Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 242 - 237: The Secret Realm
Location: Obsidian Academy Secret Realm
Date/Time: 26-29 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm (Secret Realm sub-dimension)
The portal was older than the Academy.
Jayde had known that intellectually — Headmaster Qin had said it predated the Sundering, and Qin didn’t strike her as someone who exaggerated. But standing in front of it in the grey light of an Ashwhisper morning, feeling the weight of the thing push against her skin like standing too close to a furnace, she understood the difference between knowing something was ancient and feeling it in her bones.
Massive stone archway. Rough-hewn. Undecorated. The kind of construction that didn’t bother with aesthetics because the people who’d built it had been occupied with things that mattered more. No carvings. No inscriptions. Just stone — and the essence woven through it, dense and layered, humming with a power that made the Academy’s refined ward matrices feel like children’s drawings next to an architect’s blueprint.
Structural analysis: pre-Sundering construction. Formation anchors integrated into the stone at a molecular level — not applied, grown. Whoever built this didn’t enchant the archway. They grew it from the ground with essence as a core building material.
(That’s not how anyone builds anything anymore.)
No. It isn’t.
Students gathered on the staging ground in a crowd that stretched back further than Jayde could see. Tens of thousands. Maybe a hundred thousand — the applicants who hadn’t walked away after the enrollment speech, packed into the broad terrace at the mountain’s base, spilling down the road into Obsidian City itself. The morning air was cold enough that breath came out in pale clouds, and the massed exhalation of that many bodies created a low-hanging mist that drifted across the staging ground like weather.
The nervous ones checked their equipment. Tightened straps. Counted rations for the third time. The confident ones postured — wide stances, loud voices, the kind of performance that was meant to convince others and usually only convinced the performer. The genuinely dangerous ones stood still and watched.
Rescue teleport crystals were distributed by a line of harried Academy proctors — small, red, faceted, each one nestled in a padded case and keyed to the student’s essence signature. They handed them out with the mechanical efficiency of people who’d done this before and the carefully neutral expression of people who knew not all of them would come back unused.
Break it, and you were out. Safe. Alive. And rejected — still owing one hundred and fifty merit, worked off in the Academy’s fields and mines at one merit per two hours. Three hundred hours of labour, minimum. The crystal wasn’t an escape. It was a different kind of trap.
Nobody wanted to break it.
Jayde turned hers over in her hand. The facets caught the grey morning light and threw tiny red reflections across her fingers. Fragile. Deliberately fragile. A reminder that safety was always one decision away, and that decision had a cost.
She tucked it into the reinforced pocket at her hip. Buttoned it shut.
Eden was several rows ahead, near the front of the crowd. Her pack was smaller than most — compact, efficiently loaded, nothing unnecessary. She stood with her back straight and her hands still, not checking her equipment, not fidgeting. She stood the way someone stood when they’d already verified everything twice and saw no reason to perform anxiety for an audience.
Their eyes met across the crowd. Eden nodded — small, steady, the kind of acknowledgment that carried more than words. Good luck. Be careful. See you on the other side.
Jayde nodded back.
She’ll be fine. She’s more capable than she shows.
(I know. I’m still worried.)
Headmaster Qin was there. Not arrived — was there. He had simply appeared at the edge of the staging ground with the unsettling ease of someone who had been navigating this space for so long that the space rearranged itself around him rather than the other way around. Hands clasped behind his back. Faded robes. Pale grey eyes sweeping the crowd with the unhurried attention of someone cataloguing specimens he expected to disappoint him.
"Survive," he said. His voice carried without effort. "Learn. Grow." A pause. The mildness didn’t change. "And try not to disappoint me. I’ve had quite enough of that."
Students stepped through the archway in groups of twenty. A flash of golden light — warm, nothing like the cold precision of modern teleportation formations. A displacement of air that smelled like ozone and old rain. And they were gone. Scattered to random locations within the realm. No choosing your landing zone. No sticking with allies.
Eden’s group went. The flash swallowed her, and the space where she’d been standing was empty.
(Be safe.)
Then Jayde’s turn. The archway loomed. The golden light intensified — warm on her face, warm against her closed eyes when she blinked, warm in a way that felt less like heat and more like attention. Something reading her. Something old, and patient, and thorough.
She stepped through.
***
The first thing she noticed was the smell.
