Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 91 - 86: Preparation for War

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Chapter 91: Chapter 86: Preparation for War

Location: Demon Palace, Archives → War Room | Demon Realm

Time: 29 Frostforge - 1 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI | Days 490-492/188-190

Realm: Upper Realm (Demon)

The demon archives smelled of old parchment and preservation spells.

Ren stood before a table piled with ancient scrolls, his purple eyes scanning text that most demons couldn’t read anymore. The old language. The script from before the Great War, when demons had been numerous and powerful and hadn’t needed to claw for survival with each passing generation.

"Majesty," Uggor said softly, the head librarian’s voice barely disturbing the heavy silence. "These are the last of the Shaolin records. Everything we have on entry requirements, historical accounts, and artifact classifications."

The ancient demon looked exhausted. Understandable—Ren had summoned him before dawn, demanding every piece of information about the lost world. Three hours later, Uggor had produced enough scrolls to bury the research table.

"Good," Ren murmured, unrolling another document. His eyes tracked across faded ink, absorbing details about cultivation requirements (under one hundred years old, King-level minimum), terrain descriptions, and survival recommendations.

All useful.

None of it was what he actually needed.

"Uggor," Ren said without looking up. "The prophecy scrolls. Anything related to soul reincarnation, truemate bonds, essence signatures that might identify a reborn soul."

The librarian’s breath caught. Just slightly. Just enough that Ren noticed.

"Majesty, those texts are... sensitive. The old seers wrote extensively about soul mechanics, but much of it is theoretical. Unproven. Some would say dangerously speculative."

"I didn’t ask for your assessment." Ren’s voice remained perfectly calm. Perfectly cold. "I asked for the scrolls."

Uggor bowed deeply. "Of course, Majesty. I’ll retrieve them immediately."

He shuffled toward the deeper archives, leaving Ren alone with documents about Shaolin that he’d already memorized decades ago.

The dual purpose was necessary.

Publicly, Ren was preparing for Shaolin’s reopening. Researching entry requirements. Planning which young demons to send. Mobilizing resources to give his people the best chance at claiming divine artifacts.

It was logical. Expected. Exactly what a responsible demon king should do when faced with prophesied opportunities.

Privately?

Privately, Ren was hunting for any scrap of information that might help him find one reincarnated soul in three vast realms before Sharlin’s network stumbled onto the right trail.

The jade pendant burned warm against his chest. Not painfully. Just... present. Reminding him she was out there. Growing stronger. Still in danger.

Patient, the beast rumbled inside his soul, and the tone was different. Calmer. Must be patient. Rush and enemies follow. Lead them straight to mate.

Ren paused, scroll forgotten in his hands.

The beast was... thinking.

Actually thinking rather than just demanding and raging and throwing itself against the cage with mindless fury.

It’d been like this since the confrontation with Sharlin. Since Ren had nearly lost control in the throne room, since the shadows had rippled across his skin, and the darkness had almost consumed him.

Something had shifted.

The beast had tasted certainty—had felt the jade pendant burn with proof of their truemate’s existence, had experienced her transformation through the bond, had received absolute confirmation that she lived and breathed and grew stronger.

Before that, it’d been desperate. Feral. Clawing at its cage with the kind of manic energy that came from hope without proof, from need without outlet.

Now?

Now it had proof. Had certainty. Had a goal that was real rather than theoretical.

And apparently, certainty brought strategy.

The irony wasn’t lost on Ren.

For ten thousand years, he’d been the one maintaining control. The one counseling patience. The one holding back the beast’s violent demands with iron discipline and careful planning.

Now the beast was the one urging caution while Ren fought the desperate urge to drop everything, tear through the Realms, and find her now.

You want to rush, the beast observed, its mental voice surprisingly clear. Feel it. The pull. The need. Want to mount demon-scaled horse and fly to her tonight.

"Yes," Ren admitted quietly to the empty archives.

Will get her killed, the beast said simply. Sharlin watches. Spies everywhere. You fly to her, they follow. They find mate. They kill mate. Patience saves her. Rush destroys her.

The logic was sound. Infuriatingly sound.

