©NovelBuddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 179 - 174: Ashes and Evidence
Location: Demon Realm Border Territories (Eastern Site)
Time: Day 222 (Doha Actual)
Realm: Demon Realm
Heiteng materialized in a flash of obsidian scales and mercury-silver eyes that gleamed with ancient power and the kind of cold calculation that came from ruling for millennia.
The Black Dragon King.
High Apexblight cultivation radiating outward like a miniature sun, making the very air around him shimmer with barely-contained essence that wanted to explode outward. Pressure so intense that weaker dragons would’ve been forced to their knees just from proximity, just from being in the same space as that much concentrated power.
"Stand down, Captain," Heiteng said quietly—not threatening, not aggressive, just stating fact with the calm certainty of someone who knew exactly how this was going to end.
Captain Luwei spun toward the new threat, Verdant essence already flaring around him in defensive preparation, barriers forming instinctively—then STOPPED cold when full recognition hit him like a hammer blow between the eyes.
Black dragons.
The exiled sect who’d been neutral for ten thousand years, who’d stayed out of dragon realm politics since Queen Xueteng’s death, who were rumored to be even more dangerous than their isolation suggested. Power and resources that made other sects nervous, made them wonder what the blacks were planning in their self-imposed exile.
"This isn’t your fight," Luwei said carefully. Emerald eyes tracking the black dragon king with the wariness of someone who recognized a superior predator and knew better than to make sudden movements.
"It is now."
Heiteng made a small gesture, and behind him, ten more black dragon warriors materialized out of stealth with the kind of synchronized precision that spoke of millennia of training together—appearing like shadows gaining substance, like nightmares becoming real.
All of them Blazecrowned tier. All armed with weapons that practically sang with razor edges and killing intent that made the air taste like metal. All radiating the kind of casual menace that made the air taste like danger and approaching death.
"The bronze heir is ours," Heiteng continued. His voice carried absolute certainty—not a request, not a negotiation, not even really a threat. Just a statement of how things were going to be, like he was describing the weather or stating that water was wet. "You have two choices. Fight us and die here. Or take your wounded warriors and leave while you still can. Choose quickly."
Captain Luwei looked at his six wounded dragons—warriors who’d already given everything they had, who were exhausted and bleeding and operating on fumes and desperation and not much else.
Looked at the unconscious Heihuo lying in a spreading pool of his own blood.
Looked at ten fresh black dragon warriors plus their obviously powerful king, who radiated the kind of aura that screamed High Apexblight at minimum.
The mathematics were brutally simple and didn’t require deep tactical analysis.
They’d won their fight against bronze. Barely. At a terrible cost that’d take years to recover from. His team was running on empty, and going up against eleven fresh black dragons led by what his instincts screamed was a High Apexblight-tier opponent?
Suicide. Absolute suicide with no chance of victory, no hope of survival. Just death for everyone under his command.
"We’re leaving," Luwei said flatly—making the only choice that made tactical sense, the only choice that wouldn’t result in his entire remaining team dying in the next sixty seconds.
He gestured to his surviving warriors. "Collect the bodies of our fallen. We’re extracting."
The green dragons moved with the kind of tired efficiency that came from long experience with battlefield cleanup, with retrieving fallen comrades under less-than-ideal circumstances. Gathering the corpses of their five dead teammates with the reverence born of ten thousand years of military tradition that said you never left your people behind if there was any choice.
Dragons didn’t abandon their dead. The fallen deserved proper rites. Proper burial. Proper respect for the sacrifice they’d made.
Luwei took one last look at the unconscious Heihuo before he turned to go—one last moment of wondering what might’ve been if circumstances were different.
"Why?" he asked Heiteng. Genuine curiosity overriding tactical caution for a moment, overriding the voice in his head that said shut up and leave while you can. "Why intervene to save bronze scum? Your sect’s been neutral for ten millennia. Why break that now for HIM?"
Heiteng’s smile was a cold, terrible thing that never touched his mercury-silver eyes—the kind of expression that promised pain and suffering and justice delivered with surgical precision.
