Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 267 - 262: First Week

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Chapter 267: Chapter 262: First Week

Location: Obsidian Academy — Training Grounds / Classrooms / Elite Tier

Date/Time: 12–18 Emberrise, 9939 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm

She understood the "don’t eat beforehand" instruction within the first three minutes.

Sixth bell. The training ground was empty except for Heizan, who sat on the same low wall in the same position — cross-legged, bare feet, eating what appeared to be a different peach but might have been the same one. The weighted practice sword Jayde had selected from the rack was heavier than it looked, designed to punish bad grip and worse habits.

"Strike the post," Heizan said. Didn’t look up. "Any form."

She struck. Clean, controlled, using the foundation White had drilled into her over six months of Pavilion training — the basic overhead cut that translated across every sword school she’d studied in two lifetimes.

"Again."

She struck again.

"Again."

Again. And again. And again. For forty minutes, the only words Heizan said were "again" and, once, "slower." The peach disappeared. A second peach appeared. The sun crawled over the eastern peaks and lit the training ground in stripes of amber and stone.

On the seventy-third repetition, her empty stomach cramped. On the eighty-fourth, her forearms started shaking — the weighted sword pulling at tendons she hadn’t realised she was underusing. On the hundred-and-second, she understood.

He’s not testing the technique. He’s testing the body’s response to fatigue. How do the mechanics change when the muscles fail? What does the foundation default to when the conscious mind stops managing form?

(He wants to see what’s underneath.)

Yes. And an empty stomach accelerates the fatigue timeline. Efficient.

"Stop."

Jayde stopped. Sweat ran down her jaw. Her arms trembled. The practice sword’s tip wavered — barely, but enough. Heizan’s dark brown eyes tracked the waver with the focus of a man reading a sentence in a language only he could speak.

"Your foundation is good," he said. Not a compliment — a diagnosis. "Whoever taught you understood weight distribution. But your transitions are borrowed — you’re combining at least two different schools, and the seams show under stress."

She said nothing. He hadn’t asked a question.

"Sixth bell. Every day." He bit into the second peach. "Dismissed."

(That’s it?)

That’s it.

She walked back to the Elite tier on legs that felt like they’d been replaced with something less reliable. On her shoulder, Takara kneaded his claws into her robe with the rhythmic precision of a creature expressing an opinion about early mornings.

***

Classes started at the eighth bell.

Obsidian Academy’s class structure was stratified with the same brutal efficiency that governed everything else in the institution. Three tiers — Elite, Core, Normal — each containing five grade levels. New intake students entered Grade 1 and advanced through testing. Advancement was not guaranteed. Some students spent years in the same grade, grinding against their own limitations until they either broke through or broke down.

Jayde’s three subjects: Refining, Formations, and Runology. Each taught in the Elite tier’s dedicated classrooms — carved chambers deep in the mountain, lined with formation-etched walls that dampened stray essence and kept experimental mishaps from reaching the corridors.

The Refining classroom was the first.

Instructor assessment: Mid Blazecrowned, essence signature consistent with thirty-plus years of sustained practice. Teaching methodology: demonstration-first, correction-through-repetition. Competent but not exceptional. Curriculum will be foundational — entry-level theory that I mastered in the Pavilion eighteen months ago.

(We promised. We’re here for the experience, not just the learning.)

I’m aware.

The instructor — a compact woman with close-cropped silver hair and the no-nonsense posture of someone who had been teaching longer than most of her students had been alive — surveyed the room. Twenty-three Elite Grade 1 students. Black robes. Varied ages, mostly seventeen to twenty, though a few faces looked older.

"Refining is the foundation of cultivation advancement," she began. No introduction, no name, no pleasantries. "If your foundation is flawed, everything built on it will fail. I don’t care about your Secret Realm rankings. I don’t care about your family names. In this room, you refine or you leave."

Direct. Good.

Jayde sat three rows back. Optimal position — visible enough to avoid attention for hiding, far enough from the front to discourage the instructor from using her as a demonstration subject. Takara had settled on the desk beside her notebook, curled into a perfect white circle with his tail over his nose. His blue eyes were closed. His ears were rotated toward the instructor.

The student to Jayde’s left hadn’t looked at her once. He sat with the specific stillness of someone who had learned early that movement attracted attention and attention attracted trouble. Black hair with an auburn undertone, cut short and clean. Bronze skin. Lean build — not the cultivated leanness of starvation but the natural efficiency of someone whose body had been trained to waste nothing. Noble bone structure that he wore like a coat he’d rather not be noticed in.

Tawny amber eyes. Still. Watchful. Fixed on the instructor with an attention that had nothing to do with interest and everything to do with habit.

