Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 244 - 239: The Pavilion Stirs
Location: Isha’s Pavilion
Date/Time: 30 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm (Pavilion Sub-dimension)
The thread was still there.
Isha checked it for the ninety-third time — not because the number mattered, but because the alternative to checking was acknowledging that checking accomplished nothing. The contract bond between him and his current contractor pulsed with the steady, unremarkable rhythm of a heartbeat monitored from another room. Alive. Present. Entirely out of reach.
Two Pavilion days. A handful of real hours.
He’d felt the moment she crossed the boundary — a clean severance, like a door closing between rooms that had always been connected. One moment, the girl’s essence signature had been there, readable through the Pavilion’s remote monitoring thread. The next: nothing. Not dead. Not damaged. Simply... elsewhere.
The formations responsible were interesting in the way that things which exceeded your comprehension were always interesting. Isha had existed since the Luminari era. He had seen civilizations rise and collapse. He had trained contractors who had gone on to reshape continents, and he had watched contractors die in ditches for want of a single technique they hadn’t bothered to learn. In all that time, he had encountered perhaps a dozen formation architectures that genuinely surprised him.
This one predated him.
Not by a year or a century. By an order of magnitude that made precision pointless. Whatever the girl had fallen into — whatever had opened the earth beneath her feet and swallowed her whole — it bore the signature of something built before his creators had walked this world.
He knew what it was. Not the specifics — those were lost to an age that didn’t leave records so much as echoes — but the shape of it. The pattern. Ancient inheritances operated on their own criteria, their own timelines, their own logic. They chose their recipients. They tested them. They gave, or they took, and the process couldn’t be rushed, interrupted, or monitored from outside. You didn’t rescue someone from an inheritance trial. You waited.
And you hoped.
"She’ll either pass or she won’t," he said to nobody in particular, because talking to yourself was only madness if someone was listening. "And either way, I can’t help her from here."
That was the part that sat wrong. Not the danger — danger was constant, danger was baseline, danger was the water they all swam in. The part that sat wrong was the helplessness. An artifact spirit of his age and capability, reduced to monitoring a contract bond and hoping.
The Pavilion hummed its quiet agreement. Formations ticked over. Training grounds sat empty. The knowledge archives waited with the infinite patience of things that had been waiting for longer than most species had existed.
In the sleeping quarters, White sat by the window with a sharpening stone and a blade that didn’t need sharpening. Steel grey eyes watching nothing. He hadn’t asked Isha for updates since the first day. Not because he’d stopped caring — the opposite. Because asking required admitting he couldn’t help, and the man handled helplessness the way he handled most emotions: by finding something nearby and applying violence to it until the feeling passed.
Green had been reading. The same page for six hours. Her fractured emerald eyes tracked the text without absorbing it. She’d brewed tea twice, forgotten it twice, and was currently sitting in the garden with a cold cup and a book she wasn’t reading and the particular stillness of a woman who was furious at the universe for not providing her with an enemy she could lecture into submission.
They were fine. The adults were always fine. Adults had practice at being useless.
It was the others that concerned him.
***
Reiko woke up wrong.
Not wrong, the way a bad dream left you — startled, heart racing, reaching for something that wasn’t there. Wrong the way a house was wrong after someone had moved all the furniture six inches to the left. Everything was where it should be. Nothing was where it had been.
His body was the first problem. Too sharp. Joints that had been loose and puppyish locked into place with a precision that felt borrowed from something older. His senses — which had always been good, better than good, the enhanced perception of a primordial bloodline that most scholars considered extinct — had been turned up in a way that made the word "enhanced" feel quaint.
He could hear White’s sharpening stone. Not the sound of it, not the general scraping — the grain of the metal catching on the grain of the stone, the micro-fractures in the blade’s edge singing at a frequency that should have been inaudible. He could feel the Pavilion’s formation network the way you’d feel sunlight on skin, each node a point of warmth with its own rhythm and purpose. He could smell —
Everything. He could smell everything. The garden. The archives. The dust on the training grounds. Green’s cold tea. The wyrmlings’ particular scent of ozone and silver and something like hot metal, which was new, which hadn’t been there before he’d —
Before.
The chaos core. The beast in the pass. The decision that hadn’t been a decision at all because his bonded was bleeding, and the thing hurting her needed to stop existing, and the fastest path to that outcome was swallowing the corrupted essence stone that pulsed with energy that shouldn’t have existed on this planet.
