Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 191 - 186: The Truth of Blood
Location: Pavilion Medical Bay (Pocket Dimension)
Time: Day 231 (Doha Actual) | 764 - 21 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Isha didn’t speak immediately.
The kitsune’s translucent form solidified fully, nine tails settling into stillness that Jayde had learned to recognize as deep consideration. He drifted to the medical bay’s center, positioning himself where everyone could see him clearly.
"What I’m about to tell you," he began, "will change how you understand yourself. Your past. Your future." Golden eyes met hers with unusual gravity. "I need you to listen completely before reacting. Can you do that?"
Jayde’s taloned fingers curled against her palms. The unfamiliar sharpness grounded her.
"Yes."
"Good." Isha took a breath he didn’t technically need. "You already know part of this. Ala told you—or rather, figured it out when she met you. That you carry Pyratheon’s phoenix essence directly, not through descendants. That you carry her silver dragon heritage. That you shouldn’t exist naturally."
The memory surfaced unbidden. Ala’s golden form flickering with emotions too powerful to contain. Unless he created you. Deliberately. Using both our essences. Phoenix and dragon. Fire and earth. His power and mine, woven together in... a child. Our child.
"Ala was right," Isha continued quietly. "You are their daughter. Literally. But what she couldn’t know—what none of us understood until your transformation—is how Pyratheon made it possible."
Jayde’s breath caught. "What do you mean?"
"Beings like Pyratheon and Ala—Luminari, World Spirits, primordial entities—they don’t reproduce the way mortals do. Their essence is too vast, too powerful. Children between such beings are essentially impossible." Isha’s tail flicked. "In all the millions of years of Luminari history, across thousands of universes, I can count on one hand the number of times it happened. And every single case required sacrifices that most wouldn’t comprehend."
"But Pyratheon found a way."
"He did more than find a way. He engineered one." Isha gestured, and the air shimmered with Luminari technology. Diagrams appeared—complex structures of nested seals arranged in layers. "While you were cocooned, I examined your essence more closely than ever before. What I found..."
He trailed off, something like awe and horror mixing in his expression.
"These are Primordial Binding Seals. Eight of them, layered on your soul like armor. They’re not cultivation seals—they’re god-punishment magic. Created during the War between Luminari and Devourers over a million years ago. Designed to strip divine beings of their divinity. To make gods mortal."
(Seals? On our soul?)
New information. No prior knowledge of this.
"I’ve never seen them used like this," Isha continued. "Normally, they’re punishment—imprisonment. But on you, they’re protection. Camouflage. Each layer hides what’s beneath, makes you appear normal when you’re anything but."
"What are they hiding?"
"Your heritages. All eight of them."
Jayde’s mind stuttered. "Eight? I thought I had two bloodlines—"
"You have eight seals, each locking a different heritage." Isha’s projection shifted, showing the seals color-coded and labeled. "Inferno—phoenix, Pyratheon’s essence. Torrent—silver dragon, Ala’s essence. Those are the first two, the outermost. But beneath them are six more. Verdant, Terracore, Metallurge, Galebreath, Radiance, and Voidshadow. Each corresponding to a different primordial race."
The information was overwhelming. Eight heritages. Eight divine bloodlines sealed inside her.
"How is that possible?"
"I don’t know the full mechanism. But I believe Pyratheon collected essence from eight primordial races over thousands—perhaps millions—of years. Then wove them together with his own and Ala’s essence to create you." Isha’s voice dropped. "You’re not just their daughter, Jayde. You’re their masterwork. A being designed to carry the power of eight divine bloodlines, hidden behind seals that no one could penetrate, born into a mortal body that would let you grow and adapt without drawing attention."
"And then sent forward through time," Jayde said slowly, pieces clicking together. "To be born now. In this era."
"Yes. Over a hundred thousand years into the future from when he created you." Isha’s tails rippled. "Pyratheon knew something was coming. Something that would require someone like you to stop. The Devourers, perhaps—the soul-eaters that destroyed the Luminari civilization. Or something else entirely. Whatever it is, he believed you were the key."
(This is insane.)
Evidence supports the hypothesis. The anomalous power readings. The seals. The impossible combination of bloodlines. It explains everything.
"The transformation you just went through," Isha continued, "fully unlocked the first seal—your phoenix heritage from Pyratheon. It also cracked the second seal—your silver dragon heritage from Ala. That’s why you have nascent wings and dragon characteristics now. But the other six seals remain locked. And each one contains... I don’t know what. Powers we can’t predict. Physical transformations we can’t prepare for."