Ren had spent millennia teaching the beast restraint, and now it was teaching him.

"When did you become the reasonable one?" Ren murmured.

When we got proof, the beast replied. Before: hope maybe false. Maybe delusion. Maybe never find her. Drove me insane. Now: know she’s real. Know she’s alive. Know we’ll find her. Can afford patience.

Ren set the scroll down and rubbed his face with both hands.

The beast was right. Absolute certainty changed everything. Removed the desperate edge from the hunt. Allowed for strategy instead of blind searching.

Also, the beast added, almost smug, sensed her power during transformation. Dragon and phoenix both. She’s strong. Getting stronger. Not helpless child needing immediate rescue. She’s warrior. Like us. Can survive while we plan properly.

That... was also true.

The Oracle Keeper’s visions had shown defiance in those amber eyes. Strength. Determination. And the dual bloodline awakening spoke of power that most cultivators would never achieve.

She wasn’t a damsel waiting for rescue.

She was a weapon being forged.

And Ren needed to be smart enough to reach her without leading every enemy straight to the forge.

"I know," Ren said quietly, picking up the scroll again. "But patience has never been easy when it comes to her."

Is now, the beast corrected. Because we know ending. Know we find her. Know she’s ours. Just matter of time. Can be patient when certain of victory.

Ren almost smiled.

Almost.

The beast had learned strategy. Had learned to think beyond immediate impulse. Had become the voice of reason in Ren’s mind when everything else screamed at him to act.

It was bizarre.

Unsettling.

And exactly what he needed.

***

The Oracle Chamber, three levels below the palace, had been sealed for ten thousand years.

Only Ren and the Oracle Keeper could enter. Only they knew the passwords, the blood-key wards, the specific essence signatures required to pass the guardians that’d been set to protect the chamber after too many attempted thefts.

Ren descended the stone steps, each one carved with runes that glowed faintly purple in response to his presence. At the bottom, a massive door waited—demon-forged steel, three feet thick, inscribed with protections that would’ve killed anyone who tried to force entry.

He placed his hand on the center plate.

Blood-key activated. Essence signature verified. Ancient magics recognizing the demon king’s authority.

The door opened with a groan of metal that hadn’t moved in months.

Inside, the Oracle Crystal blazed on its pedestal.

Not as bright as two nights ago, when it’d shown Ren’s truemate’s transformation. But still active. Still swirling with purple and gold mists that formed patterns, shapes, fragments of vision.

The Oracle Keeper waited beside the pedestal, his ancient face lined with exhaustion. He’d been consulting the crystal daily since the major vision, searching for clearer images, better details, anything that might pinpoint location.

"Report," Ren said quietly, approaching the crystal.

"The distance remains too great, Majesty." The Oracle Keeper’s voice held frustration. "I can confirm she exists. Can see glimpses of her essence signature. But specifics elude me. The visions show fragments—forest environments, cave systems, training scenarios. Nothing distinctive enough to identify a precise location."

Ren studied the crystal. The mists swirled, occasionally coalescing into shapes that might’ve been amber eyes or midnight fur or golden flames before dissolving back to formless patterns.

"Her power grows daily," the Oracle Keeper continued. "The bond between you strengthens with each advancement she makes. Eventually, when she reaches a critical threshold, the crystal will show clearer visions."

"How long?"

"Unknown, Majesty. Weeks, perhaps. Months at most. When she crosses from Inferno-tempered to Blazecrowned tier, the surge should—"

"She’s only Inferno-tempered?" Ren’s eyebrows rose fractionally.

The Oracle Keeper nodded. "Recently advanced, I believe. Her cultivation progresses rapidly—faster than normal for her age. But she hasn’t reached Blazecrowned yet."

Interesting.

That meant she was still in the Lower Realm. Had to be. Anyone at Blazecrowned or above would’ve attracted significant attention, would’ve been recruited by sects or clans, would’ve appeared in intelligence reports.

Inferno-tempered, though? Powerful, yes. Unusual for someone so young. But not remarkable enough to draw widespread notice if she kept a low profile.