First rank. Ryo. The noble’s son who doesn’t act like a noble’s son.

He’d ranked first in the Secret Realm. Jayde had ranked 199th — deliberately. She’d noticed him at the ranking ceremony only because he’d received the announcement of his first-place finish with the same expression he wore now: nothing. No pride, no satisfaction, no acknowledgment that what he’d done was remarkable. Just the flat, controlled blankness of someone who treated achievement as a baseline, not a destination.

(He reminds me of someone.)

He reminds you of White.

(Different, though.)

Yes. White’s control comes from discipline imposed over fury. This one’s control is native. He was built quiet.

Ryo didn’t speak during the class. Not once. He refined when instructed, his essence control precise and unhurried. When the instructor corrected another student’s technique, his amber eyes tracked the correction with the focus of someone filing information — not the technique itself, but the instructor’s priorities, what she considered important, what she’d let slide.

He was mapping the class. Just like Jayde was.

***

Formations was different.

The instructor was a tall, angular man with Inferno-red hair and the particular intensity of someone who believed formations were the most important subject in the Academy and could not understand why anyone would study anything else. His name was Instructor Zhao, and he spoke with the rapid-fire enthusiasm of a person who had forgotten that not everyone shared his passion.

"Formations are the language of the world!" He gestured at the formation-etched walls with both hands. "Every essence interaction, every ward, every barrier, every tool you will ever use operates on principles that can be expressed as formations. If Refining is your muscles, Formations are your brain. Without them, you’re just hitting things very hard."

Instructor capability: genuine expertise. Passion sometimes outpaces pedagogy — he’ll move too fast for the weakest students and too slow for the strongest. I’ll need to manage my performance carefully.

(I like him.)

He’s excitable. Try not to encourage it.

This class was larger — forty students, including several she recognised from the ranking ceremony. Jayde took a seat toward the middle. Takara settled on the desk again, this time arranging himself on top of her formation textbook with the deliberate precision of a creature who wanted it known that he was sleeping on important documents and felt no remorse.

The student who sat down at her right was different from Ryo. Taller — six feet, though he carried himself smaller, shoulders hunched, taking up less space than his frame allowed. Dark hair that fell past his jaw, faintly shimmering blue-green in the essence-lantern light. Olive-gold skin that marked him as neither fully human nor fully... something else.

Sea-green eyes that swept the room once, fast, cataloguing threats — and then fixed on a point in the middle distance with the particular intensity of someone who had decided that looking at nothing was safer than looking at anyone.

His ears. Just visible beneath the dark hair. Slightly pointed.

Half-elf. Mid Inferno-tempered. Verdant and Torrent dual affinity — unusual combination. Second rank in the Secret Realm.

(Kiran.)

Kiran Duskborne. Half-elf heritage in a world that has no place for halves. Filed in the Character — filed as high-risk for social isolation. Temple groups will target him.

He didn’t look at Jayde. He didn’t look at anyone. He sat with the rigid posture of someone braced for a comment about his ears, his skin, his heritage — the particular readiness of a person who had been hit so many times from so many angles that his default state was armoured.

A student from the row behind leaned forward. "Hey — is that a real kitten?"

It took Jayde a moment to realise the question was directed at her. The student — a girl with broad shoulders and the calloused hands of someone who’d grown up working — was staring at Takara with the expression of someone whose entire day had just improved.

"He followed me from the frontier," Jayde said. "The Academy said I could keep him if he didn’t cause problems."

"He’s adorable." The girl reached out. Takara opened one blue eye, assessed the threat level of the approaching hand (none), and allowed himself to be scratched behind his left ear. His purr — involuntary, traitorous, devastating — filled the silence between formation lectures.

Three more students turned around. Then five. Within minutes, Takara was being passed from hand to hand like a very small, very dignified hostage, and the Formations classroom had devolved into a cluster of black-robed Elite students making cooing sounds over a white kitten who was, internally, composing his resignation.

Instructor Zhao looked up from his formation diagrams, saw a kitten being held aloft by a seventeen-year-old who was making baby noises, and said, with the weary resignation of a man who had seen worse: "If the cat can sit a formation exam, it can stay."

Kiran hadn’t moved during the commotion. But when Takara was eventually returned to Jayde’s desk — fur slightly ruffled, dignity slightly diminished — the half-elf’s sea-green eyes flicked to the kitten. Just once. The ghost of something that might have been amusement crossed his face before the armour came back.

"He’s tolerant," Kiran said. Not to Jayde. To the middle distance.

"He’s patient," Jayde corrected.

Kiran’s jaw tightened. The faintest shift — like he’d expected the conversation to go somewhere worse and was surprised that it hadn’t.

