Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 157 - 152: When the Bond Screams
Location: Demon Realm - Royal Training Grounds (Upper Realm)
Time: Day 213 (Doha Actual) - Evening | Calendar: 4 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
The training grounds echoed with the clash of weapons and the grunt of exertion.
Ren stood at the center of the massive courtyard, surrounded by five hundred demon warriors going through combat drills. The royal training grounds sprawled across volcanic stone, carved with formations that absorbed stray attacks and reinforced the space against cultivation damage. Evening light painted the black stone crimson, and the air smelled of sulfur and sweat.
"Again!" Ren barked, watching a squad run through close-quarters formations. "Tighter! If that had been a Zartonesh infiltrator, three of you would be dead!"
The warriors adjusted, moving with the fluid grace of soldiers who’d trained together for centuries. Most were Apexblight tier, a few Eternalpyre—elite troops who’d survived multiple invasion wars. All in humanoid form, their jade-white skin gleaming with exertion, their movements precise and lethal.
And all of them watched their king with the devotion of warriors who knew exactly what he’d sacrificed to keep them alive.
Kaelen leaned against the courtyard wall nearby, arms crossed, pale silver eyes tracking the drills with professional assessment. The strategist was tall and lean—six-foot-three of whipcord muscle and elegant precision. His silver-white hair, streaked with black, was pulled back in a practical queue. Even at rest, he looked like he was calculating probabilities.
"Squad Seven is improving," he observed. "Still sloppy on the pivot, but getting there."
"They’ll get it, or they’ll run the drill until they collapse," Ren replied without heat.
"Harsh."
"Effective."
Lysander materialized from the shadows on Ren’s other side, his presence barely a whisper despite being six-foot-one. The spymaster’s midnight black hair—streaked with deep blue and green—caught the light strangely, as if drinking it. His pure black eyes held violet flecks that gleamed with catalogued secrets. "The perimeter scouts report no unusual activity. Border formations are holding. No Zartonesh signatures detected."
"Good."
Theron approached from the infirmary wing, carrying medical manifests and supply lists. The healer-warrior’s white hair—streaked with black and silver—practically glowed in the evening light, matching his pale gold eyes. At six-foot-four, he moved with a grace that spoke of both combat training and surgical precision. His skin held a warmer tone than most demons’ jade-white, a subtle reminder of his human heritage that had made him an outcast before Ren gave him purpose. "Requisitions are approved. New medical supplies arrive tomorrow. Should I schedule triage training?"
"Day after tomorrow," Ren decided. "Let them rest first."
"Generous," Cassian drawled, sauntering over with characteristic laziness. The youngest of Ren’s Kael’shira looked like he’d just woken from a nap—which he probably had. At six-foot-two with orange-red hair streaked with black and white, and bright amber-orange eyes that always held amusement, he was the group’s eternal joker. "You’re going soft in your old age, Your Majesty."
"I’m ten thousand years old. That’s not old for a demon."
"It’s ancient for a Demon King who keeps throwing himself at planetary extinction."
Fair point.
Draven’s booming laugh cut through the courtyard noise. The warrior-poet was impossible to miss—six-foot-seven of heavily muscled combat perfection, with crimson hair streaked with black and molten gold-red eyes that burned with perpetual enthusiasm. Even standing still, he radiated barely contained energy. "At least he throws himself at interesting problems! Better than dying of boredom like some kings."
"Some of us prefer strategy to poetry," Kaelen said dryly.
"Your loss, my friend. Strategy wins battles. Poetry makes them worth remembering."
Ren watched the drills continue, mind half on the warriors and half on things he couldn’t control. The demon realm had been... quiet lately. Too quiet. No major threats, no invasion warnings, no political upheaval. 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
Just the slow, grinding awareness that his entire species was dying.
Five thousand years since the last demon child was born. Five thousand years of watching his people age without replacement, watching bloodlines thin, watching the population dwindle year by year.
No children. None. The demon realm held no young voices, no learning warriors, no next generation.
Just warriors who’d survived millennia, growing older, knowing their species ended with them.
Because without a Demon King’s Zhū’anara—truemate—demons couldn’t sustain their population.