"Continue daily consultations," Ren ordered. "Document any changes in the visions, no matter how small. I want to know the moment the crystal shows anything more specific."

"As you command, Majesty."

Ren turned to leave, then paused at the threshold.

"One more thing. The visions you’ve seen—are they accessible to other seers? Could someone with sufficient skill view what you’ve witnessed?"

The Oracle Keeper’s expression darkened. "No, Majesty. The Oracle Crystal is unique to our realm. Only I can interpret its visions. And only because I’ve been bonded to it for three thousand years."

"Good."

That was one advantage, at least. Sharlin’s seers might detect ripples, might sense disturbances, might catch fragments of prophetic hints.

But they couldn’t see what Ren’s Oracle Crystal showed.

***

The war room filled with demons as dawn broke on the second day.

Ren sat at the head of the table—dark wood carved from ashwood trees that’d stood for millennia, marked with maps of all three realms. His advisers occupied seats on either side: Oglemir (military), Garzor (intelligence), Ekoros (resources), Dar’on (magic), Junnik (politics).

The best minds in the demon realm.

None of them knew the real reason for this council. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚

"Shaolin reopens within ten years," Ren began without preamble. "Possibly less, according to the Radiant Realm’s prophecy. We need to prepare."

Oglemir, the grizzled military commander who’d fought in the last Zartonesh invasion, leaned forward. "Entry requirements are restrictive, Majesty. Under one hundred years old. Inferno-tempered tier minimum. That limits our candidates severely."

"How many demons meet those criteria?" Ren asked, though he already knew the answer.

"Forty-seven," Garzor supplied, his intelligence network as thorough as always. "Across the entire realm. Most are between fifty and ninety years old. Cultivation tiers range from Inferno-tempered to Blazecrowned. None have reached Apexblight yet."

Forty-seven.

Out of a demon population that’d once numbered in the millions.

The decline was stark. Painful. A reminder of everything Ren had failed to prevent despite ten thousand years of effort.

"We’ll assess them all," Ren said firmly. "Bring them to the capital. Best trainers, best resources, best spirit beasts for contracts. I want every candidate pushed to their absolute limits."

"The cost will be substantial, Majesty," Ekoros warned. The resource minister looked nervous, as he always did when discussing expenditures. "Aura stones alone—"

"Use everything." Ren’s voice cut through the protest. "Empty the vaults if necessary. Our people’s survival depends on claiming those divine artifacts before other realms monopolize them."

That was true enough. Public reason. Logical. Strategic.

Privately, Ren needed those candidates to be mobile and visible. Needed the demon realm to look busy, aggressive, and fully committed to Shaolin preparation.

It was the perfect cover for deploying scouts to the Lower Realm under the guise of "recruitment missions" and "talent assessment."

"Garzor," Ren continued, "I want intelligence networks activated across all three realms. Focus on the Lower Realm initially. Any rumors of unusually powerful young cultivators. Anyone advancing faster than normal. Particularly women under twenty years old."

Garzor’s eyes sharpened. "Looking for competition, Majesty?"

"Exactly." The lie came smoothly. "Other realms will be doing the same—identifying threats, assessing rival candidates. We need to know who we’re facing before Shaolin opens."

Reasonable. Tactical. Completely normal wartime intelligence gathering.

No one questioned it.

"I’ll have reports within a week," Garzor promised.

"Make it three days," Ren corrected. "And be discreet. I don’t want other realms knowing the extent of our information networks."

What he really meant: I don’t want Sharlin realizing my scouts are searching for someone specific.

The council continued for two hours. Resource allocation. Training schedules. Weaponsmith contracts. Spirit beast acquisition. Everything necessary to prepare forty-seven young demons for the opportunity of several lifetimes.

All of it secondary to Ren’s actual priority.

When the advisers finally left, only Garzor remained.

The intelligence master waited until the door closed, then spoke quietly. "Majesty, if I may... the focus on young women specifically. The urgency. The—"

"You may not," Ren interrupted softly.

Garzor bowed. "Of course, Majesty. Forgive my presumption."

But his eyes held understanding.

