Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 425 - 420: The Beast Lord’s Mark

Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 425 - 420: The Beast Lord’s Mark

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Chapter 425: Chapter 420: The Beast Lord’s Mark

Location: Obsidian Academy — Pavilion Workshop / Courtyard

Date/Time: Mid Infernorest, 9941 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm — Doha

Reiko had been irritable for three months.

Not the sharp irritability of illness or the focused irritability of hunger. Something vaguer. Ambient. A restlessness that moved through the bond like weather — cloudy one hour, clearing the next, never quite settling. Jayde felt it as a low hum of frustration underneath the cub’s normal warmth, the way you felt static electricity in the air before a storm that never arrived.

He couldn’t name it.

Reiko was honest through the bond the way he was honest about everything — without filter, without strategy. When he was happy, the bond sang. When he was frightened, it contracted. When he was confused, it scattered. She’d learned to read his emotional weather by pattern, by repetition, by the accumulated months of sharing a consciousness with a creature who didn’t know how to hide what he felt.

And for three months, the weather had been wrong.

He paced. Not the energetic pacing of a cub exploring — the tight, circuit-making pacing of something confined. He’d grown bigger over the past year, the silver-black fur covering a frame that had filled out past gangly adolescence into something heavier, denser. The mercury rune between his eyes had grown more complex, its shifting patterns more intricate. His silver eyes held a depth that hadn’t been there six months ago.

But the growth had stopped. And the frustration had started. Not aimed at anyone. Not directed. Just there, pressing against the inside of him like something trying to get out of a room with no doors.

She’d asked him about it.

[I don’t know,] he’d said. The cub’s bewildered honesty. [Something feels wrong. Not hurt-wrong. Stuck-wrong. Like I need to run, but there’s nowhere to run to.]

Stuck-wrong. A cub’s word for something he had no framework to understand.

***

Takara came to her on a Quenchday evening with four words.

My lord wants to speak with you and the cub.

Not an explanation. Not a preamble. Just the message.

"About what?" Jayde said.

He will tell you himself.

She looked at Takara. The amber eyes held something she rarely saw there. Tension. The kind of tension that came from carrying knowledge for a long time and knowing it was about to land.

"When?"

Now. If you’re willing.

She was in the workshop. Reiko was dozing against the wall, the bond carrying his restless half-sleep. Even in dreams, the frustration hummed.

"Reiko." She touched his shoulder. The silver eyes opened. Alert. Cub-quick. [What?]

"Someone wants to talk to us."

[A Beast Lord requesting an audience through his subordinate,] Kazren observed from the soul-space. [One notes the protocol — he asks rather than commands. This suggests he wants something he cannot simply take.]

***

Fahmjir spoke through Takara.

The Panthera’s amber eyes went distant — not blank, not absent. Occupied. The look of a vessel making room for something much larger than itself. When the voice came, it was not Takara’s. Deeper. Older. The voice of a being who had ruled beasts for so long that the boundary between ruler and ruled had dissolved into something that was simply authority.

"Little queen." The address was for Jayde. "And the cub who carries my mark."

Reiko’s ears pricked forward. Through the bond, Jayde felt his confusion. He didn’t know what "my mark" meant.

Neither did she.

"I am Fahmjir. Beast Lord of Oceanus Domain. The Panthera who guards you is mine — the head of my elite guard, sent to protect you long before you knew you needed protecting. He has served you well. And he has kept a silence that I asked of him, which I am now breaking."

The workshop was still. Formation arrays humming on the walls. Reiko pressed against Jayde’s leg, gaze fixed on Takara’s distant face.

"The mark on the cub’s forehead," Fahmjir said. "The mercury rune. You have been treating it as a species trait. A primordial characteristic. It is that. But it is also a designation. In my domain, it has a name."

A pause. Not for drama — for weight.

"It is the Beast Lord’s mark. The heir sign. Your cub carries my bloodline. He is my heir."

The words landed in the quiet of the workshop. Jayde felt them hit Reiko through the bond — not comprehension, not yet. Shock. The particular shock of being told you are something you had no idea you were.

"My guardian has known this since the day the cub emerged from his cocoon," Fahmjir continued. "Since the worm attack, when you nearly died, and the silver queen pulled you both from the edge. The mark was there. Faint. But unmistakable to anyone who serves my court."

Jayde’s hand tightened on Reiko’s fur. She looked at Takara’s distant eyes. "He’s known for over a year."

