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Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 173 - 168: Bronze Heihuo’s Hunt
Location: Demon Realm Border - Northeastern Territories
Time: Day 216-220 | 6-10 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Realm: Upper Realm (Demon Dominion Border)
The trail was three days cold and getting colder.
Heihuo landed on war-scarred stone—black basalt fractured by ancient violence, still bearing scorch marks from the last Zartonesh invasion ten thousand years ago. His massive bronze form cast shadows across terrain that wore its history like battle scars, where corruption from interdimensional war had seeped into the earth and never quite healed.
Four parallel scars—temple to jaw—pulled tight as wind cut across his scales with teeth of ice and ash. Voidmarch. The coldest month. And they were hunting shadow dragons through demon territories while winter tried to freeze the essence in their Crucible Cores.
"Essence signature confirmed," Tiejaw rumbled through their mental link. The veteran combat dragon crouched fifty meters east, examining disturbed ground with a millennium of tracking experience. "Shadow dragon. Passed through here approximately seventy hours ago. Heading northeast toward the demon capital."
Xinglong’s trail. Finally.
Three days since leaving the Burning Crown Inn. Three days tracking the shadow dragon regent through neutral borderlands and into demon territories proper. Following displaced essence signatures, questioning witnesses in border towns, piecing together the quintet’s path like assembling shattered pottery.
Xinglong was heading for the demon capital. For Ren d’Aar’s palace, where rumors said the Demon King had locked himself away after some mysterious journey. Where Heihuo suspected—hoped—the silver queen might be under demonic protection.
But there was a problem.
Heihuo spread his wings and lifted into the winter sky, gaining altitude until he could see the broader geography. Demon capital lay northeast—he could see its volcanic spires in the distance, smoke rising from the palace district like funeral offerings to gods who’d abandoned them millennia ago.
The silver pulse, though...
He’d felt that pulse. Every dragon with essence sensitivity had felt it—silver light powerful enough to cross realms, ancient bloodline waking from dormancy, magic that tasted like legends made manifest.
Direction: Southeast.
Not northeast toward the demon capital. Southeast. Different vector entirely.
Close enough that someone might confuse them if they weren’t paying attention. Close enough that Xinglong apparently had—a shadow dragon regent heading toward the palace based on rumors and coincidence rather than actual pulse direction.
But Heihuo was paying attention.
And the math didn’t work.
If the silver queen was in Ren’s palace, the pulse direction should point northeast. Should align with the capital’s location. Instead, it pointed southeast—demon territories, yes, but not the palace. Somewhere else. Somewhere in the broader demon realm that sprawled for millions of square kilometers.
So where is she?
Heihuo had spent the last three days wrestling with that question. Tracking Xinglong’s trail while simultaneously trying to verify pulse direction. Following northeast while knowing the actual source lay southeast.
And this morning, standing at this crossroads, he’d made a decision.
Smart reconnaissance before stupid assault.
Xinglong could waste time besieging a locked palace where the silver queen might not even be. Could throw himself at Ren d’Aar’s defenses and start a war based on coincidence and hope.
Heihuo would be smarter.
He’d verify the queen’s location first. Scout the demon territories southeast of here—the direction the pulse actually came from—before committing twenty bronze dragons to a battle that might be completely pointless.
"Change of plans," Heihuo announced through the mental link. His voice carrying command that allowed no argument. "We’re not following Xinglong to the capital. We’re conducting strategic reconnaissance southeast. Find the actual pulse origin before we commit to any action."
Twenty bronze dragons shifted formation. Some confusion rippling through the mental link—they’d been tracking Xinglong for days, why abandon the trail now?
But Heihuo’s personal team knew better than to question orders. They moved into a grid pattern, spreading across the demon borderlands southeast of their current position, essence senses extended to maximum range.
Searching for silver signatures in war-scarred wasteland while winter tried to kill them.
The demon realm border was nightmare geography rendered in ice and ancient violence.
Heihuo flew low over terrain that still bore wounds from the Fourth Zartonesh Invasion—ten thousand years ago, when interdimensional horrors had punched through reality itself and tried to consume Doha. The war had lasted decades. Casualties numbered in the millions. And even after victory, the land remembered.
Black stone fractured by energies that shouldn’t exist in normal reality. Pools of frozen essence—not water, not ice, something in between—that reflected wrong things when you looked too closely. Vegetation twisted by exposure to Zartonesh corruption, growing in patterns that hurt to perceive, producing flowers that bloomed in colors that had no names.
And everywhere, the cold.