He didn’t say anything else. But he didn’t change seats, either.

***

Runology was quieter.

Smaller class — fifteen students, the smallest of Jayde’s three subjects. The instructor was an elderly woman who spoke barely above a whisper and drew rune diagrams with a hand that trembled slightly but never made an error. Her name was Instructor Wen, and she treated each rune like a word in a prayer — with reverence, precision, and the absolute expectation that her students would do the same.

"Runes are older than cultivation," she said. "Older than the realms. Older than the species who inhabit them. When you inscribe a rune, you are speaking in a language that predates your existence by orders of magnitude. Show respect."

Instructor capability: exceptional. Depth of knowledge suggests at least sixty years of dedicated study. Possibly the most valuable teacher in the Academy for my specific needs — rune theory intersects with formation arrays, artifact construction, and sword inscription at the advanced levels.

(This is the one we actually need.)

Yes.

Jayde sat at the front. Takara stayed on her shoulder, pressed against her neck — the warmth of a creature who had decided that Runology was acceptable and formation-class socialising was a war crime. His blue eyes tracked the instructor’s trembling hand as she drew the first basic rune set, and his ears rotated with a focus that had nothing to do with feline curiosity.

***

Eden’s track diverged after the first morning bell.

Alchemy, Healing, Poisons — a combination that had made the registration clerk pause and ask if she was certain. Eden had said yes with the flat certainty of someone who had been certain about things before the clerk was born.

They met at the communal dining hall for the evening meal. Long scarred tables, porridge that had been optimistic once, steamed buns, pickled vegetables, weak tea. The Elite tier’s section was quieter than the Normal tier’s chaos below — twenty thousand students crammed into a space designed for fifteen, the noise alone enough to rattle essence barriers.

"Alchemy’s interesting," Eden said, stirring her porridge with the methodical attention of someone cataloguing its nutritional value. "The theory is... different from what I expected. More intuitive. Less systematic."

Unusual phrasing. "Different from what I expected" — she expected something specific. Someone with that level of pre-existing knowledge in pharmaceutical theory doesn’t come from a frontier village. Filing that.

"Healing?"

"Promising. The instructor has actual field experience — not just theory. She’s treated combat injuries." Eden’s blue eyes were thoughtful. "The poisons class is the most advanced. The instructor assumes knowledge that most students don’t have. I’ll be fine."

(She’ll be more than fine. She’ll be the best student in that class within a month.)

She knows more than she should. Whatever her background actually is, her understanding of poisons and healing goes beyond anything a Lower Realm village orphan would have. Every correct answer she gives too quickly is a data point someone could track.

"Be careful."

Eden looked at her. One beat. "Always am."

They ate. Around them, the first-week social dynamics were crystallising — students sorting themselves into clusters based on ranking, background, cultivation affinity, and the thousand invisible social signals that determined who sat with whom. Noble-born students gravitated toward each other with the instinctive magnetism of shared vocabulary. Frontier kids clumped defensively. The top-ranked sat where they pleased and everyone adjusted around them.

Jayde watched. Filed. Said nothing.

***

The week settled inta o rhythm.

Sixth bell: Heizan. The training ground, the weighted sword, the repetitions that stripped her technique to its bones. He never demonstrated. Never corrected with words. He watched, said "again," and occasionally adjusted her grip with a two-fingered touch — the remaining fingers of his damaged left hand precise as surgical instruments. By the third morning, she understood his method: he was letting her body teach itself through exhaustion, stripping away the conscious management layer to expose the instinctive foundation underneath.

He’s reverse-engineering my training history through my failure patterns. Every time my form breaks under fatigue, he sees which school’s technique I default to. He’s mapping the seams.

(Is that dangerous?) 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚

For our cover? Potentially. He already knows I wasn’t Academy-trained. But he’s not reporting it. He’s... curious.

Eighth bell: classes. Refining, Formations, and Runology on rotating days. Jayde held back in everything — strong enough to pass, weak enough to bore. Entry Inferno-tempered, Torrent affinity only. The cover held. It was exhausting in a way that combat never was — the constant vigilance of mediocrity, the mental effort of performing below capacity while maintaining the illusion of effort.

Think of it as undercover operations. The best cover isn’t the one that’s invisible — it’s the one that’s boring.

(I hate being boring.)

I know.

Ryo appeared at the edges of her awareness like a shadow she kept almost seeing. He was in two of her three classes — Refining and Formations — and in both, he sat with the same controlled stillness, performed with the same precise competence, and spoke with the same economy of words. By the fourth day, Jayde had catalogued his patterns: he arrived early, left late, ate alone, trained alone, and watched everything with the amber-eyed focus of someone who had been taught that information was the only currency that never devalued.