Not unpleasant. Rich. The deep, layered scent of living forest — soil and bark and green things growing, and the particular sweetness of decay that meant the ecosystem was healthy, that death was feeding life the way it was supposed to. But underneath that, something else. Something metallic and faintly electric, like the air before a thunderstorm, except it didn’t fade. It was constant. Woven into the atmosphere, the way colour was woven into cloth.
Essence. The ambient essence density was — she had to stop and recalibrate, because her initial assessment couldn’t be right. Three times the concentration of the Academy grounds. Maybe more. Every breath pulled it into her lungs alongside oxygen, and her Crucible Core responded before her conscious mind did, cycling faster, drinking it in, the way a plant turned toward light without deciding to.
Her boots were on soft earth. Dense forest. Alone.
The other students in her group were gone — scattered elsewhere, deposited in their own random corners of whatever this place was. She stood in a small clearing ringed by trees that defied reasonable proportion. Old growth on a scale that made the Dark Forest look like a garden. Trunks wider than buildings. Bark textured with patterns that could have been natural grain or could have been carved by hands that had turned to dust ten thousand years ago. The canopy above was so thick that the light filtering through had a green-gold quality, like being underwater in a warm sea.
Tactical assessment: terrain — old-growth forest, massive canopy, limited ground visibility beyond thirty metres. Elevation: slight downward slope to the southeast. Defensible positions: elevated root system at two o’clock provides cover and high ground. Water source: audible, southeast, approximately two hundred metres. Hostile signatures: none immediate.
(It’s beautiful.)
It’s dangerous. Focus.
Jayde focused. But she let herself breathe first. One long, slow breath of air that tasted like lightning and growing things and the patience of a place that had been waiting for a very, very long time.
Then she moved.
Perimeter check. Three escape routes identified. Water source confirmed — a stream, clear, cold, running over stones that hummed with the same low essence that saturated everything else. Two beast territorial markers within her immediate area — claw gouges on tree trunks, the particular musk that said something large lived nearby and expected others to know it.
Formations pulsed in the ground beneath her feet. Dormant. Woven into the bedrock itself, not applied on top of it but integrated so deeply that they were part of the geological structure. The entire realm sat on top of them like a house built over a foundation that had supported something else entirely.
This place was built. Not natural. A purpose-designed training environment from an era when the builders considered growing stone archways from raw essence a reasonable construction technique.
A camp position presented itself within the hour. A hollow between the roots of one of the massive trees — elevated, defensible, with sight lines to the north and east and a natural choke point at the entrance that would funnel anything approaching into a narrow corridor. Jayde set simple wards. Arranged her supplies.
Then she opened her backpack.
***
Two blue eyes stared up at her.
They were nestled between her spare shirt and her water flask. Wide. Blue. Framed by white fur and a pink ribbon on the left ear and a pale blue ribbon on the right, both somehow perfectly positioned despite being smuggled through an inter-dimensional portal inside a backpack.
Zero remorse.
Jayde stared.
The kitten stared back.
The ancient forest hummed around them. A bird called somewhere in the canopy — a long, liquid note that rose and fell and faded into the green-gold light. The stream murmured two hundred metres to the southeast. The essence-thick air pressed gently against everything.
"...Takara."
Mew.
Neither of them moved. For several seconds, they maintained a silence that was, from the outside, a girl looking into a bag. From the inside, it was something considerably more complicated.
"How did you — I told you to stay. The realm seals pet spaces. How are you—"
He was never in pet space. He’s not a contracted beast. He was physically inside the backpack when we stepped through the portal. The realm sealed spatial storage. It didn’t seal a bag.
(He climbed into my bag.)
He climbed into our bag. While we slept. After we specifically told him to stay behind.
(He outmanoeuvred the entire entry protocol by getting into a bag.)
Yes.
There was no sending him back. The portal was one-way. No return mechanism — fourteen days, or break the crystal. The kitten was here. In a realm full of spirit beasts that could crush him with a careless step, in a forest saturated with essence that would overwhelm a normal animal, surrounded by students who were competing for resources and wouldn’t think twice about something small and fragile getting caught in the crossfire.
(He could die in here.)
He could have died out there. He’s a kitten in a cultivation academy. At least here he’s with us.
(That doesn’t make me feel better.)
It wasn’t meant to.
