Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 168 - 163: When Foundations Crack
Location: Grand Assembly Hall → Dragon Territories (Dragon Domain, Upper Realm)
Time: Day 214 Night → Day 215 Dawn | Calendar: 5-6 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
The Grand Assembly Hall had descended into madness.
Four hours after Laolong’s revelation. Four hours of accusations, denials, rage building like pressure in a sealed vessel ready to explode.
And now it was exploding.
"LIARS!" An ice dragon elder—ancient, diminished, grief-stricken—launched himself at Elder Shanshe’s tier. Frost trailing from his scales. Killing intent blazing. "My bloodline DIED because of your lies!"
Bronze dragons intercepted. Bodies colliding mid-air. Essence signatures flaring. First blood spilled as claws met scales, as ice met fire, as ten thousand years of suppressed rage found outlet.
The assembly erupted.
Dragons surging from their tiers. Some trying to restore order. Others embracing chaos. Factions forming and fracturing moment by moment as loyalties shattered like glass under hammer blows.
Laolong stood at the center of it all, watching his truth burn through the dragon realm like wildfire through drought-dead forest.
This, he thought grimly, is what happens when lies become foundations. When you finally pull them out, everything collapses.
Behind him, Yulong’s hand found his. Squeezed once. Anchoring.
"We did this," she whispered. Not accusation. Statement of fact.
"We did," Laolong agreed. "And we’d do it again."
Because some foundations deserved to burn.
***
PART I: THE BREAKING
A rock dragon—young, fierce, shaking with rage—stood before the bronze dragon tier, roaring at dragons twice her age.
"My parents spent their last CENTURY trying to hatch eggs!" Her voice cracked. Raw. Bleeding. "Dozens of clutches. HUNDREDS of eggs. They thought it was their fault. Their weakness. Their failure!"
She pointed at Elder Shanshe with a claw that trembled.
"But it wasn’t them. It was YOUR false queen. YOUR corruption. YOUR lies that killed my siblings before they could even hatch!"
Bronze dragons tried to shout her down. She didn’t care.
"They died in SHAME!" she screamed. "Believing they’d failed our bloodline. When it was YOU. All of you ancient bastards who broke what wasn’t yours to break!"
A lightning dragon joined her. Then a desert dragon. Then more.
Minor sects—the dying breeds, the suppressed bloodlines, the ones who’d suffered most under ancient elder rule—they were done being silent.
"We demand justice!"
"Remove the false queens!"
"Try the ancient elders for genocide!"
"Restore what you STOLE from us!"
The demands crashed against bronze, red, and green dragon tiers like waves against cliffs. And the cliffs were starting to crack.
***
A bronze dragon—mid-level warrior, loyal to Shanshe for centuries—found himself face-to-face with a lightning dragon he’d trained with millennia ago.
"Is it true?" the lightning dragon asked. Voice quiet. Deadly. "Did you know? Did your sect know what they did to Xueteng?"
The bronze dragon hesitated. Fatal mistake.
"You DID know," the lightning dragon whispered. Then louder: "YOU KNEW!"
Essence signatures flared. Lightning crackling. Bronze hardening.
They’d been friends once. Brothers-in-arms during the fourth Zartonesh invasion.
That ended when the lightning dragon’s claws found the bronze dragon’s throat.
"My sister died," the lightning dragon said softly. Tears streaming. "Died trying to hatch eggs poisoned by your false queen. And you KNEW. You all knew and said nothing."
Blood splattered ancient stone.
The first death of what would become civil war.
***
In the highest tier, Elder Dalong watched chaos spread with calculating golden eyes.
"We’ve lost control," he said quietly. Not to anyone in particular. Just stating a fact.
Elder Caoya stood beside him, shifting gaze, tracking violence blooming across the hall like poison flowers.
"Laolong played us perfectly," Caoya admitted. Grudging respect in his voice. "Used truth as a weapon. Turned the realm against us in a single night."
"What do we do?" a younger red dragon asked. Nervousness bleeding through careful neutrality.
"Damage control," Dalong said. Mind already racing through scenarios. "We—"
A blade appeared at his throat.
Red dragon. One of his own sect. Eyes blazing with betrayal.
"My daughter," the red dragon said. Voice shaking. "You came to her hatching ceremony. Blessed her egg personally. Told me your queen’s touch would ensure she thrived."
Dalong went very still.
"She died three days after hatching," the red dragon continued. "Essence signature destabilized. Internal corruption. The healer said it was like she’d been poisoned before she even broke shell."
The blade pressed closer. Drew a single drop of blood.
"Did you know?" the red dragon whispered. "Did you know your queen was false? That her touch was poison?"
Silence.
Then: "Yes."
The red dragon’s hand trembled. "You KNEW. And you let me bring my daughter to your false queen anyway."
"It was necessary," Dalong said. Cold. Factual. "To maintain the lie. To preserve order. Individual sacrifice for collective—"
The red dragon’s essence signature exploded.
