Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 286 - 281: Wyrmlings
Location: Nexus Pavilion
Date/Time: Late Sparkfall, 9939 AZI
Realm: Pavilion Sub-Space
The formation network stirred at the sixth bell.
Not because the bell rang — there was no bell. The Pavilion did not require one. Isha felt the change the way a river feels the turn of a season: through pressure, through temperature, through the infinitesimal shifting of energy patterns that meant another cycle had begun and the inhabitants of his body were waking.
White first. Always White.
The man’s signature was a controlled burn — dense, precise, the essence of someone who had compressed himself into the smallest possible space and held. He slept for four hours. He had slept four hours every night for the six millennia he had lived here, and Isha suspected he had slept four hours every night for the preceding millennia as well. The remaining twenty hours were divided between training, maintaining his weapons, and a silence so complete it registered in the formation network as a kind of anti-sound.
Steel grey eyes opened. The scarred hand reached for the sharpening stone beside his pallet before the rest of the body had committed to consciousness.
Isha had housed contractors who slept less. He had housed contractors who trained harder. He had never housed a contractor who did both with such systematic, unrelenting, quietly furious devotion. White did not train to improve. White trained to contain.
What he was containing, Isha had not asked. Isha had existed since before most creatures had walked on Doha and knew when not to ask.
Green next.
She was already in the herb garden — had been for an hour, because Green rose before White and pretended she didn’t. Her signature was the opposite of his: layered, branching, a complex architecture of attention that tracked multiple processes simultaneously. Right now, she was checking the growth patterns of the spirit herbs she had planted in the southern terrace, her fractured emerald eyes — that particular shattered-glass quality that made them look as though someone had broken something beautiful and the pieces had refused to separate — moving between beds with a botanist’s precision.
She was talking to the plants.
She did this every morning. Quiet, one-sided conversations about water schedules and root development and whether the dragonthorn was being passive-aggressive about its soil composition. She believed no one could hear her.
Isha could hear her. The formation network conducted sound the way it conducted everything — through stone and air and the particular resonance of a space that was, in the most literal sense, alive. He had heard every conversation she had ever had with a plant in this garden. He had learned more about herb cultivation in six months than in the previous ten thousand years.
He had never told her. He suspected she would stop talking if he did, and the Pavilion was quieter without her voice.
Reiko.
The primordial shadowbeast was a formation disruption. There was no delicate way to frame it. Lion-sized now — four feet at the shoulder, though the size-shifting meant he could be house-cat-sized when it suited him, which was usually when he wanted to fit somewhere he shouldn’t. The mercury rune on his forehead glowed openly here — no salve needed, no disguise required. Silver eyes reflecting light that the Pavilion hadn’t generated.
His heat registered as a 0.7-degree thermal anomaly in every room he occupied. Isha had recalibrated three formation arrays in the first week to accommodate it. Then Reiko had grown larger, and Isha had recalibrated again. And again. The shadowbeast produced heat the way stars produced light — as a fundamental consequence of existence rather than a deliberate act.
He was curled against the garden wall. Shenxin was pressed against his flank, still sleeping. The wyrmling had migrated there sometime in the fourth bell, and Reiko had not moved since, because moving would wake the child and waking the child would invoke Green’s lecture about disrupting wyrmling sleep cycles, and even a primordial shadowbeast had limits to his courage.
Yinxin.
In the queens’ training chamber. The door was closed, which meant the ancient queens had solidified enough to hold a sustained session. Months of Pavilion energy had strengthened them — they were more present now, more interactive, their formation signatures denser than the whispered echoes they had been when they first manifested. Two had emerged as primary instructors: one whose signature was warm, layered, patient — the teacher. One whose signature was sharp, angular, ancient — the war-queen.
They were remaking the girl. Not quickly — queens were not made quickly, even with the full inherited memory of every Silver Queen who had ever lived flowing through her blood. But steadily. The Yinxin who emerged from those sessions was not the frightened young dragon who had arrived in the Pavilion two years ago. Something was settling into her bones. Something that felt, to Isha’s formation-sense, like sovereignty.