"Because someone needs justice delivered," the black dragon king said quietly. "And justice requires that the criminal be alive and fully aware when that delivery happens. This one has crimes to answer for. Debts to pay. And I intend to make absolutely certain he pays them in full."
Understanding flickered across Captain Luwei’s emerald eyes as memory connected to rumor, as pieces fell into place.
The whispered stories about Heihuo and a shadow dragon princess. About an attempted rape that’d been hushed up through political connections. About political protection, keeping the bronze heir safe from consequences despite what everyone knew he’d done, despite the evidence, despite the victim’s testimony.
Apparently, that protection had just run out. Apparently, the bills were coming due.
"Then I sincerely hope she makes him suffer," Luwei said with feeling—meant every word, every syllable of vicious satisfaction. "I hope she takes her time. I hope she makes it hurt in ways he can’t even imagine. I hope he begs for death and doesn’t get it."
He activated his personal teleport talisman.
He activated his own teleport talisman, silver flash building around the remaining green warriors.
The dimensional tear opened, pulling them through—
And Heiteng moved.
***
Not toward Heihuo. Toward the departing greens.
Voidshadow blade materialized in his hand, an obsidian weapon that seemed to drink surrounding light, moving faster than exhausted warriors could possibly perceive. Ten black warriors dropped from the canyon rim in perfect synchronization, landing in a precise circle around the forming portal with coordination that spoke of countless rehearsals.
"I’m sorry," Heiteng said quietly, and the terrible thing was he actually sounded like he meant it. "Nothing personal. Just... necessary."
Luwei had maybe half a second to understand what was happening, to feel betrayal lance through exhaustion, before the blade took his head.
Clean strike. Professional. The kind of killing blow that came from a warrior who’d done this so many times, muscle memory guided the motion. Captain Luwei’s head separated from his body mid-teleport activation, arterial spray painting stone crimson as his body collapsed. The teleport talisman’s essence fizzled out, half-formed portal collapsing as its channeler died.
The other five greens followed their captain into death almost simultaneously—black warriors striking with professional efficiency born from millennia of coordinated combat operations. No hesitation. No mercy. No unnecessary cruelty.
Blades finding throats with surgical precision. Hearts pierced through gaps in scales weakened by earlier injuries. Spines severed at points where paralysis would be instant and death would follow within heartbeats.
Killing blows delivered by warriors who understood exactly how to end life quickly, cleanly, and efficiently. Who’d done this enough times, it was just another task to complete.
The six wounded greens died barely understanding they’d been betrayed, that the offered escape had been a lie from the beginning. No time for fear beyond that first spike of adrenaline. Barely time for pain to register beyond initial shock. Just sudden darkness rushing up to claim them, the sensation of falling into nothing, consciousness extinguishing like a candle flame in high wind.
Captain Luwei. Plus five wounded warriors. Dead.
Combined with the seven killed during the bronze fighting, that made thirteen total green casualties in the canyon. Two critical evacuated. ZERO survivors remaining on site.
Heiteng stood amid the fresh carnage, obsidian scales splattered with green blood that looked almost black against his natural coloring. He looked at Xinglong, who’d materialized beside him during the execution, Shadow Prince with golden eyes that reflected the spreading blood pools with disturbing calm.
"Plant the second crystal now," Heiteng ordered one of his warriors. "Shows reds arriving just after the two greens teleported out. The one that shows reds systematically executing the remaining wounded greens. Make the timeline crystal clear—greens won, started evacuation, then reds struck while they were vulnerable."
The black warrior nodded, pulling the prepared recording crystal from storage. Moved to position it where green sect investigators would find it—partially hidden in rubble, as if knocked loose during the red attack, but visible enough to be discovered during a thorough site examination.
Evidence planted. Narrative established. Scene set.
Heiteng turned to Xinglong. "Status on the eastern site?"
"Ren’s finished," Xinglong confirmed, golden eyes unfocusing slightly as he sensed through their communication network. "All objectives achieved. All bronze eliminated. All red eliminated. Evidence planted showing green-red coordination against bronze forces."
