Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 209 - 204: Cold Trail

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Chapter 209: Chapter 204: Cold Trail

Location: Dark Forest, Lower Realm

Date/Time: 1-2 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm

The Dark Forest lived up to its name.

Xingteng had seen ancient forests before—the shadow groves of the Dragon Domain, the twilight woods where her people had hunted for millennia. But this place was different. Older. The trees here didn’t just grow; they watched. Massive ironbarks with trunks wider than palace halls stretched toward a canopy so thick that even midday felt like perpetual dusk.

"Stay close," Xinglong murmured from the front of their group. His golden eyes swept the shadows between enormous roots. "The forest is... aware."

Xingteng felt it too. Not hostility—something more complex. Ancient intelligence observing their passage, weighing their intentions against criteria older than dragon civilization itself.

The six of them moved in formation through the primordial woodland. Heiteng and Xinglong at the front, mercury and gold eyes scanning for threats. Huifu and Hulong flanking, the warrior and the analyst covering different angles. Xingteng and Yinglong at the rear, sisters who’d learned to guard each other’s backs long before this mission began.

All in human form. All suppressing their cultivation signatures to avoid drawing attention. Six dragons pretending to be travelers in a realm where their true nature would cause panic.

A shadowbeast crossed their path, a common forest dweller the size of a large dog. It froze when it sensed them, amber eyes reflecting what little light filtered through the canopy. For a long moment, it simply stared, as if trying to reconcile what its instincts told it (predators, run) with what its eyes showed (humans, harmless). 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚

Huifu made a small shooing gesture. The shadowbeast bolted into the underbrush, crashing through dead leaves and vanishing between massive roots.

"Even the beasts know something’s wrong with us," Hulong observed quietly.

"We’re suppressing cultivation, not nature," Xinglong replied. "Dragons are apex predators. Even in human form, lesser creatures sense it."

They continued deeper into the ancient woodland. The trees grew larger as they progressed, their trunks scarred with age, their roots creating labyrinthine passages that forced constant detours. Bioluminescent fungi clung to bark in clusters, providing faint blue-green light that made the forest feel less like a place and more like the inside of something living.

The journey from Vor’thane’s sanctuary had taken days through this unfamiliar terrain. Days added to the weeks already lost to planning, to the necessary bloodshed that had cleared their path of hunters, to the careful coordination across realms that couldn’t be rushed, no matter how urgently Xingteng wished otherwise.

"There." Heiteng stopped, pointing toward a rock formation half-hidden behind a curtain of hanging vines. "Vor’thane’s coordinates match this location."

Xingteng’s heart quickened.

Please, she thought. Please let them still be here.

+++

The cave entrance revealed itself only when they pushed through the vine curtain.

Clever concealment. Without Vor’thane’s intelligence, they might have searched for days and walked right past it. The ironbark roots created natural barriers, the rock face blended with the surrounding stone, and subtle ward remnants suggested someone had reinforced the natural camouflage with cultivation techniques.

Ward remnants. Fading. Which meant—

"Empty," Huifu said flatly, emerging from the cave mouth after a quick scout. His jaw was tight with frustration. "No one’s been here for days, at least."

Xingteng pushed past him before anyone could stop her.

The cave interior told a story of recent habitation. A fire pit, cold but recently used—ashes still held their shape, hadn’t scattered. Sleeping alcoves carved into stone, three of them, with indentations suggesting regular use. Storage niches that had clearly held supplies now emptied.

Xingteng paused beside one of the sleeping alcoves. Someone small had slept here—the indentation was shallow, the space compact. A child? No, the essence residue was adult, just... diminutive. The second alcove was larger, and carried a faint warmth that made her dragon blood stir in recognition.

Silver, she thought. The pure silver queen slept here.

The third alcove was different still. Larger. And the essence signature clinging to the stone was neither human nor dragon but something in between—beast and intelligence merged, predator and protector combined.

