Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 220 - 215: Changing the Rules

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Chapter 220: Chapter 215: Changing the Rules

Location: Lower Realm - Campsite Off Trade Road

Date/Time: 7-8 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI

Three more villages.

That was all it took.

Three more villages in two days of travel, and Jayde stopped pretending the Lower Realm’s problems were someone else’s to solve. The details blurred together—different names, same suffering. A child with a broken arm set wrong because the bonesetter charged in silver. A widow paying "protection fees" with the only thing she had left, while her neighbors looked away. A boy with Torrent affinity—real talent, the kind that could change his family’s life—dragged to a wagon by men with ledgers and dead eyes.

Each time, Reiko dissolved into her shadow before they reached the village outskirts. Each time, she felt his fury pressing against the bond like water behind a dam. And each time, Yinxin’s presence steadied them both—cool silver thread holding the bond together when the heat of it threatened to crack.

Between villages, Reiko ran alongside the wagon in the open, burning off the shadow-meld compression with ground-eating strides that kept pace with the horses. He didn’t speak through the bond on those stretches. Just ran. Muscles working, wind in his fur, the simple animal relief of being solid and visible and himself.

Takara, draped across Jayde’s shoulder, catalogued each village with clinical precision and buried his reactions beneath five millennia of practiced detachment.

It didn’t work as well as it used to.

***

They made camp that night in a clearing ringed by winter-bare trees, the trade road a distant thread of packed earth visible through gaps in the undergrowth. Yinxin built the fire—dragon instinct made her particular about flames, even mundane ones—while Jayde set perimeter wards with the casual efficiency of someone who’d done it ten thousand times.

Reiko circled the clearing in a precise patrol pattern, then settled at the fire’s edge. He lay with his head up, ears rotating, eyes tracking the darkness beyond the firelight.

On his flat stone near the flames, Takara warmed himself with the contented air of a creature that had no concerns beyond comfort.

Externally.

Internally, he was running threat assessments on every sound within a kilometer and simultaneously worrying about the look on Jayde’s face.

She’s been silent for three hours. Not the meditation kind of silent. Not the tired kind. The planning kind. The dangerous kind.

In five thousand years, I have learned to recognize exactly four expressions that precede catastrophe. She’s wearing the third one.

Yinxin sat across the fire. Even through the glamour, her eyes held something that had been building since the first village—a weight that had nothing to do with the disguise’s drain and everything to do with watching history repeat itself.

"I watched you do it before," she said quietly.

Jayde looked up. "Do what?"

"Change things." Her muted eyes held the memory of silver scales and mountain caves and a girl who’d walked into a dying village and refused to let it die. "On Telia. That village was starving when you arrived. Corrupt mages hoarding power, warlords taxing people into dust, and everyone else just... surviving. And in thirty-eight days, you gave them plows that did the work of a hundred men. Sawmills. Stone-cutting tools. Trade agreements that made warlords irrelevant." She paused. "You didn’t fight anyone, Jayde. You just made their power not matter anymore."

Reiko’s ears swiveled forward. His tail thumped once against the ground—involuntary, the way it always moved when something triggered a good memory.

Telia.

He remembered Telia.

[The tarts,] he sent through the bond, and the word carried weight—not just flavor, but warmth, safety, the bewildering experience of being somewhere people weren’t afraid of him. [Mrs. Ryunzo’s tarts. She made them with berries and butter and she put them on a plate and gave them to me like I was a person.]

(You are a person.)

[You know what I mean. Nobody ran. Nobody screamed. The children climbed on me. That little girl—the one with the braids—she fell asleep on my back, and her mother just SMILED. Like a shadowbeast was a perfectly reasonable place for a nap.]

Through the bond, the memory bloomed—vivid, sensory, the way Reiko stored everything. Not in words or analysis but in textures and smells and the precise feeling of warm cobblestones under his paws. The feast in the village square. Food piled on tables. Music he didn’t understand but liked anyway. Jayde laughing—actually laughing—while Mrs. Ryunzo tried to adopt them both.