Jayde stared at her taloned hands. Thought about the wings folded against her back. The moonlight hair. The golden eyes with phoenix-fire rings.
All of this from just one and a half seals unlocking.
Six more waited.
"Why are you telling me this now?" she asked. "Why not before?"
"Because we didn’t know. Green and I thought we understood the seals—thought they were standard Divine Locking formations. We were wrong." Shame flickered across Isha’s ethereal features. "We only unlocked the outer layers, the parts that gave you access to your essence types. We never touched the heritage portions. Didn’t even know they existed until Yinxin’s blood triggered a full unlock during your transformation."
"So I’m... what? A time-displaced half-goddess with eight sealed bloodlines and cosmic responsibilities I never asked for?"
"You’re Pyratheon and Ala’s daughter." Isha’s voice softened. "Everything else is context. Whatever you become, whatever you do with the power you’re inheriting—that’s your choice. The seals. The destiny. None of it binds your will. Pyratheon made sure of that. His letters were clear—he wanted to give you the power to face what’s coming, not force you to face it."
Tears burned in Jayde’s transformed eyes. Golden drops fell, sizzling faintly against her skin.
(I don’t know how to process this.)
Nor do I. Recommend focusing on immediate implications.
"There’s a problem," Jayde said, forcing herself to think tactically. "My essence signature. If I’m carrying all this... divine power... won’t people sense it?"
"Yes." Isha’s expression grew grim. "When you emerged from the cocoon, your signature became detectable. Not phoenix or silver dragon—something older. Something that anyone with sufficient spiritual perception will recognize as Luminari-touched."
"Which means?"
"Ancient races who remember the Luminari still exist. Some will see you as a holy figure, and worship you. Others will see you as proof that divine power still exists, waiting to be claimed, or because of fear—destroyed. And some—the worst ones—will see you as a resource to harvest."
"Harvest."
"Divine essence is the most valuable substance in existence. The Devourers hunted Luminari across thousands of universes specifically to consume that power. You’re carrying a spark of that same divinity. There are beings who would cut you apart to extract it." His voice went hard. "And if the Devourers themselves ever sensed what you carry..."
He didn’t finish. He didn’t need to.
Reiko pressed against her side, massive body radiating protective fury. [Anyone who tries will die. I don’t care how powerful they are.]
"Which is why," Isha said, reaching into dimensional space, "I spent months searching for a solution."
He withdrew something small.
A pendant. Clear crystal wrapped in silver-gold wire that seemed to shift when not directly observed. Inside the crystal, microscopic runes swirled in patterns that hurt to perceive for too long.
"The Veil of the Forgotten," Isha said. "A Luminari god-tier artifact, created by Pyratheon himself. It completely suppresses divine essence signatures, masks appearance alterations, and allows the wearer to pass as fully mortal to any form of detection."
Jayde stared at the pendant. "He left this for me, too?"
"He left it hoping you would survive long enough to need it." Isha’s voice softened. "It’s keyed to his bloodline. Only someone carrying his essence can activate it. A single drop of blood, and it bonds permanently."
"Then I’ll use it. Problem solved."
"There’s a cost."
Of course, there was. There was always a cost.
"The Pavilion requires payment for god-tier artifacts," Isha said carefully. "Approximately one million Nexus merits."
Jayde’s breath caught. "I have maybe twenty thousand."
"Nineteen thousand, eight hundred and eighty-five. Leaving a debt of nine hundred eighty thousand merits."
"How long to pay that off?"
"At your current earning rate? Approximately forty years."
(Forty YEARS?)
Forty years of life. The distinction matters.
"I can guarantee the loan," Isha continued. "The debt will attach to your contractor account. You’ll need to complete missions, earn merits, and pay it off over time. But you can wear the Veil immediately."
Jayde looked at the pendant in Isha’s hands. Thought about hunters coming for divine essence. Thought about beings who would cut her apart for the spark of divinity in her soul. Thought about her family—Reiko, Yinxin, the wyrmlings—caught in the crossfire.
(Forty years of slavery with extra steps.)
Forty years of LIFE. Death is the only alternative. The math is simple.
"I accept."
Isha held the pendant toward her. "A single drop. The artifact will recognize you."