"Clean?"
"Completely. The crystal Ren prepared will be delivered anonymously to Elder Shanshe within the hour. He’ll see what appears to be proof that greens and reds allied to eliminate his enforcers." Xinglong’s expression was coldly satisfied. "Meanwhile, Elder Caoya will receive dying testimony from his critical warriors, plus the crystal showing green victory, and his investigators will report back that the reds killed his survivors."
"And Elder Dalong?"
"All eighteen of his reds are dead at the eastern site. No survivors. He’ll send investigators who’ll find the planted evidence showing bronze-green forces coordinating against reds." Xinglong smiled without humor. "Each sect gets their proof. Each sect believes the other two betrayed them."
"Good," Heiteng said with satisfaction that felt somehow wrong standing among so many corpses, surrounded by so much spilled blood. "The story writes itself after that. No contradictions. No survivors to question the narrative. Just dying warriors’ final testimony and physical evidence supporting their claims."
Xinglong nodded slowly, golden eyes tracking across the carnage with professional assessment rather than emotional reaction. "So the scheme works exactly as designed."
"Perfectly," Heiteng confirmed, then gestured at the scattered corpses with one blood-stained claw. "Thirty-four total dead across both sites. Bronze thinks greens and reds allied against them. Greens think bronze and reds allied against them. Reds are completely eliminated, so they can’t think anything. And the truth?"
"The truth died with everyone who saw it," Xinglong said. "Beautiful. Ruthless. Effective."
***
Ren materialized with a purple Voidshadow flash that made reality ripple outward in concentric waves, Peak Eternalpyre presence pressing down hard enough to make the stone crack beneath his feet with sharp reports.
He moved to Heihuo’s unconscious form, reached into the bronze dragon’s storage pouch with casual ease that spoke to absolute mastery of spatial manipulation. Withdrew a small crystal pulsing with faint bronze essence—Heihuo’s life crystal, the duplicate that connected to Elder Shanshe’s Hall of Eternal Vigil.
"Can’t have bronze sect knowing their heir survived," Ren said quietly, holding the crystal up to catch the light. "They need to believe he died here with the rest of his force. Otherwise, they’ll search. They’ll investigate too thoroughly. They’ll discover inconsistencies."
He closed his hand around the crystal.
Purple Voidshadow essence flared, crushing pressure that made reality groan. The life crystal shattered with a sharp crack, fragments dissolving into motes of light that faded quickly.
In the Hall of Eternal Vigil, three realms away, Heihuo’s life crystal would be shattering on its pedestal right now. Elder Shanshe would be watching his grandson’s essence signature extinguish. Believing him dead.
"Now he’s dead to them," Ren confirmed with cold satisfaction. "Bronze mourns their heir. Blacks hold him for justice. Perfect."
"Now the bodies," Heiteng continued, voice taking on a harder edge. "We need to explain why investigators won’t find Heihuo’s corpse despite his life crystal shattering. The story needs to be that reds destroyed most of the evidence covering their tracks after the rescue."
He turned to his ten warriors. "Systematic incineration. Focus especially on the area around where Heihuo fell—that entire section needs to be ash and melted stone. Leave some partial remains scattered throughout—enough for investigators to confirm casualties and identify some dead, but make it look like reds got sloppy in their rush. They tried destroying all evidence but left just enough for us to piece together what happened."
The black warriors spread out across the canyon, taking positions around the corpse-littered battlefield. Twenty bronze bodies. Fourteen green bodies. Thirty-four total that needed... adjustment.
"Use Inferno essence," Heiteng specified. "Red sect signature style. Make it obvious reds did this, not demons, not blacks. I want red Inferno essence traces all over the destruction patterns. Communication crystals that survived initial fighting but got damaged during body destruction. Melted armor with red essence signatures. Make investigators work to identify remains—dragon scales don’t burn easily, but sustained Inferno assault at Apexblight level will reduce most tissue to ash while leaving enough fragments for forensic confirmation."
Xinglong nodded understanding. "Which bodies do we leave more intact?"