[I approved of that village,] he sent, with the quiet certainty of a predator who’d evaluated territory and found it worthy. [They gave good food and appreciated proper predators.]

Yinxin’s thread brightened with amusement. [You ate an entire platter of honey cakes on the second day. The baker thought you were a spirit that needed appeasing.]

[He wasn’t wrong. I am very spiritual when honey cakes are involved.]

Takara’s ears twitched—barely perceptible, but his attention sharpened to a razor’s edge. She did WHAT on Telia? Plows? Sawmills? In thirty-eight DAYS?

I need to pay closer attention to campfire conversations.

[She’s right, though,] Reiko continued, his mental voice shifting from warm nostalgia to something steadier. [About what you did there. The farmers—before your machines, they broke their backs for a handful of grain. After? They stood straighter. Talked louder. The elder stopped flinching when strangers approached the village. That wasn’t just tools. You changed what they believed was possible.]

(I had help. Both of you.)

[You had a traumatized dragon with three starving wyrmlings,] Yinxin sent. [Hardly an army.]

[And me,] Reiko added. [Who mostly ate their food and let children nap on him. Very tactical contribution.]

(Best allies I ever had.)

A pause in the bond—warm, three thousand years of shared memory and one shadowbeast’s fierce loyalty compressed into silence.

"That was one village on a backwater world," Jayde said aloud.

"And it worked. Every farmer who pulled a plow through that soil stopped needing a mage’s blessing to eat. Every healer who received those herbs stopped needing a sect’s permission to treat the sick." Yinxin leaned forward. "You changed the rules. I watched you do it."

Silence stretched between them. The fire popped, sending a shower of sparks skyward.

"Telia was different," Jayde said slowly. "They had magic, but it was hoarded. Controlled by corrupt mages who used it to keep everyone else down. Here..." She gestured vaguely at the darkness beyond their fire, at all the villages they’d passed, at a world built on the assumption that power flowed from within. "Here, the strong don’t just have better weapons. They have better bodies. Better senses. Better everything. A Flamewrought cultivator isn’t just armed—they’re fundamentally superior to an Ashborn in every physical way. How do you equalize that?"

[You can’t,] Reiko sent bluntly. [Stronger is stronger. That’s how it works.]

(Is it? Your mother was stronger in every way that mattered. She survived alone, raised you alone, and protected a territory alone. The pride had numbers. That’s not strength.)

Reiko didn’t answer. Through the bond, she felt him chewing on the question like a bone that wouldn’t break.

[That’s not strength,] Yinxin sent after a moment. [That’s just cruelty wearing strength’s skin. A dragon who burns a village isn’t strong. She’s a coward who’s never faced anything that could burn her back.]

"The same way you equalized it before. Not just Telia." Yinxin spoke aloud now, her voice quiet. "Before that. Before all of this."

Jayde met her eyes. Yinxin was one of the few who knew—about the other life, the other soul, the sixty years of war that lived behind a seventeen-year-old’s face. She’d told her on Telia, back when she’d thought they’d part ways and the secret wouldn’t matter.

"Xi Corp," Jayde said. "They engineered super soldiers—people like me—to fight their wars. We were property. Assets. Numbers on a ledger that could be spent like currency. And the Federation—the government that was supposed to protect everyone—couldn’t touch them. Wouldn’t touch them. Too much money, too much power, too much influence."

Reiko went very still.

Not confused. Not lost.

Something clicking into place.

He’d always known there were different voices in Jayde. He’d felt them through the bond since he was small—since the forest, since the beginning. His Jayde, the one who scratched behind his ears and called him ridiculous and loved him with a fierceness that burned. That was the real one. The whole one.

But underneath, he’d always sensed the others.

The child. Soft, scared sometimes, desperately hopeful. The voice that said (I’m frightened), (I want to go to school), and (please don’t leave me). He’d thought it was just... Jayde being young. The part of her that was still seventeen and hadn’t learned to hide it yet.

