Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 375 - 370: What It’s Made Of

Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 375 - 370: What It’s Made Of

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Chapter 375: Chapter 370: What It’s Made Of

Location: Pavilion — Starforge Nexus, Eden’s laboratory

Date/Time: Mid Voidmarch, 9939 AZI — evening to late night

Realm: Lower Realm (soul-space)

Eden held the pill the way a jeweler held an uncut diamond — both hands, steady, the dark wood case resting on the laboratory table between two formation-stabilized crystal trays.

The Soulbloom. Pearlescent. Thumbnail-sized. The surface shifting with iridescence that caught the bioluminescent light and broke it into colors that shouldn’t have existed. It was beautiful. It radiated a warmth that Eden could feel through the silk lining, through the case, through the table — a low, constant heat, like a heartbeat.

"This is the most valuable thing I’ve ever held," Eden said. "More valuable than anything I worked with in my previous life. More valuable than the equipment Xi Corp gave me, and they gave me things that could have bought cities." She looked at Jayde. "Ryo trusts us with it. I’m going to treat it accordingly."

Jayde stood behind her. Arms crossed. Watching.

Eden spent twenty minutes preparing. The laboratory — her domain now, the space she’d carved out of the Pavilion’s architecture over months of careful work — was organized with the particular precision of a scientist who believed that sloppiness killed more patients than disease. Every tool in its place. Every surface clean. Every variable controlled.

She laid out her instrument kit — the one she’d assembled over months, each tool a hybrid of Federation knowledge and Doha materials. Scalpels thin enough to split a hair. Crystal slides ground to optical flatness. Tweezers with formation-enhanced tips that could grip a single grain of pollen without crushing it. Gloves — thin, essence-neutral, the closest thing to sterile she could produce on Doha.

And the microscope. Their microscope — the one she and Jayde had built together in three hours of Pavilion time, two Federation minds working in tandem the way they’d worked for sixty years. Formation-based lens array. Precision-ground crystal optics. Four hundred times magnification. The first instrument on Doha capable of seeing cells.

Eden pulled on the gloves. Selected the thinnest scalpel. Placed the pill on a crystal tray. Steadied her hand.

"I need a scraping. The absolute minimum — a film. Nothing more. I don’t want to degrade the pill’s efficacy by even a fraction. Ryo’s going to take this. It needs to be intact when I return it."

She drew the scalpel across the pill’s surface. Once. Light. The pressure of a breath. The reverence of someone touching something sacred.

A film of material — thinner than paper, barely visible — clung to the blade’s edge. Eden transferred it to a crystal slide with the tweezers. Set the slide under the microscope. Adjusted the formation-lens.

Looked.

***

The first thing she saw was the structure.

At four hundred times magnification, the Soulbloom’s material resolved into layers. An outer matrix — crystalline, ordered, the lattice pattern of a refined alchemical compound. Beneath that, a biological substrate. Living cells — or cells that had once been living, preserved by the alchemical matrix, the way amber preserved insects.

"The outer layer is standard." Eden’s voice was clinical. Focused. The doctor reading data. "High-grade alchemical binding agent. Rare plants — I can see the cellular structure of at least three species I don’t recognize. Expensive, but normal."

She adjusted the magnification. Pushed the lens deeper into the substrate.

"The inner layer is..." She trailed off.

Jayde stepped closer. "What?"

Eden didn’t answer. She adjusted the focus. Moved the slide. Adjusted again. Her blue eyes pressed to the eyepiece, the clinical composure holding — but her breathing had changed. Faster. Shallower. The breathing of someone seeing something they didn’t want to see.

She pulled back. Stared at the microscope. Stared at the slide. Then, without speaking, she prepared a second slide — different section, different layer — and placed it under the lens.

Looked again.

Longer this time. A full minute. The laboratory was silent except for her breathing and the low hum of the bioluminescent veins.

She prepared a third slide.

Looked.

"Run it again," she said. To herself. Voice flat.

Fourth slide. Fifth. Each from a different section of the scraping, each showing the same thing. Eden’s hands — the doctor’s hands, steady for sixty years of surgical procedures — had developed a fine tremor.

She pulled back from the microscope. Set both hands flat on the table. Pressed until the tremor stopped.

"Jayde." Her voice was different now. The clinical tone stripped bare. Underneath it — something cold. Something that sounded like the voice Eden used when the casualties were too high, and the numbers had stopped being numbers. "Come look at this."

***

Jayde leaned in. The eyepiece was warm from Eden’s face. She adjusted focus — the trained eye, the Commander who had studied battlefield forensics and biological weapon signatures for decades, reading what the lens showed her.

