Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 247 - 242: The Long Dark
Location: Underground Cavern, Deep Zone — Secret Realm
Date/Time: Outside time
Realm: Lower Realm — Obsidian Academy Territory
Jayde walked.
There was nothing else to do. The tunnel stretched ahead, carved from stone so dark it swallowed the light from her hands, and behind her, the crack where she’d left Takara was already gone — sealed or too far away to matter. The bond to Reiko was a hollow ache in her chest, turned inward, unreachable. The thread to Isha was static. Even the Pavilion, that constant hum at the edge of her awareness like a second heartbeat, had gone quiet.
No bond. No backup. No extraction route. No communication.
(I’m alone.)
Yes.
The word sat between her voices without argument. No tactical reframe. No emotional deflection. Just the fact of it, clean and cold as the stone under her boots.
She’d been alone before. The pit had been alone — years of it, the kind of solitude that ate through you like acid until you forgot there’d ever been anything else. But even the pit had sounds. Dripping water. Distant footsteps. The scrape of the food tray. The pit had context, even if the context was suffering.
And before that — before Doha, before the pit, before any of it — there’d been the solitary deployments. Months in deep space with nothing but instrument readings and her own breathing. Recon posts on dead moons where the silence was so total you could hear your own blood moving. She’d thought those were lonely. She’d been wrong. Those had purpose. Mission parameters. An extraction date circled on a mental calendar. Loneliness with an end point wasn’t loneliness. It was patience.
This was different.
This silence was absolute. No ambient noise. No wind through formations. No distant beast calls echoing through stone. Her footsteps made sound — flat, absorbed impacts that died the instant they were born — and her breathing, and that was all. The world had shrunk to the space her body occupied, and everything outside it was darkness and stillness and the faint, impossible light ahead.
Jayde kept walking.
Time stopped meaning anything after the first hour. Or the second. She couldn’t tell. There was no change in the tunnel — same smooth walls, same dark stone, same light that was always almost brighter, always just ahead, never actually closer. Her legs ached. The chase through the deep zone had left its marks — bruised ribs from squeezing through the gap in the rock face, palms scraped raw from the slide down. She was tired. Not the bone-deep weariness of someone worn thin, but the honest exhaustion of a body that had been running flat out and hadn’t stopped yet.
Pace consistent. Breathing steady. Hydration adequate for another six hours. Injury assessment: cosmetic. Continue.
(It feels like the tunnel is watching me.)
Tunnels don’t watch.
(This one does.)
She couldn’t argue. There was something in the quality of the silence — not hostile, not welcoming, just attentive. As though the stone itself had been carved by someone who expected this walk to happen, and had been patient enough to wait.
Jayde walked for what her internal clock said was four hours. Then six. The tunnel didn’t change. The light didn’t get closer. The silence didn’t break.
Reassessment. No visible progress toward the light source. No branching tunnels. No environmental variation. Possibility: optical phenomenon. The light may not represent a destination.
(You think it’s not real?)
I think we’ve been walking for six hours and haven’t gained a single metre on it.
She stopped. Stood in the middle of the tunnel with her hands on her knees and her breathing loud in the stillness and thought about turning back.
Tactical assessment. Current trajectory offers no measurable progress toward objective. Reversal to entry point and alternative route selection may—
(There is no entry point. You know that.)
The crack may still be—
(It’s gone. We both know it’s gone.)
Her tactical mind didn’t argue. It ran the numbers instead, the way it always did when the answer was bad — retreat to data, retreat to calculation, retreat to the cold, clean mathematics of survival where feelings couldn’t reach. Probability of tunnel terminating in destination: unknown. Probability of survival if water is depleted before reaching destination: declining. Probability of—
Jayde straightened up and kept walking.
Reasoning?
There was nothing to go back to. The crack she’d come through was sealed or lost or too far behind to find. Takara was up there somewhere, alive — she hoped — but unreachable. Reiko was in the Pavilion, unconscious, evolving into something she didn’t understand. Isha was silent. The Secret Realm’s deep zone had swallowed her whole, and the only direction that existed was forward.
(Forward is all we’ve ever had.)
Her practical self filed that under irrational but functional and said nothing more.
