Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 302 - 297: Vor’lumen Horror (Part 1) — The Investigation
Location: Demon Realm — Vaelith’s Research Chambers, Kor’veth Citadel
Date/Time: 30 Blazepeak, 9939 AZI
Realm: Demon Realm
Vaelith had not slept in four days.
Ren could see it in the way she held herself — not the fragility of exhaustion but the rigidity of a healer who’d found something she couldn’t explain and was refusing to rest until it made sense. Her vivid green-gold eyes had the sharp, brittle quality of someone running on purpose alone. Her midnight black hair — gold streaks dulled by the chamber’s amber light — was pulled back in a knot that had been retied at least three times without being taken down.
Vorketh stood behind her. Deep copper eyes tracking Ren as he entered. The massive frame positioned not beside but behind — eighteen thousand years of truemating bond making the guard instinct operate below conscious thought. His expression said what his mouth didn’t: she won’t stop, I can’t make her, and if you can, do it soon.
The research chambers smelled like cold stone and alchemical reagents. Worktables covered in sealed sample vessels, formation tools, and notebooks filled with Vaelith’s precise hand — page after page of analysis, each one ending in the same word. Unknown.
"Tell me," Ren said.
Vaelith set her ink-stained hands flat on the table. The gesture of a healer presenting findings she wasn’t satisfied with — laying them out despite knowing they were incomplete.
"The substance is manufactured. That much I’m certain of. It’s not a natural compound — it doesn’t match any mineral, biological material, or essence residue in my reference archives. It’s not something the body produced. It was introduced from outside."
"What does it do?"
"I don’t know."
The words cost her. Ren could see them land — the admission of a life healer with centuries of experience saying I don’t know about something found inside a demon body.
"The substance is present in trace amounts throughout the entire body," Vaelith continued. "Not concentrated in the Vor’kesh — spread through tissue, bone, blood, essence channels. Whatever this is, it was absorbed systemically. The body processed it the way it processes food or medicine — broke it down, distributed it, integrated it into every biological system."
"But you can see the Vor’kesh anomaly. The severed leaf. The frozen vine."
"Yes. And I believe this substance caused it. The distribution pattern is consistent with something designed to interact with demon physiology at every level — not just the vine, but the entire biological architecture that supports it. But I can’t prove the connection. I can’t identify the compound. I can’t determine how it was synthesised, what it was synthesised from, or who synthesised it." Her jaw tightened. "I’ve used every analytical technique I possess. Formation spectral analysis. Essence resonance mapping. Degradation pattern reconstruction. The compound is too old. Too degraded. The information I need simply isn’t there anymore."
The amber formation lighting hummed. The sealed vessels on the table glowed faintly under its touch — four samples from four bodies, each containing trace amounts of something that had destroyed demon souls and left no readable signature behind.
"There’s one thing that might work," Vaelith said. And the way she said it told Ren everything about what she was going to suggest and why she’d waited until she’d exhausted every other option before saying it.
"No."
"You haven’t heard—"
"You want Lyria."
Vaelith met his eyes. Green-gold holding purple. "Her gift can See the past. If I provide a physical anchor — the compound itself, the Vor’kesh tissue, the bodies — her sight could trace the substance back to its origin. To the moment it was created. She could See what I can’t analyse."
"She’s fourteen."
"She looks nineteen. She carries a gift that—"
"She’s fourteen. And she is Voresh’s truemate. The bond is forming. Four leaves where there was one. The first healing he’s experienced in thirty thousand years." Ren’s voice didn’t rise. It dropped. "Every vision carries the risk of her soul not finding its way back to her body. That’s what the anchoring is for — Voresh gives her a path home. But the visions themselves — whatever she Sees, she experiences. She feels it. She lives through it. And what we’re asking her to look at—" He gestured at the sealed vessels. At the bodies downstairs. "We’re asking a fourteen-year-old girl to witness something that may be devastating. That kind of emotional damage doesn’t heal cleanly. And if it affects the bonding process with Voresh—"
He didn’t finish. He didn’t need to. Everyone in the room understood what a disrupted truemating bond would mean for Voresh. Four leaves. The first growth in thirty thousand years. If the bond stuttered — if Lyria’s psyche fractured under the weight of what she Saw and the emotional connection between them warped — Voresh would lose the only thing keeping him alive.
"Yes," Vaelith said. "Because if I can’t identify this substance, we can’t detect it. And if we can’t detect it, we can’t know who’s been affected. And if we can’t know who’s been affected—" She paused. "Then every demon in this realm is standing next to a potential threat they can’t see. Including Lyria."
The silence that followed was the kind that happened when both sides of an argument were right and the cost of choosing was being paid by someone who wasn’t in the room.
Vorketh spoke. Quietly. The way he did when something mattered enough to break his usual silence. "How many bodies showed the anomaly?"
"Four," Ren said. "From Salroch’s inner circle. All with the same pattern — severed leaf, frozen vine, unknown substance."
