Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 371 - 366: The City of the Sleeping

Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 371 - 366: The City of the Sleeping

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Chapter 371: Chapter 366: The City of the Sleeping

Location: Zhū’kethara — Research Chambers

Date/Time: Late Frostforge, 9939 AZI — late evening

Realm: Demon Realm (Upper Realm)

Vaelith’s hands were shaking.

Vorketh noticed first. He always noticed first — eighteen thousand years of reading his mate the way a sailor read weather. The deep copper eyes tracked the tremor in her fingers, and his weight shifted forward in his chair. Waiting to see if the shaking was exhaustion or something else.

It was something else.

"I found them," Vaelith said. Green-gold eyes bright.

Vorketh stood.

***

Ren arrived in the research chambers still wearing the dust of the evening walk. Purple eyes. Raven-black hair falling across his forehead. The jade pendant resting against his chest — warm tonight.

Voresh materialized from the corridor behind him. The spymaster hadn’t been summoned.

Vaelith stood before them. No gradient map. No population data. Just a table with blood crystals and the particular stillness of a woman who had been searching for something for a very long time and had just found it in the worst possible place.

"Velshan and Sorathia," she said. "I found them."

The room went quiet.

They all knew the names. Vaelith had told the story months ago, when Lyria’s blood test in the Hall of Remembrance had lit up a crystal that shouldn’t have been there — a prophetic signature that matched Kethara’s line. Lyria was connected to the last great demon prophetess through her brother Draevik, who was Lyria’s great-grandfather. Which made Velshan and Sorathia — Kethara and Draevik’s parents — Lyria’s great-great-grandparents.

Vaelith had been searching for them ever since.

"Where?" Ren asked.

"The Zel’kethari."

The word settled into the room. The City of the Sleeping. The most deeply hidden place in the demon realm.

***

"I should have known," Vaelith said. Her green-gold eyes were fixed on the blood crystals. "I kept in contact with them for years after Kethara died. After Draevik—"

She stopped. Breathed.

"Draevik said goodbye. The Kael’vora. Told his parents he was going to end it honourably." Her voice was steady, but her hands were not. "He never had the chance. His soul is lost."

The worst of it. Death had honour. A lost soul meant no rebirth. No afterlife. Nothing, forever. And his parents were sleeping beneath the mountains, believing their son had chosen a clean ending.

"They’ll have to be told," Vorketh said. Low.

"Yes. They will."

"I stayed in contact with Velshan and Sorathia for years after. Decades." Vaelith’s voice was steady, but her hands were not. "I owed them that — Kethara was my mentor. She taught me everything. Her parents welcomed me into their home when I was young and stupid and thought I knew what healing meant. Sorathia fed me. Velshan corrected my formation work. They were—" She stopped. Started again. "They were family. The closest thing I had before Vorketh."

Vorketh’s hand tightened on her shoulder. Not pulling. Holding.

"But grief does what grief does. The visits grew longer between. The messages shorter. Sorathia’s letters stopped first — she was always the stronger one, and when strong people break, they break completely. Velshan held on longer, but eventually his replies stopped too. No farewell. No explanation. Just silence."

She looked at the blood crystals.

"Pairs who go to the Zel’kethari are supposed to announce it. There’s a process — a formal notification, arrangements for their holdings, farewells. Velshan and Sorathia did none of that. They just... went. Quietly. Without telling anyone." Her green-gold eyes met Ren’s. "I assumed they were retreating inward. Closing the doors the way old truemated pairs do. It never occurred to me they’d gone to sleep — because they didn’t follow the protocols. They were too broken to bother."

"They went to sleep," Ren said.

"They went to the Zel’kethari. Both children were gone — or so they believed. No grandchildren. No bloodline remaining. Nothing left to stay awake for." Vaelith looked at the blood crystals. "They’ve been sleeping ever since."

The Zel’kethari. The City of the Sleeping. Carved into bedrock beneath the oldest mountains in the demon realm, sealed by workings older than the current dynasty. The most protected place in existence — the demon realm’s final refuge for those who could not die and could not bear to live.

Truemated pairs went there when the world had taken everything but each other. They couldn’t sever the bond — the Codex’s design didn’t permit it. They couldn’t harm their mate by ending themselves — the bond would kill the other. So they slept. Bodies dormant. Bonds humming at their lowest frequency. Vor’kesh was holding at whatever state it had been in when they chose rest over waking.

Some had slept for hundreds of years. Some for millennia. When the demon race needed them — and only then — they could be woken. But no one had entered the Zel’kethari in centuries. The city waited in the dark beneath the mountains, holding its thousand sleeping pairs the way earth held seeds.

