMMINENT. RECOMMEND IMMEDIATE—

(CAN’T BREATHE CAN’T THINK CAN’T—)

Her knees buckled. Hands hit the grass, fingernails digging into earth as her body tried desperately to stay upright. Every nerve ending in her skull felt like it was being flayed with razors. Her brain was fragmenting—child consciousness screaming in terror, veteran consciousness running damage assessments with concerning detachment, both of them barely holding together under pressure that should’ve shattered her mind completely.

The earth spirits pulsed with desperate support, pouring ancient strength into her meridians. That was the only thing keeping her conscious. That patient, steady power like bedrock, holding firm when everything else crumbled.

Must attack. Can’t defend—only option is offense. Kill them before they kill you.

Jayde shaped an Earth Dragon Strike with hands that shook violently.

Terracore essence gathered sluggishly, fighting through the agony that made concentration nearly impossible. Radiance from Yinxin wove through it, and the earth spirits’ power amplified everything—made the lance burn brighter, pulse harder, hunger deeper.

She threw.

The Strike hit the worm mass with devastating force.

These worms had no shields. Weren’t defending—too focused on their psionic assault, too confident that killing Jayde’s mind would be enough. They’d made a tactical error.

She made them pay for it.

The enhanced Strike didn’t just drain dozens of worms. It drained hundreds. Golden vitality flooded back into Doha’s soil in rivers of stolen life force, finally returned to its rightful home. Worms dissolved to ash by the score, their parasitic bodies unable to withstand having everything they’d stolen ripped back out.

Yinxin’s purification blast followed immediately.

Silver light washed over the colony, and another wave of worms simply ceased to exist. Corruption burned away. Parasites erased from reality.

The psionic assault stuttered, weakened as hundreds of attackers died simultaneously.

Jayde’s mental barriers stabilized at 71% integrity.

Blood still poured from her nose and ears. Her head felt like someone had taken a sledgehammer to her skull. But she was alive.

Still fighting.

(We’re winning. They’re dying. We can do this, we can—)

The remaining worms—maybe a thousand left—did something Jayde hadn’t anticipated.

They turned on their own dead.

***

Horror crawled up Jayde’s spine as she watched through blood-tinted vision.

The surviving worms descended on the ashes of their fallen companions like starving predators. Segmented bodies writhing over the remains, mouths opening to reveal those concentric rings of teeth, and then—

They ate.

Not the ashes themselves. The essence left behind. The stolen vitality that hadn’t fully returned to Doha yet, the corrupt energy that lingered where parasites had died.

The worms fed on their own dead.

And they grew stronger.

Jayde watched in sick fascination as worms that had been forearm-length began swelling. Growing. Their bodies becoming more dense, more powerful, and corruption concentrating instead of dispersing. They were cannibalizing their fallen, consuming the essence of thousands of dead companions to fuel their own transformation.

Within seconds, the thousand remaining worms were twice as strong as they’d been.

Then three times.

Tactical assessment: Hostile entities adapting through consumption of fallen. Power levels increasing exponentially. Recommend—

(No. No, no NO this isn’t fair they’re supposed to DIE they’re—)

Jayde threw another Earth Dragon Strike.

The enhanced lance hit the writhing black mass and... dissolved.

Just vanished before it could drain anything. The worms’ new strength let them shrug off attacks that had killed hundreds before. Corruption met purification and corruption won, absorbing the spell’s power and growing even stronger from it.

Yinxin’s silver light followed.

The purification blast hit with diminished force—the dragon’s reserves were nearly depleted after an hour of continuous combat. Silver light washed over the strengthened worms and managed to kill... maybe two hundred.

Eight hundred remained.

Eight hundred worms that were each as strong as ten of their original companions. Maybe stronger. Their psionic assault intensified, focused hatred drilling into Jayde’s mind with renewed vigor now that they’d fed.

Mental barriers: 68% integrity. Pain level: Exceeding measurement capacity. Blood loss: Severe. Ember Qi reserves: 31%. Recommendation: EMERGENCY EXTRACTION IMMEDIATELY.

(Can’t retreat. Won’t retreat. Yinxin needs more time for another attack and—)

The worms changed tactics.

***

The psionic assault shifted from battering to draining.

Jayde felt it immediately—the difference between being hit with hammers versus having leeches latch onto her essence. The pressure in her skull changed quality, became hungry, and suddenly the worms weren’t just attacking her mind.

They were feeding on her magic.

Vampiric psionic assault. Latching onto her Ember Qi reserves and sucking power out through the connection they’d forced into her consciousness.

Jayde’s Crucible Core lurched.

She felt her cultivation dropping.

Flamewrought tier—the rank she’d fought so hard to achieve, the power she’d built through months of brutal training and sacrifice—began draining away.

Flamewrought Peak → Late → Mid.

Her meridians started shredding.