"Four that you opened. Out of how many in Salroch’s section?"
"Hundreds."
"And beyond Salroch’s section?"
Ren didn’t answer. He didn’t need to.
Vorketh nodded. Once. The nod of a warrior who’d spent forty thousand years protecting people and understood what it meant when the threat was invisible. "Send for Lyria."
Ren didn’t move. Not immediately.
He stood in the research chamber with the sealed vessels on the table and the formation light casting his shadow long against the far wall and the weight of the decision pressing against the inside of his ribs. He thought about Lyria — fourteen, looking nineteen, reading Lower Realm storybooks in the garden because she’d never had a childhood that included leisure. He thought about what she’d already endured. Five years of her life, gone — burned by inexperience with a gift too powerful for a child’s body to channel safely. Nobody fully understood what had happened. Lyria herself had only fragments. But the years were gone and couldn’t be retrieved. What he was asking now was different — a controlled vision, anchored, with Voresh as her tether. The risk wasn’t her lifespan. It was her mind.
She was fourteen. Whatever lived in those bodies — whatever the substance had done, whatever the truth was behind the severed leaves and frozen vines — it would be ugly. The kind of ugly that left marks on the psyche. The kind that changed how a person saw the world. And Lyria’s bond with Voresh was still forming. Still fragile. If emotional damage from the vision disrupted that process — if the horror of what she Saw bled into the connection between them — the consequences for Voresh would be catastrophic.
He thought about Voresh. Four leaves. Healing. The first thaw in thirty thousand years of emotional winter. Voresh had been one leaf from Kael’thros when Lyria entered his life. One leaf from the ritual blade. And now the vine was growing again. If the bond completed, Lyria would become ageless — truemated demons and their partners didn’t age. She had centuries ahead of her. Millennia. A future that stretched beyond anything a fourteen-year-old could imagine.
But that future depended on the bond forming cleanly. And clean bonds required emotional stability that devastating visions did not produce.
Asking Lyria to See meant asking Voresh to watch.
But four bodies in the Hall said something was walking among them that shouldn’t exist. And if Vaelith couldn’t identify the substance, they were blind. Blind to a threat that could be standing in the next room. Sitting at the council table. Walking the settlement streets beside the eight hundred thousand refugees who’d trusted their king to protect them.
The jade pendant was cold against his chest. It had been cold for months. The absence of warmth was its own kind of counsel — the truemate bond dormant, silent, offering nothing. He was alone with this.
"Ren," Vaelith said. Quiet. Not pushing. Waiting.
He closed his eyes. The Common Path hummed around him — eight million threads, each one a demon, each one trusting him with their safety. He couldn’t protect them from something he couldn’t see.
He opened his eyes.
"I’ll summon them myself."
***
Ren reached for the Common Path.
He found Voresh’s thread first — taut, watchful, the resonance of a demon who never fully relaxed even in safety. Then Lyria’s, woven close beside it — brighter, younger, carrying the particular harmonic of a prophetic gift that hummed even when dormant.
He pulled both threads. Gently.
Voresh. Lyria. Vaelith’s research chambers. Now. Come alone — your quintet stays outside.
The response was immediate. Not words — texture. Voresh’s thread vibrating with the sharp attention of a scout who’d been summoned to a location he associated with danger. And beneath it, fainter, Lyria’s thread humming with something that felt like the gift stirring. As if it already knew.
***
They arrived within the quarter hour.
Voresh came through the door first. Tarnished copper eyes sweeping the chamber — Ren, Vaelith, Vorketh, the sealed vessels on the table, the notebooks, the formation tools. The assessment took two heartbeats. On the third, his gaze settled on Ren and stayed there.
"No," Voresh said.
He hadn’t been told what was being asked. He didn’t need to be told. Thirty thousand years of reading situations had given him the ability to see the shape of a request in the way a room was arranged — the five people present, the quintets excluded, the sealed samples, Vaelith’s expression. He knew.
Lyria entered behind him. Storm-grey eyes shot through with gold and green, the colours shifting in the chamber’s amber light. Copper-gold hair threaded through brown. Gossamer Aetherwing wings folded against her back — pale grey, silver iridescence catching the formation glow. The prophetic rune on her forehead was quiescent. Waiting.
She looked at the worktables. At the sealed vessels. At Vaelith’s face — the exhaustion, the frustration, the dead end written in ink-stained hands and four days without sleep. At Ren — standing by the door, soulblades on his back, the weight of something in his purple eyes that he hadn’t yet shared.
Her gaze moved between them. Waiting. She didn’t know why she’d been summoned — Ren’s Common Path message had carried urgency but no explanation. The prophetic rune on her forehead pulsed once, faintly, as if responding to something in the room she couldn’t consciously identify.
"Tell her," Vaelith said to Ren.