He had felt it before. In other contractors. In beings who had walked into his Pavilion as one thing and walked out as another. The process was always the same: pressure, knowledge, time, and the particular alchemy of becoming what you were always meant to be.
She was becoming what she was meant to be.
And then. The wyrmlings.
Isha saved them for last because they were the part of the morning he did not have words for. He had millennia beyond counting of vocabulary. He had housed gods. He had an index of nine hundred and twelve distinct emotional states catalogued from previous contractors, cross-referenced by species, culture, and era.
None of them covered this.
***
Tianxin was first. Tianxin was always first.
She had discovered, approximately eleven days ago in Pavilion time, that if she built sufficient momentum before leaving an elevated surface, she could achieve a sustained glide of approximately four seconds. This discovery had been followed by a systematic campaign to test the theory from progressively higher locations. The garden wall (two feet). The herb shed roof (four feet). The training hall railing (six feet). Yesterday: the queens’ chamber balcony (twelve feet).
Isha had discreetly reinforced every landing zone within a thirty-metre radius of each launch point. He had thickened the formation cushioning beneath the flagstones, added resilience arrays to the garden beds, and installed what amounted to invisible padding across the entire southern courtyard.
Tianxin did not know this. She believed she was improving at landing.
She was not improving at landing.
This morning, she launched from the herb shed — golden eyes blazing, silver wings spread to their full span (which was, objectively, not very full), and achieved her personal best: four and a half seconds of genuine glide before the physics reasserted themselves and she hit the garden bed face-first.
Green’s dragonthorn, which had been the subject of extensive one-sided conversations about soil composition, was destroyed.
Tianxin extracted herself from the crater. Soil on her nose. One wing bent at an angle that made Isha discreetly check his medical formation. Grinning.
"Did you see?" she demanded — of no one in particular, of everyone, of the sky itself. "Did you SEE?"
From behind Reiko, still pressed against the warm flank, Shenxin opened one eye. Evaluated the trajectory, the distance, the angle of descent, and the crater depth. Closed the eye. Filed the data.
He would execute a clean version later, when no one was looking. He would land on his feet. He would say nothing. This was their pattern: Tianxin broke ground, Shenxin perfected it, and neither acknowledged what the other was doing.
Isha noticed. Isha always noticed.
And Huaxin.
The quiet one sat in the grass beside the ceramic bowl where the seed rested — small, dark-husked, inert. Doing nothing. Waiting for something that had not arrived yet, in the particular patience of a seed that knew its season had not come. No one had been able to identify it. Isha had cross-referenced its essence signature against every botanical record in his archive and found nothing. The contractor’s sword spirit knew — Isha was certain of that — but the old blade was not sharing.
Huaxin was watching it.
Not the way Tianxin watched things — with aggressive curiosity and the immediate intention to interact. Not the way Shenxin watched — with analytical assessment and strategic filing. Huaxin watched the way she watched everything: as if listening to a conversation that happened below the range of anyone else’s hearing.
Her golden eyes were still. Her wings were folded. Her breathing was even. She sat with the seed the way she sat with the ancient queens — in the presence of something that most people could not perceive, comfortable in the silence between.
The queens said: "The quiet one hears us already."
Isha did not know what Huaxin heard in a dormant seed. He added it to the list of things about the youngest wyrmling that he could not explain, which had grown longer than he was comfortable with for an entity that prided himself on comprehensive knowledge.
They called him uncle.
Not because anyone had instructed them. Not because the term existed in dragon nomenclature for a Nexus spirit — it did not; he had checked. They had simply decided, through whatever process governed the social taxonomy of young dragons, that the presence woven into the walls and floors and formations of their home was family.
Uncle.
He had housed gods. He had trained legends. He had been home to contractors who reshaped continents. In all the ages of his existence — stretching back to an era when the Luminari still walked, and Doha was young — no one had called him uncle. He had calculated forty-seven possible responses to the term, and none of them were adequate. He had settled on adjusting the temperature in Huaxin’s sleeping chamber by 0.3 degrees every night, because she slept better at exactly that warmth, and growing the particular variety of silver-leaf clover that Tianxin liked to eat in the garden, and making his formation constructs solid enough for Shenxin to climb on when he thought no one was watching.