She ate walking. Dried meat and a travel biscuit from the rations in her supply pouch, washed down with careful sips from her waterskin. Not because she was particularly hungry — the exhaustion had dulled her appetite — but because training didn’t negotiate with comfort. You ate when you could. You drank on schedule. You maintained the machine whether the machine felt like being maintained or not.
Caloric intake: adequate. Water remaining: approximately one day at the current pace. Recommend rationing.
Jayde rationed.
***
After what felt like ten hours — or twelve, or eight, she’d lost the ability to tell — the tunnel started doing something to her mind.
Not magic. Not formation work. Nothing she could identify as an external influence. Just the slow, grinding erosion of stimulus deprivation. The same walls. The same stone. The same footsteps. The same breathing. The same unreachable light. Her thoughts began to loop. She’d start a tactical assessment and find herself three minutes later thinking about nothing at all, her legs moving on automatic, her eyes fixed on the glow ahead without actually seeing it.
She’d felt this before. Long marches. Forty-hour ops where sleep wasn’t an option and the mission was just move, move, move until the body forgot it was a body and became a mechanism for putting one foot in front of the other. The mind went somewhere else. Somewhere quiet and blank and mercifully empty.
Jayde let it happen. There was no point fighting it. The tunnel would end, or it wouldn’t, and either way her legs would keep moving.
Step. Step. Step. Step.
The light ahead.
Step. Step. Step.
Breathing.
Memories surfaced and sank like things in dark water. Green’s hands adjusting her stance. White’s voice, flat and merciless: Again. The smell of the Pavilion’s training hall after a long session — sweat and essence residue and the faint ozone tang of spent formations. Reiko’s warmth against her side at night, the steady rise and fall of his breathing, the way his silver eyes would track her across a room even when he was pretending to sleep.
Gone. The memories dissolved the moment she reached for them, replaced by the tunnel and the dark and the sound of her own footsteps.
Step. Step.
The pit surfaced once. Not a memory — a feeling. The specific quality of darkness when the walls are close enough to touch on both sides and the ceiling is low enough to feel, and there is nothing, nothing, nothing except the certainty that tomorrow will be exactly the same. She flinched away from it. Not with fear — she was past fearing the pit. With recognition. The tunnel was doing what the pit had done: reducing the world to the space her body occupied and daring her to keep existing inside it.
Jayde had kept existing then. She’d keep existing now.
Step.
(Jayde.)
The child’s voice. Small, but clear. Not panicked — patient. The way a younger sister might say your name when you’d been staring at a wall too long.
(The light. Look at the light.)
She didn’t want to. Looking at the light meant caring whether it was closer, and caring meant feeling, and feeling meant leaving the numb place where the walking was easy, and the darkness didn’t matter.
(Please.)
Jayde blinked. Focused. Looked at the glow ahead for the first time in — how long? An hour? Two?
It was closer.
Not by much. Not dramatically. But the quality had changed. Warmer now, less white, more amber, and the edges of it were sharper than they’d been. Not a trick of exhausted eyes. Not the optical phenomenon her analytical mind had suggested hours ago.
Closer. Actually closer.
(See? Told you.)
Something loosened in her chest. Not hope — she wasn’t ready for hope. Just the absence of the worst possibility. The tunnel had an end. She would reach it. That was enough.
Noted. Revised assessment: light source is a fixed point. We are making progress. Rate of approach: slow but measurable.
She took a breath. It hurt — her throat was raw, her lips cracked. She drank the last mouthful of water. Kept walking.
***
Jayde lost count of the hours after that. The numbness came and went in waves — long stretches of blank, mechanical movement broken by moments of sharp awareness when her boot caught a ridge in the stone or her bruised ribs reminded her they existed. The water was gone. She ate the last of the rations — a strip of dried fruit that tasted like nothing. Her mouth was dry. Her legs had moved past aching into a dull, constant throb that she filed under irrelevant and ignored.
The light grew. Slowly. Imperceptibly at first, then noticeably, the amber glow warming the dark stone until she could see the texture of the walls without trying. And the walls were changing. The featureless dark was resolving into something else. Something made.
Not carved. Grown. The stone had been shaped from within, coaxed into forms that followed no architectural tradition she’d ever studied — and she’d studied most of them, across two lifetimes and more star systems than she could count. These walls curved and joined without seams, without tool marks, without the telltale precision of formation work or the deliberate roughness of hand-craft. They looked the way bone looked inside a body — functional, organic, inevitable.
