©NovelBuddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 218 - 213: The Rabbit
Location: Forest near Thornhaven → Thornhaven Village
Date/Time: 7-8 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI
Realm: Mid Realm
The morning sun filtered through ancient branches, dappling the forest floor in patterns of gold and shadow.
Lyria walked the narrow trail with practiced ease, her wings tucked close to avoid catching on low-hanging branches. Voresh moved beside her—close enough to respond to threats, far enough to give her space. The quintet spread out in their usual formation: Kael’vor ahead as scout, the twins flanking, Drazhen and Sorvak guarding the rear.
Six demons protecting one girl from a village of outcasts.
It should have felt absurd. Would have felt absurd, three days ago.
Now it just felt... normal. Or something approaching normal. The way Voresh’s copper eyes constantly scanned the tree line. The way Zharek and Tharek moved in perfect synchronization, crimson and blue-haired shadows flowing through the underbrush. The way Kael’vor’s emerald gaze noted every broken twig, every displaced stone, every sign that something had passed this way before them.
Protectors. Guardians. Whatever the demons called themselves, they were very, very good at it.
"You come here often," Voresh said. Not a question.
"Since I was old enough to walk alone." Lyria ducked under a branch she’d ducked under a thousand times before. "The forest was my escape. When the village felt too small, when my mother’s worry felt too heavy, when I needed to just... breathe."
"It’s dangerous."
"Everything’s dangerous." She glanced at him, finding his copper eyes already watching her. "Being different is dangerous. Having visions is dangerous. Existing in a realm that thinks mixed-bloods shouldn’t exist is dangerous. At least the forest never looked at me like I was an abomination."
Something flickered across Voresh’s weathered face. Pain, maybe. Or recognition.
"The trees don’t judge," he said quietly.
"They’re the only ones who don’t."
***
They walked in comfortable silence for a while, the only sounds the crunch of leaves beneath their feet and the distant calls of birds that fell silent as they approached. The quintet moved like ghosts—present but unobtrusive, watchful but not suffocating.
"Tell me about the demon realm," Lyria said eventually.
Voresh’s eyebrows rose slightly. "What would you like to know?"
"Anything. Everything." She spread her hands, wings rustling with the gesture. "I know what humans say about demons. Monsters. Devils. Creatures of darkness who steal children and corrupt souls. But you’re not... you’re not what I expected."
"What did you expect?"
"Horns. Fangs. Maybe some fire and brimstone." She smiled crookedly. "Not six warriors who look more tired than terrifying."
Tharek, close enough to overhear, let out a soft huff that might have been laughter. Zharek elbowed him, but his molten red eyes held a glint of amusement.
Voresh’s lips twitched. "We have fangs. Sometimes. When the beast rises."
"The beast?"
"Another time." He gestured vaguely. "The demon realm... it’s beautiful. More beautiful than most beings ever see. Obsidian cities that gleam like black mirrors. Gardens that bloom with flowers found nowhere else in existence. Mountains that touch the sky and valleys that glow with bioluminescent life."
"It sounds incredible."
"It is." His voice softened. "And it’s dying."
Lyria’s steps faltered. "Dying?"
"The desert claims more land every year. Without..." He paused, seemed to consider his words carefully. "Without certain conditions being met, the realm cannot sustain itself. We’ve been fighting a slow war against extinction for ten thousand years."
"What conditions?"
Voresh was quiet for a long moment. Long enough that Lyria thought he wouldn’t answer.
"Hope," he said finally. "The realm needs hope. And for a very long time, we had none."
Before she could press for more, Kael’vor raised a fist—the signal for halt.
Everyone froze.
***
For a heartbeat, nothing moved. The forest held its breath.
Then, from the undergrowth ahead, something small and grey hopped into the path.
A spirit rabbit.
Lyria’s hunting instincts kicked in before conscious thought could interfere. Her hand came up, essence gathering in her palm with the ease of long practice. A single pulse of compressed Verdant energy—razor-thin, blade-sharp—and the rabbit dropped without a sound.
Clean. Efficient. Practiced.
She was already moving toward her kill when she realized the demons had gone absolutely still.
Not the alertness of warriors sensing danger. Something else. Something that made the air feel thick and wrong and waiting.
Lyria stopped, the rabbit’s small body at her feet. "What?"