"Shadowbeast," Hulong said, examining the third alcove with analytical precision. "A large one. But the signature is... strange. More complex than any common forest beast."

"Bonded," Heiteng said quietly. "This shadowbeast is soul-bonded to someone. The complexity you’re sensing is the bond itself."

And deeper, through a narrow passage that opened into something that made her breath catch—

A sanctuary.

The cavern had been shaped. Walls smooth as glass, inscribed with patterns that seemed to shift when viewed directly. The space hummed with residual essence, silver and warm, like sunlight remembered rather than experienced.

"Dragon sanctuary," Heiteng said quietly from behind her. "Someone created a proper dragon sanctuary inside this mountain."

"The pure silver queen." Xinglong’s voice held something like awe. "She has real power. This kind of space-shaping takes decades to master."

But Xingteng barely heard them.

She stood in the center of the sanctuary, eyes closed, reaching with senses that had been carved open by trauma and refined by desperate hope. Searching for what she’d crossed realms to find.

There.

Silver. Faint as morning mist, delicate as spider silk, but unmistakable. Silver dragon essence woven into the very stone, like perfume lingering in an empty room.

"She was here," Xingteng breathed. Her hand pressed against the smooth wall, and tears threatened—stupid tears she blinked away fiercely. "Both of them. I can feel... echoes."

"How long?" Xinglong asked.

Xingteng reached deeper. Let the resonance wash through her, trying to read the fading signature like words written in water.

"Days. Maybe a week." Her voice cracked. "The resonance is dispersing. I can tell they were here, but the direction they went..." She shook her head. "It’s like smoke. I can’t track it."

Silence fell over the group.

A week. After everything—they’d missed the queens by a week.

***

They made camp at the cave entrance as darkness fell.

Not inside—the sanctuary felt too sacred for that, too marked by the presence of those they sought. Instead, they cleared a space among the massive roots, set watches, and built a small fire that Huifu shielded with essence to prevent the light from traveling.

The Dark Forest’s night sounds surrounded them. Creatures moving through the underbrush. Wind through an impossibly distant canopy. The occasional cry of something hunting or hunted in the ancient darkness.

Xingteng sat apart from the others, her back against an ironbark root wider than she was tall, staring at flames that reminded her of silver essence and empty sanctuaries.

Yinglong settled beside her without asking permission. Her sister’s presence was warm, familiar, grounding in a way that required no words.

"We’ll find them," Yinglong said quietly.

"Will we?" Xingteng’s voice was hollow. "The Lower Realm spans half a continent. They could be anywhere by now. Any direction. Any city or town or village among thousands."

"Then we search them all."

"That could take years."

"Then it takes years." Yinglong’s hand found hers in the darkness. "We waited ten thousand years for a silver queen to return. What’s a few more years of searching compared to that?"

Xingteng wanted to argue. Wanted to point out that every day the queens remained unprotected was another day something could go wrong—capture, death, enslavement like Xueteng had suffered. Every day was a risk they couldn’t afford.

But her sister’s hand was warm, and the fire crackled softly, and somewhere in the distance the Dark Forest hummed with ancient patience that made mortal urgency seem small.

"I felt her," Xingteng said instead. "In the sanctuary. Not just silver essence—warmth. Whoever lived here was... happy. Safe. The walls remembered laughter."

Yinglong was quiet for a moment. "That’s good. That means she knows how to find safety. How to build it for herself."

"Or she had help."

"Also good. Help means allies. Allies mean she’s not alone."

Xingteng leaned her head against her sister’s shoulder. Let herself feel, just for a moment, the exhaustion of weeks of travel and tension and hope constantly deferred.

"What if she doesn’t want our protection?" The question emerged small, uncertain—nothing like the fierce determination she tried to project. "What if she’s happy hiding? What if we find her and she tells us to leave?"

"Then we leave," Yinglong said simply. "And we protect her from a distance without her ever knowing. Guard her path without walking it with her. That’s what guardians do."