He didn’t approach her. But on the third day, when a cluster of Core-class students deliberately shouldered past her in the corridor — testing the new Elite, seeing what she’d do — Ryo had been standing at the junction ahead. Watching. Not moving to help. Just... present. A witness who made the Core students recalculate.

The shouldering didn’t happen again.

Kiran was different. Where Ryo was absence — the deliberate removal of himself from social space — Kiran was bristle. He radiated don’t-touch-me with the efficiency of a porcupine, and the Temple-affiliated students had already found his particular frequency.

"Mixed-blood," one of them said on the second day, loud enough to carry. Not to Kiran directly — to the air beside him, which was worse. "Wonder who let him in."

Kiran’s sea-green eyes went flat. His jaw locked. His hands — and Jayde noticed this — had slightly too-sharp nails that he’d filed down but couldn’t quite hide. He said nothing. Walked past. His shoulders were higher when he sat down in Formations, and he didn’t lower them for the rest of the day.

(They’re targeting him because he’s half-elf.)

They’re targeting him because he’s vulnerable. The heritage is the handle, not the blade.

On the fifth day, Kiran sat beside Jayde in Formations without asking. Not next to her — one seat away, with the gap of someone who wanted proximity but not presumption. Takara, who had been sleeping on the desk, opened one eye, assessed the half-elf’s emotional state (guarded, hurt, stubborn), and deliberately stretched toward Kiran’s side of the desk.

Kiran looked at the kitten. The kitten looked at Kiran. Something passed between them that Jayde didn’t try to interpret.

"He likes you," Jayde said.

"He likes warmth." But Kiran’s hand moved — tentative, barely there — and scratched behind Takara’s right ear. The blue ribbon shifted. Takara purred.

And Kiran’s shoulders dropped. Just slightly. Just enough.

***

By the seventh day, the pattern was set.

Heizan at dawn. Classes through midday. Library in the afternoons — Jayde mapped the Academy’s collection with systematic Federation efficiency, identifying the texts that would be most useful and the sections that were restricted. Eden in the evenings, comparing notes across their divergent tracks. Takara was on every desk, in every classroom, charming every student and teacher he encountered while silently coordinating a protection detail that no one knew existed.

The cook in the Elite dining hall — a broad woman with flour-dusted arms and the particular warmth of someone who had been feeding teenagers for decades — had started saving fish scraps for Takara. She called him "little prince" and tucked pieces of dried fish into a cloth napkin that she left at Jayde’s usual seat.

Takara ate every piece with the dignified suffering of a five-thousand-year-old warrior being served scraps like a housecat. Internally, he was running tactical assessments of the kitchen staff’s loyalty profiles and wondering if the cook’s excellent instincts about fish quality indicated a background in military provisioning.

The Academy was settling around them. The first week’s chaos — the ranking shocks, the tier assignments, the false accusation, the mines — had smoothed into routine. Students found their rhythms. Friendships formed. Rivalries crystallised. The invisible architecture of twenty thousand young cultivators sorting themselves into the hierarchy that would define the next five years of their lives took shape with the organic inevitability of water finding its level.

Jayde watched it all.

Baseline established. Social map in progress. Meiling in Core tier — maintaining distance but not idle. Heizan a variable I didn’t anticipate. Ryo and Kiran are... potential.

(Potential what?)

Potential allies. Potential complications. Potential friends.

(Friends.)

Don’t say it like that.

(Like what?)

Like it’s something you’re allowed to want.

The evening bell rang. Seventh day. End of the first week. Jayde sat in her courtyard with Eden’s annotated herb list, Takara warm against her neck, the mountain air carrying the particular cold of late Emberrise — spring trying to happen, winter not quite done arguing.

Tomorrow: Heizan again. Classes again. The slow, careful work of being no one special in a place that consumed anyone who stood out.

She could do this. She’d done harder things.

(But I’ve never done this.)

Done what?

(Been a student. Just... a student. With classmates. And a kitten. And a cook who saves fish.)

No. You haven’t.

(Is it supposed to feel like this?)

Like what?

Jayde didn’t have a word for it. Not in Federation Standard, not in Doha Common, not in any of the languages she’d collected across two lifetimes. The closest she could get was: the feeling of a door that had always been locked, opening — not dramatically, not with fanfare, but with the quiet click of a mechanism that had been waiting for exactly the right key.

She didn’t name it. Naming things gave them weight, and weight made them harder to carry when they were inevitably taken away.

But she filed it. Carefully. In the place where she kept the things she wasn’t ready to examine yet.

On her shoulder, Takara purred. Whether it was tactical or genuine, neither of them could tell anymore.