Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 182 - 177: Awakening in Darkness

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Chapter 182: Chapter 177: Awakening in Darkness

Location: Thornhaven Village - No-Man’s-Land, Northern Territories

Time: Day 224 - 14 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI

Realm: Mid Realm

Lyria woke screaming.

Not the half-strangled gasp of normal nightmares. Not the confused whimper of bad dreams fading with dawn.

This was visceral. Raw. The kind of scream that tore throat tissue and made the vocal cords bleed.

Her mother burst through the door three heartbeats later, wings half-unfurled in panic, Aetherwing essence crackling silver-blue around her hands. Father followed, slower but steady, one hand on the hunting knife at his belt.

"Lyria!" Kaela’s wings folded tight against her back as she rushed to the bed. "Sweetheart, what’s wrong?"

But Lyria couldn’t answer. Couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t think past the images still flooding her mind like a dam had broken somewhere deep in her skull.

She saw everything.

All at once.

A girl wrapped in golden-silver light, suspended in crystalline fluid, dragon scales forming beneath human skin. Purple eyes watching from shadows, filled with desperation so profound it made reality crack. A woman with green eyes and auburn hair standing over a corpse, blood on white robes, rage and fear bleeding through perfect composure. Dragons fighting in skies painted red with fire, sects tearing each other apart, silver queens and bronze tyrants, and—

"She’s burning up." Aldris’s voice cut through the chaos. Her father’s hand pressed against her forehead, rough calluses cool against fevered skin. "Kaela, get water. Now."

The visions wouldn’t stop.

Gates opening into darkness. Devils pouring through. Realms burning or healing—two futures splitting like forked lightning. A bond reforming between Void and Light. Five factions hunting one girl. Shadows protecting. Death walking in radiance. Obsession blinding—

Pain exploded across Lyria’s forehead.

She screamed again. Clawed at her face. Felt something burning into her skin, carving lines of molten silver through flesh that smoked and sizzled.

"Gods!" Kaela dropped the water pitcher. It shattered on wooden planks. "Aldris, her forehead—"

The pain reached a crescendo. White-hot. Blinding. Like someone had taken a branding iron heated in Inferno essence and pressed it directly against her skull.

Then it stopped.

Silence crashed down like a physical weight.

Lyria gasped. Gulped air. Tasted blood where she’d bitten her tongue. Her whole body trembled, sweat-soaked nightgown clinging to skin that felt too hot, too tight, too small for whatever had just happened.

Slowly, she opened her eyes.

Her parents stood frozen. Staring. Kaela’s wings had gone rigid, primaries spread in shock. Aldris’s face had gone pale beneath his tan, pointed ears twitching with the kind of fear Lyria had never seen on her gentle father.

"What?" Her voice came out hoarse. Broken. "What’s wrong?"

Neither answered.

Kaela moved first. Stumbled to the small mirror hanging on the wall. Grabbed it with shaking hands. Held it up so Lyria could see.

A silver rune blazed on her forehead.

Complex. Geometric. Beautiful and terrible all at once. The main symbol sat centered above her brows—a sun-like pattern with eight rays spreading outward. But it didn’t stop there. Delicate lines branched from the central mark, flowing down her temples, curving along her cheekbones, disappearing beneath her jawline.

The rune glowed. Pulsed with its own internal light. Power that made the air around her head shimmer like heat haze.

"No." Kaela’s voice broke. "No, no, no. Not my daughter. Not—"

The door crashed open.

Lyria’s three younger siblings tumbled in—Mira first at eleven, then the twins Joren and Kael at eight. All three froze when they saw her face.

"Mama?" Mira’s voice came out small. Frightened. "Why is Lyria glowing?"

"Get the Elder." Aldris’s words came out sharp. Commanded. The tone he used when dire-bears wandered too close to the village. "Now. Run."

Joren was already moving, bare feet slapping against wood as he sprinted into the cold night.

***

Elder Torvald arrived within minutes.

The old man moved fast for someone who’d lived through three race wars and seen the Mid Realm nearly tear itself apart. His essence flared Peak Blazecrowned-tier as he entered their small cottage, grey robes billowing despite the lack of wind.

He took one look at Lyria’s forehead.

And swore.

"By Ala’s broken heart." The words came out quiet. Reverent. Horrified. "A new Prophetess."