And then the other one. The cold voice. Hard and sharp and pointed, like a blade wrapped in ice. The one that assessed threats and calculated distances and spoke in clipped observations that felt older than anything had a right to feel. He’d never understood that voice. It didn’t match anything about her—not her age, not her body, not the warmth he felt when she was just Jayde.

He’d asked once, when he was smaller. Pushed against the cold voice through the bond with a cub’s curiosity.

It had responded with something vast and tired and gentle—and then retreated behind walls he couldn’t climb.

Now he understood.

[The cold voice,] he sent slowly. [The hard, pointy one. The one that counts exits and measures distances and never, ever sleeps.]

Jayde looked at him. Through the bond, he felt her breath catch.

[That’s not just a part of you. That’s HER. The soldier. Sixty years of war and fighting and—] He stopped. Started again. [She LIVED. A whole life. Before here. Before me.]

(Yes.)

[And the child—the soft, scared one—]

(That’s Jade. The girl I was born as on Doha. Before the memories woke up.)

[And you—MY Jayde—]

(Both of them. Together. That’s who I am now.)

Reiko processed this the way he processed everything—not analytically, not with words, but with the deep body-knowing of a predator who understood territory. Jayde wasn’t two voices fighting for space. She was a landscape he’d always known had mountains and valleys and depths he couldn’t quite see into.

Now he could see into them.

[Good,] he sent, with a simplicity that surprised her. [The cold voice kept you alive. The child voice kept you kind. And together they made someone who lets shadowbeasts eat honey cakes and children nap on their back.]

Through the bond, Yinxin’s thread shimmered—quiet, approving, the warmth of someone watching understanding bloom exactly when it was needed.

On his stone, Takara was experiencing a very different kind of understanding.

Other life? Other soul?

His kitten face maintained perfect sleepy blankness while his mind ran through every intelligence briefing he’d ever received about his charge.

Lady Ala said she was special. Lord Fahmjir said she was engineered by Pyratheon. Neither of them mentioned PAST LIVES.

What else don’t I know about this woman?

"So we built something outside the system," Jayde continued. "The Centauri. A rebellion, a refuge, a place where engineered soldiers weren’t property, and children weren’t weapons." Her voice went rough. "It took sixty years. Sixty years of fighting and dying and losing people I loved. And when I died, the Centauri had one homeworld. Nearly two million people. Warships in a dozen systems. And a dream that might not survive without me."

(But it did survive. It must have. Eden’s children were free.)

Unknown outcome. Insufficient data. But the foundation was sound.

"How?" Yinxin asked. "How did you fight something so much stronger?"

Jayde looked up at the stars—different constellations than the ones she remembered, arranged in patterns that had existed for billions of years before humanity crawled out of the mud.

"We changed the rules."

Reiko lifted his head from his paws, sapphire eyes reflecting firelight. Through the bond, Jayde felt the slow turn of understanding—ponderous, instinctive, reaching conclusions by feel rather than logic.

[The plow,] he sent.

(What?)

[On Telia. The plow. The farmers didn’t need to be stronger than the mages. They just needed... something the mages couldn’t take away. Something that worked without magic.]

(Yes. Exactly.)

[And here? On Doha?]

The memory surfaced—a cave in the Dark Forest, a charcoal sketch on stone, equations that bridged two lifetimes of knowledge.

Sparkcaster. Not a rifle. Not a technique. Something in between.

She’d designed it months ago. A weapon that combined Federation plasma technology with cultivation principles. A way to channel essence without the decades of training that traditional techniques required. Point. Focus. Fire.

Any idiot could learn to use a gun in hours. The same principle applied.

"The sparkcasters," Jayde said aloud.

Yinxin tilted her head. "The what?"