Not the normal strain of overuse. Actual damage—channels meant to carry Flamewrought-level power being forced to handle the catastrophic energy transfer as her cultivation was literally sucked out of her body. Blood vessels in her meridians burst. Essence pathways began tearing like overstressed rope.

The pain transcended anything physical.

Flamewrought Mid → Early.

(NO STOP PLEASE STOP I CAN’T—)

CRITICAL: Cultivation base under attack. Meridian integrity: 83% and degrading. Core stability: Threatened. Thunder Core Ward holding but— ALERT: Dropping to Sparkforged tier.

Sparkforged Peak. Late. Mid.

Months of progress vanishing in seconds.

Jayde screamed—actually vocalized the agony this time, sound ripping from her throat as her life’s work was stolen by parasites that fed on everything they touched.

The earth spirits poured more power into her, trying desperately to shore up the damage, but it wasn’t enough. They couldn’t stop the drain. Could only slow it, buy her seconds she might not have.

Sparkforged Mid → Early.

DROPPING TO ASHBORN TIER.

No.

Ashborn Peak.

No, no, no, please—

[JAYDE!]

Reiko’s mental scream cut through the agony like a lifeline.

The shadowbeast merged with her—not physically but through their contract bond, forcing his own essence into her meridians to feed the vampiric drain. Taking some of the pressure. Sharing the burden.

His magic flowed into her channels like water filling a sinking ship.

It slowed the drain.

Didn’t stop it—the worms were too strong, too hungry, too determined to suck them both dry. But Reiko’s power bought precious moments. Kept her from dropping past Ashborn entirely. Kept her conscious when unconsciousness would’ve meant death.

But now they were both locked into the drain.

Both trapped. Both dying together.

Jayde felt Reiko’s terror through their bond. Felt his determination. Felt him pouring everything he had into keeping her alive, even though it meant his own death.

(No. Not Reiko. Not my shadowbeast. He’s just a baby, he doesn’t deserve—)

Cultivation: Ashborn Peak holding. Meridian integrity: 71%. Blood loss: Critical. Consciousness: Fragmenting. Time until complete system failure: Estimated two minutes.

Across the glade, Yinxin was building another purification blast. The dragon’s scales blazed with silver light despite her reserves being nearly empty. Phoenix fire from Jayde’s core amplified what little power remained, squeezing every drop of potential from essence that shouldn’t have been enough.

But the spell was weaker. Much weaker.

Even if Yinxin hit them all, it wouldn’t be enough to kill eight hundred strengthened worms.

They were going to lose.

After everything—all the training, all the suffering, all the brutal preparation—they were going to lose because the worms had adapted faster than anyone could’ve predicted.

(Doha will die. The wyrmlings will be orphans again. I promised Tianxin we’d come back, and I’m breaking that promise I’m—)

***

In his kitten form, hidden among the ferns outside the ward perimeter, Takara watched the battle with mounting horror.

He couldn’t see the psionic assault. Couldn’t perceive the vampiric drain. But he could see Jayde’s cultivation falling—could feel the shift in her essence as power drained away, could watch her meridians literally glowing through her skin from catastrophic damage.

She was dying.

Reiko was dying.

And Takara was trapped outside the ward perimeter—had tried to breach it when Jayde’s Earth Dragon Ward shattered, only to be thrown back by divine-grade formations he’d stupidly assumed were standard containment wards.

His rookie mistake. His failure.

Now all he could do was watch as the child he’d been ordered to protect was murdered by enemies he couldn’t even see.

The Lightning Panthera form inside him raged against the restriction.

He could break through if he revealed his true form. Could shatter the ward stones with his full power, reach Jayde, and protect her from the psionic assault with techniques honed over five millennia.

But he couldn’t kill the worms. That was the horrifying reality he kept smashing against in his mind like waves against stone.

Only Yinxin’s purification spell could destroy them permanently. Takara could slaughter thousands with Lightning Panthera techniques—but they’d regenerate, return, consume their fallen, and grow stronger. He’d seen parasites like these before. Knew their nature.

Revealing himself would accomplish nothing except exposing what he was.

Worse—it might disrupt Yinxin’s spell. The dragon needed to complete the purification weave. Needed Jayde’s protection to finish. If Takara shattered the ward stones, if he interfered with their coordinated defense, he might ruin the only thing that could actually save Doha.

His hands were tied.

Not by orders—by reality.

Lord Fahmjir’s mission was to protect Jayde. But what good was protection if revealing himself destroyed the very battle she was trying to win?

When does necessary become absolute?

She was dying.

But so would countless others if the worms survived because he’d broken the one spell that could kill them permanently.

Takara’s small body trembled among the ferns, caught between impossible choices, watching the child he’d been sent to protect bleed out while he could do nothing that would actually help.

He’d never felt more helpless in five thousand years of existence.

***

Jayde bit her lip.

Hard. Hard enough that teeth sank into flesh. Hard enough that blood filled her mouth—copper and salt mixing with the blood already pouring from her nose.