Kaela made a broken sound. Wings wrapped around herself like a shield. "She’s fourteen. She’s just a child—"

"The gods don’t care about age." Torvald moved closer, his gaze fixed on the glowing rune. "How long ago did the mark appear?"

"Minutes," Aldris said. "She woke screaming. The rune burned into her skin while we watched."

Screaming from outside interrupted them.

Not one voice. Many.

Lyria’s hands clenched in her blankets as she recognized the sounds. The whole village waking. Reacting to whatever power surge had accompanied her awakening. Thornhaven wasn’t large—maybe two hundred souls—but those two hundred were alert, combat-ready, survivors who’d learned to recognize threats immediately.

Footsteps pounded. Voices raised. Within moments, the cottage was surrounded.

Elder Torvald moved to the window. Pushed it open. "Back to your homes! Nothing to fear—"

"The hell there isn’t!" That was Garrick, the blacksmith. Half-dwarf, half-human, built like a boulder. "We all felt that power spike, Elder. Something awakened. Something big."

"I’ll explain in the morning." Torvald’s voice carried authority earned through decades of keeping outcasts alive. "Return to your families. Now."

Grumbling. Muttered protests. But the footsteps retreated.

Mostly.

Lyria heard at least three people remaining. Watching. Waiting. That was Thornhaven’s way—trust the Elder, but verify. Always verify.

Torvald closed the window. Turned back to face them. His weathered face looked ancient in the lamplight, deep lines carving shadows across features that’d seen too much.

"We have to hide her," he said quietly. "If word reaches the Temple of Light—"

"They’ll kill her." Kaela’s wings trembled. "Won’t they? Because she’s not pure blood. Because she’s ours."

Silence confirmed it.

Lyria’s stomach turned to ice.

She’d heard the stories. Every outcast child heard them, whispered around fires when adults thought they weren’t listening. About how the Temple of Light controlled prophecy. How High Priestess Sharlin hoarded seers like precious gems. How the last Prophetess—the real Prophetess, the one with perfect accuracy—had supposedly been in "seclusion" for a thousand years.

Seclusion.

Right.

"They can’t know she exists." Aldris’s hand found Kaela’s. Squeezed. "We tell no one outside Thornhaven. The village keeps the secret."

"Can we do that?" Kaela’s voice cracked. "If the Temple’s seers felt the awakening—"

"They probably did." Torvald grimaced. "But the Mid Realm is vast. Primordial forests cover millions of square miles. We’re in no-man’s-land between the Ironveil Kingdom and the Silverleaf Territories. Neither royal house patrols here. The other races won’t search mixed-blood lands. If we’re careful—"

Lyria’s vision blurred.

Not tears. Visions.

The images slammed back into her mind with crushing force. She gasped, body going rigid, hands clawing at blankets as futures and presents and pasts collided in her skull.

The girl in the cocoon stirred. Golden light intensified. Scales completed their formation—

Purple eyes snapped open in darkness. A demon king rising from his throne, shadows writhing beneath jade skin—

Auburn hair whipping in wind. Sharlin standing before seers who clutched heads and bled from noses—

Dragons descending on villages. Fire and death and—

Her mouth opened.

Words came out that weren’t hers. Couldn’t be hers. The voice was wrong—deeper, resonant, layered with power that made the cottage walls vibrate.

"The Phoenix-Dragon rises from ash and blood.

The bond reforms between Void and Light.

Five factions hunt, but shadows protect.

The realms will burn or heal—the choice belongs to one."

Kaela whimpered. Aldris’s knife clattered to the floor.

But the prophetic voice continued, pulling words from Lyria’s throat like a puppeteer working strings:

"Silver queen awakens, bronze seeks dominion.

Death walks in radiance, obsession blinds the seer.

Beware the priestess who killed her predecessor—

The new voice will not be silenced."

The power released her.

Lyria collapsed back against her pillow, gasping, tasting copper. Blood trickled from her nose. Her whole body shook like she’d been thrown from a cliff.

"By all the gods." Torvald’s voice came from far away. Distant. Shocked. "She speaks of Sharlin. ’The priestess who killed her predecessor’—"

"The Temple will hunt her." Kaela’s wings wrapped tighter. "When they realize what she can see, what she knows—"

"We hide her." Aldris’s voice hardened with determination. "We fought in the Last Race War. We’ve survived royal purges and territorial disputes and predators that could tear apart Flamewrought cultivators. We can protect one girl."

