Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 96 - 91: Into the Wild
Location: Tardide Village → Deep Forest → Cave System
Time: Day 511 | Telia: Day 2
Realm: Dimension 137 (Telia)
Dawn came cold and grey, the kind of morning that made smart people stay indoors.
Jayde stood at Tardide’s east gate, checking her equipment with the methodical precision of someone who’d learned that mistakes in the field got people killed. Blade sharp. Water flasks full. Medical supplies accessible. Reiko at her side, alert and ready.
The village was quiet except for the handful of people who’d come to see her off.
Elder Ryunzo looked like he hadn’t slept. "You’re certain you don’t want more men? Behro and Jinko are excellent trackers—"
"They are," Jayde agreed. "Which is why I need them here. If something goes wrong, if I don’t come back, the village still needs its hunters."
Risk mitigation: Civilian casualties unacceptable. Solo operations reduce exposure.
Mrs. Ryunzo pressed a wrapped bundle into her hands. "Food. For the journey. It’s not much, but—"
"It’s perfect. Thank you."
(They’re giving me food they can barely spare. Because they think I can save them.)
The weight of Milta’s promise pressed against her ribs like iron.
Behro and Jinko approached, both carrying packs and weapons. The older brother’s expression was determined. "We’re coming with you. At least to the forest edge. We know the terrain."
"To the forest edge," Jayde agreed. "No further."
"But—"
"No further," she repeated, voice firm. "This is my job. My responsibility. You have families here who need you alive."
Tactical assessment: Two untrained civilians in combat zone equals mission compromise. Emotional resistance expected but operationally necessary.
Jinko looked like he wanted to argue, but Elder Ryunzo placed a hand on his shoulder. "She’s right, boys. This is what mages do. What we can’t."
The younger brother’s jaw tightened, but he nodded.
"Three days," Jayde said, meeting the Elder’s gaze. "If I’m not back in three days, assume the worst and prepare the village’s defenses as best you can."
"Three days," Elder Ryunzo repeated. "May the gods watch over you."
(Gods. Right. Because those have been so helpful so far.)
Mission parameters confirmed. Timeline: 72 hours. Objective: Eliminate direwolf pack. Secondary objective: Return alive.
"Let’s go," Jayde said.
***
The forest began gradually—scattered trees giving way to denser growth, cultivated paths becoming game trails, civilization fading into wilderness. Behro led the way with the easy confidence of someone who’d spent his life reading terrain.
"Direwolf territory starts about two kilometers in," he explained, voice low despite the distance from danger. "We’ve mapped their hunting range over the past three months. They don’t usually come closer to the village than half a kilometer, but that’s been changing."
"Getting bolder," Jayde observed.
"Yeah. Last week, one was spotted just outside the east wall in broad daylight. Didn’t attack, just... watched. Like it was assessing."
Behavioral pattern: Increasing confidence. Pack learning village is weak. Escalation probable.
"Their den is deeper in," Jinko added. "Cave system in the rocky terrain about five kilometers northeast. We think. Never got close enough to confirm."
"After we lost Tomek and the others," Behro’s voice went flat, "we stopped trying."
They walked in silence for a while, the forest growing denser around them. Morning light filtered through the canopy in scattered beams, painting everything in shades of green and gold. Birds sang. Small creatures rustled in the underbrush.
It would’ve been beautiful if it wasn’t a hunting ground.
"Here." Behro stopped at the edge of a small clearing. "This is where we usually turn back. Direwolf territory officially starts past those rocks."
Jayde studied the terrain with tactical precision. The clearing formed a natural chokepoint between dense forest and rocky outcroppings. Good ambush site. Multiple sight lines. Cover on all sides.
Terrain assessment: Favorable for pack hunters. Poor visibility. Numerous approach vectors. Recommended strategy: Avoid if possible.
"The cave system?" she asked.
Behro pointed northeast. "Follow the rocky ground. It slopes up gradually. You’ll know you’re close when you start seeing bones."
"Bones."
"From their kills. They drag prey back to the den. Leave the remains scattered around the entrance. Territorial marking, probably. Or maybe just... efficient."
(Efficient. What a word for horror.)
"Alright." Jayde turned to face the brothers. "This is where we part ways. Thank you for the guidance."
"You’re really going in alone?" Jinko asked. "Just you and your shadowbeast?"
