Β©NovelBuddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 280 - 275: Rivals and Shadows
Location: Obsidian Academy
Date/Time: Mid Sparkfall, 9939 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm
The bench was warm where Ryoβs elbow pressed against hers. ππ£πππ°πππ§πΌπππ.π°π¨π¦
Not intentionally β the mess hallβs Elite section had seating for two hundred but a population that rarely filled half of it, which meant the four of them choosing to crowd one end of a long table was a statement, not a necessity. Jayde sat with her back to the wall. Ryo on her left, close enough that their arms brushed when he reached for the teapot. Kiran, across from her, hunched over a text on Verdant soil composition with the focus of someone using a book as a barricade. Eden beside him, eating with the steady precision she brought to everything β small bites, no wasted motion, eyes tracking the room between each one.
Takara sat on the table next to Jaydeβs bowl, one white paw resting on a strip of dried fish the cook had left folded in a napkin. His large blue eyes tracked the hall with a focus that had nothing to do with food. The three ribbons β pink on his left ear, pale blue on his right, gold at his throat β caught the lantern light.
Not just a kitten. Sheβd known that since the cores. Since the warrior blink. But whatever he was, heβd chosen to stay, and Jayde had learned not to interrogate gifts.
"The congee," Ryo said, "is an insult."
Jayde glanced at his bowl. It looked the same as every other morning β grey, thick, flecked with something that might have been grain.
"Itβs congee," Eden said without looking up. "Itβs not supposed to be exciting."
"Thereβs a difference between unexciting and hostile." Ryo pushed the bowl a precise two inches away from himself. "This congee has intent."
Kiran turned a page. "Stop talking about the congee."
"Iβm making a point about institutional standards."
"Youβre making a point about being noble." Kiran still didnβt look up, but the corner of his mouth moved β not quite a smile, closer to the memory of one. "Normal people eat bad food and donβt write speeches about it."
Ryoβs amber eyes narrowed. For a moment, Jayde thought the silence would sharpen into something real β Ryoβs noble background was the one subject that could cut through his control. But he picked up his spoon instead. Ate a mouthful. Set the spoon down with exaggerated care.
"I retract nothing."
Eden pushed her own congee toward him. "Have mine. I ate early."
She hadnβt. Jayde had been awake since the fifth bell, and Edenβs side of their shared quarters had been occupied. But Edenβs lies about meals were the small, practiced kind β the kind that came from years of feeding other people first. The village healer from Millhaven, stretching supplies. That was the cover story. It fit, mostly. The gap between what Eden said about herself and what Eden demonstrated remained exactly where it had been since the road β present, unexplained, and growing wider with every class she attended.
Unusual. File it.
Jayde ate her own congee. It was terrible. Ryo wasnβt wrong.
Around them, the mess hall moved through its morning rhythm. Students in black Elite robes and red Core robes filtering in, collecting food, and finding seats. The sound was familiar now β weeks of the same bells, the same scraping benches, the same low hum of conversation that rose and fell with the light through the high windows. Jaydeβs table had become fixed geography. Other students flowed around it the way water flows around a stone β acknowledged, accounted for, not questioned.
Four people whoβd chosen each other. That mattered here. In a place where alliances formed along sect lines and family connections and cultivation rankings, a group built on nothing but proximity and preference was either invisible or conspicuous.
Theyβd stopped being invisible about a week ago.
***
Jayde saw it happen from the courtyard.
Between the second and third bell β the gap when students crossed from morning lectures to applied sessions β the flow patterns shifted. Not dramatically. Not in a way most people would notice. But Jayde had spent sixty years reading crowd dynamics in environments where misreading them killed you, and the mess hallβs social geography had been rewriting itself for weeks.
A first-year. New, nervous, still wearing her robes with the stiff self-consciousness of someone who hadnβt broken them in. She crossed the courtyard with her meal tray, heading toward the Elite section, scanning for a seat. Her trajectory angled toward Jaydeβs table β toward the empty spaces at the far end, where newcomers sometimes landed when they didnβt know anyone.
Then she glanced left.
Meilingβs table. Centre of the hall, positioned where sight lines from both entrances converged. Not accident β architecture. Meiling sat with her back straight, gold silk robes immaculate, black hair in the elaborate arrangement that took an hour and announced itself as effortless. The students around her had multiplied. A dozen two weeks ago. Closer to twenty now. Some wore small badges pinned to their collars β pale gold circles, simple, understated. Radiant Path. The Temple teacherβs contribution to Academy fashion.