Memory flooded him. Not his memory.
Combat formations used by beast lords who had died before this continent had a name. Spells — not techniques, not cultivation methods, actual spells — woven from Voidshadow essence in patterns that made his current understanding look like a child’s drawing of a masterwork. The weight and texture of a lineage that stretched back beyond the Sundering, beyond the Zartonesh, beyond everything that anyone living had any business remembering.
He was Reiko. He was also something considerably larger than Reiko, pressed into a shape that was — for the first time — a choice rather than a limitation.
That thought settled. Turned over. Became real.
He stood. Or tried to. His legs worked differently — same limbs, different mechanics, the muscles organised around principles he was still integrating. He got three steps before the floor seemed to rush up at him, which was confusing until he realised it wasn’t the floor moving.
He was shrinking. 𝚏𝕣𝐞𝗲𝐰𝕖𝐛𝐧𝕠𝕧𝚎𝚕.𝐜𝚘𝗺
Not gradually. Not with the controlled elegance of a creature that understood its own abilities. He went from lion-sized to house-cat in roughly half a second, legs suddenly far too close to the ground, the room expanding around him like a box unfolding, and the sound he made was not dignified.
[What — ]
Panic. Instinct fired in a direction he didn’t recognise, and his body responded by reversing course with the subtlety of a catapult. He ballooned. Limbs extended. Shoulders hit the doorframe — both sides simultaneously — and his head cracked against the ceiling hard enough to send dust raining down.
[NO — ]
Back the other way. Too far. Cat-sized again. A training dummy toppled and nearly flattened him. He scrambled sideways, claws skittering on stone, and crashed into a rack of practice weapons that collapsed with a sound like a percussion section falling down stairs.
"Ah," said Isha’s voice from somewhere above him. The kitsune spirit had materialised on the weapons rack — the one that was still standing — with his tails arranged in a fan of elegant unconcern. "Welcome back. I see you’ve discovered the size-shifting. Going well, I notice."
Reiko sat in the wreckage of the practice rack, roughly the size of a large cat, surrounded by scattered wooden swords and a significant quantity of his own embarrassment. His silver eyes — which were, he realised with a start, seeing in spectrums he hadn’t known existed — found the kitsune.
[Where is she?]
Not a demand. Not quite a plea. Something between the two that carried the weight of a creature who had been unconscious while the person he was bonded to had vanished.
Isha’s expression didn’t change. "She’s alive. The contract bond confirms it — steady, strong, no distress markers. A few hours ago, she fell through the floor of some pre-Luminari chamber. Ancient inheritance trial — the formations are older than me, which I’m told is unusual. They’ve cut her off from external communication entirely."
[Cut her off.]
"Not a trap. A test. Whatever’s down there chose her specifically. These things have their own criteria — their own timelines. They operate outside normal rules. She’ll either pass the trial and inherit whatever it’s offering, or she won’t." A beat. "I believe she’ll pass."
Reiko processed this. The ancient memories helped — provided context for formations that could sever bonds clean, for spaces that sat outside the normal architecture of the world. Places built by the old ones. Places that chose who entered and decided what they left with.
The ground opened for her. That meant design. Purpose.
[She’ll pass.]
Not a belief. A statement. The kind that didn’t entertain alternatives because alternatives weren’t acceptable.
"Yes," Isha said. "She will."
Not agreement. Acknowledgement. The difference mattered, but Reiko decided it didn’t matter enough to fight about. Not right now.
He looked down at himself. Cat-sized. The mercury rune on his forehead — which should have been hidden under dark salve, which should have required careful daily application to keep concealed — was visible. Pulsing with a slow, liquid rhythm that matched his heartbeat.
Except... he could feel it. Not the rune itself — he’d always felt that, the warm hum of something embedded deeper than fur and bone. But now he could feel the edges of it. The borders. The way it connected to his essence channels like a tap connected to a pipe.
He reached for it the way you’d reach for a muscle you’d just discovered you had.
The rune faded. Not hidden — not covered with salve like camouflage over a wound — but pulled inward, absorbed, present but invisible. He could feel it still there, still pulsing, still his. Just... contained.
He let it return. It surfaced like ink rising through water.
[I can control it now.]
"Yes," Isha said, and there was something in the kitsune’s voice that wasn’t surprise, exactly. More like the tone of a teacher whose student had just performed a technique the teacher had been waiting to see. "Yes, you can. No more salve."