Cells. Human cells. The structure unmistakable — she’d studied human cellular architecture in Xi Corp labs before she could walk. The nucleus, the mitochondrial patterns, the particular density of a human-origin biological sample.

But not just human.

Other cells. Woven through the human ones — not separate, not layered, but integrated. Different structures. Elongated nuclei. Denser mitochondrial clusters. Cell walls with patterns she’d never seen — organized differently, the architecture of a species that wasn’t human.

"That’s not human," Jayde said.

"No." Eden stood behind her. Arms folded. Tight. "It’s not. But the human cells are there. Mixed in with the non-human ones. I’ve run five slides, Jayde. Five different sections. Same result every time."

"How much of the pill is biological?"

"Sixty percent. At least. The rest is the plant compounds and a structural element I can’t identify yet — something that has a similar architecture to beast cores, but more complex. More refined." Eden paused. "I need a non-human comparison sample. Something to identify what the other cells are."

Jayde straightened. Looked at Eden. Blue met gold-amber.

"Kiran," they said at the same time.

***

Eden took a clean slide and a pricking needle back to the Academy.

She found Kiran in the training yard after evening drills — sitting on the wall, filing his nails, the evening ritual. The last light catching the points he ground down every day.

"I need a drop of your blood," Eden said. "Medical research."

Kiran didn’t ask why. He looked at her face — at whatever was on it that she hadn’t managed to hide — and held out his hand without a word.

Eden pricked his finger. Single drop. Sealed the slide. Walked back to the Pavilion.

She placed the slide beside the Soulbloom sample under the microscope. Adjusted the lens. Looked from one to the other. Back. Again.

Her hands were shaking.

"The non-human cells in the pill." Eden’s voice was very quiet. Very controlled. "They match Kiran’s elven markers. The cellular architecture, the elongated nuclei, the mitochondrial density — it’s elven. The same species."

Jayde stood behind her. The phoenix fire beneath her skin had gone cold. Not banked. Cold.

"Human and elf," Jayde said. "In the same pill. From the same person."

"From the same person." Eden looked up from the microscope. Her blue eyes held Jayde’s. "The human cells and the elven cells aren’t from different donors mixed together. They’re from one individual. A hybrid. Someone with both human and elven heritage. One person."

The laboratory was silent. The pill sat on its crystal tray — pearlescent, warm, glowing softly.

One person. Per pill.

"Eden." Jayde’s voice was the Commander’s voice — flat, certain, the voice that made decisions when the world was on fire. "What exactly are they doing to make this pill?"

"The cellular structure shows essence-saturation patterns I’ve only seen in one context — active cultivation. These cells were removed from a living cultivator while their core was active." Eden’s clinical composure cracked. Not much — a fracture, a seam, the doctor who had held herself together through five slides and a trip to the Academy, and a comparison that confirmed the worst. "The essence degrades within minutes of death. These cells were taken from someone who was alive when the extraction happened."

She looked at the pill.

"One person made this pill. One living person, with a human-elven hybrid core, was harvested — alive — to produce this."

***

They called everyone.

Green came first — emerald eyes sharpening the moment she saw their faces. Then Yinxin, golden eyes reading the room. The six dragons in human form, filing in with the particular alertness of warriors who recognized the body language of crisis. Heiteng last, mercury silver eyes already knowing.

White appeared in the doorway. Steel grey eyes. He didn’t enter. He didn’t need to.

Isha manifested — the kitsune’s form solid, nine tails still.

Hélong and Gǔlong materialized. The ancient queens filling the laboratory with their presence.

Eden presented the findings. Clinically. The slides. The comparison. The conclusion. One person per pill. Human-elven hybrid. Core harvested from a living subject.

The room absorbed it in silence.

Xinglong spoke first. "You’ve identified human and elf." The strategist’s fierce orange eyes on the microscope. "What about the structural element you couldn’t identify?"

"That’s what I need help with," Eden said. She looked at Green.

Green stepped to the microscope. Adjusted the lens with the healer’s precision — the trained eye that had spent years reading essence structures and biological formations on Doha. She looked at the unidentified structural element. The compound that was similar to beast cores but more complex.

She looked for a long time. The emerald eyes moving across the slide. Her lips pressing together. Her breathing slowing the way a healer’s breathing slowed when the diagnosis was bad.

She pulled back from the eyepiece. Her face was white.

"I can’t be certain," Green said. The words careful. Measured. The words of someone who understood the weight of what she was about to say. "But the architecture is consistent with human Crucible Cores. Refined. Processed. Stripped of individual markers. But the base structure — the essence lattice, the channel architecture, the way the material holds cultivation energy—" She stopped. Started again. "That’s a human core."

The laboratory went cold.

"Sixty percent sentient biological material," Eden said. "Human-elven hybrid cells. And a structural compound made from processed human Crucible Cores."