"He has known. And he has said nothing. Because the law of my domain demands it." Fahmjir’s voice held no apology. Only the steady authority of someone explaining a rule that existed for reasons older than any individual complaint. "Beast Lord heirs are not summoned. They are not guided. They are not told what they are. The heir must find their own way to Oceanus Domain — must survive the journey, navigate the shadow-paths, arrive under their own power. That is the test. It has always been the test."

"And how many heirs have passed it?" Jayde asked.

"In living memory? None."

The answer sat in the workshop air. A test designed for an age of abundance, applied to an age where almost no primordials remained.

"Which is why I am breaking it," Fahmjir said. "For the first time in the history of Oceanus Domain, I am sending for the heir instead of waiting for the heir to come. My guardian informed me of the cub’s condition. I looked through his eyes. I saw the stagnation. And I made the decision."

"What condition?" Reiko’s voice through the bond — [What’s wrong with me?] — carried the rawness of a cub who’d been feeling wrong for months and was hearing for the first time that someone understood why.

Fahmjir’s voice shifted. Gentler. Still authority — but the authority of a teacher addressing a student, not a ruler addressing a subject.

"Nothing is wrong with you, cub. Everything is right with you. That is the problem." A pause that held something almost tender. "You are a primordial shadowbeast with Beast Lord bloodline. You have been raised in a home that is safe, loving, and full of people who care for you. And you have been living like a person. You are not a person."

Through the bond, Jayde felt Reiko go still. Not offended. Listening. The way you listened when someone was telling you something about yourself that you’d always felt but never had words for.

"You have never truly hunted," Fahmjir said. "Not the deep, sustained, predatory hunting your instincts require. You have never run — not the way shadowbeasts run, through darkness so complete that sight becomes irrelevant, and essence-sense becomes everything. You have never been among your own kind."

[That,] Reiko said through the bond. Quiet. Almost reverent. [That’s what the stuck-wrong is.]

"The frustration you feel," Fahmjir said, "is your nature pressing against a life that is too gentle for what you are becoming. The confinement is not the Pavilion’s walls. It is the absence of the wild. Your body has outgrown what this environment can provide — not because the environment is wrong, but because you are something that requires more than safety. You require challenge. Hardship. The company of beasts who will not be gentle with you because you are young."

Reiko pressed against Jayde’s leg. The bond was doing something she’d never felt — a vibration that was relief and longing and recognition all braided together. The cub who’d been scratching at an itch for months, finally being told what it was.

"I want him to come to me," Fahmjir said. "To Oceanus Domain. I will train him. Not gently. The hunt is dangerous. The training is brutal. He will be hurt. He will fail. He will be pushed past every limit he believes he has."

"And if he breaks?" Jayde said.

"He won’t. A beast with a bonded heart does not break. The bond is his anchor. You are his anchor. And that is what makes him different from every heir I have lost — they had power but no heart. Your cub has both. The love you gave him is what will keep the power from consuming him."

Silence. The workshop. The formation arrays. Reiko’s breathing, warm against her leg.

"How long?" Jayde asked.

"Months. The process is individual. I will not rush it." Fahmjir’s voice softened by a fraction. "And I will bring him back to you. This I promise. The bond will hold across any distance. You will feel him. He will feel you. The thread will thin, but it will not break."

Jayde looked at Reiko. The silver eyes. The mercury rune — the Beast Lord’s mark — shifting between his brows. The cub who’d been living like a person because he’d been surrounded by people, and whose nature had been calling to him for months in a language he couldn’t speak.

[I need to go,] he said. Not pleading. Not asking permission. Telling her. The way you told someone you loved a truth they didn’t want to hear because the truth mattered more than comfort. [I need this. I don’t want to leave you. But I need this.]

She wanted to say no. She wanted guarantees — a plan, a timeline, a risk assessment she could evaluate. And the part of her underneath the strategy wanted to say: You’re mine and I’m not ready.

She looked at Takara’s distant eyes. Fahmjir watching through them. The Beast Lord who’d waited for an heir. The ancient being who’d broken his own protocol because he was done losing heirs to tradition.

"Takara escorts him. Personally. The entire journey."

That was always the plan, Takara said. His own voice, not Fahmjir’s. The professional-disgruntled back in place.

"When?" Jayde said.

"Tomorrow," Fahmjir said. "The longer the stagnation continues, the deeper it sets."

Jayde placed her hand on Reiko’s head. The mercury rune pulsed against her palm. Warm. Complex. The mark of an heir whose nature was finally being acknowledged.

[I’ll come back,] Reiko said through the bond. Simple. Absolute. The cub’s understanding of promises — uncomplicated, unbreakable. [I’ll always come back to you.]

She nodded. Not because she was ready. Because Reiko was.

And his decision mattered more than her readiness.

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