She lifted him out. He came willingly — no resistance, no scrambling, just the boneless ease of a cat who’d decided to cooperate. He stretched in her hands. Slowly. Thoroughly. The kind of stretch that said the backpack had been cramped and he’d endured it with dignity, and he wanted her to appreciate the sacrifice without making a fuss about it.
Then he settled onto her shoulder. Hooked his claws into her collar with practised precision. Surveyed the ancient forest with an expression that was, somehow, both alert and profoundly unimpressed.
"Fine," Jayde said. "Fine. You’re here. But you stay close. You stay on my shoulder or in the pack. And if something big comes — if something comes that I can’t handle — you hide. You hear me? You hide, and you stay hidden until I come back for you."
Mew.
She chose to interpret that as agreement.
She scratched behind his ear — the left one, beneath the pink ribbon — and felt the vibration of a purr start against her neck. Small. Warm. Steady.
(At least I’m not alone.)
We were never alone. We have us.
(I know. But he’s warm. And he purrs.)
...Yes. He does.
***
That night, after the fire was banked and the wards were set and Takara had curled into a ball against her hip with a possessiveness that suggested he considered the position non-negotiable, she reached for Isha.
It was the first thing she should have done. Would have done, if the backpack situation hadn’t derailed her priorities. The Pavilion connection was her lifeline — Isha’s guidance, the sanctuary’s resources, the family waiting inside. In any new environment, the first step was always to establish comms.
Jayde closed her eyes. Reached inward. Found the thread that linked her to the Pavilion and pulled.
Static.
Not silence — static. The thread was there, but it was... muffled. Wrapped in something. Like trying to hear a voice through water, or through stone, or through whatever ancient formations saturated this realm’s bedrock. She pushed harder. Fed essence into the connection.
A voice. Faint. Fragmented. Like hearing someone shout from very far away in a storm.
...Jayde... hear... interference... realm’s formations...
"Isha?"
...ancient barrier architecture... predates my systems... cannot maintain stable...
The voice faded. Surged. Faded again. Jayde pushed everything she had into the thread and caught one more fragment — clearer than the rest, as if Isha had concentrated everything into a single transmission.
...Pavilion is closed to you while you’re inside the realm. The barrier formations are too old and too deeply embedded. I can’t reach through them. You’re on your own until you exit.
Then silence. The thread didn’t sever — it was still there, still present, but wrapped so thoroughly in interference that no signal could pass through it. Like a door that hadn’t been locked but had been buried under ten thousand years of stone.
(We’re cut off.)
For fourteen days. No Isha. No Pavilion. No Yinxin. No backup.
(Just us.)
Just us. And a kitten.
She looked down at Takara. He was watching her. Both blue eyes open, fixed on her face with an attention that was too focused for a small animal who should have been asleep.
"We’re on our own," she told him.
Mew. Quiet. Steady.
Jayde lay back. Stared up through the canopy at the fragments of sky visible between the massive branches — dark now, pricked with stars she didn’t recognise. Different constellations. Or the same ones from a different angle. She couldn’t tell.
Fourteen days. No lifeline. A realm full of things that wanted to kill her and students competing for every resource they could carry. And formations older than civilisation humming in the earth beneath her.
And a kitten.
(We’ve had worse.)
Have we?
(The pit.)
...Fair point.
Jayde slept. Eventually. The kind of sleep that came from exhaustion rather than comfort — deep, immediate, the body taking what it needed regardless of the mind’s objections.
On her hip, a white kitten opened his eyes.
He waited. Counted her breaths until they were deep and even and steady. Then he lifted his head and extended the mental link.
[Canirr. Position report.]
Nothing.
[Canirr. Respond.]
Nothing. Not the clean silence of a closed channel. Static. The same dense, layered interference that saturated everything in this realm — ancient formation architecture pressing down on frequencies that had worked across continents, across oceans, across the barrier between realms without interruption for five thousand years.
Lightning Panthera mental links were not essence-based communications. They operated on a frequency that predated cultivation itself — a biological inheritance from an era when the great beast lords had coordinated hunts across distances that would take a mortal months to cross. The links worked through ward barriers. Through dimensional boundaries. Through interference that would have shredded any cultivation-based communication like wet paper.
They did not work here.
[Suki. Prota. Amaya. Any unit, respond.]
