Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 295 - 290: Reiko’s Birthday
Location: Nexus Pavilion
Date/Time: 24 Blazepeak, 9939 AZI (Day 334)
Realm: Pavilion Sub-Space
The first cake exploded at noon.
Not dramatically — not a wall-shaking detonation or a formation array rupture. The Hearthcore Oven, which Jayde had built specifically for this purpose and tested three times without incident, simply decided that the particular combination of flour, spirit-honey, and ground zharfruit was an affront to thermodynamics and responded accordingly. The batter expanded. The oven’s temperature regulation — five settings, steady, reliable, the same dial mechanism she’d used on the commercial model — held for approximately ninety seconds before the batter reached a critical density and the beast core surged.
The lid blew off. Batter hit the ceiling. Takara, who’d been sleeping on the kitchen table, launched sideways with a yowl of pure indignation and landed on White’s shoulder, claws embedded in the combat trainer’s collarbone with the desperate precision of a creature who had not signed up for this.
White looked at the kitten on his shoulder. The kitten looked at the batter on the ceiling. White looked at Jayde.
"The oven," White said, in the flat tone of a man whose steel grey eyes had seen every conceivable form of violence and had just added baked goods to the list, "is on fire."
It wasn’t on fire. It was smouldering. There was a difference, and Jayde intended to defend that difference until the smoke cleared.
"Ventilation," she said, adjusting the dial. "The sealed design traps moisture. I need steam channels."
"You need," White said, removing Takara from his shoulder with the careful grip of hands that could snap a man’s neck and chose instead to hold a kitten like a teacup, "to not burn down the Pavilion on Reiko’s birthday."
From the doorway, Green’s voice carried the musical precision of a woman who had been watching the disaster unfold and had waited exactly long enough to be helpful: "The spirit-honey. It catalyzes with beast-core heat above the third setting. Any alchemist would have told you that."
"I’m not an alchemist."
"Clearly." Green stepped into the kitchen. Five-two, ash-blonde hair in its severe bun, fractured emerald eyes assessing the batter-covered ceiling with the expression of someone cataloguing damage for future lectures. She was carrying a cloth-wrapped bundle. "I brought stabilising powder. Mix a quarter-measure into the next batch. It’ll buffer the honey’s reaction."
(She knew. She let me blow it up first.)
Of course she did. The lesson is more memorable with batter in your hair.
Kazren was enjoying this. She could feel it — the faintest warmth of amusement from the soul space, the sword spirit’s version of a smile. He’d been alive for eons. He’d served a god-emperor. And he was entertained by cake.
[You have batter on your ear.] Reiko. Through the bond. Warm, amused, deliberately not coming into the kitchen because the birthday boy wasn’t supposed to see the preparations, and he was taking that rule more seriously than any rule he’d ever been given.
(Stay out.)
[I’m in the training clearing. I can’t see anything.]
(You can feel everything through the bond, and you know exactly what’s happening.)
[I have no idea what you’re talking about. I am practicing my tracking formations and thinking about nothing.]
(You’re laughing.)
[I am a dignified primordial shadowbeast. I do not laugh.]
He was absolutely laughing.
***
The second cake didn’t explode.
It sank. Slowly, mournfully, with the gradual deflation of something that had briefly believed in itself and then reconsidered. The centre collapsed inward, leaving a crater surrounded by what could generously be called a rim and more accurately called a baked accident.
Yinxin examined it. She stood at the kitchen counter in her human form — five-ten, silver-white hair loose around her shoulders, golden eyes studying the failed cake with the focused intensity of a dragon queen who had inherited twelve thousand years of ancestral memory and found none of it relevant to baking.
"It’s... structural," she offered.
"It’s a hole," Jayde said.
"A structural hole."
Tianxin, the eldest wyrmling, had her snout on the counter’s edge. She was approximately the size of a large dog now — fifteen percent bigger than six months ago, bronze-scaled, adventurous to the point of recklessness. She sniffed the cake. Sneezed. A tiny spark of essence left her nostril and landed on the rim, which began to smoulder.
"No," Jayde said. "No fire. We’ve had enough fire."
Shenxin, the middle wyrmling, was watching from the floor with the cautious expression of a creature who had assessed the kitchen’s current risk profile and chosen the safest position. He was silver-scaled, thoughtful, and had positioned himself exactly behind Yinxin’s legs, where nothing could reach him.