Ren was the last. The only purple-eyed demon left in existence. Once, there had been over a hundred Demon Kings who held the common path open, whose truebonded mates revitalized the earth and increased fertility across the realm. Powerful beings scattered across demon territories, anchoring the species’ survival through their very existence.
But thirty thousand years of systematic Zartonesh assassination had killed them methodically. Hunted down during the invasions, murdered in their homes, their mates slaughtered alongside them. Sometimes the Demon Kings simply disappeared—taken in the night, never seen again. Sometimes they fell in battle, overwhelmed by numbers designed specifically to eliminate them. Sometimes Zartonesh agents infiltrated demon society, poisoned food, sabotaged defenses, created "accidents" that weren’t accidents at all.
The enemy had understood what many demons didn’t: kill the Demon Kings, kill the species. Slowly. Inevitably.
Until only Ren remained.
And when Suzarin died ten thousand years ago during the Fourth Invasion, she’d taken demon fertility with her.
The elders had nearly lost him then. Would have lost him, if not for a desperate sacrifice.
Ren remembered the rampage only in fragments.
That night. The small bedroom where the toddler slept, lit by a single jade lamp. The Soulreaper—massive, terrible, darkness made flesh—hunched over the tiny bed. Suzarin’s lavender eyes wide with terror and pain as the creature tore her apart. Her small body broken, blood pooling on sheets embroidered with dragons. Those beautiful eyes dimming as she looked up at him one final time, her last breath a whisper: "Ren..."
She was two years old.
Two.
The bond shattering—not fading gently but breaking, like a bone snapping under too much pressure. The spiritual connection they’d formed at her naming ceremony ripping apart with physical agony.
His beast taking complete control. Tearing free of every restraint, every civilized thought, every shred of humanity.
Then... nothing coherent. Just blood. So much blood.
They told him later the details he couldn’t recall himself.
That he’d killed the Soulreaper first—torn it apart with his bare hands, reduced it to scattered essence and screaming shadows. That he’d then killed every Zartonesh in the Demon Realm. Every single one. Tracked them through dimensional rifts, across battlefields, into their hiding places. That Doha had been losing the Fourth Invasion War—the enemy pushing deeper into territories every day, overwhelming defenses, slaughtering defenders faster than they could be replaced. That his six-month rampage had turned the tide completely. The Zartonesh forces, seeing him coming, had tried to flee. Hadn’t mattered. The beast chased them down, tore through their formations, reduced entire divisions to scattered meat and broken weapons.
He’d killed nearly a million of them.
Doha started winning because Ren went insane.
But the beast hadn’t stopped when the enemies died. Hadn’t recognized friend from foe. Allied troops trying to help him had died screaming. Demons trying to stop his advance had been torn apart without hesitation. Civilians fleeing the violence—men, women, elders, anyone within reach—just more bodies in his path.
The carnage had been apocalyptic. Strategic. Indiscriminate.
It took twenty-three demon elders dying to stop him. Twenty-three of the most powerful cultivators in the realm—Peak Eternalpyre masters who’d survived multiple invasion wars—sacrificing their cultivation completely to build a spiritual weave cage in his mind. A prison for the beast. A containment field woven from their life essence and whatever power remained after they burned through centuries of advancement.
They’d died building it. All twenty-three. Gave up everything they were to create something that might—might—keep the last Demon King alive long enough to matter.
The elders had hoped, desperately, that Suzarin wasn’t his true Zhū’anara. That the bond he’d felt at her naming ceremony was just wishful thinking, or perhaps something else—a Kaeth’ara bond waiting to form, a chosen mate rather than one destined by the ancestors. If Suzarin hadn’t been his truemate, if the bond had been something that could be rebuilt with another...
But the rampage proved them wrong. The bond’s shattering, the beast’s complete takeover, the six months of uncontrolled slaughter—that was what happened when a Demon King lost his Zhū’anara.
Not a Kaeth’ara. Not a chosen mate.
A truemate. Soul-bonded. Irreplaceable.
Or so they’d thought.
Because if Ren died, the demons died with him.
No Demon King meant no common path. No fertility. Just slow extinction as the remaining population aged without replacement.
The elders had risked everything to keep him alive. Waited ten thousand years for him to heal enough to... what? Search for a new truemate? Impossible. You only got one. Try to form a Kaeth’ara bond? Maybe. If he could find someone strong enough to anchor his beast without the divine connection. If he could control the darkness long enough to even attempt it.