Voresh’s face had gone pale. Paler than jade-white—ash-pale, bloodless, the color of someone who’d just witnessed something impossible. His copper eyes were fixed on her with an expression she couldn’t read.
Horror. That was horror in his eyes.
"What?" she repeated, her voice sharper now. She looked around at the quintet. Zharek and Tharek had frozen mid-step, their usual easy grace shattered into rigid stillness. Kael’vor’s emerald eyes were wide. Drazhen’s hand had gone to his weapon on pure instinct. Sorvak looked like he’d stopped breathing entirely.
"You—" Voresh’s voice cracked. Actually cracked, like he couldn’t force the words past some obstruction in his throat. "You killed it."
"Yes?" Lyria looked down at the rabbit, then back up at the circle of frozen demons. "It’s a rabbit. Spirit-touched, good eating. I’ve been hunting since I was eight."
"You killed it," Voresh repeated. His hands were trembling. Trembling. This ancient warrior who’d survived thirty thousand years looked like he was about to shatter.
"Voresh." She stepped toward him, genuinely alarmed now. "What’s wrong? It’s just a rabbit."
"The backlash—" He seemed unable to finish the sentence. "You should be—the empathic—"
Understanding began to dawn. Slowly, like light creeping over a dark horizon.
"You expected something to happen to me," Lyria said carefully. "When I killed it."
"Female demons cannot kill." Voresh’s voice was barely a whisper. "The empathic backlash—feeling the death, the fear, the pain of whatever they harm—it destroys them. Drives them mad. Even killing a rabbit would leave a demoness incapacitated for hours. Killing anything larger..." He shook his head. "They would never recover."
Lyria looked down at her hands. At the lingering traces of Verdant essence still fading from her palm.
"I don’t feel anything," she said.
The silence that followed was deafening.
***
Voresh moved toward her slowly, as if approaching something fragile. Or something dangerous. Lyria wasn’t sure which.
"Nothing?" he asked. "You feel... nothing?"
"Nothing from the rabbit." She bent and picked up the small body, still warm. Held it up with the practical ease of someone who’d cleaned game a hundred times before. "It’s dead. I killed it. I’ll skin it later, and my family will have meat for dinner. That’s all."
The quintet exchanged glances loaded with meaning she couldn’t interpret.
"But you have empathy," Voresh said slowly. "I’ve watched you with your siblings. With the village children. You feel their emotions. You respond to pain and joy that aren’t your own."
"Of course I have empathy. I’m not a monster."
"Then how—" He stopped. Started again. "When you look at me. What do you feel?"
Lyria considered the question. Really considered it, opening herself to the awareness she usually kept carefully tamped down.
Voresh’s soul-pain hit her like a wave.
Thirty thousand years of loneliness. Millennia of watching others find what he’d been denied. The slow death of hope, leaf by falling leaf, until only one remained. The gaping wound where joy should have lived, scarred over but never healed.
And beneath it all, fragile as new spring growth—hope. Terrifying, desperate hope that didn’t dare believe in itself.
Lyria gasped and slammed her barriers up. The pain vanished, cut off cleanly as a door slamming shut.
"You feel it," Voresh breathed. "You do feel it. The quintet’s pain too—I saw your face when you first met them. You felt their soul-wounds."
"Yes." Her voice came out steadier than she’d expected. "I feel it. I can always feel it, if I let myself. But I can also... not."
"Not?"
"Close it off. Build a wall. Whatever you want to call it." She gestured vaguely. "Mother taught all of us when we were young. Said it was important—essential, even. That we’d go mad otherwise."
Voresh went very, very still.
"Your mother," he said carefully, "taught you to build empathic barriers."
"Yes."
"Barriers strong enough to block completely. Not just dull the pain—block it entirely."
"Yes." Lyria frowned at the intensity of his attention. "Why? Is that unusual?"
The look that passed between Voresh and the quintet told her everything she needed to know.
It was not just unusual.
It was supposed to be impossible.
***
"Full-blooded female demons cannot build such barriers," Voresh said. His voice had that careful quality again—the tone of someone navigating treacherous ground. "They can learn to dull the empathic connection, to mute it slightly, but never block it completely. It’s why they cannot fight. Cannot kill. The backlash would destroy them."
"But I’m not a full-blooded demon." Lyria kept her voice light, though her heart had started beating faster. "I’m not a demon at all. I’m mixed-blood—Aetherwing and elf, with some human somewhere in the mess."