"Something I designed. A while ago." Jayde’s mind was racing now, pieces clicking together that she hadn’t known were separate. "Cultivation takes years. Decades. And even then, only those with resources can push past Ashborn. But technology—tools, weapons, devices—anyone can use those. You don’t need a higher tier cultivation to pull a trigger."

"You want to give weapons to commoners?"

Takara’s eyes snapped open.

He didn’t mean to. Five thousand years of discipline and control, and his body betrayed him because his brain was too busy short-circuiting to maintain the facade.

Weapons.

She wants to give WEAPONS.

To COMMONERS.

On DOHA.

"I want to give options to commoners." Jayde stood, pacing now, the cold fury in her chest transforming into something hotter. More dangerous. More useful. "Runes can be inscribed on objects. Formations can be built into structures. Artifacts can be created that store techniques for later use. None of that requires the user to be a powerful cultivator. They just need the tools."

Systematic democratization of power. Remove the advantage of elite cultivation through technological multiplication. Classic insurgency doctrine applied to a magical framework.

"More than weapons," she continued, voice dropping as the vision expanded. "Healing devices that could be operated by anyone with basic training. Defensive formations that activated automatically against threats. Communication artifacts that let villages coordinate against raiders. Warning systems that alerted people when hostile cultivators approached."

Infrastructure. What this world lacks isn’t power—it’s infrastructure. The systems that distribute capability rather than concentrating it.

Reiko was on his feet now, ears forward, tail rigid, watching Jayde pace with the intensity of a predator tracking prey. But he wasn’t tracking her—he was tracking the idea.

[Like dens,] he sent suddenly.

Jayde paused. (What?)

[Shadowbeast prides—the strong protect territory. But the territory has its OWN defenses. Thornbrush at the perimeter. High ground with sightlines. Narrow passages that funnel attackers. The den is safe not because the pride is strong, but because the DEN is built to be safe. Even weak cubs survive because the territory fights for them.]

Yinxin’s bond-thread brightened with surprise. [That is... remarkably astute.]

(Yes.) Through the bond, she felt something warm—surprise, pride, the recognition that Reiko had grasped the concept faster than most Federation strategists would have. (Exactly like that. Build the den so strong that even without a pack leader, the cubs survive.)

[I understand,] Reiko said, and settled back onto his haunches with the quiet certainty of someone who’d just decided what side of a war they were on. [Build the den. Make the territory fight for the weak ones. I understand.]

"The Luminari built artifacts that anyone could use. The Centauri built weapons that any soldier could fire. This world thinks strength comes from inside—from cores and essences and bloodlines. But strength can also come from outside. From tools. From technology."

She looked at Yinxin, and behind the Veil’s disguise, her gold phoenix-amber eyes burned with something that might have been madness or might have been vision.

"I need to learn refining. Runes. Artifact creation. Everything that goes into making tools that work without a cultivator’s direct involvement." Her voice dropped. "And then I need to make those tools available to everyone who’s ever been kicked in the dirt by someone stronger than them."

"That would make you enemies of every sect, every kingdom, every power structure on Doha."

THANK YOU, Takara screamed internally. THANK you, dragon woman, for stating the BLINDINGLY OBVIOUS.

"Good." Jayde’s smile held no warmth. "They were already my enemies. They just didn’t know it yet."

No.

No no no no NO.

Takara’s tiny body went rigid. His blue-tipped ears flattened against his skull. His tail puffed to twice its normal size. His claws extended—tiny, pathetic, kitten claws that couldn’t cut wet paper—and dug into the stone beneath him.

I was assigned to protect ONE girl from SPECIFIC threats. Parasites. Rival cultivators. Maybe the occasional beast. Manageable. Calculable. Within operational parameters.

She just declared war on CIVILIZATION.

Lord Fahmjir is going to have me cleaning latrines for ETERNITY.

Except he won’t, because I’ll already be DEAD, because I’ll have died trying to protect a seventeen-year-old revolutionary from the ENTIRE PLANET.