They’d watched their species dwindle year by year, hoping against hope that something—anything—would change before it was too late.
"You’re brooding again," Kaelen observed.
"I’m thinking."
"Same thing with you."
"Scorch it, Kaelen."
The strategist grinned, unrepentant. "You know we’re not letting you die, right? Even if you try. We’ll drag your stubborn ass back to sanity kicking and screaming."
"Touching."
"We mean it." Lysander’s voice was serious despite his usual guardedness. "Last time nearly destroyed the realm. We won’t survive another rampage. None of us will."
Draven’s normally cheerful expression sobered. "We’ve got plans, brother. Contingencies. Ways to cage the beast if it breaks free again." His molten eyes met Ren’s. "We’d rather die trying than watch you become what your father was."
Ren’s jaw tightened. "I’m not planning to—"
The world shattered.
Not physically. Not externally.
Internally.
The bond—that golden thread he’d felt for six months, that connection to something precious and impossible—suddenly screamed.
Not pain. Worse than pain.
Absence. Void. Death.
Like something vital had been ripped from his chest, leaving a gaping wound where warmth should be.
No.
Ren staggered. The training grounds spun. Warriors froze mid-drill, sensing their king’s distress.
No no no NO—
The spiritual weave cage cracked.
Ten thousand years of careful containment, built from elder sacrifice and desperate hope, fracturing like glass under impossible pressure.
His beast—ancient, terrible, utterly uncontrollable—surged forward.
"REN!" Kaelen’s voice, distant and meaningless.
The transformation was instantaneous.
Ren’s humanoid form dissolved. Muscle expanded. Bones cracked and reformed. Power erupted outward in waves that flattened warriors within fifty meters. The formations carved into the training ground blazed white-hot, struggling to contain the sudden pressure.
And the vor’kalth emerged.
Fifteen feet of demonic perfection. Black scales shot through with purple lightning. Three pairs of wings—enormous, membranous, crackling with Voidshadow essence. Horns swept back like obsidian blades. Eyes burned pure violet, without recognition, without sanity, without anything remotely human.
Peak Eternalpyre cultivation fully unleashed.
The spiritual weave cage shattered completely.
And the beast knew only one thing: Bond dying. Mate dying. MUST GO.
"EVERYONE BACK!" Kaelen’s roar cut through shock. "GET AWAY FROM HIM!"
Five hundred warriors scrambled backward, terror written across their faces.
Because they remembered. All of them remembered.
Ten thousand years ago, this same beast had killed millions. Had torn through Zartonesh armies like they were paper. Had turned the tide of a losing war through sheer apocalyptic violence.
And hadn’t stopped when the enemies died. Hadn’t recognized friend from foe. Just killed everything that moved until twenty-three elders sacrificed themselves to stop it.
Now it was loose again.
And this time, there were no elders left with enough power to cage it.
The beast’s wings spread wide—each spanning thirty feet, lightning crackling between the membranes. Its massive head tilted back, and it roared.
The sound wasn’t noise. It was force. Reality itself rippled outward, shattering windows in the palace, cracking walls, sending warriors to their knees with hands over ears.
When the roar faded, the beast began to rise.
Not jump. Not fly.
Just... rise. Levitation through pure cultivation power, ascending into the crimson evening sky above the training grounds.
"No," Theron breathed, his pale gold eyes wide with horror. "No no no, he can’t—"
The beast raised one massive clawed hand.
And began tearing through dimensional fabric.
Space itself screamed. Reality parted like a curtain, revealing the swirling chaos of the in-between realm. The beast was opening a passage. Not to anywhere specific—just away. Toward whatever instinct was driving it forward.
Toward the dying bond.
"STOP HIM!" Draven roared, but even as he said it, he knew the futility.
Warriors tried. Apexbright and Eternalpyre cultivators launched attacks—essence strikes, formations, desperate attempts to ground the beast. Everything splashed against its scales like water against stone. The power differential was too vast. Peak Eternalpyre versus Apexbright wasn’t a fight. It was barely an inconvenience.
