©NovelBuddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 214 - 209: Patterns in the Dark
Location: Demon Realm - Royal Palace, Obsidian City
Date/Time: 4 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Upper Realm
Ren reached for the common path again, but this summons was different. Gentler. A request rather than a command.
Vaelith. I would speak with you, if you’re willing. It’s important.
The response came wrapped in warmth—the mental signature of a female demon, rich with life and light. It felt like sunlight on dark water, like spring after an endless winter.
Of course, my king. We’ll come at once.
We. Because Vaelith never went anywhere without Vorketh. And Vorketh never let her go anywhere without him.
Ren settled into his chair to wait, massaging his temples against the ever-present pressure of eight million threads. The common path was a gift and a curse—it allowed him to communicate instantly with any demon, to feel the pulse of his entire race, to know immediately if someone was in danger.
It also meant he carried the weight of every single demon soul in his consciousness. Every. Single. One.
His mind hadn’t been designed for this. No single demon king’s mind had. In the old days, there had been hundreds of demon kings, each ruling their own territory, each carrying a manageable portion of the burden. Hundreds of thousands of threads per king, not millions.
But the kings had fallen, one by one. Their truemated queens had followed them into death, as all Zhū’anara did when their bonds were severed. And each time a king died, his threads had transferred to the remaining kings, spreading the load among fewer and fewer minds.
Until only Ren remained.
The last demon king. Carrying the entire race alone.
The pain was constant now—a grinding pressure behind his eyes, a weight on his soul that never lifted. He’d learned to function through it, to hide it from almost everyone. Some days were worse than others. Some days the threads felt like fishhooks embedded in his brain, each one pulling in a different direction, each one demanding attention.
But Vaelith knew. Vaelith, with her healer’s gifts and her gentle touch, was the only one who could ease the damage the threads did to his mind.
Without her monthly visits, he suspected he would have gone mad centuries ago.
*** 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
The delegation arrived twenty minutes later.
Ren felt them coming through the common path—Vaelith’s warm presence surrounded by the fainter, colder threads of her quintet. Five ancient warriors, all Vor’shal, all hovering at death’s edge yet stubbornly clinging to existence because their duty to protect her outweighed their exhaustion.
And Vorketh. Vorketh’s thread burned brighter than the others—truemated, fully healed, his vor’kesh restored to full bloom. But the thread also carried an edge of constant vigilance, a readiness to kill anything that threatened his mate. Even after eighteen thousand years of bonding, that protective instinct hadn’t dimmed. If anything, it had grown stronger.
The doors opened, and Vaelith entered first—as protocol demanded. Female demons always led, always held a position of honor. The males existed to serve and protect, never to command. It had been this way since the dawn of demon civilization, and it would remain this way until the last demon drew their final breath.
She was beautiful in the way all demonesses were: luminous pale skin with an inner glow that seemed to emanate from somewhere deep within, midnight black hair threaded with gold and green undertones falling loose past her shoulders, eyes the color of sunlit leaves—vivid green with flecks of gold that seemed to look through flesh to the soul beneath. Eighteen thousand years old, and she still appeared to be in her mid-twenties.
The truemating bond did that. It preserved both partners at the age they’d been when the bond fully formed—when the female completed that final thread of trust, when she truly opened her heart and soul to her mate. From that moment forward, both were frozen in time while the world aged around them.
Behind her, Vorketh moved like a living fortress. Forty thousand years had weathered his bronze skin to the texture of ancient stone—the kind that had endured earthquakes and storms and the slow grinding of millennia. Copper-brown hair streaked with silver and black was pulled back severely from his face, and his deep copper eyes—tarnished like ancient coins—were sharp and alert despite the millennia behind them.
He positioned himself slightly behind and to the left of his mate—close enough to reach her in an instant, far enough to give her space. The position of a guardian. The position of a male who had spent twenty-two thousand years as Vor’shal before finding his reason to live, and who would never, ever take that reason for granted.
The quintet flanked them in perfect formation.
Thalos, the eldest at thirty-eight thousand years, took point. His copper hair had dulled with age, copper eyes faded to tarnished bronze, but the Terracore essence in his blood still made him immovable as bedrock. He’d been protecting Vaelith since before the fertility crisis began, since before hope became a foreign concept.
Korvash and Morvain held the sides—one with faded crimson hair and the other with copper, Inferno and Terracore warriors whose flames and stone had protected Vaelith for longer than most civilizations had existed. They moved in perfect synchronization, thousands of years of practice making them extensions of each other’s will.
Dravek and Sethrak brought up the rear, the former’s blue-black hair and the latter’s dulled white marking their Torrent and Galebreath essences, making them swift responders to threats from any direction. Water and wind—they could react to danger before most beings even registered it existed.