The new studentβs step faltered. Her eyes moved from Jaydeβs table to Meilingβs and back. The calculation was visible β a girl weighing two options and understanding, with the instinct of someone raised in a world where choosing wrong had consequences, that this was a choice with weight.
She turned toward Meilingβs table.
Jaydeβs congee was long finished. She sat with her hands around an empty tea cup, watching.
Social manipulation. Stage Two β establishing gatekeeping. The group leader creates the community; the enforcer manages access. Belonging is redefined as compliance. Non-attendance becomes non-belonging. The cost of independence rises until conformity is cheaper than resistance.
Classic two-tier control structure. Teacher provides the ideology. Meiling provides the social enforcement. Neither could function without the other.
Ryo appeared beside her, settling onto the bench with the economy of motion that marked everything he did. His tawny eyes tracked the new studentβs path across the hall.
"Third one this week," he said. Quiet. Statement, not question.
Jayde said nothing.
"Meilingβs people are telling new arrivals the study groups are mandatory." He kept his voice low, pitched under the ambient noise. "Not in those words. βEveryone attends.β βYouβll fall behind if you donβt.β βThe instructor recommends it.β Friendly. Helpful. The kind of pressure you canβt push back against because no oneβs actually threatening you."
Jayde watched Meiling welcome the new student. A warm smile. A hand on the arm. The girlβs shoulders loosened with relief. Belonging offered and accepted in thirty seconds.
"Sheβs good at this," Jayde said.
Ryoβs jaw tightened. "Sheβs dangerous at this."
He was right. Meiling hadnβt confronted Jayde since the stream β since the first week, when sheβd poured salt water on Fengβs blistered hands, and Jayde had intervened. Whatever that encounter had taught her, sheβd absorbed it. No direct conflict. No scenes. Instead: a slow, methodical reshaping of the Academyβs social landscape, with herself at its centre and the Temple teacherβs ideology as the scaffolding.
She learned. The impulsive noble from the road is gone. What replaced her is more competent and significantly more dangerous.
Across the hall, Meilingβs hazel eyes found Jaydeβs brown ones. The contact held for two heartbeats β long enough to be deliberate, short enough to be deniable. Then Meiling turned back to her table, and the moment dissolved into the noise of the mess hall.
Jayde filed it.
***
The whispers found Kiran between classes.
He was crossing the covered walkway that connected the Scholastic wing to the Applied Arts building β head down, dark hair falling past his jaw, the braided cord on his left wrist catching the light. Alone. Kiran was often alone between classes. He moved through the Academy like someone whoβd learned that empty space around you was safer than company.
Jayde was thirty paces behind, heading to Formations. Close enough to hear. Close enough to see.
Three students in red Core robes, clustered near the walkwayβs pillars. Two boys and a girl. Pale gold badges on their collars. They werenβt blocking the path β positioned just to the side of it, voices pitched at that precise volume meant to carry without being directed. The kind of cruelty designed to be overheard and denied in the same breath.
"Mixed heritage, though. Half-breeds always test well early. Canβt sustain it."
"The Radiant Path teaches that essence channels are diluted by impure blood. Instructor Lanhua explained it in the last session."
"Does explain the ears."
Kiran walked past them. His stride didnβt change. His shoulders didnβt tense. His face showed nothing β the practised blankness of someone whoβd heard variations of these words so many times that the sounds had stopped carrying meaning and become weather. Something to endure. Something that happened.
The permanent furrow between his brows deepened by a fraction. His hand moved β unconscious, barely visible β to the braided cord on his left wrist. Elven knotwork. He didnβt touch it so much as confirm it was there. That was all.
The girl with the badge said something else β quieter, to the boys, after Kiran had passed. Whatever it was made them laugh. The sound followed him down the walkway like something thrown at his back.
Jayde reached the walkway as the three students peeled away toward the Scholastic wing. She noted the badges. Noted the faces. Filed them in the expanding catalogue she was building of Lanhuaβs operation β the support groups, the badges, the language that had started leaking into classrooms. Impure blood. That phrase hadnβt existed at this Academy three weeks ago.
Target isolation of group members who donβt conform. Define belonging by defining who doesnβt belong. The outgroup member serves as a warning: this is what non-participation looks like. This is what happens to people who are different. Join or become them.