Reiko concentrated. The size-shifting was still clumsy — he found his normal dimensions through trial and error rather than precision, expanding in stages that went a little too far and then not quite far enough before settling into the lion-sized form that felt like home. The doorframe was undamaged. A small miracle.
[The memories,] he said carefully. [There are... a lot of them.]
"Take your time with those. Ancient beast lord knowledge was designed to be inherited gradually. You got it in weeks through a corrupted essence stone. The fact that you’re coherent is, frankly, impressive."
[The combat forms — ]
"Will need practice. The spells will need even more. And the instincts" — Isha paused, delicate — "will need to be integrated carefully. You are still Reiko. The memories are tools, not identity."
[I know who I am.] A beat. [I’m hers.]
"Yes," Isha said, and meant something different by it than Reiko did, and let the difference stand.
***
Yinxin had stopped pacing. Briefly.
Not because the urge had passed, but because Tianxin had positioned herself directly in the pacing route with the immovable certainty of a child who had decided that this particular patch of grass was hers and that anything walking through it — including her mother — was a trespasser.
The contract bond pulsed. Alive. Not distressed. Distant.
A few hours. That’s all it had been in the real world — a few hours since Isha had felt the severance, since the steady thread connecting him to Jayde had gone clean and quiet. But inside the Pavilion, where time stretched like honey, those hours had become two days. Two days of checking the bond. Two days of watching the wyrmlings play while the person who had saved all of their lives was somewhere underground, chosen by something ancient, undergoing a trial that nobody could help her with.
Isha said it was an inheritance. That the formations were older than anything he’d encountered. That these things had their own criteria, their own timeline, and you didn’t interfere — you waited. He said it with the calm of someone who had seen this pattern before, or something close enough to recognise the shape.
Yinxin was not calm.
She was a queen. The last silver dragon queen in existence. She carried fragments of her predecessors — impressions, echoes, the wreckage of a lineage that was hunted to extinction before anyone could pass it on properly. She could shapeshift. She could feel the Pavilion’s formation network. She had fought beside Jayde in a cocoon of transformation that should have killed them both.
And she could not do a single thing about any of this.
Tianxin — bold, always first, always pushing — had figured out that her wings could catch air if she jumped from a high enough surface. She’d spent the morning launching herself off the garden wall, achieving roughly three seconds of glide time before impacting the grass with the graceless determination of a creature that considered failure a personal insult. Each attempt longer. Each landing slightly less catastrophic.
Shenxin watched from the base of the wall. Cautious. Calculating. He’d seen his sister’s first four crashes and was clearly running the physics in his head, waiting until the technique had been proven before attempting it himself. When he finally jumped — later, when Tianxin wasn’t watching — his glide would be clean. Precise. He’d land on his feet and say nothing, because that was Shenxin.
Huaxin sat in the grass and watched the clouds.
She wasn’t disinterested. She was somewhere else — following something in the sky that only she could see, her small silver head tilted at the exact angle of a creature listening to music that wasn’t playing. She did this sometimes. More often lately. The youngest wyrmling had a quality that Yinxin couldn’t name — a stillness that wasn’t shyness, a patience that wasn’t hesitation. She saw things. Or heard things. Or felt things that existed at a frequency the others couldn’t access.
Yinxin watched her daughter watch the sky and felt the familiar ache of a mother who knew her child was extraordinary and couldn’t tell her why.
"I’m useless," she said.
The garden didn’t argue.
"I’m supposed to be a queen. I carry fragments of every queen before me — scraps, really. Echoes. I can shapeshift. I can feel formation networks. I fought beside Jayde when the transformation should have killed us both. And I’m standing in a garden watching my children learn to fly while she’s underground being tested by something none of us understand, and I can’t — "
Her voice cracked. Not dramatically. A fracture, hairline, the kind that spreads if you pressed on it.
Child.
Yinxin went still.
The voice was not Isha’s. It was not White’s gravel or Green’s music. It came from inside her and outside her simultaneously — from the memories she carried, the fragmented inheritance of queens who had lived and died and passed their knowing forward. But it was louder than fragments. Clearer than impressions.
You carry us. Did you think we were sleeping?
The garden changed. Not physically — the grass was still grass, the walls still walls, the sky still the perpetual amber of Isha’s pocket dimension. But the light shifted. Became older. Warmer. The kind of light that illuminated temples and throne rooms, and the particular spaces where decisions were made that shaped centuries.
And they were there.