Architecture predating any formation language in existing Doha records. Unable to classify.
(Pretty.)
That too.
She’d been walking for what felt like days. Her body said it had been at least one full day — maybe more. No water. No food. Running on the fumes of stubbornness and the light that was, finally, undeniably, close.
***
The tunnel ended.
Not in a wall or a collapse or another passage, but in a space — small, as caverns went. Twenty paces across, perhaps. A ceiling Jayde could almost touch if she stretched. Lit by the amber-gold glow that had pulled her through a day of darkness, warm now, steady, like firelight without fire.
She stood at the threshold and breathed. Her legs were shaking. Her mouth was so dry her tongue stuck to her teeth. She was empty — of water, of food, of everything except the stubborn refusal to stop that had carried her this far.
The walls here were the same grown stone, but covered in something. Symbols. Dense, layered, carved in spirals and whorls that ran floor to ceiling in unbroken lines. Jayde couldn’t read them. Not in any language she knew — not Doha common script, not the handful of formation languages Green had taught her, not any of the seventeen standard languages from her past life that still lived in the back of her skull like muscle memory.
Unable to classify. Script form does not match any catalogued system. Filing.
She let it go. The symbols weren’t the point. She knew that the way she knew the tunnel had been watching — instinctively, without evidence, in the place behind her ribs where analysis couldn’t reach.
The point was in the centre of the cavern.
A pedestal. Black stone, the same grown material as the walls, rising from the floor like a single finger of darkness. Simple. Elegant. Ageless in a way that made the rest of the cavern look young.
On the pedestal: a sword.
Jayde stopped walking.
Assessment initiated.
The blade was long. Thin. Not delicate — precise, the way a surgeon’s scalpel was precise, every fraction of width serving a purpose. Dormant runes ran along the fuller, dark red against darker steel, so faint they might have been a trick of the amber light. The hilt was black — wrapped grip, tight, designed for a hand smaller than White’s. An intricate hand guard curved around the grip in patterns that she almost recognised, almost could name, the shapes hovering at the edge of meaning like a word you’d forgotten in a language you used to speak.
At the top of the hilt, where the guard met the pommel, a jewel. Dark red. Not ruby — something deeper, something that absorbed light rather than reflecting it. It sat in its setting like a closed eye. Sleeping. Or waiting.
The pommel was detailed with symbols she’d never seen. Different from the wall script — smaller, more deliberate, cut by hand rather than grown.
Scan complete. No traps detected. No wards. No defensive formations. No hostile essence signatures. No mechanisms of any kind.
(That’s weird.)
Extremely weird. A weapon of this apparent value and age, left unguarded in an accessible cavern. Either the defensive systems have degraded beyond detection, or—
(Or it doesn’t need guards.)
Insufficient data to—
(It’s been waiting for someone. And no one else was going to come.)
Her analytical mind went quiet. Not in agreement — it didn’t agree with intuition, ever — but in the specific way it went quiet when the available data supported a conclusion it couldn’t prove.
Jayde circled the pedestal. Slowly. Checking angles, checking shadows, checking the stone floor for pressure plates and the air for essence disturbances and every other thing that sixty years of not dying had taught her to check.
Nothing. The sword sat on its pedestal. The amber light pooled around it. The cavern waited with the patience of deep geology.
She completed the circle. Stood in front of it again.
The sword looked back at her.
Swords didn’t look. Jayde knew that. She had held and used and maintained and discarded more weapons across more battlefields than she could catalogue, and not one of them had ever looked at her. Weapons were tools. Tools were objects. Objects didn’t have attention.
This one did.
She could feel it. Not in her essence, not through any formation or bond or magical mechanism she could identify — just a pull. A resonance. Like a tuning fork that had been struck an age ago and was still vibrating, and she’d finally walked close enough to vibrate at the same frequency.
(It was made for me.)
That thought should have sounded insane. In a lifetime of insane thoughts — I died in a chair and woke up in a pit, I’m bonded to a shadowbeast, my father is a god — this one should have ranked somewhere near the top.
It didn’t. It sounded true.
Jayde reached for the hilt.