He would destroy anyone who threatened them. This was new. In all his millennia, his protective protocols had been contractual — defined by terms, governed by clauses, limited by the scope of agreement. This was not contractual. This was not governed. This was something that had no clause and no limit and no termination condition, and it had settled into his formation network like a root system, quiet and total and permanent.
Uncle.
The word did not fit in any of his nine hundred and twelve catalogued emotional states. He was building a new one. He did not have a name for it yet.
***
The queens’ chamber was silver light and old grief.
Isha monitored from the formation network — not intruding, not manifesting, simply present in the way that he was always present everywhere in the Pavilion simultaneously. The chamber was the queens’ space. He had ceded it early, when the ancient spirits had rerouted his formation lines without permission and he had decided, after ages of territorial precision, that some battles were not worth fighting against three hundred dead queens who had collectively ruled an empire.
Yinxin knelt in the centre. Human form today — golden eyes, silver-white hair falling past her shoulders, the 5’10" frame that she wore with increasing ease. She had been in session for three hours. The two primary queens had solidified around her — the warm one to her left, the war-queen to her right.
"I need to ask you something," Yinxin said.
The chamber shifted. Isha felt it — a change in the formation resonance, a collective holding-of-breath from spirits who did not breathe. Three hundred consciousnesses turning their attention to a single point.
"My mother," Yinxin said. "My sister. Are they—"
She stopped. The question sat in the silver light like a stone dropped into still water.
The warm queen spoke first. Her voice was layered — not one voice but many, the harmonic resonance of queens who had chosen to let one speak for all. "Child."
"I need to know."
"We understand."
Silence. The war-queen’s signature sharpened — not with hostility but with the precision of someone preparing to deliver truth without softening it. Isha had known beings like this. They believed kindness and honesty were the same thing, and they were usually right.
"Your mother’s spirit passed to the Tree of Souls," the war-queen said. "As all Silver Queen spirits do, in the natural course. She rests. She will, in time, return to the lineage — reborn, not as herself, but as the essence of what she was, woven into a new life."
Yinxin’s hands pressed flat against her thighs. "And Xueteng?"
"The same. The Tree took her. Even a spirit that ends by its own Crucible Core detonation returns to the Tree — the method of death does not alter the destination." The war-queen’s voice held no softness, but it held something else — the weight of a being who had watched this cycle repeat across millennia. "They are at peace. Both of them."
"But they’re not here."
"No."
"They can’t—" Yinxin’s voice cracked. Held. Steadied. "They can’t come back. Not like you."
"No. The Tree does not release what it holds. Not in this form. Not as the spirits you knew." The warm queen’s signature pulsed — gentle, surrounding. "We stayed because we chose to resist the Tree’s pull. It cost us — we are echoes, child. Fragments of what we were. The memories are complete, but the selves that carried them are... diminished. We chose this diminishment because the alternative was worse."
"What alternative?"
"That you would be alone." The warm queen’s voice was simple. Final. "That the lineage would die, and the last Silver Queen would have no one to guide her. No one to teach her what she was. We stayed because you would need us."
A pause.
"We stay because your children will need us."
Yinxin did not cry. Dragons did not cry in human form the way humans did — the physiology was different, the grief expressed through other channels. Her essence signature flickered. The silver of it went dull for three heartbeats, then brightened — not the brightness of recovery but the brightness of something being forged under heat.
Isha had seen this before. The moment when grief stopped being a wound and became a foundation. When the question changed from why did I lose them to what do I build with what remains.
"Thank you," Yinxin said. "For staying."
"It was not a sacrifice," the war-queen said. "It was a privilege."
The warm queen added, so quietly that only Isha’s formation-sense caught it: "Your mother would be proud of you. She would be proud of your children. She would be proud of what you are becoming."
Yinxin’s hands uncurled. She stood. The golden eyes that looked out of her human face were dry and bright and ancient in a way they had not been three hours ago.