Not visible. Not physical. But present, the way heat was present near a fire — undeniable, felt in the bones rather than the eyes. Dozens of them. Hundreds. Queens who had ruled when dragons held the sky and the earth answered to silver wings. Queens who had fought wars and brokered peace and raised children and died defending things that mattered. Queens who had been gentle and queens who had been terrible and queens who had been both, because ruling required everything and nothing was exempt.
Yinxin couldn’t see them. She could feel them. The weight of their attention was like standing at the bottom of an ocean and looking up.
"Oh," said Isha.
The kitsune had appeared at the garden’s edge, nine tails fanned behind him, and his expression was — for the first time in Yinxin’s memory — genuinely unsettled. Not frightened. Isha didn’t do frightened. But the careful, bemused wariness of an ancient entity recognising something older than himself.
"Well," he said, tails swishing once. "That’s new."
It is not new, the voice said — voices, plural, layered like harmonics, individual and collective simultaneously. It is very, very old. We have been waiting for the child to ask.
"She didn’t ask," Isha pointed out. "She complained."
Close enough.
Yinxin’s hands were shaking. The bond pulsed — Jayde, distant, steady. Her children played in the grass. Reiko’s silver eyes watched from the training ground doorway, his new body held with the careful stillness of something that was paying very close attention.
You want to stop being helpless, the queens said. Not a question. A diagnosis. You want to protect what is yours. You want to be worthy of the girl who saved your children and asked nothing in return.
"Yes," Yinxin whispered.
Good. We can give you something that has not been given in a very long time. Centuries of war. Millennia of statecraft. The full weight of every queen who came before you — not fragments, not impressions, but the complete inheritance. We have not been able to reach a living queen like this in... longer than we care to count. Something about this place, this moment, has opened a door that was closed to us for millennia.
A ripple through the collective — surprise, wonder, something almost like hunger. Queens who had died with knowledge they couldn’t pass on, who had watched their line diminish generation by generation, each daughter receiving less than the one before. Until fragments were all that remained, and even the fragments were fading.
We will not waste this chance. And neither will you.
A pause. The light shifted. Colder now.
It will hurt. It will take everything you think you are and rebuild it around what you need to become. You will not enjoy a single moment of it.
The wyrmlings had stopped playing.
Tianxin was on her feet, wings half-spread, small body oriented toward the source of the presence with the instinctive certainty of a creature responding to something in its blood. Bold. First in everything. She took a step forward, chin up, silver scales catching the light.
Shenxin had moved behind Yinxin’s leg. Not hiding — positioning. His small claws gripped the fabric of her robe, and his cautious eyes tracked the presence with the calculating intensity of a child who wanted to understand before he acted.
Huaxin hadn’t moved. She was still sitting in the grass, still watching the sky, but her head had tilted. Not toward the queens. Toward something else. Something that lived in the space between the queens’ voices — the silences, the gaps, the places where the harmony didn’t quite resolve.
She smiled. Small. Private. As if she’d heard a secret and decided to keep it.
"My children," Yinxin said. "Will they — "
They are silver dragons. This is their inheritance too. The little one with the courage will learn first. The boy will learn best. And the quiet one...
A pause that felt different from the others. Heavier.
The quiet one hears us already.
Yinxin looked at Huaxin. The youngest wyrmling looked back. Golden eyes — her mother’s eyes in miniature — steady and unafraid.
(Mama. They’re singing.)
Yinxin’s breath caught.
She turned back to the presence. The light. The weight of queens who had held the sky for longer than most civilisations had existed.
"When do we start?"
Now.
The garden blazed silver.
Isha watched from the edge, tails still, eyes bright with something that lived at the intersection of admiration and concern. Ancient queen spirits manifesting inside his Pavilion. Channelling the full inheritance of a destroyed lineage into a young queen who’d learned to shapeshift less than a year ago. And three wyrmling children being pulled along for the ride.
He’d housed gods. He’d trained legends. He’d been home to contractors who remade the world. But ancient dragon queen spirits establishing a training ground inside his formation network without so much as asking his permission first — that was a new indignity.
They’d simply... moved in. Rearranged the essence flows in the inner sanctum to suit their purposes, adjusted the time compression in ways he hadn’t known were possible, and settled into his architecture like they’d been living there all along. Which, he supposed, they had — dormant inside Yinxin’s bloodline, waiting.
"She’s going to be a terror when she comes out," he said quietly.
He paused. Considered.
"Good."