Ren told them. Not the full context — not the Healing Tent investigation, not the political architecture, not the nine months of evidence that had led him to the Hall. Just what mattered for this room, this moment: four bodies in the Hall of Traitors. Something was done to their Vor’kesh that shouldn’t be possible. An unknown substance that Vaelith couldn’t identify. And the implications — demons whose souls appeared intact but weren’t. Walking among the living. Undetectable.
Voresh listened with the stillness of stone. His tarnished copper eyes didn’t leave Ren’s face. His hand — the one closest to Lyria — had curled into a fist so tight the knuckles blanched, and the four leaves on his Vor’kesh trembled.
"You’re telling me," Voresh said when Ren finished, "that there may be things wearing demon faces walking beside my mate right now. And I can’t tell which ones."
"Yes."
"And you can’t detect them."
"No."
"And the only way to understand what was done to those bodies — the only way to find a detection method — is to send Lyria’s soul into a vision of something that might break her."
"Yes."
The trembling in the Vor’kesh stopped. Not because the emotion passed — because Voresh locked it down with the brutal efficiency of a demon who’d spent thirty thousand years choosing control over collapse. He looked at Lyria. Tarnished copper meeting storm-grey. The bond between them hummed — visible for one instant as a shimmer in the air between their bodies, the way heat made the air above a forge waver.
Lyria looked back. Steady. Fourteen years old, looking nineteen, carrying a gift as old as the race that surrounded her. She’d already heard the answer in the question. She’d heard it before Voresh had finished asking.
"I’ll See," she said.
"Lyria—"
"If there are things out there that can wear demon faces and we can’t tell the difference, then everyone I care about is at risk. You. The quintet. Vaelith. Every demon in this settlement." Her wings shifted — a fractional spread, the iridescence catching light. "I didn’t ask for this gift. But I have it. And if it can show us what science can’t, then I use it. That’s not bravery. That’s arithmetic."
Voresh stared at her. The look of a man watching the person who’d pulled him back from the edge of Kael’thros speak with the calm certainty of someone who’d already calculated the cost and decided to pay it.
"I anchor," he said. "Wings and bond. Full contact. Her soul stays tethered to me — I am the path back. And if I feel her drifting — if the vision pulls her too deep or the emotional weight starts cracking her — I pull her out. No arguments. No, ’just a little longer.’ I pull her out, and we find another way."
"Agreed," Ren said.
"Agreed," Vaelith said.
***
Vaelith prepared the circle. 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
Chalk on stone. The arrays weren’t random — containment, direction, amplification, each symbol serving a specific function she’d developed over centuries of working at the intersection of healing and prophetic sight. The compound sample at the centre in its sealed vessel. The Vor’kesh tissue samples arranged around it in a formation pattern that would give Lyria’s gift the strongest possible anchor to the substance’s past.
The work took an hour. Nobody spoke during it. Vorketh helped — setting containment points, testing boundaries with the careful hands of a warrior who understood that formation work required the same precision as surgery. Voresh watched from the chamber’s edge, arms crossed, tarnished copper eyes never leaving the circle. Lyria sat on a stone bench against the far wall, her wings folded close, her hands in her lap, the prophetic rune on her forehead occasionally brightening and dimming as the formation arrays activated — the gift inside her responding to the proximity of something that wanted to be Seen.
Ren stood at the door. Guard and witness. The soulblades on his back had gone quiet — not humming, not vibrating, holding the same silence the room held. As if even the weapons understood that what was about to happen required stillness.
When the circle was ready, Vaelith stepped back. Drew breath. Checked the containment boundaries one final time — a healer’s thoroughness, leaving nothing to chance. Nodded.
Lyria stepped in.
Her gossamer wings caught the array’s light — silver iridescence shifting to something warmer as the formation activated. The prophetic rune on her forehead brightened. Silver light. Steady. The gift waking.
Voresh stepped in behind her. His wings — darker, heavier, the wings of a pure demon male — spread and canopied around her. Not enclosing. Sheltering. His arms wrapped around her from behind, and the bond between them blazed — visible as a thread of copper-gold light connecting his Vor’kesh to her Shan’keth vine at her jaw. The anchor. A truemate holding his partner in the world while she walked somewhere else.
The room held its breath.
Lyria closed her eyes. Drew one long, slow breath. Let it go.
When she opened them, they were no longer storm-grey. The gold and green had consumed everything — luminous, depthless, looking through the room and the stone and the present into a time that no longer existed except in the memory of things.
The rune on her forehead blazed white.
"I see a room," Lyria whispered. Her voice came from somewhere far away — present in the chamber but also somewhere else, somewhere deep, the words travelling a great distance to reach them. "Underground. Stone walls. Cold. There are candles. Dozens of them."
Her voice shook.
"There’s a table. A stone table. And on the table—"
She stopped. Her breath caught. Voresh’s arms tightened.
"Oh," she said. Very quietly. "Oh, no."