She found Kiran at their table that evening. Ryo was already there, his expression carefully neutral β the cold quiet that meant heβd heard about it. Jayde could guess who told him. Ryo noticed things about people. It was what made him dangerous and what made him kind, and the distinction between those two qualities was narrower than most people understood.
"Itβs nothing," Kiran said before anyone spoke. His sea-green eyes stayed on the text in front of him. His voice was flat. "Itβs always nothing."
Nobody argued with him. Nobody said it wasnβt nothing. Nobody offered sympathy, because Kiran would have thrown it back like a weapon, and they all knew it.
Eden, sitting beside him, slid her dessert β a dense honey cake the Academy kitchens produced once a week β across the table. No comment. No eye contact. Just the small motion of pushing a plate six inches to the left.
Kiran didnβt look up. But his hand found the cake, and he ate it in three bites, fast, the way someone ate whoβd learned to finish before food got taken.
***
Heizan was eating a peach.
Cross-legged on the training ground wall, bare feet, practice robes that had been black a long time ago. He looked half-asleep. His dark eyes β nearly black, the only part of him that didnβt look like a retired groundskeeper β tracked Jayde through the form sheβd been drilling for the past twenty minutes.
She struck the post. Clean. Controlled. The overhead cut White had taught her, translated through Kazrenβs refinements into something that looked competent and unremarkable. A talented student with good foundations. Nothing more.
"Better," Heizan said. He took a bite of the peach. Juice ran down his chin. "Youβre learning to walk like everyone else."
The compliment was in the nod, not the words. He meant: your disguise is improving. Your forms no longer carry the precision that makes people look twice. Youβre learning to be invisible.
She struck again. He watched. Three missing fingers on his left hand, the rest wrapped around the peach with the casual grip of someone whose hands remembered holding things they no longer could. He said nothing else.
He didnβt need to. The lesson was the silence between instructions β the space where she practised being ordinary, and he practised pretending he didnβt see what she was.
***
Evening.
The four of them in the study alcove off the Elite common room β a space theyβd claimed by habit, the way their mess hall seats had become fixed geography. Kiranβs texts spread across the table, annotated in his sharp, cramped hand. Ryo polishing his blade β the habitual gesture of someone raised by people who maintained weapons the way other people maintained appearances. Eden reading ahead in the Alchemy curriculum, three Chapters past what the instructor had assigned.
Jayde sat with her own Formation notes, sketching the lattice structure from yesterdayβs lecture. Takara had curled on the table between two stacks of texts, his small white body warm against her forearm. Asleep, or performing sleep. With him, the distinction had stopped mattering.
The alcove was quiet. Warm. The kind of ordinary that Jayde had learned not to trust, because ordinary things broke.
Through the common roomβs open archway, she could see the corridor. Students passing on their way to evening meditation or late study sessions. More badges tonight than last week. Pale gold circles catching the lantern light. Sheβd been counting. Three weeks since Lanhua arrived. The support groups had grown from a dozen students to nearly a third of the student body. Teachers were being invited to sessions. The language was shifting β purity, purpose, the Radiant Path, blessed heritage β seeping into classroom conversations and hallway greetings like dye through water. Slow. Thorough. Professional.
Institutional capture. Textbook progression. Stage One: establish presence (done). Stage Two: create social hierarchy (in progress). Stage Three: normalize ideology until questioning it becomes the aberration, not accepting it. Timeline: three to six months at current velocity.
Kiranβs letters sat in a neat stack at the corner of the table. Written, sealed, ready for tomorrowβs courier. One every week. To a family that hadnβt written back in months.
Ryo saw them. Said nothing.
Eden turned a page. The scratch of her quill was steady, metronomic. Sheβd stopped looking up when badges passed in the corridor. Whatever assessment she was running, sheβd reached her conclusions weeks ago.
Outside the alcove, the Academy hummed with its evening routines. Bells marking the hours. Footsteps on stone. The distant murmur of a support group meeting somewhere in the Scholastic wing β voices rising in unison, the particular cadence of people saying words theyβd been given.
Tomorrow would be the same. The badges would multiply. The whispers would continue. The line being drawn through the Academyβs social fabric would deepen, and the four of them would sit on the wrong side of it, quiet and watchful and together.
Until something broke.
But not tonight.
Tonight: four people at a table, studying, eating stolen cake, enduring. The warmth of elbows touching and shared silence, and the small, fierce loyalty of a dessert pushed six inches to the left.
It would have to be enough. For now, it was.