New tactical assessment: Protection difficulty has escalated from "challenging" to "mathematically impossible."

Revised mission parameters: Keep alive one (1) reincarnated super-soldier with divine heritage, dual consciousness, revolutionary tendencies, and an apparent pathological inability to leave well enough alone.

Resources available: One (1) kitten body. A pink ribbon. Whatever dignity I have left, which at this point is a negative number.

Probability of success...

He didn’t finish the calculation. Some numbers really weren’t worth knowing.

Then he sneezed.

The force of the sneeze—tiny, pathetic, adorable—knocked him off the stone. He hit the ground, scrambled upright, and launched himself back onto the stone with the frantic dignity of a creature pretending that nothing had happened while internally experiencing the worst existential crisis of his extremely long life.

"You okay, little one?" Jayde asked, bemused.

OKAY?

Am I OKAY?

You just announced your intention to overthrow every power structure on this planet, and you’re asking if the KITTEN is OKAY?

He made a sound. Not quite a mew. More like a very small, very distressed squeak that carried approximately five thousand years of professional frustration compressed into a single syllable.

He circled the stone three times because his body needed to move, and there was nowhere to go. Lay down. Stood up again because lying down felt too much like accepting the situation. Circled twice more. Finally curled into a ball so tight he was trying to compress himself out of existence.

Yinxin’s lips twitched. "I think you frightened the cat."

"It’s a kitten. What does it know about political revolution?"

EVERYTHING, apparently. I know EVERYTHING about political revolution. I’ve SEEN political revolutions. They end BADLY. They end in FIRE and DEATH and the complete destruction of everything the revolutionary tried to build.

Except...

A pause. A crack in the panic.

Except she said hers didn’t. She said the Centauri survived. Nearly two million people and warships across the stars.

And here she is. Reborn. Still dreaming.

He buried his face under his own tail and didn’t move again.

Reiko watched the kitten’s performance with mild concern, then turned back to Jayde. Through the bond, his mental voice carried something new—not the raw fury of the afternoon, not the confused grief of the slave wagon, but something steadier. Grounded.

[When do we start?]

(At the academy. I need to learn refining, runes, and artifact creation. The theory first. Then the practice.)

[And until then?]

(We watch. We learn. We remember every village and every cage and every boot in every face. And we use it.)

[Use it how?]

(As fuel.)

[Good,] Yinxin sent through the bond, and beneath the word lay the vast, patient fury of a being who had watched ten thousand years of injustice and finally—finally—saw someone with the will and the means to end it. [Good.]

Reiko considered this. Then he lay back down, pressed against her side, and rested his great head on his paws. Through the bond, she felt him file the concept away—not in the frantic, analytical way the Federation voice processed information, but in the deep, instinctive way a predator remembered the location of every water source and every threat in its territory.

He would remember.

He would remember every village.

***

Later, when Yinxin had settled into meditation, and Reiko had drifted into a light sleep—one ear still tracking sounds, predator’s rest rather than true unconsciousness—Jayde sat alone by the dying fire.

Not quite alone. On his stone, a ball of white fur that might have been sleeping stirred.

Takara had not calmed down. Not exactly. But five thousand years of military discipline had reasserted itself over the initial panic, and something like rational thought had returned.

All right. Assessment.

She’s not wrong.

The Lower Realm’s power structure is parasitic. It extracts from the weak to feed the strong. It wastes potential on a scale that would horrify Lord Fahmjir if he ever bothered to look. And the beings at the top—the sects, the kingdoms, the noble houses—they maintain their dominance not through merit but through monopoly.

Monopoly of knowledge. Monopoly of resources. Monopoly of cultivation techniques.

She wants to break that monopoly.

It’s insane. It’s suicidal. It will paint a target on her back the size of a continent.

And it might be the only thing that actually saves this planet.

Because the Zartonesh won’t wait forever.

Sixty-two years. That’s what the prophecies suggest. Year ten thousand. The Fifth Invasion. Hell’s Gate opens, and every nightmare that’s been pressing against reality’s walls for ten millennia comes pouring through.