All five were Vor’shal. All five had one leaf remaining on their vor’kesh. All five should have performed Kael’thros millennia ago.
But they stayed. For her.
Because Vaelith, every month, lowered her mental shields and let them bask in her presence. Let them feel, for just a few precious hours, what it was like to be near a female demon who didn’t flinch from their soul-pain. It wasn’t a cure—nothing could cure Vor’shal except finding a truemate—but it was enough. Enough to keep them going. Enough to keep the final leaf from falling.
Ren rose as they entered—a gesture of respect for a female demon that even a king would offer.
"Val’thara Vaelith," he greeted formally. "Vor’ala kaeth’mar."
"Vor’ala, my king." Vaelith’s smile was gentle, but her green-gold eyes held concern. She could see the strain around his eyes, the slight tremor in his hands that he couldn’t quite hide. "It’s been some time since you’ve used the common path to summon me. Is everything well?"
"Better than well." Ren gestured to the chairs arranged before his desk. "Please, sit. What I have to tell you is... significant."
Vaelith settled into the offered chair, moving with the unconscious grace of someone who’d had millennia to perfect every gesture. Vorketh remained standing behind her, arms crossed, positioning himself between his mate and Ren.
King or not, Ren was an unmated male. And no truemated demon would ever fully trust an unmated male near his female. It wasn’t personal—it was biology. The protective instinct couldn’t be overridden, not even for their sovereign.
Ren could order Vorketh to stand down. Vorketh would try to obey. And his body would refuse, locked in place by instincts older than civilization itself.
So Ren didn’t bother ordering.
The quintet arranged themselves around the room’s perimeter, never more than three steps from Vaelith, never quite looking at Ren directly. Their soul-pain beat at the edges of Ren’s awareness through the common path—a dull, grinding agony that they couldn’t feel but that leaked through their threads nonetheless.
It was one of the cruelest aspects of Vor’shal. The fading demons couldn’t feel their own pain—their emotions had gone numb along with everything else. But everyone around them could sense it, bleeding through their threads like a wound that wouldn’t stop weeping.
"Your quintet could wait outside," Ren offered, knowing the answer before he spoke.
"With respect, my king," Thalos rasped, "we stay with Val’thara Vaelith."
"They stay," Vaelith confirmed, her voice carrying the gentle steel that all female demons possessed. "Even in front of their king, they won’t leave an unmated male too close to me."
Ren acknowledged this with a nod. He understood. He even respected it.
"Very well." Ren leaned forward. "Voresh has found his truemate."
The reaction was immediate.
Vaelith’s hand flew to her mouth, tears springing to her green-gold eyes. "Voresh? After all this time?"
Behind her, Vorketh went rigid. His weathered face showed nothing—decades of Vor’shal existence had trained him to reveal nothing—but his thread in the common path blazed with sudden emotion.
"Condex witness," Vorketh breathed. "The old scout finally found her."
"Her name is Lyria. She’s fourteen years old, living in the Mid Realm." Ren’s expression grew serious. "She’s also the new Prophetess—and she’s been burning her life force on uncontrolled visions. She looks nineteen, Vaelith. She’s already sacrificed years of her life."
The joy on Vaelith’s face transformed to horror. "No. No, that’s—she needs training immediately. The old techniques for controlling prophetic gifts without burning life force—they take months to master, even with guidance. If she’s been doing this untrained..."
"That’s why I’m asking you to travel to the Mid Realm."
Vorketh’s growl was immediate and instinctive. His massive frame shifted, placing himself more firmly between Vaelith and Ren. "You want to send my mate into the Mid Realm? Where the Temple is hunting? Where—"
"Vorketh." Vaelith’s voice was quiet, but it stopped him instantly.
The massive warrior trembled with the effort of restraining himself. His every instinct screamed to refuse, to keep his mate safe in the demon realm where nothing could threaten her. But a truemated male couldn’t override his mate’s wishes—physically couldn’t, unless her life was in immediate danger.
And Vaelith hadn’t refused.
"Tell me more," she said to Ren.
"I’m sending one hundred Kael’thoren with you."
The quintet stirred at that. The Kael’thoren—Honor Blades—were the elite of the demon military. Ten thousand warriors total in all the demon realm, each capable of fighting ten-to-one odds, the last resort and greatest weapon the demon realm possessed.
One hundred of them was an army.
"Both females will be protected," Ren continued, meeting Vorketh’s eyes. "Lyria and Vaelith both. I’m not sending your mate into danger—I’m sending an overwhelming force to ensure no one can threaten her."
Vorketh’s tension eased fractionally. Not gone—it would never be entirely gone—but manageable.
