Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 377 - 372: The Children

Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 377 - 372: The Children

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Chapter 377: Chapter 372: The Children

Location: Pavilion — Main Hall / Eden’s Laboratory / Obsidian Academy — Training Yard

Date/Time: Mid Voidmarch, 9939 AZI — morning to next day

Realm: Lower Realm (soul-space) / Lower Realm

Heiteng found them in the main hall.

Jayde and Eden. Sitting at the long crystal table where the bloodsworn oath had been spoken, where the ancient queens had manifested, where Ashara’s memory projections had rewritten the history of the world. The table where important things happened.

Heiteng sat across from them. Mercury silver eyes on Jayde. The king, who had just spent an hour on a communication crystal and was carrying information that weighed more than stone.

"The Demon King has been investigating the Temple’s operations for months," Heiteng said. "Independently. Before we found the pill. Before the tournament."

Jayde’s gold-amber eyes were steady. Listening.

"He has a prophetess. Young. Powerful. Found after Xinglong and I left for the Lower Realm." Heiteng’s voice was measured. Each word placed with care. "She has visions. Four of them, related to the Temple. The first showed the Soulbloom production pipeline."

Jayde’s instinct was skepticism — sixty years of Federation training didn’t bend for visions and prophecy. But her father had seen every possible future. If a prophetess existed with even a fraction of that capacity, the intelligence was worth hearing.

"Tell me what she saw." Heiteng’s mercury silver eyes held hers. "A hall. Children in white tunics with copper trim. Six, seven years old. A priestess welcoming them as chosen."

The main hall was quiet. The bioluminescent veins pulsing their slow rhythm.

"Behind the walls of that hall: examination chambers. Each child on a dais. A polished disc passed over them. A scribe writing numbers in two columns." Heiteng paused. "Yield potential and disposition. Yield. The word they use for harvests."

Eden’s blue eyes went flat. The doctor hearing terminology she recognized — the language of processing, of throughput, of treating living things as raw material.

"Three grades," Heiteng said. "A children are kept. Allowed to mature — fuller essence, higher yield when eventually harvested. B children are processed immediately. Smaller yield, faster turnover. C children—" He stopped. The mercury silver eyes closing for a moment. Opening. "C children are walked through a door at the end of the hall. The door opens one way. Down a ramp. To copper vats."

The words fell into the room one at a time.

"The extraction kills them. The prophetess’s word was grinding."

Eden pushed back from the table. The chair scraped against the crystal floor — loud in the silence, the involuntary movement of a body recoiling from information the mind hadn’t finished processing. Her blue eyes were wide. Her hands — the doctor’s hands, the healer’s hands — had come off the table and were pressed against her mouth.

Children. Six years old. Copper vats. Grinding.

The pill she had examined last night. The pill she had scraped with the care of a jeweler. The pill she had called the most valuable thing she’d ever held. A child. She had been holding a child.

Eden turned away from the table. Her shoulders tight. Breathing through her fingers.

Jayde hadn’t moved. On the surface. Inside, something cracked — not the Commander’s composure, which held the way it always held, but something beneath it. The place where the child who had watched her mother die and been sent to the slavepits lived. The place that understood, in a way no tactical framework could contain, what it meant to be a child in a room where no one cared whether you lived.

Her hand found the table’s edge. Gripped. The gold-amber eyes burned — not with tears. With something older and colder. The look of someone who had just found the line, the one that separated strategy from war, and had stepped over it.

"The pills are distilled suffering," Heiteng said. The prophetess’s phrase. His voice was quieter now — the black dragon king who had delivered atrocities before, who had sat in war councils and heard casualty reports measured in thousands, watching two young women absorb a horror that was worse than numbers. "She Saw the entire pipeline. Examination, sorting, extraction, processing. Copper-sealed crates moving by night along Temple routes. Pills in lacquered boxes. Priests blessing them. Upper Realm nobles consuming them with breakfast and calling them sacred medicine."