And when it happens—when it ALWAYS happens—the Higher Realm will fortify. The Mid Realm will mobilize. And the Lower Realm?

The Lower Realm will burn.

It always burns. Every invasion, the same pattern. The powerful flee upward—anyone with enough cultivation or enough coin buys passage to the Mid Realm and watches from safety while everything below them dies. Then, when the war ends and the Zartonesh retreat, they come back. Rebuild. Resettle. Under the gracious authority of the Temple of the Light, of course. Always under the Temple’s authority. Sharlin’s predecessors understood the value of being the ones who "restore order" to devastated lands.

The Lower Realm’s people don’t get evacuated. They don’t get warned. They get left behind to die, and the survivors get ruled by whoever deigns to return and claim the ashes.

She wants to change that.

Not just the petty cruelties of sects and slavers. She wants the Lower Realm to SURVIVE the next invasion. To fight back. To have tools and weapons and defenses that don’t depend on cultivation tiers that most of them will never reach.

A planet full of Ashborn farmers with wooden hoes won’t survive the Fifth Invasion.

But a planet full of people with tools? With sparkcasters? With defensive formations, warning systems, and the ability to fight back?

That’s different.

That’s the difference between a civilization and a graveyard.

He uncurled slightly. Settled his chin on his paws. Watched Jayde stare at the stars with the expression of someone seeing blueprints in constellations.

I still think she’s insane, he decided. But she might be the useful kind of insane. The kind that changes things.

Lord Fahmjir...

I’m going to need reinforcements.

The sparkcaster concept drifted through Jayde’s mind—improved now, refined by months of cultivation knowledge she hadn’t possessed when she first sketched it on cave stone. The original design had been crude. A wand-shaped weapon that fired compressed essence like a projectile.

But why stop there?

She’d built the Centauri from nothing. Had taken engineered weapons designed for obedience and turned them into an army of liberation. Had faced impossible odds and won through sheer stubborn refusal to accept defeat. When she’d died, the Centauri was an empire—one homeworld, nearly two million souls, warships across the stars, and a dream.

But it was enough. It had to have been enough.

She could do it again.

"Obsidian Academy," she murmured. "That’s where I start. Refining. Runes. Technology that gives the powerless a chance."

The fire crackled, sending sparks up into the darkness.

Somewhere in the distance, a child probably wept. A healer probably refused treatment. A cultivator probably beat someone weaker for the crime of existing.

And in sixty-two years, the Zartonesh would come. The Higher Realm would seal its gates. The Mid Realm would mobilize its armies. And the Lower Realm—the Lower Realm would be left to die, again, the way it was left every time, because the people here weren’t worth saving to anyone who had the power to save them.

Jayde couldn’t save them tonight.

But she could start building the world that would.

On his stone, Takara opened one eye. Watched the firelight dance across her face. Watched the determination settle into her bones like iron being forged.

Five thousand years, he thought. Five thousand years, and I’ve never been assigned to someone who scared me more than the enemies I was supposed to protect them from.

She’s going to turn Doha upside down.

And I’m going to have a front-row seat.

In kitten form.

With a pink ribbon.

Lord Fahmjir, if you can hear me: I want a raise.

Against Jayde’s side, Reiko stirred in his sleep. One paw twitched—chasing something in his dreams. Through the bond, she caught a fragment: shadow and light, cages breaking, children running free across open fields with no baskets and no bleeding feet.

She rested her hand on his flank.

(Good dream,) she thought. (Hold onto it.)

The fire burned low.

The stars wheeled on.

And in a clearing on a trade road in the Lower Realm, a girl with two lifetimes of war in her bones, a shadowbeast with his mother’s courage in his heart, a dragon queen with three thousand years of patience, and a kitten with five thousand years of reluctant loyalty sat together in the dark and waited for the morning.

The morning when everything would start to change.