Static. Deep. Old. The hum of formations that had been running since before the Lightning Panthera species had evolved.
He stared into the dark forest. The girl breathed against him, warm and unconscious and entirely unaware that the small animal on her hip was conducting a tactical assessment that would have alarmed several governments.
[Comms dead. All frequencies. Duration: unknown. Minimum fourteen days.]
[Principal is isolated. No Pavilion support. No protect detail. No extraction capability.]
[I am the only asset in the theatre.]
He looked down at the sleeping girl. At the rise and fall of her breathing. At the hand that had scratched behind his ear and the voice that had told him to hide if something big came.
[Acceptable.]
[I have worked with less.]
***
The first days found their rhythm.
Jayde woke before dawn. The forest’s light changed gradually — the green-gold filtering through the canopy shifting from near-black to a deep emerald, then slowly brightening to the colour of sunlight through shallow water. No bell here. No institutional schedule. Just the forest, and the light, and the quiet business of a realm that had been running itself for longer than civilisation had existed.
Camp broke efficiently. Wards checked — none tripped. Concealment formation reapplied. Takara fed from her rations — he ate the dried meat with the focused intensity of a creature who understood that food was fuel and fuel was non-negotiable, which was unusual for a kitten. Most kittens played with their food. Takara treated meals the way a soldier treated meals. Eat. Finish. Move.
(He even eats efficiently.)
Some animals are smarter than others.
Jayde hunted.
The realm’s spirit beasts occupied territories that overlapped in patterns she recognised — not random, designed. Some ancient architect had engineered predator-prey relationships into the landscape, the way a city planner designed water systems. The lower-tier beasts near the forest edges were manageable. Sparkforged. Low Flamewrought. Enough to fight, enough to learn from, not enough to kill her.
The first beast she took was a bristle-backed thing the size of a large dog. Flamewrought, single Inferno affinity, aggressive but predictable. It charged from a thicket with the subtlety of a thrown boulder, and she sidestepped, put a blade through its neck, and watched it drop.
Clean. Efficient. The way she’d killed things for sixty years.
The core was warm in her hand. She stored it. Stripped the useful materials from the carcass — hide, claws, and two essence-dense glands near the spine that would have alchemical value. Left the rest for the forest’s scavengers.
Everything had value. The ranking wasn’t based on a single metric — it was total haul. Beast cores, spirit herbs, rare materials, jade slips hidden in formation caches. All of it collected at the end of the fourteen days, assessed, weighed, valued. The students with the richest harvests ranked highest. Simple. Brutal. A system that rewarded breadth and efficiency equally — the student who killed fifty beasts and the student who found three rare herbs could theoretically rank the same, depending on what they’d found.
Field dressing a spirit beast while a kitten watches from a root. The tactical indignity of this moment is not lost on me.
(He’s watching my knife work.)
Kittens watch moving things. It’s instinct.
(His ears are tracking my cuts. Both of them. He’s watching my technique.)
...He’s a very attentive kitten.
By sunset on day one, she had three beast cores, two bundles of alchemical materials, and a pouch of spirit herbs she’d identified from Isha’s training. The camp smelled like beast blood and wood smoke and the particular satisfaction of competence applied to a problem.
***
Days two through four passed in the rhythms of survival.
A route developed. Mornings for hunting and herb identification — Isha’s training paid dividends. Jayde recognised forty-three plant species in the first three days, seven of which had genuine alchemical value. The realm’s enhanced essence density had produced specimens that were richer than their surface-world equivalents, more potent, the kind of quality that would make an alchemist weep. Everything stored carefully in sealed pouches.
Middays for formation puzzles. The realm was studded with them — carved into cave walls, embedded in cliff faces, hidden in root systems, scratched into standing stones that jutted from the forest floor like broken teeth. Solve one, and a jade slip materialised — dense, warm, essence-rich. The puzzles ranged from simple pattern-matching to complex multi-layered essence manipulation. She solved them all. Some took minutes. Some took hours. But her mind was built for this — sixty years of engineering training and Isha’s cultivation education, layered together into a problem-solving architecture that ate formation puzzles the way fire ate kindling.
This one uses a recursive anchor structure. Unusual. The builder assumed the solver would approach linearly — left to right, like reading. But if I start from the resonance peak in the upper left and work inward—
The jade slip materialised before she’d finished her analysis. She picked it up. Added it to the growing collection.