Jayde hadn’t moved. Hadn’t shifted. The Commander’s posture holding everything in place while the information arranged itself behind her eyes. But the hand on the table’s edge was white-knuckled, and the gold-amber eyes held a light that Heiteng recognized. He’d seen it once before — in Ren’s eyes, the day the Demon King decided to kill Salroch. The day Ren put the realm above his own blood and made the choice to slay his own father. The light of someone who had decided, quietly and permanently, that something was going to end.

Eden turned back to the table. Her hands were steady now — the doctor’s control reasserting itself, the way it always reasserted itself, because the alternative was uselessness and Eden was never useless. But her blue eyes were different. Harder. The warmth she carried — the doctor’s compassion, the healer’s softness — had been replaced by something clinical and sharp and final.

"How long?" Jayde asked.

"Generations." Heiteng’s jaw tightened. "Small-scale at first. Framed as tragedy — children who didn’t survive their training. Nobody counted because the Temple owns the academies and the records. But the prophetess’s latest vision showed quotas being revised upward. Dozens per year, scaling to thousands."

"How long is a very long time?"

Heiteng grimaced. The expression of a man who had lived eighteen thousand years and still found certain numbers difficult to say.

"Thousands of years."

***

(Children.)

Jade’s voice arrived small. Not her usual self — the wry commentary, the sharp asides, the child who surfaced to poke at Jayde’s composure. This was different. This was a child hearing about children. 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚

(Those are CHILDREN. Why are they investigating? You go, and you STOP them.)

Jayde kept her face still. The main hall. Heiteng across the table. Eden beside her. The Commander who could not afford to crack.

You can’t accuse people without facts.

(You HAVE facts. You have the pill. You have the microscope. You have what you SAW.)

Who’s going to believe it?

(EVERYONE. You SHOW them.)

Show them what? Cells? DNA? Words that don’t exist on Doha? Jayde’s internal voice was patient. The patience of someone explaining something terrible to someone too young to understand why terrible things couldn’t be fixed by wanting them fixed. If I stand before the Academy elders and say, "I looked at the pill through a device that magnifies four hundred times and found human biological material" — they’ll think I’m mad. Or worse, they’ll wonder how I know what I know. How I have technology that doesn’t exist. How a first-year Academy student has knowledge that no healer, no alchemist, no scholar on Doha possesses.

(But they’re killing CHILDREN.)

I know.

(Six years old. Seven years old. They’re — they’re the same age as—)

Jade stopped. The same age as her when they’d sent her to the pits. The same age as the child who had watched her mother die and been dragged away by men who didn’t care whether she screamed or went silent. Six. Seven. The age when the world was supposed to be safe, but never was.

(You have to DO something.)

I will. But rushing will do more harm than good. If we move before we have proof the world can understand — proof in their language, not ours — the Temple buries everything. The evidence disappears. The operations move. And we never get another chance.

(But the children—)

The children who are there now, I cannot save today. The children who will be there tomorrow — I can save them by being patient today.

Jade went quiet. Not the quiet of agreement. The quiet of a child who had been told something true and hated it. The quiet of someone whose entire being was screaming DO SOMETHING and being told that the something was waiting.

The quiet was heavy. Heavier than usual.

***

Heiteng must have seen something on Jayde’s face — the war showing through the composure, the fractures in the mask — because he spoke quickly.

"The Demon King has already acted. He’s extracted hundreds of thousands of mixed-bloods from the Mid Realm. Everyone in Temple-controlled territories. They’re safe. In his territory. Housed. Protected."

Jayde looked at him. The information landing.

(Well.) Jade’s voice was small. Bitter. The bitterness of a child who wanted heroes and was being given strategists. (At least SOMEONE is saving people.)

A pause.

(What are YOU going to do?)

Jayde didn’t answer. Not to Jade. Not out loud. The Commander filing the question alongside everything else — the pipeline, the quotas, the children in white tunics, the door that opened one way. Filing it in the place where the things she would act on lived, alongside the things she could not act on yet.

"Thank you," Jayde said to Heiteng. "For the intel."