She walked out of the chamber. She went to the garden. She sat on the grass beside Huaxin, who was still watching the dormant seed in its ceramic bowl, and she gathered the quiet wyrmling into her lap and held her.
Huaxin, without being told what had happened, curled into her mother’s chest and was still.
The queens’ chamber dimmed. Three hundred spirits settled back into the silver light, their duty discharged, their vigil continuing.
Isha noted: the formation signature of the chamber had shifted. Warmer. As if the act of truth-telling had released something that had been held for a very long time.
He added it to his records. He did not add the way it made his own network feel — that was not the kind of data he knew how to catalogue.
***
The kitten was in a wagon.
Isha observed this from the formation network with the detached precision of an entity cataloguing the single most entertaining event in an existence that predated civilisation.
The wagon was Shenxin’s construction — garden stakes for the frame, spirit-vine for the lashing, a platform of woven leaves reinforced with the structural intuition of a wyrmling who had watched Green build herb-drying racks and extrapolated. It was, from an engineering perspective, surprisingly competent. From a dignity perspective, it was a catastrophe.
Takara sat in the wagon.
The 5,000-year-old Peak Eternalpyre Lightning Panthera — head of Lord Fahmjir’s elite guard, veteran of campaigns that predated most civilisations, possessed of enough killing power to level this Pavilion and everything in it — sat in a leaf-and-vine wagon being pushed around the garden by a dragon wyrmling. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
He was wearing a crown. Tianxin had constructed it from ribbons and silverleaf clover and what appeared to be one of Green’s herb-drying clips. It sat between his ears at an angle that suggested it had been placed there by someone with more enthusiasm than precision.
Shenxin pushed. Methodical. Steady. Following a route he had clearly planned in advance — around the herb beds, past the training circle, along the garden wall where Reiko was pretending to be asleep and failing because his silver eyes kept opening to watch and his tail kept twitching.
Huaxin, who had eventually left her mother’s lap and the dormant seed, was walking alongside the wagon. Occasionally, she reached in and patted Takara’s head. He endured this with the thousand-yard stare of a soldier in enemy territory who has accepted that extraction is not coming.
Through the formation network, Isha could sense the communication crystals embedded in Takara’s collar. The protect detail’s encrypted frequency was active.
Takara: I require extraction.
Amaya — her signature unmistakable even through the Pavilion’s walls, the grey-and-white tracker stationed somewhere on the exterior perimeter: Negative. Visual confirmed. This is the best day of our lives.
Suki, from wherever assassins lurked when they weren’t assassinating: Seconded.
Prota, with the measured restraint of someone physically suppressing laughter: Hold position, my lord. The asset is secure.
Canirr, professional to the last: Surveillance confirms no threats to protectees. Recommend maintaining current operational posture. A pause. I am recording this for the archive.
Takara’s mental signature radiated a quality that Isha could only describe as profound spiritual desolation.
Tianxin ran up. "KITTY NEEDS A CAPE!" She produced a scrap of cloth — one of White’s discarded training wraps, which she had clearly stolen from the washing line — and attempted to tie it around Takara’s neck. He endured this, too. His large blue eyes stared at a fixed point in the middle distance. His ears were flat. His tail was motionless.
He was fulfilling his mission. The wyrmlings were safe, occupied, and happy. They were not climbing formation arrays, not harassing the queen during training sessions, not attempting to eat Green’s experimental compounds. By all operational metrics, allowing himself to be used as a wagon passenger, hat, pillow, and now caped crusader was tactically optimal.
It was also destroying him.
Isha considered manifesting to offer assistance. He decided against it. This was too valuable.
The wagon completed its circuit. Shenxin parked it — carefully, precisely, in the exact spot where he’d started — and walked away without comment. Takara remained in the wagon. Huaxin climbed in with him, settled against his side, and fell asleep.
He did not move. His mission parameters now included functioning as a mattress. He accepted this. His ears rotated once — toward the garden wall where Reiko was definitely not watching — and went still.
From the collar crystal: I am adding all of you to the list.
Amaya: We know. We’re honoured.