Voidmarch in the demon territories was brutal. The realm’s natural volcanic heat should’ve made winter mild, but war-scarred zones rejected warmth like bodies rejecting poison. Frost formed on Heihuo’s bronze scales despite his Crucible Core cycling Inferno essence. Ice crystals grew in patterns that followed mathematical rules from dimensions humans would go mad contemplating.
His twenty dragons spread in a systematic grid formation. Each scanning a fifty-kilometer sector. Each extending essence senses to detect silver signatures, dragon bloodlines, anything that might indicate the queen’s location.
Each finding absolutely nothing.
"Sector four clear," Copperscale reported. "War-scarred zone, heavy Zartonesh corruption. No dragon signatures detected."
"Sector nine clear," Bronzeclaw added. "Found collapsed rift structure. Old. Ten thousand years minimum. Tested the residue—dimensional energies, no silver traces."
"Sector fifteen clear," Firewing said. "Encountered territorial shadowbeasts. Killed three. Nothing else of interest."
Nothing. Nothing. Nothing.
The reports filtered through Heihuo’s mind like water through cracked pottery, each one another confirmation that they were searching blind.
He landed on an outcropping of war-scarred basalt—black stone veined with something that glowed faint purple when essence passed nearby. Zartonesh taint. Still active after ten millennia. Still poisoning reality with its presence.
The landscape stretched before him like a map drawn by madness. Frozen pools reflected skies that weren’t quite right. Twisted vegetation grew in spirals that made his eyes hurt. And in the distance, more war-scarred zones spread like infection across demon territories.
Two million square kilometers of this. Maybe more. All of it damaged by ancient invasion. All of it potentially hiding one silver dragon.
This could take months.
Heihuo’s claws gouged stone. Left furrows that filled with purple glow—Zartonesh corruption bleeding up from below like old wounds reopening.
He’d made a strategic decision. Smart reconnaissance instead of blind assault. Verify the queen’s location before committing forces.
But standing here, looking at the impossible scope of demon territories, he wondered if smart strategy was just another word for wasting time.
***
By the second day, doubt was creeping in like frost.
"Sector twenty-three clear," Molten reported. The assassin sounded tired—forty-eight hours of constant searching, wearing even on dragons who could fight for days without rest. "Zartonesh rift scar, heavily corrupted. No silver signatures. No dragon essence at all except war residue."
"Sector thirty clear," Longyan added. The female lieutenant’s voice carried an edge of frustration. "Found old demon settlement. Abandoned during the invasion. Checked thoroughly. Nothing."
Heihuo stood on another outcropping, this one overlooking a frozen valley where reality itself looked wrong. The sky above was the correct color, but the wrong texture. Light bent in ways that violated physics. And when he extended his essence sense, the feedback made his Crucible Core ache.
War scars. Dimensional damage that would take another ten thousand years to fully heal. If it ever healed at all.
His team had covered nearly a thousand square kilometers in two days. Grid pattern. Systematic. Professional. Each sector scanned with essence senses that could detect dragon bloodlines from hundreds of kilometers away.
And they’d found nothing except war damage and corruption.
No silver queen. No ancient bloodline waking from dormancy. No dragon signatures that matched the pulse description.
Just wasteland. Just scars. Just evidence that the Zartonesh had nearly destroyed Doha, and only a desperate sacrifice had stopped them.
A demon patrol passed overhead—twenty demons in formation, Inferno-tempered minimum, patrolling their border territories with military precision that spoke of centuries of practice.
Heihuo’s team melted into the landscape. Twenty bronze dragons suppressing essence signatures, becoming invisible against war-scarred terrain that played tricks on perception anyway.
The demons passed without noticing. Flew northeast toward the capital. Disappeared into the winter sky.
Crisis avoided. But it cost them an hour of hiding. An hour when they could’ve been searching.
And after they resumed?
Still nothing.
Heihuo’s frustration built like pressure in a sealed vessel. Two days. Forty-eight hours. Thousands of kilometers scanned. Hundreds of potential hiding spots investigated.
Zero results.
Where are you?
The pulse had been real. He’d felt it himself—silver essence powerful enough to cross dimensional boundaries, dragon bloodline mixed with other signatures, magic that made his Crucible Core resonate with recognition.
She was out here somewhere.
Unless...
Unless the pulse didn’t come from demon territories at all.
The thought hit like a physical blow.
What if the magnitude had fooled everyone? What if a power strong enough to cross realms meant that distance was much greater than estimated? What if southeast from the dragon territories pointed through the demon realm to...
Mid Realm.
Or even the Lower Realm. Deep in territories where shadow dragons had better access. Where Xinglong’s brother Huifu had gone immediately, while the rest of the quintet scattered across the upper realms chasing ghosts.