"Just us."
"That’s..." He trailed off, searching for words. "That’s insane."
"That’s my job." Jayde smiled slightly. "I’ve faced worse."
Well, it wasn’t a lie; she had faced worse in her Federation life. This life well debatable at best. But necessary for civilian morale.
Behro studied her for a long moment. "Three days. If you’re not back—"
"If I’m not back, tell Elder Ryunzo to send word to Oldstrand. Maybe they’ll send help." Maybe. "But I will be back. With proof, the pack is dead."
"How can you be so sure?"
Because a woman who lost her children is counting on me. Because I promised. Because failure isn’t an option when people this desperate put their trust in you.
"Because I have to be," Jayde said simply.
The brothers exchanged glances, then nodded. Behro clasped her shoulder once—brief, firm, the gesture of one warrior to another.
"Good hunting, mage."
"Good hunting."
She watched them disappear back toward Tardide, then turned to Reiko.
[Ready to hunt?]
The shadowbeast’s mental presence sharpened with focus. [Always. Where do we start?]
"Where we always start. Evidence collection. Let’s see what these direwolves can tell us."
***
The first scat pile was a hundred meters into direwolf territory.
Fresh. Maybe twelve hours old. Jayde crouched beside it, examining the contents with clinical detachment that would’ve made her Federation survival instructors nod approval.
Dietary analysis: Large prey. Deer, probably. Bone fragments present—pack crushing skeletal structure for marrow. Indicates strong jaw strength. Multiple contributors based on volume.
"At least four different wolves in this pile," she muttered, prodding it with a stick. "See the variation in consistency? Different digestive processes. And look here—" She pointed at partially digested fur. "This color doesn’t match local deer. They’re hunting multiple species."
[Does that matter?] Reiko asked, sniffing around the perimeter.
"Means they’re not desperate. Desperate predators stick to one prey type—whatever’s easiest. These wolves are eating well. Varied diet. Which means they’re confident hunters."
Threat assessment increase: Well-fed pack equals higher energy reserves. Sustained combat capability. Reduced desperation-driven mistakes.
She moved on, eyes scanning the forest floor.
Paw prints appeared next—pressed into soft earth near a stream. Jayde measured them with her hand, comparing sizes, counting distinct tracks.
"Seven," she said. "Seven different sets of prints. And look at this one."
[The big one?]
"The enormous one." The Alpha’s track was nearly the size of her entire hand. "This wolf is massive. Probably Inferno-tempered tier himself."
Combat consideration: Alpha represents primary threat. Elimination of Alpha likely triggers pack dissolution. Target priority established.
[Can you beat him?] Reiko’s mental voice carried concern.
"I have to." Because if I can’t, everyone in Tardide dies eventually. "Come on. Let’s find more evidence."
They tracked northeast, following game trails and scent markers. Reiko’s nose proved invaluable—his Voidshadow-enhanced senses picking up trails Jayde’s human limitations couldn’t detect.
[Blood,] he sent suddenly. [Fresh. This way.]
The kill site lay in a small depression—a deer, half-eaten, steam still rising from its exposed organs.
Time assessment: Less than one hour old. Pack may be nearby. Increase alertness.
Jayde approached cautiously, studying the remains. The killing technique was efficient—throat torn out, death probably instantaneous. Professional work. The feeding pattern showed discipline too—pack members eating in turn, not fighting over scraps.
"They’re organized," she said quietly. "Well-trained. The Alpha’s maintaining pack hierarchy through feeding order."
[That’s... impressive?] Reiko sounded uncertain.
"Impressive and terrifying. Means we’re not dealing with simple beasts. These are intelligent predators with social structure and tactical awareness."
Threat reassessment: Pack exhibits advanced behavioral patterns. Expect coordinated tactics. Ambush probable. Recommend heightened caution.
She straightened, scanning the surrounding forest. The morning had grown warmer, insects buzzing, birds calling. Everything seemed peaceful.
Too peaceful.
(Something’s wrong. The forest sounds wrong.)
[Jayde?] Reiko picked up on her tension. [What is it?]
"Listen. Actually listen. What do you hear?"
[Birds. Insects. Wind.]
"Exactly. We’re standing next to a fresh kill in predator territory. Where are the scavengers? Why aren’t smaller predators approaching? Why do the birds sound nervous?"
[Because the pack is watching us?]