"Random distribution," Heiteng decided. "Some bronze. Some green. Make it look like the reds were working fast, maybe got interrupted, or worried about response time. Started with Heihuo’s section—completely obliterated, explaining the missing heir’s body. Then moved outward but didn’t finish before retreating. Left maybe eight to ten bodies partially intact enough for visual identification. Rest reduced to fragments, ash, melted equipment."
"Heihuo himself?" one warrior asked, gesturing at the unconscious bronze heir.
"I’ll handle him personally," Heiteng said. "Get him out of here before the fires start. Can’t have investigators finding fresh tracks or dimensional transit signatures near his supposed death site."
***
The black warriors began their grim work with professional efficiency that spoke to careful planning and rehearsal.
Inferno essence blazed across the canyon in coordinated waves, red-gold flames that reached temperatures hot enough to make stone run like water. Not the purple-black Voidshadow that demons preferred. Not the obsidian flames that blacks could generate. Pure crimson Inferno matching red sect signature techniques perfectly—any forensic examination would identify the essence traces as red dragon origin without question.
They started at the canyon’s center, where Heihuo had fallen, where his unconscious form had lain until Heiteng secured him moments ago. Concentrated Inferno assault turned that entire section into an inferno that made the air shimmer from heat distortion visible even from the canyon rim.
Bronze bodies in that zone—five of them, including Heihuo’s personal guard—were systematically reduced to ash and fragments within two minutes. Scales that could withstand normal fire turned brittle and crumbled under sustained Apexblight-level assault. Flesh literally vaporized, leaving only carbonized bone fragments and partially melted armor. The stone beneath glowed red-hot, actually melting in places, creating pools of liquefied rock that would cool into glass-like formations.
The recording crystal they’d planted earlier—positioned at the canyon’s edge, away from the most intense destruction—survived the flames. Partially damaged, the essence coating cracked from heat exposure, but still functional. Perfect. Made it look like it survived by chance or oversight rather than by design.
The warriors moved outward in a systematic pattern, reducing bodies to varying degrees of completeness based on Heiteng’s instructions. Some bronze warriors ended up as little more than piles of ash with a few scales and bone fragments for identification. Some green warriors suffered the same fate—carbonized beyond easy recognition, requiring careful forensic analysis to confirm identity.
But others—scattered randomly throughout the canyon—received less intense treatment. Still burned, still damaged by Inferno assault, but recognizable. Faces partially preserved. Distinctive scarring visible. Armor intact enough to show sect markings and personal insignia. Eight bodies total left in condition where investigators could make visual identification without extensive lab work.
The smell was absolutely horrible—burned dragon flesh mixed with melted metal and superheated stone, creating thick oily smoke that rose in a column visible for kilometers. The kind of smoke that announced major combat engagement, that would draw investigators like moths to flame once sect life crystals shattered and emergency protocols activated.
Throughout it all, the black warriors carefully channeled their Inferno essence to leave red sect signature traces. Not their natural obsidian flames. Not neutral fire. Specifically, red-tinted essence that forensic examination would identify as coming from red dragon cultivation techniques. Every scorch mark. Every melted section. Every carbonized corpse.
Evidence that red dragons had done this. Had systematically destroyed bodies after their massacre of wounded greens and rescue of Heihuo. Had tried covering their tracks but gotten sloppy in their rush or overconfidence.
"Communication crystals," Xinglong directed, moving among the destruction. "Some need to survive but show fire damage. Make it look like reds tried destroying them but missed a few or didn’t finish the job."
Black warriors carefully damaged several communication crystals scattered across the battlefield—enough to show attempted destruction, not enough to make them completely unrecoverable. Cracked housings. Partially melted essence matrices. But cores still intact, still holding stored messages and recorded conversations that would support the planted narrative.
The whole process took maybe five minutes. five minutes to transform a battlefield of intact corpses into a scene of systematic evidence destruction that still left enough fragments for investigators to piece together the story.