No. Can’t be that. We’re in the right location. Just need to search more thoroughly.
But doubt gnawed at certainty like acid at metal.
***
Third day brought the first real challenge.
"Contact," Tiejaw’s voice snapped through the mental link. Sharp. Alert. Combat-ready. "Demon military patrol. Fifty strong. Multiple Blazecrowned. Heading our direction. They’ve detected us."
Heihuo’s essence signature flared with predatory interest before tactical calculation took over.
Fifty demons. Multiple Blazecrowned tier. In their own territories during winter, when the terrain favored defenders. Fight would be brutal. Might win, but casualties guaranteed. And political consequences?
War. Immediate, unavoidable, catastrophic war between bronze dragons and the demon realm.
"Suppress signatures," Heihuo commanded. "Avoid contact. We’re merchants caught in the wrong territory, not military forces conducting reconnaissance."
His team shifted. Twenty bronze dragons adopting humanoid forms, disguising themselves as traveling merchants who’d wandered off safe routes. Weapons hidden. Essence suppressed to appear harmless.
The demon patrol descended. Fifty warriors in formation that spoke of military discipline. Their leader—Apexblight tier, jade skin marked with combat scars—landed directly in front of Heihuo.
"You’re a long way from bronze territories," the demon said. Voice carrying authority backed by millennia of command experience. "Explain your presence in demon borderlands."
Heihuo adopted the merchant persona he’d practiced for centuries. Bowed respectfully. Voice humble despite rage burning underneath.
"Apologies, honored warrior. We’re transport merchants. Took the wrong route during the storm. Got turned around in war-scarred zones where essence plays tricks. Just trying to find our way back to neutral territories."
The demon studied him with eyes that had seen through better lies.
Long silence.
Tension building.
Then: "You have twelve hours to clear demon territories. If we find you here after that, we’ll assume hostile intent. Understood?"
"Perfectly understood, honored warrior. Thank you for your mercy."
The demon patrol lifted off. Disappeared northeast.
Heihuo heldthe merchant persona until they were gone. Then dropped it like discarded clothing, essence signature blazing with frustrated fury.
Twelve hours. They had twelve hours before demons returned with force.
Which meant the search was over.
Three days. Seventy-two hours of systematic reconnaissance. And all they’d accomplished was confirming the queen wasn’t in demon border territories and getting themselves expelled before the investigation was complete.
Wasted. All wasted.
***
By the fourth day, Heihuo stood on the same war-scarred outcropping where this hunt had started, looking at the winter sky and admitting failure.
Longyan landed beside him. The female lieutenant’s bronze scales were frost-covered despite her cultivation. Four days in Voidmarch had taken toll even on Blazecrowned dragons.
"Lord Heihuo," she said carefully. "We need to talk about strategy."
Heihuo said nothing. Just stared at the demon capital visible in the distance, smoking and locked down tight. Where Xinglong was probably trying to negotiate with Ren d’Aar. Where bronze dragons couldn’t go without starting a war.
"The pulse magnitude was enormous," Longyan continued. Professional. Tactical. Delivering bad news with the precision of someone who knew how commanders wanted information presented. "Strong enough to cross realms. But that kind of power..." She paused. "That means distance could be much greater than we estimated."
Heihuo’s jaw clenched. Four scars pulled tight.
"We’ve searched two thousand square kilometers of demon borderlands," Longyan said. "Four days. Twenty dragons with extended senses. Found nothing except war damage and territorial beasts. No silver signatures. No dragon essence except our own."
She met his eyes directly.
"I think the pulse came from much farther away," Longyan said quietly. "Not demon border. Not demon capital. Somewhere beyond Upper Realm entirely. Either Middle Realm..." She paused. "Or even Lower Realm if the magnitude was truly that enormous."
Lower Realm.
Heihuo’s claws gouged war-scarred stone. Left furrows that glowed with ancient corruption—Zartonesh taint bleeding up like old wounds remembering pain.
Lower Realm. Where shadow dragons had sent Huifu immediately. Where the weakest realm meant fewer competitors, easier hunting. Where a silver queen could hide among millions of humans who’d never recognize dragon bloodline when they saw it.
But Lower Realm access wasn’t like traveling to the Middle Realm. Wasn’t just a passage through established transit points.
Lower Realm required...
Tiejaw joined them on the outcropping before Heihuo could finish the thought. The veteran combat dragon’s presence was solid. Reliable. Two hundred years of service backing every word.
"The demon patrol commander was serious," Tiejaw said. "If we’re still here when they return, it’s combat. And combat in demon territories during winter against prepared forces?" He shook his head. "We’d lose half our team minimum. Maybe more."
"Agreed," Heihuo said. "We redirect. Question is where."