"They don’t know," Vaelith said. "They don’t know that Draevik’s line survived. That he fathered a daughter — Aenna — through a one-moment bond as his last leaf fell. That the line continued. Aenna to Elyn to Kaela. To Lyria."

"They don’t know they have a great-great-granddaughter," Ren said. "A prophetess."

"A prophetess who carries their daughter’s gift." Vaelith’s green-gold eyes were bright. "Kethara’s prophetic signature, come back through Draevik’s bloodline. The gift they thought died with their daughter — returned through a path none of them could have imagined. And Lyria isn’t alone. Her mother, Kaela, her sister Mira, and her brothers Joren and Kael. An entire family they don’t know exists."

The silence held.

"And they don’t know about Draevik," Vorketh said. Low. The deep copper eyes holding the weight of what that meant. "That he didn’t complete the Kael’thros. That he turned."

Vaelith’s jaw worked.

"No. They don’t know."

Ren closed his eyes. Opened them. The calculus was not simple. Waking them meant joy — a bloodline survived, a great-great-granddaughter with their daughter’s gift. Waking them also meant truth — their son didn’t die with honour. He fell. He turned into a devil. And he was killed by the people who’d sheltered the very descendants they were about to meet.

"It has to be done carefully," Ren said.

"I know."

***

"There is more." Vaelith straightened. The personal grief settling behind the scientist’s composure. "Velshan and Sorathia are not the only ones."

Ren looked at her.

"Over five hundred truemated pairs in the Zel’kethari have descendants among the mixed-bloods."

The number landed.

Five hundred pairs. A thousand sleeping demons who had gone to rest, believing their lines were gone. And the evidence of their survival walked the streets of Zhū’kethara.

"You understand what waking them means," Vorketh said. His deep copper eyes moved between Vaelith and Ren. "These pairs — they didn’t go to sleep because they were weak. They went to sleep because they were too strong to die and too broken to stay. Every pair in the Zel’kethari is high to peak Eternalpyre. A thousand of the most powerful demons alive, held in reserve as the realm’s last line of defense — only to be woken when the realm is in dire need."

The weight of that settled.

"And when they wake," Vorketh continued, "they will learn that their children — the ones they went to sleep mourning — may still be alive. Some of them. In captivity. In breeding programmes. In places we haven’t found yet." He paused. "These are not people who will take that news quietly. These are warriors who went to sleep because they had nothing left to fight for. You will be giving them something to fight for."

"I know," Ren said.

"A thousand Eternalpyre warriors, freshly woken, freshly enraged, learning that the kin they went to sleep mourning were taken. Enslaved. Bred." Vorketh’s deep copper eyes were steady. "Not all direct descendants — some will be from their siblings’ lines, their cousins’, their wider bloodkin. But blood is blood to a demon who went to sleep because they believed that blood was gone. That is either a liberation army or a catastrophe. Depending on how we wake them."

Ren walked to the window. The view from the research chambers looked south — toward the fields being prepared, the distant line where the desert had retreated, the faint lights of the outer districts where mixed-bloods and demons lived side by side in buildings that hadn’t existed six months ago.

A thousand Eternalpyre warriors. The thought turned in his mind the way a blade turned on a whetstone. The demon realm’s standing military was powerful — the Kael’thoren numbered tens of thousands, and the regular forces ran into the hundreds of thousands. But Eternalpyre was another scale entirely. A single Eternalpyre warrior could hold a mountain pass against an army. A thousand of them, organized, motivated, enraged — that was a force that could reshape the balance of power across all three realms.

The Radiant Realm was already hunting the silver queen. The passages between realms were monitored. The political situation was deteriorating — the conservative clans pushing back against integration, the other races watching the demon realm’s reconstruction with a mixture of hope and suspicion. And the breeding programme was still out there. Not all the captive mixed-bloods had been found. None of the pocket dimensions had been located.

A thousand warriors who went to sleep because they had lost everything, waking to learn that "everything" had been found — some of it free, some of it still in chains.

Vorketh was right. Liberation army or catastrophe. The difference was entirely in the timing and the telling.

"The Zel’kethari itself," Ren said, turning from the window. "What condition is it in?"

"Unknown." Voresh’s voice from the doorway — he hadn’t left entirely, just faded to the edges the way he did when information was still flowing. "The last recorded entry was over four hundred years ago. A pair from the eastern clans. The entrance workings should still be functional — they’re self-maintaining. But the interior hasn’t been inspected in centuries."

"The sleeping chambers are deep," Vaelith added. "Below the mountain’s root. The workings that maintain the stasis are among the oldest in the realm — pre-dynasty, designed by craftsmen whose names we’ve lost. They sustain the bodies, maintain the bonds at minimal frequency, and prevent deterioration. In theory, a pair could sleep indefinitely."