Kaelen’s face was ashen, silver eyes calculating impossibilities. "If he crosses dimensions in that state—"
"If he survives the crossing, he’ll kill everything in his path," Lysander finished, all his usual calm gone. "Friend or foe. Until someone strong enough stops him. Or until he burns out completely."
"And if he burns out?" Cassian’s voice shook; all humor fled.
"Then he dies. And we all die with him."
The beast’s claws sank deeper into the dimensional fabric. The tear widened. Through it, they could see fragments of other realms—Lower Realm forests, Middle Realm mountains, places the beast would tear through on whatever mission drove it to madness.
Theron’s hands clenched, golden light flickering around his fingers as his Radiance essence responded to his desperation. The half-breed healer was the only male in the demon realm who could wield the light—human mother, demon father, accepted by neither race until Ren and his battle-kin had found him dying on the side of the road. "We can’t lose him. Not like this. Not after everything—"
The five Kael’shira stood frozen, watching their king—their friend, their brother, the last hope for their entire species—prepare to cross dimensions in full vor’kalth form.
If he left, he’d kill thousands before someone stopped him.
If they tried to stop him, they’d die.
If he died searching, the demons died with him.
No children in five thousand years. No hope for fertility without a Demon King’s Zhū’anara. No future beyond slow extinction.
"Ren," Kaelen whispered, voice breaking. "Please. Don’t do this. Don’t leave us."
The beast paused.
Just for a moment.
Its massive head tilted, violet eyes unfocused, lost in instinct and pain.
The dimensional tear hung open, swirling chaos waiting.
One step. That’s all it would take. One step and the beast would cross, would hunt, would kill everything in its path, trying to reach the dying bond.
The Kael’shira held their breath.
Five hundred warriors stood frozen.
The entire demon realm waited.
And then—
The bond changed.
Not dying anymore.
Strengthening.
The golden thread in Ren’s chest, which had been unraveling like a rope fraying under impossible strain, suddenly stabilized. Then grew warmer. Stronger. Not back to full strength, but no longer fading into nothing.
Someone had saved her.
MATE SAVED, the beast rumbled, violet eyes focusing slightly. NOT DYING. MATE LIVES.
The realization crashed through Ren’s consciousness like a wave.
She wasn’t dying anymore. Whatever catastrophe had attacked her, someone—something—had intervened. The bond was weak, damaged, but holding. Growing stronger by the second.
She was alive.
The beast’s murderous urgency drained away, replaced by something almost like... relief.
The clawed hand withdrew from the dimensional fabric. Slowly. Reluctantly. Like something fighting every instinct it possessed, but recognizing that crossing dimensions wasn’t necessary anymore.
Not dead. Not dying. Just hurt.
And if she was hurt, she needed him alive and sane when they finally met. Not rampaging through dimensions, killing everything in his path until someone put him down permanently.
Return to the cage, Ren commanded his beast. She lives. We wait. We prepare.
The beast snarled, unwilling, but the bond’s stabilization had stolen its desperation. It couldn’t justify the rampage anymore. Couldn’t justify risking Ren’s life—their shared life—when their mate was no longer dying.
We wait, it agreed reluctantly. But not long. Find her soon.
"Thank Ala," Theron breathed, sensing the shift.
The beast’s wings folded. Its levitation faltered.
And it fell.
Fifteen feet of demonic power plummeting from fifty feet up, crashing into the training ground with force that cracked the volcanic stone and sent warriors stumbling.
When the dust cleared, Ren lay in humanoid form again—breathing hard, purple eyes wide and shocked, one hand pressed against his chest where the bond had screamed.
The Kael’shira rushed forward.
"Ren!" Kaelen dropped to his knees beside his king. "Are you—"
"She was dying." Ren’s voice was raw, barely recognizable. "The bond. It was... unraveling. Like her soul was being torn apart." His hand pressed harder against his chest. "But then it changed. Someone saved her. The bond stabilized and started strengthening again. That’s why I stopped."
Silence.
Absolute silence.
Then Lysander’s quiet voice: "Who?"
Ren’s hand fisted against his chest, right over where the bond pulsed—stronger now than moments ago, but still weak. Still damaged.
But alive. Growing warmer.
"My Zhū’anara," he whispered. "My truemate."