Huaxin, the youngest, was asleep on Green’s lap in the next room. She had the right idea.
"Third attempt," Green said. She’d rolled up her sleeves. The faint burn scar on her left palm — magical backlash, years old — caught the light as she measured flour into the mixing bowl. "Lower heat. Stabilising powder. And we remove the lid entirely — let the steam escape."
"If we remove the lid, the top won’t set properly."
"Then we cut the top off."
Jayde looked at Green. Green looked at Jayde. Two women who had survived things that should have killed them, standing in a kitchen, negotiating cake architecture.
"Fine," Jayde said. "We cut the top off."
***
The third cake worked.
Not perfectly. The texture was denser than she’d wanted, the zharfruit flavour was aggressive rather than subtle, and the spirit-honey had given the whole thing a faint luminous sheen that made it glow in the Pavilion’s ambient light like a slightly unsettling nightlamp. But it held its shape. It didn’t explode. It didn’t sink. It sat on the serving platter with the quiet dignity of something that had earned its existence through sheer attrition.
Green had piped a formation pattern on top using thickened cream — an actual, functional pattern that emitted a soft warmth when activated. "Decorative and practical," she said, with the faintest smile that cracked her usual composure and made her look, for a moment, like someone who enjoyed things.
Isha appeared beside the platter. The kitsune spirit materialised with the effortless grace of a being who existed in a different relationship with space than everyone else in the room — one moment absent, the next present, elegant and unruffled, tails shifting behind her in a slow cascade.
"I have never attended a birthday celebration," Isha said. "This appears to involve a great deal of destruction."
"Only the first two attempts," Jayde said.
"And the ceiling."
"The ceiling is cosmetic damage."
Isha regarded the luminous cake. The cream formation. The batter stain overhead that nobody had cleaned yet. "I see. Shall I summon the guest of honour, or would you prefer another explosion first?"
***
Reiko arrived with the studied nonchalance of a creature who had absolutely not been waiting in the clearing vibrating with anticipation for the last two hours.
He filled the Pavilion’s main room. Not metaphorically — literally. Lion-sized, mercury rune glowing at his brow, silver eyes catching the formation-light with the depth of a being who was older than his body suggested and younger than his species demanded. His fur was freshly groomed. She suspected Yinxin had been involved — the dragon queen had opinions about presentation and the authority to enforce them.
He saw the cake.
[What is that?]
"Your birthday cake."
[My what?]
"Birthday. The anniversary of the day you were born. Humans celebrate it."
[I know what a birthday is. I’m asking what happened to the cake.]
"It glows."
[I can see that it glows. Why does it glow.]
"Spirit-honey."
Reiko looked at the cake. Looked at her. Looked at the batter on the ceiling. Back at her.
[You blew up the first one.]
"That information is classified."
[I felt it through the bond. You panicked for exactly four seconds and then got angry at flour.]
White — leaning against the doorframe, arms crossed, bone-handled whip coiled at his hip — made a sound. Not quite a laugh. The ghost of a laugh, haunting the body of a man who’d forgotten how to make the real thing years ago.
"Happy birthday," White said. The words came out like they’d been forged rather than spoken — heavy, deliberate, unfamiliar in his mouth. He looked at Jayde. "That’s correct? Happy birthday?"
"That’s correct."
"Hm." He uncrossed his arms. Reached into his belt pouch. Produced a leather-wrapped object and set it on the table beside the cake with the precision of a man who was absolutely not making a big deal out of this.
Reiko’s ears went forward.
[What—]
"Open it," White said. And walked out of the room before anyone could respond. Green’s shattered-glass eyes tracked him to the door, and something moved across her face — not surprise, not tenderness, something between the two that she folded away before it could be named.
The leather fell open. Inside: a set of beast-core training weights, hand-made, sized for a shadowbeast’s limbs. Each one inscribed with conditioning formations that would adjust resistance based on the wearer’s output. The craftsmanship was rough — White wasn’t a refiner — but the intent was unmistakable. He’d made them himself. For Reiko. In a workshop he’d never mentioned having.
[He made these,] Reiko said. Quiet. The bond carried something she’d never felt from him before — a stillness that wasn’t calm but was instead the careful containment of a feeling too large to let out all at once.
"He did."
[He doesn’t make things.]
"He made these."
Reiko’s mercury rune pulsed. Once. A slow, deliberate glow that had nothing to do with power and everything to do with how a creature expressed emotion when words weren’t enough.