Dalong teleported. Barely. Blade scoring across scales. Drawing a line of blood from shoulder to hip.
"TRAITOR!" the red dragon roared.
And suddenly Dalong—ancient, powerful, strategically brilliant—found himself fighting for his life against his own sect member.
***
PART II: THE QUEEN BREAKS
The bronze dragon queen sat in her private chambers, listening to chaos in the assembly hall through a communication crystal.
She’d felt it the moment Laolong spoke the truth.
The way bronze dragons in the hall had gone silent. Uncomfortable. The way they’d shifted away from her essence signature like it burned them.
They’d always done that, she realized. Subtle. Unconscious. Instinctive avoidance of something that felt wrong.
She’d thought it was respect. Reverence for her position.
It was revulsion.
Because she wasn’t real.
The door slammed open. Bronze dragons—her own sect, dragons she’d blessed, whose eggs she’d touched, whose children she’d welcomed—poured into her chambers.
"Is it true?" the lead dragon demanded. Female. Young. Fierce. "Are you false?"
The queen opened her mouth. Tried to answer.
No words came.
Because she didn’t know. How could she know? She had no memories before the ritual. Before, ancient elders had forced her through a transformation that had lasted weeks, involved essences poured into her from sources she didn’t understand, and pain that had made her scream until her throat bled.
They’d told her it was normal. That becoming queen required suffering.
They’d lied.
"Answer us!" another dragon shouted.
The queen tried. Reached for the power she supposedly possessed. Tried to access the authority, the knowledge, the connection to her sect that real queens should have.
Nothing.
Just... emptiness where something vital should be.
"I don’t—" she started. "I can’t—"
Her essence signature flickered.
One of the dragons gasped. "By the gods, look at her!"
The queen glanced down. Saw her scales—beautiful bronze that marked her as queen—starting to crack. Essence bleeding through fissures like light through broken pottery.
"What’s happening?" she whispered.
"You’re destabilizing," an older bronze dragon said. Horror in his voice. "Your essence signature is... collapsing."
Because she’d been held together by belief. By the collective faith that she was real, was legitimate, was queen.
And now that belief was shattering.
So was she.
"Help me," the queen gasped. Falling to her knees. Scales cracking faster. Essence signature fracturing. "Please, I don’t want to—"
"She’s going to explode!" someone shouted.
Bronze dragons scrambled back. Fleeing their own queen. Abandoning her to fate, they’d unknowingly created by accepting the ancient elders’ lies.
The queen looked at her hands. Watched them dissolve into light.
I never had a choice, she thought distantly. They made me into this. Into a lie wearing a queen’s shape. And now the lie is ending.
She almost felt relieved.
The essence signature collapsed.
Light exploded outward. Not violent. Just... dissipating. Like smoke in the wind. Like lie finally acknowledged.
When the light faded, nothing remained.
The bronze dragon queen—false queen, broken creature, victim of ancient elders’ desperation—was gone.
***
The dragons who’d witnessed it stood in shocked silence.
Then someone said, very quietly: "Laolong was telling the truth."
And the dam broke.
If the bronze dragon queen was false—if she’d been a lie this entire time—then what about the others? Red queen? Green queen? Gold, yellow, copper?
How many of their eggs had failed because of false queens?
How many children had died before hatching?
How many parents had blamed themselves for crimes committed by ancient elders?
The rage that swept through bronze dragon territories was biblical.
***
PART III: DAMAGE CONTROL
Midnight.
Elder Shanshe’s private study. Privacy wards blazing so bright they could be felt across dragon realm. Three ancient elders meeting in desperate council.
"The bronze queen is DEAD," Shanshe snarled. Amber eyes blazing with barely controlled fury. "Dissolved in front of witnesses. Every bronze dragon now knows she was false."
"Red dragons are questioning their queen," Dalong added. Golden eyes calculating. Essence signature still bleeding from the wound inflicted by his own sect member. "I’ve lost control of a significant faction. Maybe thirty percent of my sect."
"Green queen is hiding," Caoya said. Voice tight. "Locked herself in the sanctuary. Refusing to see anyone. She knows what’s coming."
Silence. Heavy. Suffocating.
Ten thousand years of control. Of carefully maintained lies. Of power built on foundations of genocide and corruption.
Collapsing in a single night.
"Laolong," Shanshe growled. "That shadow dragon filth destroyed everything."
"He told the truth," Dalong corrected. Clinical. Factual. "We destroyed ourselves. He just forced everyone to see it."
Shanshe’s fist slammed into the table. Crystal shattering. "Where are his children?"
"Gone," Dalong said. "Spy networks report five shadow dragons departed the palace hours ago. Different directions. Humanoid forms. Covering maximum territory."
"They’re hunting," Caoya said. "For the silver queen, we all felt. The pulse."
"Then we hunt too," Shanshe said. "We capture her. Bring her back. Prove to the realm that WE can restore what was lost."