Ren trusted him. Had to trust someone. But even Garzor didn’t need to know everything. Didn’t need to understand that Ren was hunting for a truemate rather than scouting competition.

The fewer who knew, the safer she’d be.

***

By the third day, the palace hummed with activity.

Young demons arriving from across the realm. Trainers setting up practice yards. Weaponsmiths hauling equipment. Resource ministers distributing aura stones with the kind of lavish spending that made Ekoros look physically ill.

It was chaos.

Organized chaos, but chaos nonetheless.

Perfect.

Ren watched from his study window as another group of candidates arrived—six demons between fifty and seventy years old, their cultivation ranging from Flamewrought to Inferno-tempered. Raw potential waiting to be refined. Dangerous fighters who might actually survive Shaolin if they received proper preparation.

Behind him, reports covered his desk. Intelligence from Garzor’s network. Scout deployment schedules. Training assessments. Candidate profiles.

And buried beneath the legitimate documents, hidden in code only Ren could decipher, the real intelligence:

Lower Realm, eastern continent, reports of Freehold Clan increased patrols six months ago. Current status: patrols withdrawn, clan appears to have abandoned search.

Lower Realm, western continent, rumors of a powerful young cultivator operating in Dark Forest region. Unconfirmed. Details scarce.

Lower Realm, southern continent, no relevant intelligence.

The Dark Forest report made Ren’s pulse quicken.

Powerful young cultivator. Dark Forest. Timeline matched—six months since the Oracle Crystal first stirred, perfect timing for someone who’d been training intensively.

It wasn’t proof. Could be a coincidence. Could be unrelated.

But it was something.

A thread to pull.

"Garzor," Ren said without turning from the window.

The intelligence master materialized from the study’s shadows—literally materialized, his Voidshadow mastery allowing him to travel through darkness itself.

"Majesty?"

"The Dark Forest report. I want more details. Who’s the source? How reliable? What specific areas of the forest?"

"Source is a merchant caravan that encountered unusual essence disturbances near the western edge. Reliability is moderate—merchants tend to exaggerate, but the essence readings they described match advanced cultivation activity. Specific location is unclear, but they mentioned cave systems in the deeper regions."

Cave systems.

The Oracle Keeper had mentioned caves in his vision fragments.

"Send a scout," Ren ordered. "Discreet. No demon realm insignia. Have them pose as a wandering cultivator looking for training opportunities. I want confirmation of who’s operating in that forest and what their capabilities are."

"It will be done, Majesty."

Garzor vanished back into the shadows.

Ren returned his attention to the window, watching candidates train in the yards below. Watching resources mobilize. Watching his realm gear up for war while his actual objective remained hidden beneath layers of strategic deception.

She was out there.

In the Dark Forest, maybe. Or somewhere else in the Lower Realm. Growing stronger every day. Learning to control the bloodlines that’d awakened. Training with a shadowbeast companion who shared her power.

And Ren was getting closer.

Not rushing. Not charging in blind and dragging every enemy to her doorstep.

But moving. Carefully. Strategically. Deploying resources in ways that looked like legitimate preparation for Shaolin while actually hunting for one specific girl.

It was a delicate balance. Patience versus urgency. Caution versus desperate need.

But Ren had been balancing impossible choices for ten thousand years.

He could do this.

She’s growing stronger, the beast observed with satisfaction. Good. When we find her, she’ll be magnificent.

"She already is," Ren murmured.

The jade pendant pulsed warm against his chest.

And somewhere—in a forest or cave or training ground he hadn’t pinpointed yet—his truemate continued her cultivation, unaware that two separate forces were hunting for her.

One to protect.

One to destroy.

Ren intended to reach her first.

"Three days," he said quietly to the empty study. "Three days of preparation. Then the scouts deploy in force. Then we narrow the search. Then—"

He stopped himself.

Forced patience.

Forced strategy over emotion.

"She’s growing stronger," he said instead, echoing the beast’s observation. "So am I. And when we finally meet—when I find her before Sharlin does—I’ll be ready to protect her."

The jade pendant burned.

Not painfully. Not urgently.

Just... certain.

Like a promise waiting to be fulfilled.