"Xueteng didn’t get that choice."

"No. She didn’t." Yinglong’s voice hardened. "Which is exactly why this queen will. Whatever she wants. Whatever she decides. Her choice. Always."

The fire crackled. The forest breathed. And slowly, Xingteng felt something loosen in her chest—not hope exactly, but acceptance. They would search. They would find. And when they did, they would offer, not demand.

That was the difference between protection and possession.

That was how shadow dragons redeemed ten thousand years of failure.

***

Morning came gray and damp, mist threading between the massive ironbark trunks like ghostly rivers.

The six of them gathered around the dead fire, breaking their fast with travel rations and discussing strategy with the quiet efficiency of cultivators who’d worked together for centuries.

"The Lower Realm is vast," Hulong said, spreading a rough map across flat stone. "Major population centers here, here, and here. Trade routes connecting them. If they’re traveling openly, they’ll likely use these roads."

"They might not be traveling openly," Huifu countered. "They hid in this forest for months. Maybe longer. Why leave now?"

"Something changed," Xinglong said. "Vor’thane’s sources said they departed suddenly. Urgently. Something made them move."

"Or someone warned them." Heiteng’s mercury eyes were thoughtful. "If they have allies, they might have intelligence networks we don’t know about."

Xingteng studied the map without really seeing it. Her mind kept returning to the sanctuary, to silver essence and remembered warmth, to queens who’d found happiness in hiding and then abandoned it for unknown reasons.

"We’re not going to find them standing here," she said finally. "We need to cover ground. All of it."

Xinglong nodded slowly. "Agreed. We split up. Three pairs, three directions. Cover more territory, increase our chances of crossing their path."

He traced routes on the map with one claw-tipped finger. "Heiteng and I will take the eastern routes—major cities, centers of commerce and power. If they’re seeking resources or connections, that’s where they’ll go."

"Huifu and I will take the southern trade roads," Hulong added. "Merchant caravans, traveling scholars, anyone who might have seen unusual travelers."

"Which leaves north and west for us," Yinglong said, glancing at Xingteng. "The frontier territories."

"You have the strongest silver resonance," Xinglong told Xingteng. "If anyone can sense them from a distance, it’s you. The frontier is less populated—fewer distractions, cleaner essence signatures."

Xingteng nodded, accepting the logic even as part of her wished she could search everywhere at once.

"First contact, we signal through the Ley Mirrors," Xinglong continued. "No one approaches alone. We wait for the others, present a united front. And remember—we offer. We don’t demand."

"She won’t be forced," Xingteng said fiercely. "Not like—"

She stopped. Couldn’t finish. But they all knew.

Heiteng stepped closer, mercury eyes soft with understanding. He reached into his dimensional storage and withdrew something that caught the gray morning light—a delicate ornament pulsing with inner radiance.

"The Eye of Pyratheon," he said. "For the pure silver queen, when we find her. It will hide her from Sharlin’s seers."

He tucked it away again, then met Xingteng’s gaze directly.

"And when you’re ready, sister," he added quietly, "Heihuo awaits your justice. He’s secured in a place he’ll never escape. His death belongs to you, whenever you choose to claim it."

Xingteng’s throat tightened. She couldn’t speak—could only nod once, sharply, and look away before emotion overwhelmed her.

***

They departed as the mist began to lift.

Three pairs heading in different directions through a realm that had no idea what moved through its territories. Not predators—protectors. Guardians searching for queens who didn’t know they needed guarding.

Xingteng paused at the forest’s edge, looking back at the ancient trees that had sheltered the queens for however long they’d stayed.

We’ll find you, she promised silently. And when we do, you’ll never have to hide again.

The forest seemed to sigh in response—branches swaying in windless air, acknowledging her vow.

Then Xingteng turned and followed her sister into the unknown, leaving the empty cave and its fading silver echoes behind.