Something passed between Voresh and the quintet—a look she couldn’t interpret. A conversation held entirely in glances and subtle shifts of posture. They were keeping something from her. She could feel it the way she could feel a storm building on the horizon.
But whatever it was, they weren’t ready to share.
"The empathy itself is unusual," Voresh said finally, choosing his words with obvious care. "Most mixed-bloods don’t carry it. And those who do cannot block it so completely. The ability you’re describing—the walls your mother taught you to build—that’s something we’ve never encountered outside our own kind."
"So I have a demon trait." Lyria shrugged, though her heart was racing. "Maybe somewhere in my bloodline, generations back—"
"Perhaps." Voresh didn’t sound convinced. "But there’s more. You have no visible vine—the marking that all female demons carry from birth. A silver-green pattern that grows from infancy, starting between the brows."
Lyria’s hand went to her forehead involuntarily. She’d never had any marking there except the prophetic rune that had appeared when her visions started.
"I don’t have anything like that."
"No." Voresh’s copper eyes studied her with uncomfortable intensity. "And yet you carry empathy. You can build barriers that pureblood demonesses cannot. You can fight and kill without consequence. Everything about you suggests demon blood, but nothing about your appearance confirms it."
"Strange doesn’t cover it." This from Kael’vor, who’d moved closer during the conversation. His emerald eyes studied her with analytical intensity. "Forgive my bluntness, Lady Lyria, but you’re a contradiction wrapped in an impossibility."
"My mother has wings. My father has pointed ears. I’m a mix of things that probably shouldn’t mix." Lyria shrugged, though the movement felt more defensive than casual. "The Mid Realm is full of people like me. Combinations that don’t make sense. Bloodlines that shouldn’t exist."
"But those combinations don’t grant empathic abilities," Tharek said quietly. His azure eyes held a gentleness that contrasted with the directness of his words. "They don’t create... whatever you are."
Lyria looked down at the rabbit in her hands. Small. Grey. Dead because she’d killed it without a second thought.
"Maybe you should ask my mother," she said. "Since she’s apparently the one who taught me something impossible."
***
The walk back to Thornhaven was quieter than the walk out.
Lyria kept the rabbit, cleaning it with quick, practiced movements while they traveled. The demons watched her work with expressions that ranged from fascinated to disturbed. She supposed watching someone casually gut an animal was unsettling when your entire species believed such acts should cause psychological collapse.
What am I?
The question circled in her mind like a carrion bird over a battlefield. She’d always known she was different. Mixed-blood in a world that hated mixing. Prophetic in a way that burned her from the inside out. But this—this was something else. This suggested a difference that went deeper than bloodlines and cultivation.
This suggested secrets.
Secrets her mother had kept for fourteen years.
The village came into view through the trees—the familiar palisade, the smoke rising from chimneys, the sounds of daily life that had been her entire world until a week ago. But something had changed in her absence.
Construction.
Demons were working alongside villagers, their inhuman strength making short work of tasks that would have taken humans hours. Lyria spotted Drazhen’s distinctive silver hair near the main gate, where he was helping reinforce the defensive barriers. Sorvak’s snow-white form moved among the workers, carrying loads that no normal human could lift.
And in the center of it all, directing the work with gestures and the occasional shouted instruction—
"Father?"
Aldris looked up at her call, his weathered face breaking into a smile. He set down the plans he’d been consulting and crossed to meet her, pulling her into a brief, fierce hug.
"Good hunting?"
"One rabbit." She held it up. "Dinner."
"Better than nothing." His pointed ears twitched slightly—a tell she’d learned to read years ago. Amusement. Affection. A hint of the worry that never fully left his eyes when he looked at her. "The demons have been helpful. Very helpful, actually."
Lyria glanced at Voresh, who’d stopped a respectful distance away. "Have they?"
"Zharek and Tharek spent all morning with the children. Teaching them games, if you can believe it. Mira hasn’t stopped talking about the blue-haired one." Aldris shook his head, but his smile didn’t fade. "And the construction work... we’d been planning these reinforcements for months. They finished in a day."
"They’re good at building things," Lyria said carefully.
"They’re good at a lot of things." Her father’s voice softened. "I’m still not sure what to make of all this, little bird. But I’m trying. Your mother..."
He trailed off, his expression shifting to something more complicated.