Jade slips were the premium currency of the Secret Realm — denser in essence than beast cores, rarer than herbs, each one a concentrated packet of value that the Academy prized above almost anything else. One jade slip was worth more than a dozen common beast cores. A student who could solve formation puzzles efficiently had an advantage that no amount of brute-force hunting could match.
Nine slips. Fourteen beast cores. Forty-two herb specimens, seven of significant value. Three sets of alchemical materials.
(Is that enough for Elite?)
Unknown. We don’t know what other students are collecting. The outer zones are probably stripped by now — a hundred thousand applicants hunting the same territory. But we’ve been moving inward. The deeper we go, the richer the yield and the fewer the competitors.
Afternoons and evenings, she moved. Never stayed in one camp more than one night. Standard survival protocol — patterns were vulnerabilities. A student who returned to the same location every night was a student who could be found, and while killing was forbidden, the rules said nothing about ambush, theft, or the kind of confrontation that left you alive but empty-handed.
Other students were out there. She heard them sometimes — distant combat, the crack of essence techniques against bark and stone, raised voices carried on wind that moved through the canopy in unpredictable currents. Once she found an abandoned camp. The fire was still warm. The owner’s pack was gone, but a broken ward disc lay in the ashes, split cleanly — overwhelmed by something the student hadn’t anticipated.
Once she found blood on a tree trunk. Dark. Recent. No body. No broken crystal in the leaf litter, which meant whoever had bled here was still in the realm. Still moving. Just hurt.
Jayde checked for trail signs. Nothing leading to the bloodied tree, nothing leading away. The student had either been very good at covering tracks or very bad at leaving them.
She moved on.
(Eden’s out there somewhere.)
She is.
(I can’t find any sign of her.)
The realm is vast, and the entry points are randomised. She could be kilometres away. She’s competent. She’ll survive.
(You keep saying that.)
Because it’s true. And because worrying about something you can’t change is not a productive use of cognitive resources.
(I’m going to worry anyway.)
I know. So am I.
***
Day four. The confrontation she’d been expecting.
Three students. Male. Coordinated. They stepped out of the tree line ahead of her in a formation that was deliberate — one centre, two flanking, angles designed to cut off retreat to the left and right. They’d been tracking her. The broken twigs on her back trail told her that much.
The one in the centre was taller than the others. Flamewrought, probably mid-tier, with the particular arrogance of someone who’d been stronger than everyone around him for most of his life and had mistaken that for skill. His hands were empty — a technique fighter, not a blade user. The two on the flanks were lower. Sparkforged. Followers, not leaders.
"Nice haul you’ve got there," the centre one said. He nodded toward her belt pouches, which were visibly full. "We’ve been watching. You’re efficient. Good at finding resources, solving those puzzles." He smiled. It was the kind of smile that was meant to be charming and missed by about a mile. "We’re good at finding people who find resources. Easier that way."
Three combatants. Lead: mid-Flamewrought, open-hand style, overconfident. Flanks: Sparkforged, nervous, following orders. Threat level: negligible. Engagement time: under fifteen seconds if unrestricted.
Cover maintenance requires engaging at Entry Inferno-tempered level. Extend engagement to thirty seconds. Use only basic technique. Win ugly.
"I’d rather not," Jayde said.
"That’s sweet." The centre one stepped forward. "Hand over the harvest and we’ll let you walk. Herbs, cores, slips — all of it. You’ve got nine days left. Plenty of time to start over."
Jayde looked at him. At the two on the flanks. Back at him.
The kitten on her shoulder was watching too. His ears were forward. His body had gone very still — the particular stillness of a small animal that was paying much more attention than a small animal should.
"No," Jayde said.
He swung.
Jayde gave them thirty seconds. Made it look difficult. Took a hit to the shoulder she didn’t need to take, so the centre one would feel like he’d gotten close. Used basic footwork, basic deflections, the kind of competent-but-unspectacular combat that an Entry Inferno-tempered frontier girl might have learned from a travelling swordsman or a village militia.
The flankers went down first. One sweep, one elbow. Nothing fancy. They hit the ground and stayed down — winded, not damaged, the kind of defeat that hurt your pride more than your body.