"The whole village will need to know." Torvald moved toward the door. "And they’ll need to choose. Harboring a Prophetess from the Temple of Light... that’s declaring war on the Radiant Realm’s most powerful faction."

"Then we vote." Aldris stood. "Tomorrow. Full village assembly. Let them decide if they’ll stand with us."

Torvald nodded. Paused at the threshold. "For what it’s worth... I’ve never trusted Sharlin, and especially not the Temple of Light. If this child speaks truth about the old Prophetess’s death..." His jaw clenched. "Then maybe it’s time someone stood against that woman."

He left.

The cottage fell silent except for Lyria’s ragged breathing.

Kaela climbed onto the bed. Wrapped wings around her daughter like a shield. "We’ll keep you safe, sweetheart. I promise. No one’s taking you anywhere."

But Lyria barely heard.

The visions still flickered at the edges of her consciousness. Gentler now. Less overwhelming. But there. Always there. Showing her futures branching like tree roots, possibilities splitting and merging and splitting again.

She saw herself in Temple dungeons, chained like the old Prophetess, tortured for visions she couldn’t control.

She saw herself free, speaking prophecies that shattered kingdoms and reformed alliances.

She saw herself dead, throat cut, silenced before she could reveal what she knew.

And she saw the girl from her first vision—the one with amber eyes and golden fire—standing at a crossroads where one path led to salvation and the other to apocalypse.

That’s her, Lyria thought distantly. The Phoenix-Dragon. The one everyone’s hunting.

The silver rune pulsed on her forehead.

Warm. Constant. Permanent.

The mark that would make her a target for the rest of her life.

Outside, Voidmarch wind howled through primordial trees. Deep winter settling over the no-man’s-land where outcasts gathered and royal laws didn’t reach. Where mixed-bloods survived through loyalty and strength and the fierce determination to protect their own.

Lyria closed her eyes.

Let her mother’s wings shelter her.

And prayed to gods she wasn’t sure existed that Thornhaven’s walls would be enough when Sharlin’s hunters came.

Because they would come.

The visions showed her that with crystal clarity.

The only question was whether Lyria would still be free when they arrived.

***

Morning came too soon.

Lyria woke to grey light filtering through the cottage’s single window. Her whole body ached like she’d been thrown down a mountain. The silver rune on her forehead still glowed—fainter now, but present. Visible.

Can’t hide this.

The thought came with bitter certainty. She touched the mark gently, felt warmth beneath her fingers. Tried to will it away. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦

Nothing happened.

Permanent. Just like the stories said. Every Prophetess throughout history had borne the mark from awakening to death.

Voices drifted from outside. Low. Urgent. The whole village gathering.

Kaela appeared in the doorway, holding a thick scarf. "Let me try to cover it."

She wrapped the cloth around Lyria’s head carefully, looping it to conceal the glowing rune. But even through layers of wool, silver light leaked at the edges. Muted but unmistakable.

"It’s not working, Mama."

"I know." Kaela’s wings drooped. "But we try anyway."

The village assembly met in the central clearing—a space carved from primordial forest where ancient trees formed natural walls. Two hundred outcasts gathered, representing every mix of race Lyria had ever seen.

Garrick the blacksmith stood with his dwarf-human wife, their three children clustered behind them. Sera, the healer—elf and Aetherwing like Lyria—held hands with her human husband. The Korven family, all half-demons with jade-tinted skin and small horns. Old Matthis, who claimed giant blood and stood eight feet tall. Young Celeste, barely twenty, whose mother had been human and whose father had been a transformed spirit beast.

Every combination. Every possibility. United by one thing:

The rest of the Mid Realm hated them.

Elder Torvald stood on the raised platform. "You all felt the power surge last night. You’ve heard the rumors this morning. It’s time for truth."

He gestured to Lyria.

She climbed the platform slowly, scarf still wrapped around her head. Every eye in the clearing fixed on her. Watched. Waited.

"Show them," Torvald said gently.

Lyria’s hands trembled as she unwound the scarf.

The silver rune blazed in morning light.