Heiteng inclined his head. The mercury silver eyes holding hers for a moment longer — the sworn brother who could see the weight and couldn’t carry it for her.

He left. The main hall settled into silence.

Jayde sat at the crystal table. Eden beside her. The bioluminescent veins pulsing blue and green. The Pavilion humming its constant hum.

***

Later. Eden’s laboratory. The two of them.

The bioluminescent light steady. The microscope on its stand. The slides from last night still in their rack — the evidence of what they’d found, preserved in crystal, too important to clean and too horrible to look at again.

Jayde sat on the workbench. Eden in her chair. Two Federation minds. The same analytical framework. The same cold, necessary logic that had kept them alive through sixty years of Xi Corp operations and would keep them alive through this.

"The Temple has been targeting children in the Lower Realm," Jayde said. "Kindling Day. Every year. Offering passage to Temple schools in the Mid Realm. Hundreds of children from the Lower Realm have already been recruited."

"We know that," Eden said. "We heard the villagers. Months ago. When we were investigating the knock-off cultivation products."

"The villagers were hiding their children."

"Yes. They didn’t know why. But they knew enough to be afraid."

Jayde nodded. The villagers’ instinct had been right. The parents who hid their children in cellars and sent them to relatives in distant villages and lied to the Temple recruiters about how many offspring they had — those parents had been right.

"The Demon King rescued hundreds of thousands of mixed-bloods from the Mid Realm," Jayde said. "The Temple’s primary harvesting pool — emptied. Their supply disrupted."

"Which means they need a new source."

"The recruitment drive at the academies. The debt buyouts. The passage offers. The tournament prizes." Jayde listed them the way the Commander listed supply chain vulnerabilities — each one a node in a network. "They’re not investing in fighters. They’re not investing in talent."

Eden was quiet for a moment. Her blue eyes on the microscope. On the slides. On the rack of crystal that held the proof of what the Temple called sacred medicine.

"If they’re already harvesting children," Eden said. Slowly. "Why the interest in teenagers? In young adults? The Academy students they’re recruiting — Entry to Mid Flamewrought at most. Their cores aren’t developed enough for high-yield extraction. It doesn’t make sense as a harvesting strategy."

They looked at each other.

The same moment. The same conclusion. Two women who had spent lifetimes reading patterns, and the pattern was there, and it was the worst one.

"Breeding," Jayde said.

The word sat in the laboratory.

(Breeding?) Jade’s voice. Small. Confused. The child reaching for a concept and recoiling from it. (What do you mean, breeding?)

The teenagers aren’t for harvesting. They’re for producing the next generation. Children born in Temple facilities. Raised in Temple care. No parents to hide them. No villages to run to. A self-sustaining supply.

(I don’t—)

Breeding. Children for their pills.

(NO.)

The word hit like a fist. Jade — furious, horrified, the child’s outrage burning through every layer between her and the surface.

(You have to STOP them. You have to stop them RIGHT NOW.)

We will. But this takes time.

(TIME? They’re making CHILDREN to GRIND. How much TIME do you need?)

Enough to do it right. Enough to make sure when we move, they can’t hide. Can’t run. Can’t bury what they’ve done.

(You can stop the students from going. The ones who accepted. You can at least do THAT.)

How? They believe this is the best opportunity of their lives. Free passage. Temple resources. Debt cleared. There is nothing I can say that will change their minds.

(You can at least try?)

No. Jayde was adamant. The Commander’s certainty — flat, absolute. If I try to warn them, I draw the Temple’s attention. And if the Temple suspects anyone knows — they bury everything. Move the operations. Destroy evidence. And it’s not just the evidence we lose. The wyrmlings. Reiko. Eden. Yinxin. The dragons. Everyone in the Pavilion. Their lives will be forfeit. The Temple will bury us all. And then they continue. With no one left to stop them.

Jade was quiet for a moment. Processing. The fury still there — burning, hot, the child’s rage at a world that ground children into medicine. But underneath it, the understanding. The terrible, reluctant understanding that the Commander was right, and being right didn’t make it better.

(I hate this.)

I know.