"Mother’s still angry," Lyria finished.
"Your mother is afraid." Aldris met her eyes, and she saw echoes of her own confusion there. "Fear and anger often wear the same face. Give her time."
Time. As if time could explain the secrets that seemed to multiply with every passing hour.
***
She found the twins—Zharek and Tharek—in the village square, surrounded by a crowd of children who should have been terrified of them.
Joren and Kael, her eight-year-old brothers, were climbing on Zharek like he was a particularly patient tree. The demon bore it with what looked like genuine amusement, his molten red eyes warm as he carefully steadied one twin who’d ventured too high.
Tharek was teaching Mira and three other girls some kind of hand-clapping game, his azure eyes focused with the intensity of a scholar teaching advanced cultivation theory. The girls giggled and stumbled over the pattern, and he simply started again with infinite patience.
"They’re naturals," Voresh said from behind her.
"With children?"
"With anyone who needs protection." He moved to stand beside her, watching his younger warriors with something like pride. "Zharek and Tharek are the youngest demons alive. Eight thousand years old—practically infants by our standards. They never knew what it was like to have children in the realm. Never experienced the joy of watching younglings grow."
"And now they’re playing nanny to a bunch of mixed-blood kids in a village that shouldn’t exist."
"Now they’re doing what demons were always meant to do." Voresh’s voice carried an edge of emotion she couldn’t quite identify. "Protecting. Nurturing. Building something worth believing in."
Lyria watched Joren slip and nearly fall, watched Zharek catch him with reflexes faster than sight, watched her brother laugh with pure delight at the near-miss.
"They’re good at it," she admitted.
"They’ve waited eight thousand years for the chance."
***
The news came at sunset.
Voresh’s expression shifted mid-conversation, his copper eyes going distant in a way that Lyria had learned to recognize. He was receiving something through the common path—that mysterious connection that linked all demons to their king.
"Voresh?"
He blinked, focusing on her again. Something flickered in his gaze—relief, maybe. Or anticipation.
"Vaelith arrives tomorrow," he said. "She and her mate are half a day out, traveling with an escort. They’ll reach Thornhaven by midmorning."
"Vaelith?"
"The healer I mentioned. One of the best in the demon realm—perhaps the best who still lives. She has... gifts. Gifts that might help us understand what you are."
Lyria thought of the rabbit. Of the barriers her mother had taught her to build. Of all the questions that multiplied every time she thought she’d found an answer.
"And if what I am isn’t something that can be understood?"
Voresh’s copper eyes met hers, and she saw that impossible hope again—fragile and desperate and refusing to die.
"Then we’ll figure it out together," he said. "Whatever you are, Lyria—whatever impossible thing you turn out to be—you’re not alone in it anymore."
The words settled into her chest like warmth. Like the feather that still rested in her pocket, pulsing gently against her hip.
Not alone.
She’d spent fourteen years being alone in ways that had nothing to do with physical presence. Surrounded by family who loved her but couldn’t understand her. Part of a village that accepted her but couldn’t protect her. Different in ways that set her apart from everyone and everything she knew.
And now six demons had appeared from nowhere, claimed her as something precious, and refused to leave.
Not alone.
It was terrifying.
It was wonderful.
It was completely, utterly impossible.
Just like everything else about her, apparently.
***
That night, Lyria sat on her windowsill, legs dangling into the cool evening air.
The feather glowed faintly in her palm—grey to silver to gold, cycling through colors that matched her wings. Somewhere below, she could feel Voresh’s presence like a warm spot at the edge of her awareness. The quintet spread out around the village, tireless guardians who’d adopted her people without being asked.
Her mother hadn’t spoken to her at dinner. Had barely looked at her. The wall between them grew higher with every hour that passed.
What are you hiding? Lyria wondered. What did you teach me that you shouldn’t have known?
The answers would come. Vaelith would arrive tomorrow with her gifts of truth and healing. Questions would be asked. Secrets would be dragged into the light whether they wanted to emerge or not.
For now, Lyria watched the stars wheel overhead and felt the thread between her and Voresh pulse gently in the darkness.
Tomorrow, everything might change.
Tonight, she could simply exist in the space between knowing and not-knowing. The space where hope lived alongside fear, where impossible things waited to be named.
What am I?
The question had no answer yet.
But for the first time in her life, Lyria wasn’t afraid to find out.