"I’ll go gladly," Vaelith said. Her smile had returned, though shadowed by concern. "Voresh is an old friend. The thought of him finding his Zhū’anara after thirty thousand years..." She wiped at her eyes. "And this girl—this Lyria—she needs help I can provide. The old Prophetess taught me techniques that haven’t been practiced since the Temple took control of prophecy."
"There’s another reason I chose you," Ren said carefully. "A mission that requires your particular gifts."
Vaelith tilted her head, waiting.
***
"Lyria is half-Aetherwing, half-elf. Neither of those races has ever produced a demon’s truemate before. Our Zhū’anara have always been pure demon females—born of our own kind, carrying our own essence."
He paused, weighing how much to reveal. These were secrets he’d guarded for years. Secrets that could change everything—or destroy fragile hopes if they proved meaningless.
"What I’m about to tell you does not leave this room. Not even to Voresh." He waited for their nods before continuing. "Lyria is not the first mixed-blood truemate. There was another, years ago. A female who appeared entirely human—lived as a human her whole life. An orphan, found on doorsteps as an infant, with no way to trace her parentage. One of our males recognized her."
Vaelith’s eyes widened. "I never heard—"
"Because I kept it secret. At their request, and for their protection." Ren’s voice was firm. "I investigated myself. Spent years trying to trace her bloodline, find her parents, and understand how a seemingly human female could carry enough demon essence for recognition. I found nothing. No records. No trail. Nothing."
He moved to the window, staring out at the obsidian spires. The eternal twilight cast long shadows across his capital, and beyond the city walls, he could see the edge of the desert—that ever-growing wasteland that swallowed more of their realm each year.
"At the time, I believed it was a gift. A singular blessing from the Condex for a male who had suffered greatly. A fluke that would never repeat." He turned back to face them. "I was wrong."
"Lyria," Vaelith breathed.
"Lyria. And..." Ren paused, choosing his words with care. "There have been whispers. Another case that has come to my attention. Unconfirmed, but... suggestive."
The room went utterly still.
"If those whispers prove true—three cases, Vaelith. One I dismissed as a miracle. Two could be a coincidence. But three—three is a pattern." Ren’s voice dropped. "I need you to investigate how this is possible. Whether these females carry hidden demon bloodline—something masked by their other heritage, invisible to normal detection. And if they do... how many other females might be hidden in the Mid Realm, the Lower Realm, even the Radiant Realm? Females who could be truemates to our males without anyone knowing it?"
Vaelith’s breath caught. "You think there could be more?"
"If it’s a pattern, there could be hundreds—thousands—of potential Zhū’anara living among other races, unaware of what they are."
The weight of that possibility hung in the air.
Eight million unmated males. Eight million demons slowly fading, one leaf at a time, waiting for truemates that might never come. And all this time, those truemates might have been living among humans, elves, Aetherwings—hidden in plain sight.
"The implications..." Vaelith whispered.
"Are staggering. I know." Ren moved back toward his desk. "You understand now why I chose you for this mission. You have the skills to investigate bloodlines, the knowledge of the old ways, and the discretion to keep what you learn private."
He glanced at Vorketh. "And a mate who will ensure your safety while you work."
***
"You’ve seen the reports," Ren said quietly, changing direction. "The desert claimed another three hundred miles of farmland last season. Verdant fields that took our females centuries to cultivate, swallowed by sand in a matter of months."
"I’ve seen them." Vaelith’s voice was heavy. "Nine hundred thousand females tend the land, and still we lose ground every year."
"Our population stands at eight million seven hundred thousand unmated males. Six hundred thousand truemated couples—none of whom have produced children in ten thousand years. Three hundred thousand unmated females waiting for bonds that may never form." Ren turned to face them. "We’re dying, Vaelith. Not quickly, not dramatically, but inevitably. The Zartonesh don’t need to attack us—they just need to wait."
The common path hummed with the weight of his words. Every demon in the capital could feel their king’s pain bleeding through the threads, even if they couldn’t understand its source.
"Do you know why the land dies?" Ren asked. "Why our females can’t conceive?"
Vaelith shook her head slowly.
"Neither do I. Not for certain." He moved back to his desk, pulling out ancient texts and scrolls—documents so old they predated the fertility crisis, written in dialects that fewer than a hundred demons still understood. "But I’ve researched. For centuries, I’ve researched. And I believe it’s connected to the death of the demon kings."
"The kings?"
"We once had hundreds of ruling kings, each with their truemated queen, each controlling a portion of our realm. Each territory was fertile, prosperous, filled with demon children. Then the kings started falling—to war, to assassination, to the Zartonesh. Each time one died, his queen followed within minutes. And each time a royal couple died, their territory began to wither."