***
Jayde’s gift came next.
The collar was black leather — supple, treated with preservation formations to prevent wear, sized to sit comfortably against his fur without restricting movement. At the centre: a small, polished spatial stone, set into a brass housing that she’d inscribed with compression arrays. A space ring, embedded. Storage.
"Twelve cubic feet," she said. "Enough for medical supplies, emergency rations, and whatever else you decide to carry. The stone recharges passively from ambient essence — you’ll never need to feed it."
Reiko lowered his head. She fastened the collar. Her fingers — diamond-tipped talons in her true form, careful, precise — worked the clasp with the practiced efficiency of someone who’d measured his neck seventeen times to get the fit right.
He raised his head. The collar sat against his dark fur, the spatial stone catching the Pavilion’s light.
[Twelve cubic feet.]
"Twelve."
[You measured my neck seventeen times.]
"Fifteen."
[Through the bond, I counted seventeen.]
"Two of those were quality checks."
His tail swept the floor. Once. The slow, deliberate wag of a creature who would not admit to wagging his tail and expected everyone present to maintain the fiction.
***
"Birthdays," Tianxin said.
Not in words — wyrmlings couldn’t speak yet. But the eldest had positioned herself directly in front of Jayde with the immovable determination of a young dragon who had watched someone else receive cake and presents and had arrived at a conclusion.
"You want a birthday," Jayde said.
Tianxin’s bronze-scaled head bobbed.
"You don’t know when your birthday is."
The head bobbed again. Differently. The bob of a creature who considered this an administrative problem, not a philosophical one.
Shenxin had emerged from behind Yinxin’s legs to join his sister. His silver scales caught the light differently — cooler, more reflective, the colour of his mother’s dragon form. He sat beside Tianxin with the quiet solidarity of a brother who supported the cause even if he hadn’t initiated it.
Huaxin, who had been asleep, was now awake on Green’s lap and staring at Jayde with enormous amber eyes that communicated, with devastating clarity: I would also like cake.
"We’ll pick a date," Jayde said.
Yinxin’s golden eyes brightened. "A shared birthday. For all three."
"
"First of Frostforge." Jayde said it without thinking — the date arriving fully formed, instinctive, the way good ideas sometimes did. First day of winter. New beginnings after the cold.
"Why Frostforge?" Green asked.
"Because I found them dying." She looked at the wyrmlings — Tianxin bold, Shenxin steady, Huaxin watchful. Hatched on Telia with a mother too starved to feed them and a world too hostile to let them grow. "They survived something they shouldn’t have. Frostforge is the month the forge goes cold and lights again. That’s them."
Silence. The kind that meant everyone in the room had heard something they hadn’t expected and was taking a moment to absorb it.
"First of Frostforge," Yinxin said softly. "I’ll remember that."
Tianxin headbutted Jayde’s knee. Approval.
***
"What about Takara?" Yinxin asked.
The kitten was on the highest shelf in the room — his default position, the place that allowed maximum surveillance with minimum interaction. He’d eaten a precise portion of cake, groomed his whiskers, and retreated to observe the proceedings with the regal detachment of a creature who found family gatherings tolerable but not obligatory.
Jayde scooped him off the shelf before he could protest. He went rigid in her hands — the offended rigidity of a creature who had not consented to being held — but she settled him against her chest, and he stayed, because the alternative was undignified scrambling and he had standards.
"When’s your birthday?" she asked.
He blinked. Slowly. The blink of a creature performing ignorance with the commitment of a stage actor — as if he had never understood any question and certainly had no concept of calendars, thank you very much.
"Right." She scratched behind his ear. "Let’s try this differently. Emberrise?"
Nothing. Relaxed. Purring, even — or the grudging vibration he permitted when someone scratched the right spot.
"Sparkfall? Ashbloom? Scorchwind?"
Nothing. Nothing. Nothing. The purring continued with the steady indifference of a creature who could do this all day.
"Blazepeak? Infernorest?"
Nothing. Nothing.
"Flamefade."
He tensed. The tiniest contraction — a fractional tightening of the muscles along his spine that lasted less than a second before he forced himself back to relaxed. His ear tips, which had been their normal blue, flushed the faintest shade of pink.
Jayde grinned.