The centre one lasted another twelve seconds. He was actually not bad — his hand technique had decent fundamentals, and he was quick. But he committed too far on his strikes, left his centre line open, and didn’t guard his legs. She took his knee out with a low kick that she pulled at the last moment, so it buckled him instead of breaking him.
He went down. Stayed down. Looked up at her with an expression that was trying to be angry and was mostly confused.
"Your harvest," Jayde said. "All of it."
"You — that’s—"
"You tried to rob me. I’m returning the favour. Difference is, I’m asking."
He handed it over. Three pouches between the three of them — a handful of common beast cores, some low-grade herbs, two jade slips. Not much. They’d been spending more time hunting students than hunting beasts, and it showed.
Total harvest increasing. Margin widening.
Jayde walked away. Behind her, the centre one was helping his flankers up. Nobody followed.
Takara hadn’t moved from her shoulder during the entire encounter. He sat exactly where he’d been sitting — small, white, pink ribbon, pale blue ribbon, claws hooked into her collar. His blue eyes tracked the retreating students until they were out of sight. Then he yawned. Settled. Closed his eyes.
(He didn’t even flinch.)
He’s a very calm kitten.
(No kitten is that calm during a fight.)
...File it.
***
Evening of day five. Camp in a hollow between two massive roots, sheltered from the wind, warded, fire banked low. The green-gold light of the canopy had faded to deep emerald, then to near-black, and the forest came alive with different sounds — the clicks and chirps of nocturnal insects, the distant cry of something hunting, the creak of ancient wood settling under its own weight.
Jayde sat with her back against bark that was warm with stored essence and took stock by firelight.
Twelve jade slips — the formation puzzles deeper into the forest were harder, but worth considerably more. Twenty-one beast cores, ranging from common to two that pulsed with a heat she could feel through the pouch. Six bundles of alchemical materials — hides, glands, claws, two sets of fangs from beasts large enough that she’d had to actually work for the kill. Sixty-plus herb specimens, a dozen of genuine value. And whatever she’d taken from the robbers.
Exact ranking was unknowable. Nobody could know, until the fourteen days ended and the Academy assessors weighed everything. But Jayde could estimate. The outer zones, where most applicants were packed together, would be stripped clean by now — a hundred thousand students competing for the same common resources. The deeper zones, where she’d been pushing since day two, were richer and emptier. The formation puzzles alone put her ahead of anyone who couldn’t solve them. And she could solve all of them.
Conservative estimate: top five percent. Possibly higher. Nine days remaining. Continue pushing inward. The deeper zones haven’t been touched.
Takara was on her knee. Curled. Purring. The vibration travelled through her leg and into the root she was sitting on, a tiny warmth against the cooling night.
Jayde stroked his back. Absently. Feeling the ridge of his spine under fur that was softer than it had any right to be.
"I should be angry at you," she said. "For sneaking in."
Mew. Quiet. Almost contrite. Almost.
"Fourteen days. In a realm full of things that could eat you in one bite. And you climbed into my bag because — what? You didn’t want to be left behind?"
He pressed his head against her hand. Hard enough that she felt the skull beneath the fur. The purring intensified.
(He’s just a kitten. He didn’t know what he was getting into.)
He outmanoeuvred realm security by climbing into a backpack. That is not the behaviour profile of a kitten that doesn’t know what it’s getting into.
(So what is he?)
A very smart kitten. Probably. Possibly.
(That’s not an answer.)
It’s the only one we have. File it with the rest.
Jayde leaned her head back against the bark. Closed her eyes. The forest breathed around her — alive, ancient, patient. The formations in the bedrock hummed their low, constant note, and she could feel it in her teeth if she paid attention.
Something was out there. Not a beast, not a threat — something else. A pull. A direction. Like a sound she could almost hear, or a light she could almost see, tugging at the edge of her awareness. It had been there since she’d arrived, but it was getting stronger. Or she was getting closer.
She’d been moving inward without entirely deciding to.
(Something’s calling us.)
Yes.
(Should we follow it?)
We already are.
On her knee, Takara slept. Or appeared to sleep. One ear rotated — slowly, deliberately — toward the deeper forest where the pull was strongest.
The fire burned low. The night sounds continued. Nine days ahead of her. The haul growing in her pouches. And somewhere in the deep heart of the realm, something ancient and patient waited for someone with the eyes to find it.