"Middle Realm is the logical choice," Longyan offered. "Standard transit points, no complications, massive territory to search, but accessible—"
"What about Lower Realm?" Heihuo interrupted. Voice controlled. Measured. Testing to see if his lieutenant knew what he already suspected.
Longyan and Tiejaw exchanged glances. The kind of look veterans shared when discussing uncomfortable truths with commanders who might not want to hear them.
"Lower Realm..." Tiejaw began carefully. "Is not an option for us, Lord Heihuo."
"Explain."
The veteran combat dragon settled his massive bronze form on war-scarred stone. Twenty thousand years of knowledge organizing itself into careful explanation.
"Lower Realm transit requires Realm Seals," Tiejaw said. "Dwarven-crafted devices. Incredibly rare. Incredibly expensive. Without one, Ala’s boundary protection destroys your cultivation foundation on crossing. Blazecrowned reduced to Inferno-tempered. Inferno-tempered knocked to Flamewrought. Permanent damage that no amount of subsequent cultivation can repair."
Heihuo had heard of Realm Seals. Vaguely. Ancient devices that allowed Upper Realm cultivators to access Lower territories without catastrophic foundation loss. But he’d never seen one. Never needed to think about them beyond abstract knowledge that they existed.
"The dwarves make them," Longyan added. Professional tone carrying grim implications. "Only the dwarves. They control unique materials found solely in their mountain territories, plus specialized crafting techniques passed down through generations. No other race can replicate them."
"And the dwarves..." Tiejaw continued. "Don’t trade with bronze dragons. Haven’t for three thousand years. Not since Elder Shanshe..." He paused diplomatically. "Had disagreements with their king over territorial boundaries."
Of course. Of course, grandfather’s aggressive politics from millennia ago would create yet another strategic weakness at exactly the moment they needed the advantage.
Heihuo’s jaw clenched. Four scars pulled tight.
"What about purchasing through intermediaries?" he demanded. "Surely there are ways—"
"Demon realm has ten to fifteen Realm Seals," Tiejaw said. "They’re allied with the dwarves. Regular trade. Shadow dragons have eight—royal treasury acquisitions through diplomatic channels. Red and green dragons have one or two each, bought at enormous cost through neutral parties."
Longyan’s bronze eyes held grim certainty. "Bronze dragon sect has zero, Lord Heihuo. And even if we could acquire one through black market channels—which would take months and cost more than most dragons earn in a century—there’s another problem."
"Which is?"
"Transit still damages your core," Longyan explained. "Realm Seals prevent catastrophic foundation loss, but the crossing itself fractures your Crucible Core. Guaranteed. Everyone who transits suffers core damage."
Heihuo’s essence signature flared with frustrated rage. "Then how—"
"They heal it," Tiejaw interrupted quietly. "Or they don’t. Two choices."
The veteran held up one claw. "Option one: Accept permanent damage. Keep the fractures forever. Never advance beyond your current tier. Cultivation ceiling permanently lowered. Career-ending but immediate—no additional cost beyond the Realm Seal itself."
Second claw. "Option two: Heal the damage. Requires one hundred to two hundred years in complete seclusion. Cannot use Ember Qi during the entire healing period—any Qi use makes damage permanent. Requires elven healing potions throughout the process. Multiple doses. Frightfully expensive. Only elves can make them."
"And elves," Longyan said softly, "also refuse trade with humans and human-aligned factions. Including bronze dragons. They’ll trade with demons, with shadow dragons, with dwarves themselves. But not with us."
The strategic implications assembled themselves in Heihuo’s mind like pieces of a particularly vicious puzzle.
Shadow dragons sent Huifu to the Lower Realm. Which meant they’d committed one of their eight precious Realm Seals to the mission. Which meant they’d also committed to either accepting permanent cultivation damage for Huifu or spending the enormous wealth required for elven healing potions, plus one hundred to two hundred years waiting for their brother to recover.
That kind of investment said they were taking the silver queen search very seriously indeed.
Demon realm had better access—ten to fifteen Realm Seals, dwarven alliance making acquisition easier, wealth to afford elven potions for healing. They could maintain a sustainable Lower Realm presence, while bronze dragons couldn’t even attempt entry.
And Sharlin? Radiant Realm had maybe three or four Realm Seals. Ancient acquisitions from before dwarven-human relations soured. Couldn’t get more. Couldn’t afford elven healing for most agents.
Which explained why her Lower Realm intelligence network was so weak. Why, she had maybe fifty agents there who’d accepted permanent cultivation damage because healing wasn’t an option. Why she was at such a severe disadvantage compared to demons and shadow dragons.