"Flamefade," she repeated. He looked away. Aggressively casual. Studying the far wall with the intense focus of a kitten who had suddenly discovered architecture. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎
"Now — most beasts wouldn’t know exact dates. But you’re not most beasts, are you?" She ran her thumb along his jaw. He permitted it. Barely. "Beginning of Flamefade?"
Nothing. Steady.
"Mid-Flamefade?"
The ear tips went pink again. His tail, which had been hanging loose, tucked against his body. He was vibrating — not purring. Something closer to the barely contained mortification of a creature whose body was betraying him in front of an audience.
"Mid-Flamefade it is." She was enjoying this far too much. "Let’s narrow it down. Tenth? Twelfth?"
He held. Impressively still. A masterclass in feline composure.
"Fourteenth?"
Both ears flattened. The pink spread from the tips to the base. His entire body went rigid for one traitorous half-second before he recovered with the desperate dignity of a creature mentally cataloguing every involuntary response and vowing to never let it happen again.
"Fourteenth of Flamefade," Jayde announced. "That’s your birthday."
Takara turned in her arms. Slowly. Deliberately. He fixed her with his large blue eyes — the look of a being who wanted it known that he had been ambushed, that this was beneath his dignity, and that he would remember this.
Then he groomed his paw. On her chest. With the aggressive normalcy of a creature who was absolutely not having feelings about this and would prefer if everyone stopped looking at him immediately.
(He’s happy.)
She could tell. Not from the bond — Takara wasn’t bonded to her. From the way he didn’t leave. He could have jumped down. Could have returned to his shelf. Could have done any of the twelve escape routes she’d watched him execute over the past months. Instead, he stayed in her arms, groomed his paw, and pretended none of this was happening.
That was as close to joy as Takara got.
Tianxin had been watching from the floor with the laser focus of a wyrmling who had just witnessed something profoundly unfair. Her bronze-scaled head swivelled between Takara and Jayde, and the look in her golden eyes said she’d done the arithmetic and arrived at an outrageous conclusion.
She chirped. Loud. Insistent. The chirp of a dragon who had been assigned a shared birthday on the first of Frostforge and had just watched a KITTEN receive his own personal day in Flamefade — a month that sounded infinitely more exciting than boring old Frostforge.
"No," Jayde said.
Tianxin chirped again. Louder. She headbutted Jayde’s knee and looked up with an expression that communicated, with devastating clarity: I want Flamefade. He can have Frostforge. We switch.
Takara, still in Jayde’s arms, looked down at the wyrmling.
His ear tips had returned to blue. His composure was restored. And the look he gave Tianxin — the slow, imperious, utterly final blink of a creature who had just been given something and would not be surrendering it under any circumstances — shut the negotiation down before it started.
Tianxin sulked. She’d get over it in three minutes. She always did.
***
Later. The Pavilion was quiet.
Reiko lay on the main room floor, training weights beside him, spatial stone glowing softly at his collar. The wyrmlings had collapsed in a pile against his flank — Tianxin sprawled across his paw, Shenxin curled against his ribs, Huaxin tucked between them like a small amber-eyed anchor. Yinxin had gone to bed. Green had taken the remaining cake to her workroom, which meant Green was eating cake alone, and that was fine because Green needed that sometimes.
Jayde sat beside Reiko. Her gold eyes — her real eyes, phoenix-amber at the core, the ones she could only wear here — reflected the Pavilion’s quiet light. Her silver-white hair was loose. No disguise. No artifact. Just her.
[Thank you,] Reiko said. Through the bond. Warm and steady and entirely, unmistakably sincere.
"For the cake?"
[For the concept. Birthdays. The idea that the day you arrived matters enough to celebrate.] A pause. The bond carried something deeper — not sadness, not joy, but the specific ache of a creature who had spent most of his existence being a category rather than an individual. Shadowbeast. Primordial. Bonded. Categories. Not a person.
[Nobody ever told me the day I was born mattered,] he said. [Nobody knew it. Including me.]
She leaned against his shoulder. Warm fur. The steady pulse of the bond between them.
"It matters."
[I know.] His tail curled around her back. The slow, certain movement of a creature who had decided something and would not be moved from it. [It matters now.]
On the shelf, Takara’s ears tracked the room. Blue-tipped again. Steady. But his gaze lingered on Jayde and Reiko — the woman who’d just given him a date on the calendar, the beast wearing a new collar — and for just a moment, his tail curled around his own paws.
Settled. Like something that had decided to stay.

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