Xinglong’s fierce orange eyes moved from the microscope to the pill on its crystal tray. "You said you couldn’t confirm a third species. Only human and elf."

"I don’t have a comparison sample for anything else." Eden paused. "I have human. I have Kiran’s elven markers. If there’s a third component—"

"Use mine." Xinglong rolled up his sleeve. Extended his arm. The strategist who calculated everything, offering his blood to narrow the calculation.

Eden pricked. Slide. Microscope.

She pulled back after thirty seconds. "No match. The third component isn’t dragon."

The relief in the room lasted half a breath — then died. Because the third component was still there. Still unidentified. Still from a living person. And if it wasn’t dragon, it was something else. Something they couldn’t name yet.

"The third species remains unknown," Eden said. "But the conclusion doesn’t change. One individual. Human-elven hybrid at minimum, with a third heritage I can’t identify. One person made this pill. One living person was harvested to produce this."

***

Isha spoke.

"This is a violation of natural law." The kitsune’s voice carried the weight of ninety-eight thousand years. Not anger. Something colder. "The Codex governs the cycle of souls. When a being dies, its essence returns to the cycle — to be reborn, to continue, to grow. When that essence is harvested from a living body — extracted, processed, consumed — the cycle is broken."

He looked at the pill.

"Even one pill taints the soul. One. The moment a cultivator swallows this — even without knowing what it contains — their soul carries the mark. One pill, perhaps two, and the soul may still be redeemable. The taint may fade over lifetimes. But more than that—" Isha’s ancient eyes were hard. "More than that, and the soul risks annihilation. Not death. Not rebirth. Annihilation. Erasure from the cycle entirely."

The laboratory was silent.

"And heavenly law will not differentiate between the one who produces and the one who consumes. Both are guilty. Both carry the taint. The producer who harvests and the cultivator who swallows — in the eyes of heavenly law, they are the same."

He paused. The longest pause. The weight of what he was about to say pressing against the air.

"And the punishment — for those who are judged — will not be pleasant. Most souls would rather face annihilation than endure what heavenly law inflicts on those who violate the cycle of souls."

The laboratory held its breath.

Eden looked at the pill. The pill she had scraped with the care of a jeweler handling a diamond. The pill she had promised to return intact to Ryo. The pill that had been a person.

She stepped back from the table. Pulled off her gloves — carefully, methodically, the way she removed surgical gloves, turning them inside out. She set them beside the microscope. Then she stepped back further.

She wouldn’t touch the case. Wouldn’t go near it. Her hands — the doctor’s hands, the healer’s hands — hung at her sides.

"Even Xi Corp at its worst," Eden said. Quiet. The words pulled from somewhere deep — from the Federation, from the labs, from the decades of watching corporations do terrible things to people in the name of progress. "Even the worst things I saw. The biological weapons. The genetic programmes. The things they did to us." Her blue eyes found Jayde’s. "They didn’t eat people."

Jayde stood very still. The phoenix fire beneath her skin was quiet. The wings banked. The Commander’s posture holding everything in place.

(That’s what they’re doing?) Jade. Small. Horrified. (They’re eating people?)

Yes.

(The pill Ryo won—)

He’s not taking it.

***

Heiteng stepped forward. Mercury silver eyes on Jayde.

"I need to contact someone about this." His voice was low. Controlled. The deep-water register of a king whose response to atrocity was action, not rage. "The one I told you about. The Demon King. Ren d’Aar. He is an ally. His resources and intelligence network can help investigate the scale of this — how many pills, how many victims, how long it’s been happening."

Jayde looked at him.

"You trust him."

"With my life."

"Then contact him. Outside the Pavilion — nothing about the Pavilion, nothing about what’s inside, nothing about anyone here. The pill. The findings. That’s all." She held his mercury silver gaze. "My secrecy stands. The bloodsworn oath holds. Am I clear?"

"Clear."

"Go."

Heiteng inclined his head. Turned. Left the laboratory.

The room was quiet after he left. The dark wood case on the table. The slides under the microscope. The gloves beside the eyepiece, turned inside out, the doctor’s refusal to touch what she’d found.

Eden sat down. Put her hands flat on the table. Stared at them.

"I need to wash my hands," she said. "I know I wore gloves. I need to wash my hands anyway."

Jayde sat beside her. Not touching. Present. The Commander and the doctor, sitting in a laboratory in a soul-space, processing the fact that the Temple of Light was feeding people to their students and calling it a prize.

The bioluminescent light pulsed. The Pavilion hummed. On the table, inside its beautiful case, the Soulbloom pill glowed softly.

The most valuable thing Eden had ever held.

The worst thing she’d ever found.

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