But at least she had some presence.
Bronze dragons had nothing. Zero Realm Seals. Zero Lower Realm access. Zero ability to compete in the realm where the silver queen might actually be hiding.
All because grandfather had pissed off the dwarves three thousand years ago and never bothered repairing relations.
"So Lower Realm is impossible," Heihuo said. Voice flat. Controlled despite fury building underneath. "Not difficult. Not expensive. Actually impossible because we lack the resources and cannot acquire them."
"Yes, Lord," Tiejaw confirmed.
"And even if I personally acquired a Realm Seal through theft or black market—even if I paid a fortune for it—I’d have to choose between accepting permanent Blazecrowned-to-Inferno-tempered reduction or committing to one hundred to two hundred years of healing that we cannot afford elven potions for."
"Yes, Lord," Longyan said quietly.
"Which means Middle Realm is not just the logical choice. It’s the only choice. Because Lower Realm access is strategically impossible for bronze dragon forces."
"Correct, Lord Heihuo."
Silence fell across the war-scarred outcropping. Winter wind cut through the space between them. Frost formed on bronze scales despite Crucible Cores cycling Inferno essence for warmth.
Heihuo stared at the demon capital in the distance. At Xinglong’s probable location. At the palace where Ren d’Aar sat behind locked doors with the demon realm’s superior resources and better access and political alliances that actually functioned.
Shadow dragons could send their quintet member to the Lower Realm with Realm Seal protection and healing commitment. The Demon realm could maintain a permanent Lower Realm presence through multiple Realm Seals and wealth. Even Sharlin had limited capability there. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
Bronze dragons? Nothing. Another strategic weakness. Another failure point. Another way grandfather’s ancient grudges and aggressive politics had crippled their faction at exactly the moment they needed every advantage.
With or without you, grandfather had said.
Well. Heihuo was discovering exactly how many "without" options that threat included.
Without Realm Seals. Without dwarven trade relations. Without elven healing access. Without Lower Realm capability. Without the resources that other factions took for granted.
All because Shanshe thought strength meant never admitting fault, never repairing bridges, never caring about long-term consequences of short-term aggression.
"Middle Realm," Heihuo said finally. Voice carrying command that came from certainty born of having zero alternatives. "We redirect to Middle Realm. Not because it’s preferable. Because it’s literally the only realm we can access beyond Upper territories."
"Understood, Lord," Tiejaw said.
"How long to reach the Middle Realm transit point?"
"Two days northeast," the veteran answered. "Standard passage—no ritual preparation needed, no cultivation damage, no Realm Seals required. We arrive, we search. Clean and efficient."
Two days versus impossible. Middle Realm versus strategically inaccessible Lower Realm. Limited search area versus total exclusion.
The math was brutal but simple.
"We leave immediately," Heihuo commanded. "Middle Realm. Standard search grid once we arrive. And when we find her—if we find her before shadow dragons do—we ensure the bronze dragon sect finally has the strategic asset grandfather’s politics have denied us for millennia."
His team dispersed. Twenty bronze dragons who’d followed him into the demon borderlands were now following him toward the Middle Realm because every other option was closed off by ancient grudges and failed diplomacy.
Heihuo remained on the outcropping. Watching winter wind cut across the war-scarred landscape. Watching frost form on stone that still remembered Zartonesh’s invasion from ten thousand years ago.
Four days wasted searching demon territories. And now he was discovering that even if he’d guessed correctly—even if the silver queen was in Lower Realm—bronze dragons couldn’t reach her. Couldn’t compete with factions who had Realm Seals, dwarven trade relations, and elven healing access.
Strategic disadvantage piled on strategic disadvantage. All stemming from grandfather’s certainty that strength alone mattered, that alliances were weakness, that admitting past mistakes was unthinkable.
Maybe that’s why you’re failing, Heihuo thought coldly. Maybe that’s why bronze dragon sect is tearing itself apart. Because you built an empire on violence and threats instead of sustainable power.
He spread his wings. Bronze membranes catching winter light. Four parallel scars reminding him why failure wasn’t acceptable.
The silver queen was out there.
Somewhere in the Middle Realm. Probably. Hopefully.
Because the Lower Realm was impossible, and the demon territories had proven empty and Middle Realm was the only option left.
Heihuo would search there. Would find her if she existed to be found. Would claim the prize that might finally give bronze dragons the strategic advantage they desperately needed.
And if that meant admitting grandfather’s politics had crippled them?
Fine.
The hunt continued.
Just in the only realm bronze dragons could actually access.
With four days already wasted and shadow dragons hunting with better resources and strategic options, Heihuo couldn’t match.