Ren spread the scrolls across his desk. Maps upon maps, each one showing the slow creep of desert across lands that had once bloomed with life. "Look at the maps. Before the final king fell—before my father killed him and I killed my father—each territory that lost its royal couple turned to desert within a generation. The cities fell silent. The people relocated to surviving territories. And the desert grew."
"You’re saying the kings and queens were tied to the land itself?" Vaelith leaned forward, healer’s instincts engaged. "That their bond somehow... sustained it?"
"More than that. There’s an old saying: ’Zhu’mara vor’keth, vor’lumen zhu’thala.’ Where a pregnant female walks, life blooms in her wake. Our females have always been tied to fertility—of the land, of our people, of everything. But the truemated queens were something more. Their bond with their kings created a resonance that amplified that power across entire territories."
Ren’s hand pressed against his chest, where eight million threads anchored to his soul.
"When the last king fell, I inherited every thread in the demon realm. Every single connection that should have been spread across hundreds of minds. The weight of it..." He closed his eyes. "The weight of it is crushing me, Vaelith. You know this. You’re the one who heals the damage it does."
"I know." Her voice was soft with compassion. "Your mind wasn’t meant for this burden."
"No mind was. But I carry it because there’s no one else." Ren opened his eyes, and for a moment, the mask of the demon king slipped—revealing the exhausted, pain-wracked man beneath. "If I could find my truemate—if I could bond with her properly—perhaps some of that weight could be shared. Perhaps the land would begin to heal. Perhaps our females could conceive again."
Vaelith’s green-gold eyes glistened with unshed tears. "You carry all of them. Every single thread. Alone."
"There’s no one else," Ren repeated. "But now—these cases. If there’s a pattern, if our males can find Zhū’anara among other races..." He let the hope hang unspoken between them.
Vaelith rose from her chair, moved around Vorketh’s protective bulk, and did something few demons would dare—she took her king’s hands in hers.
The quintet stirred uneasily at the contact, but Vorketh rumbled a quiet command, and they subsided. This was Vaelith’s choice, and they would not interfere.
"I’ll find them," she promised. "Whatever answers exist, I’ll find them. For Voresh. For you. For all of us."
Her hands were warm against his—warm with the life energy that female demons carried, the same energy that sustained the land, that made things grow, that had once filled their realm with children’s laughter.
"Travel safely," Ren said. "Protect yourselves. And send word the moment you learn anything."
"Vor’ala kaeth’mar, my king." Vaelith squeezed his hands once, then released them. "May the Light bless you."
"Lumen’kira," Ren replied. "All of you. Walk in light."
***
They departed—Vaelith leading, Vorketh close behind, the quintet falling into perfect formation around them. Five dying warriors who refused to die, sustained by duty and the monthly blessing of the female they protected.
Ren watched them go, then sank back into his chair as the pressure of eight million threads crashed down on him once more. The brief respite of conversation had let him forget, for just a moment, the weight he carried.
Now it returned in full force.
He closed his eyes and let himself feel the threads—each one a demon soul, each one depending on him whether they knew it or not. The young twins, Zharek and Tharek, already halfway to the transport hub, their excitement bleeding through the common path. The older warriors, Kael’vor, Drazhen, and Sorvak, following at a more measured pace. Vaelith’s warmth receding through the palace corridors, surrounded by her dying guardians and her truemated protector.
And beyond them, stretching across the demon realm, eight million more. Farmers tending fields that grew smaller every year. Warriors patrolling borders that pushed inward every decade. Scholars studying texts that offered no answers. Vor’shal preparing for Kael’thros ceremonies they knew would come too soon.
All of them connected to him. All of them his responsibility.
Hope, he reminded himself. For the first time in ten thousand years, there was hope.
Voresh had found his truemate. An impossible thing—a mixed-blood Zhū’anara, proof that the old rules might be changing.
And Ren himself... he pressed his hand against his chest, where a golden thread pulsed with warmth he couldn’t explain. His own truemate was out there—somewhere in the Lower Realm. He knew that much. But the thread was too new, too fragile, to give him more than that. No specific location. No sense of which territory, which kingdom, which forest or city she might be in. Just... down there. Waiting.
But she existed. She was real. And someday—maybe someday soon—he would find her.
Three cases. One secret couple he’d protected for years. One newly discovered pair in the Mid Realm. And himself, feeling a connection he didn’t yet understand.
If three was a pattern... if truemates could be found among other races... then maybe the demon realm wasn’t doomed after all. Maybe the fertility crisis could be solved. Maybe the desert could be pushed back. Maybe children would play in these halls again.
Maybe.
Ren opened his eyes and looked out at the obsidian spires of his capital, at the eternal twilight that had become a metaphor for his people’s existence—not quite dark, not quite light, suspended in an endless dusk.
But dawn came eventually. Even the longest night had to end.
He just had to survive long enough to see it bloom.