Thirty-four bodies reduced to varying degrees of ash, fragments, and partial remains. The area around Heihuo’s last position was completely obliterated—explaining why investigators would find no trace of the bronze heir despite his shattered life crystal confirming death. Red Inferno essence signatures throughout the destruction patterns. Partial bodies and equipment fragments suggesting reds got interrupted or rushed.
Perfect.
"Investigators will find exactly what they expect to find," Heiteng said with satisfaction, surveying the transformed battlefield. "Evidence of green victory over bronze. Evidence of red arrival and the massacre of wounded greens. And evidence that reds tried destroying proof of their involvement but failed to be thorough enough."
"The missing heir’s body?" Xinglong prompted.
"Complete incineration in the most intense fire zone," Heiteng confirmed, gesturing at the still-glowing section where stone had melted. "Investigators will conclude reds either took extra time destroying their rescued ally’s remains to prevent any chance of resurrection techniques, or that Heihuo’s position at the center of defensive formation meant his body was in the area that received the most concentrated destruction. Either explanation works. Either way, no body to find means no way to prove he survived."
"And the recording crystal will show the reds doing all of this," Xinglong added. "Systematic body destruction. Evidence elimination. Everything investigators need to conclude this was a coordinated red-bronze operation gone wrong—bronze betrayed by their supposed red allies who slaughtered greens then tried covering tracks."
***
Ren surveyed the canyon with purple eyes that missed nothing. The transformed battlefield. The destroyed bodies. The ash and melted stone. The carefully preserved recording crystal. The red Inferno essence signatures coating everything.
"Excellent work," he said, voice carrying quiet satisfaction. "Timeline looks perfect."
He moved through the destruction, examining the patterns with professional assessment born from ten millennia of orchestrating far more complex schemes.
"The section where Heihuo fell—completely obliterated. No body to recover. Explains missing heir despite shattered life crystal. Investigators will conclude reds either took extra care destroying their rescued ally’s remains, or that he was simply in the wrong place when the concentrated Inferno assault hit." Ren nodded approval. "Either way, no corpse means no proof of survival."
He then pulled a small device from storage—an essence monitor keyed to track life crystal responses. "Life crystals have shattered in all three sect halls. Thirty bronze at Elder Shanshe’s Hall of Eternal Vigil. Thirteen green at Elder Caoya’s Hall of Living Essence. Eighteen red at Elder Dalong’s Hall of Enduring Flame."
The device pulsed, confirming distant essence signatures across three locations.
"The keepers are running to their elders as we speak," Ren continued with cold satisfaction. "Reporting total losses. Entire strike forces eliminated. Within the hour, investigators will be dispatched to both sites."
"And they’ll find exactly what we want them to find," Heiteng finished. He gestured at Heihuo’s unconscious form. "I’ll take this trash to our holding cells. Xingteng can have her justice when she’s ready. You two coordinate the intelligence monitoring?"
"Already in motion," Ren confirmed. "Operatives positioned to observe all three sect responses. We’ll track how they interpret the evidence, adjust if necessary, and ensure the narrative takes hold properly."
Xinglong nodded. "The beauty is we don’t need to do much. The evidence is solid enough that they’ll convince themselves. Dying warriors’ testimony will override any skepticism. Physical proof will confirm suspicions. And since there are no survivors to contradict anything..."
"The truth dies with the witnesses," Ren said quietly. "As designed."
"Good," Xinglong said with cold finality, golden eyes showing no mercy, no regret. "They hunted queens for political convenience. They hunted innocents because their elders commanded it, and they never questioned whether it was right. They chose to be weapons pointed at the helpless. Deserved worse than clean deaths in honest combat."
"Agreed," Ren said, purple eyes unfocusing slightly as he reached out through his extensive operative network woven across all three realms. Sensing dimensional transits. Tracking essence signatures across hundreds of kilometers. Monitoring communication crystals. Watching for the cascade of reactions about to begin.
His awareness touched something—
"Two greens already arrived at healing chambers, both are—" He paused, awareness tracking their life signs with precision.
"— dead now," he finished with grim satisfaction.