"In theory," Ren said.

"In practice, the longest-sleeping pair in the Zel’kethari has been under for nearly sixty thousand years. The records indicate they are still alive." Vaelith paused. "But waking is not instantaneous. The body needs time to restart — circulation, essence flow, neural function. The older the sleeper, the longer the waking. For some of the ancient pairs, it could take days."

Ren processed that. Waking five hundred pairs was not an afternoon’s work. It was a campaign — logistics, medical support, psychological preparation, housing, integration. A thousand ancient warriors reintroduced to a world that had changed beyond recognition while they slept. Most of them had to sleep before the current city existed. Before the breeding programme had been discovered. Before Ren himself had taken the throne. When the demon dream still had a hundred demon kings.

"We don’t wake them all at once," Ren said. "We start with Velshan and Sorathia. They’re the test case — the pair whose story we know, whose descendants we’ve found, whose circumstances we can control. If the waking goes well, if the truth lands without shattering them, we use what we learn to plan the next group. And the next."

"How many groups?" Vorketh asked.

"As many as it takes. I will not rush this."

"Five hundred?" Ren enquired again.

"At minimum. The cross-referencing is still running."

Ren stood. Walked to the table. Looked at the blood crystals — each one a traced line connecting a sleeping pair to a living descendant.

"Voresh. Security assessment on the Zel’kethari. Entry protocols, waking procedures, and support infrastructure. Healers, counselors — some of the sleeping pairs are old enough that the common tongue has shifted since they went to sleep. I want translators ready."

"Timeline?"

"One week."

Voresh disappeared between one breath and the next.

"Vorketh. Identify which of the five hundred pairs have direct-line descendants currently in Zhū’kethara. Strongest bloodline matches first."

Vorketh inclined his head.

"And Velshan and Sorathia?" Vaelith asked.

Ren looked at her. At the blood crystals. At the traced line that connected a sleeping healer to a waking prophetess across generations of loss.

"I’ll wake them myself."

Vaelith’s green-gold eyes were bright. "When?"

"When the preparations are complete. When we have the right people in the right rooms." He paused. "They lost everything. I will not let the first thing they see when they open their eyes be another loss. They’ll learn about Draevik — they have to. But not first. First, they learn about Lyria."

Vaelith nodded. The tremor in her hands had stopped. Something in its place — steadier. The particular steadiness of someone who had been carrying a search for months and had finally set it down.

"Ren." She said his name without title. The way she’d said it when he was young, and she was already old, and the realm was burning, and neither of them had slept in days. "Thank you."

He didn’t answer. He didn’t need to.

Vaelith gathered the blood crystals carefully, wrapping each one in cloth before placing them in a lined case. Vorketh watched her — the deep copper eyes holding the particular tenderness of a man who had spent eighteen thousand years watching his mate carry things that should have broken her, and marveling every time that they didn’t.

The research chamber emptied. Vaelith and Vorketh leaving together, his hand on the small of her back, her shoulders carrying something lighter than they had when the evening started. The blood crystals safe. The search over. The next phase beginning.

Ren stayed.

He stood at the window. The city below — Zhū’kethara, Where Blood Remembers — settling into its night cycle. Lights dimming in the residential districts. The last of the evening patrols passing through the outer gates. On the Common Path, eight million threads humming at their lowest frequency, the web of his people’s minds quieting toward sleep.

He pressed his hand to the glass. The jade-white fingers leaving no print — the cold couldn’t touch him, not at his cultivation level. But the gesture was human. The king, reaching for the world outside his window, the way anyone reached — wanting to touch something too large to hold.

Beneath the oldest mountains, a thousand truemated pairs slept. The realm’s last reserve. Warriors who had been ancient when Ren was born, who had fought in wars that predated his dynasty, who had loved and lost and chosen sleep over a world that had nothing left to offer them.

He was going to wake them. Not all at once. Not without care. But he was going to open the Zel’kethari and tell a thousand sleeping warriors that the world had changed while they dreamed. That their blood survived. That the realm needed them again — not for war this time, but for something harder.

For hope.

The jade pendant pulsed. Warm. The bond humming its constant frequency. Somewhere in the Lower Realm, the truemate he hadn’t found was living a life he couldn’t see. The beast stirred behind its walls — listening. As if even the predator understood that tonight was about something older than hunger.

Ren stood at the window until the last light faded. Then he turned, crossed the empty chamber, and walked toward his quarters. Tomorrow, the preparations would begin. Tonight, the city slept.

All of its cities slept.

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