Jayde reached out with her taloned hand. The crystal felt warm against her transformed fingertips—warm and somehow aware, like it had been waiting for exactly this moment.
She pressed one diamond-sharp talon against her palm. A bead of blood welled up—not quite red, she noticed. Tinged with gold and silver, like her tears.
She let the drop fall onto the crystal.
Light exploded.
***
When Jayde’s vision cleared, the pendant was gone from her hands.
She touched her throat and found it there—the crystal resting against her collarbone, the silver-gold wire having woven itself into a delicate chain that felt like it had always been part of her. The microscopic runes pulsed once, twice, then went still.
"Look," Green said quietly, gesturing toward the essence-mirror.
Jayde turned.
And saw someone almost normal looking back.
Black hair. Human eyes—dark brown, unremarkable, the same eyes she’d had before everything changed. Skin that no longer glowed, nails that were simply nails. The height remained—still 5’7", still taller than before. But everything else...
"It’s not changing me," she realized, touching her face. She could still feel the microscopic dragon scales beneath the illusion. Still feel the weight of nascent wings against her back. "Just hiding me."
"Correct. You can dismiss the Veil’s effect at will—useful if you need your full capabilities. But when active, even Eternalpyre cultivators won’t detect your true nature."
Jayde exhaled slowly.
Still transformed. Still carrying divine essence, phoenix wings, and dragon heritage. But hidden. Protected. Safe enough to walk among mortals without painting a target on her back—at the low, low price of forty years’ debt.
"Good." Something in Isha’s expression shifted—became almost amused. "And speaking of things you need to do..."
His nine tails swished.
"Your biological age has advanced. You’re now seventeen."
Jayde blinked at the non-sequitur. "Okay?"
"Which is perfect, actually. We were worried you’d be too young. But seventeen is the ideal age for enrollment."
"Enrollment in wha—" She stopped. Memory surfaced. A promise made months ago, in the desperate early days. A deal struck with a frightened child sharing her mind.
Isha tapped his temple meaningfully. "You promised."
(Oh no.)
Oh yes.
(We’re still going to SCHOOL?!)
The outraged thought was pure Jade—young, indignant, temporarily distracted from the weight of divine parentage by the horror of academic enrollment.
"The Obsidian Academy," Isha confirmed, failing to hide his amusement. "Doha’s most prestigious cultivation institution. You’ll need education, connections, resources—all of which the Academy provides."
Jayde’s expression shifted through several stages: shock, denial, resignation, and finally a kind of disgusted acceptance that made both Green and Yinxin struggle not to laugh.
"An infant goddess," Yinxin murmured, ancient eyes gleaming with barely suppressed mirth, "attending mortal school. Learning cultivation basics, she could probably teach."
"The irony is not lost on me," Jayde said flatly.
"You’ll also need to continue missions to pay off your debt," Isha added. "And there’s the matter of Doha itself. The world you saved. It still requires monitoring."
"Monitoring?"
"You killed one colony of worms," Green said, her amusement fading. "But the infection spread across multiple sites before you intervened. There are more colonies out there, growing, preparing. The planet isn’t safe yet."
More colonies. More battles. More responsibility.
Jayde closed her eyes. Felt Reiko’s warmth against her side. Felt the pendant’s weight against her throat. Felt the nascent wings folded against her back and the divine essence thrumming through her transformed body.
Daughter of gods. Carrier of eight bloodlines. Debtor to an ancient system. Student at a mortal academy. Defender of a world still under threat.
She was seventeen years old—chronologically, at least—and the weight of existence was already crushing.
Though there was one silver lining, she supposed. Two years of aging, five inches of height, features refined past recognition... no one would associate her with Jade Freehold, runaway slave. That frightened fifteen-year-old girl was gone, replaced by someone who looked like a completely different person. The Freehold Clan could search forever and never connect the divine-blooded young woman to the property they’d lost.
Small mercies.
And more importantly—she wasn’t alone.
[We’ll face it together,] Reiko said firmly. [All of it. School, missions, worms, destiny. Together.]
[As family,] Yinxin added, her massive head dipping in acknowledgment. [Always.]
Jayde opened her eyes. Looked at the faces surrounding her—Isha, Green, Reiko, Yinxin, the wyrmlings watching curiously from their mother’s shadow.
Family. Despite everything.
"Fine," she said, voice steadying. "School. Missions. Saving the world. Whatever."
A pause.
"But I’m not wearing a uniform."