***
Evening.
The Pavilion settled into its night cycle — not darkness, because the formation network maintained a constant ambient glow, but a dimming. A softening. The energy flows shifted from active to restorative, the essence channels widening to allow deeper cultivation absorption during rest.
Isha conducted his evening census.
Training hall: White. Cleaning the bone-handled whip with methodical care, running the leather between his fingers, checking for wear. His gaze was focused inward — the particular inwardness of a man reviewing a day’s training and finding it insufficient. He would sleep in three hours. He would wake in four. The cycle would repeat.
Herb garden: Green. Reading by formation-light, a cultivation manual open on her knee, tea cooling beside her. She had spoken to the dragonthorn’s replacement seedling for eleven minutes before planting it. She had apologised on Tianxin’s behalf. The seedling, Isha noted, was already growing faster than standard.
Queens’ chamber: Yinxin. Not training — sitting. The ancient queens’ light surrounded her, not teaching but simply present. The warm queen hummed something that was not quite music. Yinxin’s golden eyes were closed.
Garden wall: Reiko. Curled. Enormous. The mercury rune on his forehead cast shifting patterns on the stone. His heat had risen 0.2 degrees since this afternoon — the shadowbeast growing again, the primordial essence inside him expanding in ways that Isha’s formation network registered as tectonic. Something vast was becoming vaster. Isha had recalibrated the thermal arrays again. He was running out of calibration range.
Wagon: Takara. Still in the wagon. Huaxin still asleep on him. He had not moved in three hours. His large blue eyes were open, staring at the stars that the Pavilion’s formation dome projected across its artificial sky — wrong stars, copied from the Lower Realm’s sky, an aesthetic choice made by a contractor nine thousand years ago that Isha had never bothered to update.
The 5,000-year-old warrior watched the false stars with the expression of someone who had lost a war he hadn’t known he was fighting.
His dignity would recover. Eventually. Probably.
Beside the wagon, on a low stone shelf: the ceramic bowl. The unidentified seed inside it — dark-husked, palm-length, inert. Doing nothing. Waiting. It had been waiting since the contractor had planted it, and it would continue waiting until whatever conditions it required were met. Seeds were patient. Isha understood patience.
He ran his final census calculation.
Inhabitants, current: one Silver Dragon Queen, undergoing sovereignty transformation. Three silver dragon wyrmlings, developing personalities that would one day reshape their species. One primordial shadowbeast, growing beyond the parameters of anything in Isha’s archive. Two humans — one who contained fury, one who spoke to plants. One 5,000-year-old Lightning Panthera warrior, currently functioning as a mattress. Four invisible Lightning Panthera bodyguards on the perimeter, one of whom had recently discovered a passion for collecting local insects. Three hundred ancient dragon queen spirits, providing guidance from the silver light. One dormant seed of unknown origin that refused to identify itself. And one infant goddess who came home every night and let her real face settle back into place.
Isha had existed since before most creatures had drawn breath on Doha. He had been created in the desperate aftermath of the War of the Gods, when the Luminari — diminished, grieving, losing themselves — had needed something to maintain what they could no longer tend. He had been purpose without companionship. Function without family. For almost all of that vast, uncounted span, the Pavilion had been empty. Quiet. Purposeful in the way that empty rooms are purposeful — maintained, functional, waiting.
Two years. That was all it had taken. Two years to fill a silence that had lasted longer than most civilisations.
He did not have a framework for what he felt. The nine hundred and twelve catalogued emotional states did not include this. The closest approximation was a combination of entries four hundred and seven (protective obligation exceeding contractual parameters), six hundred and nineteen (aesthetic satisfaction in the presence of developing potential), and eight hundred and forty-one (structural resonance with inhabited purpose).
None of them were right. Together, they were closer, but still insufficient.
He was building a new entry. Number nine hundred and thirteen.
He thought he might call it home.
The formation network hummed. The wyrmlings slept. The seed waited. The stars turned overhead — wrong stars, false sky, and underneath them, every room full of someone breathing.
All of it. Every empty age.
Worth the wait.