"After tonight?" Dalong shook his head. "They’ll never trust us with a silver queen."
"They will if we’re the ones who SAVE her," Shanshe countered. "Shadow dragons hunt her? We rescue her from them. Protect her from their ambitions. Become heroes instead of villains."
Caoya’s eyes narrowed. "Spin the narrative."
"Exactly," Shanshe said. "Shadow dragons revealed the truth to create chaos. To seize power. To claim the silver queen for themselves. We’re the responsible ones. The stable ones. The ones who’ll actually protect her properly."
"Lie built on lie built on lie," Dalong murmured.
"It’s what we’re good at," Shanshe said coldly. "Now mobilize your hunting parties. Red dragons to the demon realm. Green dragons to the Lower Realm. My bronze dragons will track Xinglong."
"And if shadow dragons find her first?" Caoya asked.
Shanshe’s amber eyes glinted. "Then we take her from them. By force if necessary. She’s too valuable to leave in anyone else’s hands."
"This could trigger actual civil war," Dalong warned.
"War is already starting," Shanshe said. Gesturing toward the window where dragon territories glowed with fires. Violence. Chaos. "We either seize control, or we lose everything. I choose control."
Three ancient elders. Three desperate schemes. Three hunting parties are about to deploy.
Not to protect a silver queen.
To save themselves. 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
***
PART IV: THE FRACTURE SPREADS
By dawn, the dragon realm had fractured along fault lines that had been building for millennia.
Shadow Dragon Territories: United. Loyal to Laolong. Preparing to defend against retaliation.
Bronze Dragons: Split three ways. Loyalists supporting Shanshe. Reformers demanding his removal. And a significant faction simply fleeing to avoid civil war.
Red Dragons: Divided. Dalong still held the majority but was bleeding support. Young dragons questioning everything. Elders trying to maintain control through intimidation.
Green Dragons: Quietly withdrawing. Caoya’s patient approach meant most green dragons remained neutral. Watching. Waiting. Seeing which side would win before committing.
Minor Sects: Unified in rage. Ice, lightning, rock, and desert dragons forming an alliance. Demanding that ancient elders face justice. Calling for the complete restructuring of dragon realm government.
Violence erupted across territories.
Bronze dragon loyalists fighting bronze dragon reformers.
Red dragons executing those who spoke against Dalong.
Minor sect dragons raiding ancient elder estates, burning symbols of ten thousand years of oppression.
The dragon realm, so carefully controlled for so long, was tearing itself apart.
***
PART V: THE COST
Laolong and Yulong stood on the palace balcony, watching fires bloom across dragon territories.
"Ten thousand years of lies," Yulong said quietly. "We burned them all in one night."
"Had to be done," Laolong replied. But his voice carried the weight of cost. Of dragons dying in civil war, his truth had sparked.
"Was it worth it?" Yulong asked.
Laolong thought about that. About Xueteng, enslaved and broken. About silver queens hunted to extinction. About false queens poisoning eggs, killing wyrmlings, driving species toward death.
About his children, out there hunting for salvation.
"Ask me again when it’s over," he said finally. "When we know if the realm survives. If our children succeed. If we can rebuild from ashes."
Yulong touched the quintet bond through her blessing. Felt five points of light spreading across Doha. Her children. Her quintet. Searching. Hunting. Risking everything.
"They’re safe," she whispered. "Distant but safe. The bond holds."
"Good," Laolong said. Then, softer: "I sent them into this. Sent them hunting while I lit the realm on fire behind them."
"You gave them a chance to succeed without ancient elders mobilizing to stop them," Yulong corrected. "Gave them a head start. Gave them hope."
"And gave the realm civil war."
"The realm was dying anyway," Yulong said. Fierce. Certain. "Slow death from lies and corruption. This?" She gestured at fires. "This is violent. Bloody. Painful. But it’s HONEST. For the first time in ten thousand years, dragons see truth."
"Will truth be enough?" Laolong asked.
"It has to be," Yulong replied. "Because there’s no going back now."
***
Dawn broke over the Grand Assembly Hall.
Empty now. Blood-stained. Ancient runes flickering weakly.
The hall that had witnessed over a hundred thousand years of dragon politics. That had seen silver queens speak. That had held trials and celebrations and councils.
That had, in a single night, witnessed the end of one era and the beginning of another.
Outside, the dragon realm burned.
Ancient elders mobilized hunting parties in desperation.
Minor sects called for revolution.
False queens hid or died.
Real sect queens—like Yulong—waited unawakened, locked power desperate to be freed.
And somewhere across three realms, five shadow dragon siblings hunted for the silver queen who represented salvation.
While bronze, red, and green dragons hunted for the same prize with very different intentions.
The race had begun.
The realm had fractured.
And there was no going back.
Only forward.
Through fire.
Through blood.
Through the truth that burned away everything rotten.
Until only what was real remained.
If anything remained at all.

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