The pain cut through the fog. Sharpened her fragmented consciousness back into something approaching focus.

One more attack. That’s all I have left. One more Strike and whatever Yinxin can manage. It has to be enough. HAS to be.

The worms weren’t shielding anymore. Too focused on the vampiric drain, too confident they’d already won, too busy feeding on her essence to bother defending.

Tactical error.

Their last mistake.

***

Jayde gathered every scrap of power she had left.

Earth spirits’ ancient strength. Reiko’s desperate sacrifice flowing through their bond. The dregs of her Ember Qi reserves. Terracore essence and Radiance woven together with shaking hands and fragmenting consciousness.

Earth Dragon Strike formed in her palm.

But this one was different. Enhanced by desperation, amplified by the earth spirits going all-in, strengthened by Reiko’s essence joining hers in ways that shouldn’t have been possible.

The lance blazed with brown-gold with a tinge of black light so intense it hurt to look at.

Jayde threw it with the last of her strength.

The Strike hit the worm mass like divine judgment.

These worms had no shields. Had made themselves vulnerable in their confidence. And that vulnerability destroyed them.

The enhanced lance didn’t just drain vitality. It ripped essence from their parasitic bodies with catastrophic force. Worms that had fed on their dead to grow stronger found that strength turned against them—all that stolen power becoming a conduit for the purification magic to grab onto and tear out.

Golden rivers of vitality flooded back into Doha’s soil.

Hundreds of worms dissolved to ash instantaneously.

The vampiric drain stuttered as attackers died by the score.

And Yinxin’s purification blast followed with perfect timing.

Silver light—weaker than before but enough—washed over the remaining worms. The dragon had poured everything into this final attack. Every drop of Ember Qi, every scrap of power the phoenix fire amplification could squeeze out, every bit of determination to save her children’s home.

The light hit worms already weakened by Jayde’s Strike. Already reeling from catastrophic vitality drain. Already vulnerable.

They burned.

Corruption erased. Parasites purged. Segmented bodies dissolving to nothing as purification magic did what it had been designed to do—cleanse planetary corruption from existence.

The screaming stopped.

The psionic assault cut off like a switch being thrown.

Silence fell over the glade.

Jayde’s knees hit the grass.

***

She sprawled like a rag doll, body crumpling without conscious control. No strength left to stay upright. No energy remaining to even lift her head.

Blood poured from her nose and ears, painting the grass crimson. Her meridians felt like they’d been scoured with acid. Every nerve ending screamed. Her mind was fragments held together by sheer stubborn refusal to break completely.

But through blood-tinted vision, she could see the glade.

Clean earth where corruption had been. Healthy grass was already beginning to grow in patches that the worms had blighted. Sunlight filtering through trees onto soil that was finally, finally free of parasites.

(We did it. We actually did it.)

Mission status: Complete. All hostiles eliminated. Doha saved. Cost: Catastrophic personal damage. Cultivation: Ashborn Peak. Meridian integrity: 68%. Mental barriers: 61%. Blood loss: Life-threatening. Consciousness: Failing.

The emergency extraction talisman in her pocket began to glow.

Life signs dropping below critical threshold. Isha would be watching from the Pavilion, would see the readings, would activate the emergency protocol any second now.

Dimensional yanking. It would hurt.

But she’d survived.

They’d survived.

Doha was saved.

The wyrmlings would have a home.

That was worth everything.

Jayde’s vision darkened at the edges. Consciousness fragmenting further as her body finally acknowledged it was allowed to stop fighting, allowed to collapse, allowed to break after an hour of enduring the impossible.

[You did it,] Yinxin sent weakly, the dragon’s mental voice thick with exhaustion and awe. [You insane, reckless, extraordinary child. You saved us all.]

[We did it together,] Reiko added, his essence still merged with hers, his young voice carrying pride despite the trauma. [Partners.]

(Partners,) Jayde thought as darkness claimed her. (Family. Worth fighting for. Worth dying for.)

(But I didn’t die.)

(We won.)

The talisman flared bright.

Space twisted—

And nothing happened.

The dimensional yank that should have pulled Jayde to safety stuttered, failed, and collapsed back on itself like a wave hitting an invisible wall. The talisman’s light sputtered and died.

Something was blocking the extraction.

In the Pavilion, Isha felt the connection fail and immediately tried again, pouring more power into the emergency protocol.

Nothing.

Jayde remained in the glade, collapsed and bleeding, unable to be moved.

And the last thing she registered before unconsciousness took her completely was a distant voice—not through her ears but directly in her mind. Ancient and fierce and terrified in ways that made no sense:

[Don’t you DARE die after surviving that. Don’t you dare.]

She didn’t recognize it. Couldn’t place it. Didn’t have the strength to wonder who was speaking.

Then nothing.

Just blessed, merciful darkness.

And the knowledge that Doha would see another sunrise.

Even if she might not.