(Promise me we’ll stop them.)

I promise.

***

"The students who accepted the Temple’s offer," Jayde said. Her voice level. The Commander. "We can’t stop them."

Eden looked at her. "I know."

"If we try — if we warn them, if we tell them what we’ve found — the Temple will know someone is looking. They’ll bury the evidence. Move the operations. Destroy what they can. And we lose everything."

"I know."

"The wyrmlings. Reiko. You. Yinxin. The dragons. Everyone in the Pavilion." Jayde’s voice was quiet but absolute. "Their lives would be forfeit. The Temple wouldn’t just silence us — they’d erase us. And then they’d continue. With no one left to stop them."

Eden was quiet for a long time. The doctor who had watched Xi Corp do terrible things and had learned that the cost of premature action was measured in lives, not principles.

"We let them go," Eden said.

"We let them go. For now. And we build the case. In terms that the world understands. In ways the Temple can’t bury."

"And when we have enough?"

"We burn them to the ground."

The laboratory was quiet. The bioluminescent light pulsing. The microscope standing between them like a monument to what they’d found and what they’d do with it.

***

The next morning. The Academy.

Eden carried the dark wood case in both hands. The gloves she’d worn were new — she’d disposed of the old pair. The case felt different now. Not the weight of a treasure. The weight of a coffin.

They found Ryo in the training yard. Kiran beside him. The two of them running morning forms — Ryo’s precise, Kiran’s furious, the partnership of opposites that had developed over months of shared training.

"Ryo." Eden held out the case. "Your pill."

Ryo took it. Held it. The grey eyes reading Eden’s face — the revulsion she wasn’t hiding, the distance she’d put between herself and the case, the way she’d held it at arm’s length like something contaminated.

"As a friend," Eden said. "I advise you — do not take this pill."

Kiran’s verdant-green eyes widened. "What did you find?"

Eden’s face shifted. The clinical composure she’d maintained through five slides and a microscope and a night of analysis, finally showing what lived underneath it.

"Nothing good."

Ryo held the case. Looked at it. The pearlescent pill visible through the silk lining, still glowing softly, still radiating warmth. Still beautiful. The beauty was the worst part — knowing what it was and still seeing something lovely.

"My father contacted me last night," Ryo said.

The four of them stood apart from the morning crowd — corner position, backs to the wall, voices low enough that the nearest students couldn’t hear.

"In a panic. He found out I won the tournament. The first thing he asked was whether I’d taken the pill." Ryo’s grey eyes were steady. The noble’s composure holding the way it always held — but underneath, something Jayde hadn’t seen before. Uncertainty. "When I told him I hadn’t, he was relieved. Genuinely relieved. The way you’re relieved when someone steps back from a ledge."

He paused.

"He begged me not to take it. My father has never begged anyone for anything in his life. He is the head of House Ashenveil. He negotiates with sect elders and provincial governors, and trade consortium leaders. He does not beg."

The morning light caught the frost on the training yard walls.

"He’s on his way. Two days. He made me swear on my mother’s life not to touch that pill. Said I would regret it for the rest of my life if I did." Ryo looked at Eden. At Jayde. "His last warning was to stay out of the way of the Temple priests."

Jayde looked at Ryo. The Commander’s assessment — sharp, immediate, the tactical mind reading intent.

"Your father — does he want you not to take it because something is wrong with the pill? Or because he wants to use it for political gain?"

Ryo didn’t flinch. The question was direct, and he answered it directly.

"When it comes to strength, my father puts his sons first. Before anything political. Always has. He believes that with enough personal strength, everything else follows — power, position, influence. If the pill would make me stronger safely, he would have told me to take it before anyone else could claim it." The grey eyes held Jayde’s. "He told me not to touch it. And to stay away from the priests. That’s not politics. That’s fear."

Jayde and Eden looked at each other.

"We’d like to speak to your father," Jayde said.

Ryo looked at them. Grey eyes reading faces the way he always read faces — the layers, the silences, the things that lived beneath the things that were said.

"I think he’d like to speak to you, too."

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