"Or because something else is nearby. Something that scares even the direwolves."
Environmental analysis: Ecosystem behavior anomalous. Predator presence insufficient to explain pattern. Additional factor present.
Jayde’s hand drifted to her blade. "Come on. Carefully now. The cave system should be close."
They moved through increasingly rocky terrain, the forest floor rising in gradual slopes. Bones began appearing—scattered remains marking territory. Deer skulls. Smaller animals. And one that made Jayde’s stomach twist—small, delicate bones that might have been...
(Don’t think about it. Focus on the mission.)
Civilian remains confirmed. Mission urgency reinforced.
The cave mouth appeared suddenly between two massive boulders—a dark opening in the hillside, roughly circular, about three meters across. Perfect pack den.
But Jayde barely noticed it.
Because fifty meters to the left, partially hidden by dense undergrowth and rocky outcroppings, something glowed.
Silver.
Soft silver light seeping from what looked like another cave entrance, smaller, almost invisible unless you were looking for it.
"Reiko." Her voice was barely a whisper. "Do you see that?"
[The light? Yes. What is it?]
"I don’t know."
Anomaly detected. Unknown energy signature. Proceed with extreme caution.
Jayde moved toward the silver glow, blade drawn, every sense alert. The direwolf den forgotten for the moment—this was something else. Something that made the hair on her arms stand up and her Federation tactical training scream warnings.
The hidden cave entrance was small—she’d have to duck to enter. Vines and foliage had grown over it, natural camouflage that would’ve hidden it completely if not for the light seeping through.
And across the entrance, invisible to normal sight but blazing clear to her cultivation senses, stretched a ward.
Ancient. Powerful. Complex beyond anything Green had taught her.
Magical defense detected. Origin unknown. Power level: Significant. Recommend—
(Recommend what? Walking away? When something this powerful is this close to a village that can’t defend itself?)
"This ward..." Jayde reached out carefully, not touching, just sensing. "It’s old. Really old. Decades at least. Maybe longer."
[Can you break it?] Reiko asked.
"I shouldn’t be able to. This is Oracle-level work. Maybe higher." She studied the intricate pattern of magical energy. "But..."
But you’re a Nexus contractor. And Luminari technology operates on different principles than local cultivation.
"But I’m not just a cultivator."
Jayde reached deep inside, past her Crucible Core, past the Inferno essence flowing through her channels, to the place where the Starforge Nexus had bonded with her soul. That connection hummed—different from cultivation, not bound by the same rules, operating on principles this world had forgotten.
"Isha?" she whispered. "I could use some advice here."
Her guide’s mental presence manifested immediately. "You found something interesting. That’s definitely not local magic."
"Can I break through?"
"Probably. Luminari contractor status should override most non-Luminari wards. But Jayde—" His voice turned serious. "Whatever’s behind that ward, someone powerful wanted it hidden. You might not like what you find."
"Noted. How do I do this?"
"Just... push. Your Nexus connection against the ward. It should recognize you as authorized access and collapse."
Operational risk: Unknown. Potential threat level: Extreme. Recommendation: Proceed anyway because curiosity and tactical necessity override caution.
(Because if something this powerful is hiding this close to Tardide, I need to know what it is.)
Jayde placed her palm against the ward’s invisible surface. Power thrummed through her—the ward sensing her, analyzing, determining threat level.
Then, recognizing something in her Nexus connection, it simply... dissolved.
The silver light brightened.
"Well," Isha said dryly. "That was anticlimactic. Good luck with whatever’s in there."
His presence faded.
Jayde stood at the entrance, staring into silver illumination that seemed to pulse with its own heartbeat. The air felt different here. Cleaner. Charged with energy that made her Ember Qi respond instinctively.
[Jayde?] Reiko pressed against her leg. [Should we go in?]
Should they? The direwolf pack was right there—literally fifty meters away. The mission was to eliminate them, not explore mysterious caves with ancient wards.
But something in that silver light called to her. Pulled at something deep in her chest. Made the Federation tactical officer go silent, and the child voice whisper urgently.
(Something important is in there. Something that needs help.)
No tactical justification for deviation from mission parameters. And yet...
"Three minutes," Jayde decided. "We take three minutes to see what this is. Then we focus on the direwolves."
She ducked through the entrance, Reiko following close behind.