Gasps rippled through the crowd. Someone swore. A child started crying.

"A Prophetess," Torvald announced. "Awakened nine days after the old one died. Young Lyria bears the mark. She’s seen visions. Spoken prophecy. And now we must decide."

"Decide what?" Garrick’s voice rang out. "Whether we turn her over to the Temple?"

"Whether we protect her," Torvald corrected. "Or send her away. Because keeping her here puts every soul in Thornhaven at risk."

Silence fell heavy.

"The Temple will hunt her," Sera spoke up. Calm. Clinical. "High Priestess Sharlin controls prophecy in the Radiant Realm. She won’t allow a free Prophetess. Especially not a mixed-blood."

"They’ll kill her." That was Celeste, her voice sharp with old pain. "Like they killed my mother when they found out she’d bonded with a spirit beast. Pure bloods don’t share power with our kind."

Murmurs of agreement.

"So we hide her." Matthis crossed massive arms. "We’ve hidden before. We’re good at hiding."

"This is different," someone argued. "This isn’t avoiding tax collectors or dodging territorial patrols. This is the Temple of Light. They have seers. Resources. If they decide to search—"

"Let them search." Aldris stepped forward, jaw set. "Let them send their Vanguards and their pure-blood zealots. We’ll do what we always do—fight. Survive. Protect our own."

Voices rose. Arguing. Debating.

Lyria stood silent on the platform, watching her people decide her fate. Saw fear in some faces. Determination in others. The weight of survival versus the instinct to defend.

Then a vision flickered.

Just a flash. But enough.

She saw Thornhaven burning. Saw Temple forces descending. Saw her people dying because they’d chosen to protect her.

No.

The word crystallized in her mind with absolute certainty.

"Wait." Her voice came out stronger than expected. Carrying. "Everyone, please. Wait."

The crowd quieted.

Lyria took a breath. "I don’t want anyone dying for me. I don’t want Thornhaven destroyed because of what I am. So if the vote is to send me away—" Her voice cracked. "I’ll go. I’ll hide somewhere else. Somewhere, the Temple won’t find me. But I won’t let you all burn for my sake."

Kaela made a broken sound. Wings half-spread in protest.

But Elder Torvald held up a hand. "The girl speaks wisdom beyond her years." He turned to face the assembly. "The question isn’t just protection. It’s whether harboring a Prophetess serves Thornhaven’s survival. So I ask you—what benefit does she bring?"

"Prophecy," Sera said immediately. "Real prophecy. Not the Temple’s manipulated visions. We’d know when royal patrols were coming. When territorial disputes threatened our borders. When—"

"When dangers approach," another voice added. "Spirit beasts. Demon incursions. Natural disasters."

"Information," Garrick rumbled. "The kind pure bloods hoard for themselves. We’d finally have an advantage."

The mood shifted.

Lyria felt it like the wind changing direction. Saw faces moving from fear to calculation to something that looked almost like... hope?

"We vote," Torvald declared. "All in favor of sheltering young Lyria, protecting her from the Temple, and keeping her existence secret—raise your hands."

Hands rose.

Not all. Some hung back, uncertainty clear.

But more than half the village voted yes.

Torvald nodded slowly. "Then it’s decided. Lyria stays. We hide her. We protect her. And if the Temple comes..." His weathered face hardened. "We remind them why outcasts survive when pure bloods would die."

Cheers erupted.

Not universal. Not enthusiastic. But present.

Lyria felt tears burning. Gratitude and terror mixing until she couldn’t tell them apart.

Her mother’s wings wrapped around her. "You’re safe. You’re staying home."

But even as relief flooded through her, the visions flickered.

Showed her futures branching:

One where Thornhaven held strong. Became a haven for the Prophetess who spoke truth instead of propaganda.

One where Temple forces found them. Where fire consumed the primordial forest, and everyone she loved died screaming.

And one where she escaped. Fled into deeper wilderness. Found allies in unexpected places—including a girl with amber eyes and scales forming beneath her skin.

The silver rune pulsed.

Warm. Constant. Binding her to a gift she’d never asked for.

I won’t be silenced, Lyria thought fiercely, remembering her own prophetic words. No matter what Sharlin wants. No matter who hunts me.

I’ll speak the truth.

Even if it burns the world.