Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 317 - 312: Ships Made of Steel



Location:Obsidian Academy → Nexus Pavilion

Date/Time:Early Cinderfall, 9939 AZI — Evening

Realm:Lower Realm / Pavilion Sub-space

The workshop saved them.

Not deliberately — nobody said "we need a change of subject" or "that was enough emotional devastation for one evening." The transition happened the way transitions happen in families: someone stood up, someone followed, and the gravity of the group shifted from one room to another.

Eden stood first. She did it the way she’d always done it in the Meridian medical bay — when a surgery was over, when the patient was stable, when the grief of what couldn’t be saved needed to be set down so the living could be attended to. She stood, smoothed her hair, and said: "Show me where you work."

Jayde showed her.

The workshop was Jayde’s favourite room in the Pavilion. Not the most beautiful — Yinxin’s sanctuary held that honour, with its simulated sky and the deep pools that the wyrmlings used for diving practice. Not the most comfortable — Green’s medical suite was warmer, softer, designed for healing in every dimension the word could occupy. But the workshop was HERS. The space where the Commander’s mind and the engineer’s hands met, where problems became prototypes and ideas became objects that hadn’t existed before.

Workbenches lined three walls. Tools — some Doha-forged, some Pavilion-crafted, some improvised from materials that the Academy would confiscate on sight — hung in precise arrangements that reflected the methodical obsessiveness of a mind that found peace in knowing where everything was. The Hearthstone Cooker prototype sat on the central bench, its formation arrays gleaming with the dull warmth of a finished invention. Medical formation arrays in various stages of completion occupied the eastern wall. Half-built devices — experiments, failures, ideas-in-progress — cluttered every remaining surface.

Eden’s hands started moving before her mouth did.

She touched. Everything. Surfaces, tools, formation arrays, and the half-finished refining station in the corner. Her fingers translated texture into data — composition, purpose, manufacturing method. The scientist completely unshackled for the first time in five years. Not hiding. Not translating. Not filtering her knowledge through a village healer’s vocabulary. Just THINKING, in her own language, with hands that had built machines in another life and were remembering what it felt like.

"You’ve been building all this with Academy materials?" Her voice carried the breathlessness of a scientist encountering a body of work she hadn’t expected. "The formation integration alone — this isn’t standard cultivation engineering. The design principles are hybrid. You’re using structural logic that doesn’t exist on this world."

"Wait until you see the Refining station."

Eden didn’t wait. She was already there — hands hovering over the half-built apparatus, eyes mapping its architecture. "The thermal distribution model — you’ve applied radiative transfer theory to essence channelling. That’s—" She turned. Blue eyes sharp. "That’s Federation physics adapted for magical substrate."

Accurate assessment. The Commander has been applying cross-disciplinary design principles since the Pavilion workshop became operational.

"It works better than either system alone. The cultivation approach has the energy framework. The Federation approach has the structural logic. Together—"

"Together they’re something neither world has seen." Eden finished the thought the way she’d always finished Jayde’s thoughts — not interrupting, completing. The sentence had been heading there, and she arrived first because her mind ran the same calculations on parallel tracks.

Then Eden stopped. Her hands went still on the Refining station’s surface. She turned slowly. Looked at Jayde with an expression that Jayde recognised from a hundred late-night sessions on the Meridian — the face of Dr. Shishido Eba when a research question crystallised into a hypothesis sharp enough to cut.

"I need a microscope."

The words landed in the workshop air with the weight of five years of deprivation.

(A microscope. On a world where nobody understands cellular biology.)

The diagnostic implications are substantial. Visual confirmation of tissue-level phenomena would advance every medical research thread currently active.

"What magnification?"

"Start with 100x." Eden’s voice was controlled. Barely. "If you can manage 400x, I’ll cry."

"Sit down."

"What?"

"Sit down. You’re going to watch me build it."

***

Three hours. Pavilion time — which translated to a fraction of that in the real world, the time dilation that had been Jayde’s greatest advantage since the day she’d walked through Isha’s door.

Three hours, and it was beautiful.

Not the microscope — though the microscope was, in its way, a thing of beauty. Formation-based lens array using precision-ground crystal optics. Terracore essence for structural stability — the earthen affinity providing the rigid, vibration-resistant framework that optical instruments demanded. Radiance for illumination — clean, white, adjustable, the kind of light that a Federation research lab would recognise even if the power source was magic instead of electricity.

What was beautiful was the WORK. Two minds, synchronised across lifetimes, building something neither could have built alone.

Eden contributed the optics theory — focal lengths, magnification ratios, the mathematics of bending light through curved surfaces. She’d never built a formation-based lens, but she understood what the lens needed to DO, and that understanding translated into specifications that Jayde’s engineering mind could implement.

Jayde contributed to the construction — the formation architecture, the essence channelling, the structural design that turned crystalline components into a coherent instrument. Her hands moved with the confidence of a woman who had been building things since before this body was born. File. Measure. Channel. Test.

They barely spoke. They didn’t need to. The rhythm was sixty years old — a cadence of two Federation minds working in tandem on a problem that mattered. One sketched a modification; the other understood it without explanation. One hit a design constraint; the other offered a solution before the constraint was articulated.

Eden watched Jayde’s taloned fingers shape crystal with the delicacy of a jeweller, and the precision of an engineer, and her blue eyes held something that had been absent for five years: the specific joy of working with an equal.

(This is what we missed.)

Collaborative engineering with a competent counterpart. The efficiency gain is measurable.

(That’s not what I meant, and you know it.)

The microscope took shape under their hands. Lens after lens — each one ground, calibrated, and tested against formation-projected light standards. The housing, built from Pavilion-grown crystal that Jayde shaped with a combination of essence manipulation and the old-fashioned application of a very precise chisel. The stage, the adjustment mechanisms, and the illumination system.

When it was done, it sat on the workbench between them. Small. Elegant. Impossibly precise for a world that had never conceived of looking at something at four hundred times magnification.

"Ready?" Jayde said.

Eden’s hands were shaking. Not from exhaustion — from anticipation. The particular tremor of a scientist standing at the threshold of something that was about to change everything she could do.

She reached for the healing moss sample she’d been carrying in her pocket — a habit, always a sample, always something to analyse if she ever got the chance. She prepared it on the stage with the practised efficiency of a woman who had prepared ten thousand microscope slides in another life and whose hands remembered every motion.

She looked through the eyepiece.

Silence.

Five seconds. Ten. Twenty.

Eden made a sound. It was half laugh, half sob — a single exhalation that contained five years of blindness ending in a moment of sight. Her hands gripped the workbench. Her shoulders shook.

"I can see cells." Her voice was barely audible. Cracked. Raw. "Jayde, I can see individual cells on this world for the first time in five years."

Jayde stood beside her. Not touching. Not needing to. Just present.

(She’s crying.)

She’s seeing.

"The cellular wall structure—" Eden’s voice found itself again, the scientist emerging from the emotion like a swimmer surfacing. "It’s chitinous. Similar to fungal hyphae but with an additional crystalline layer — the essence-receptive membrane that Doha healers describe as the ’vital lattice.’ I can SEE it. The lattice is REAL. It’s a physical structure at the cellular level."

"Doc."

"The implications for healing research alone — if I can identify how essence interacts with tissue at this magnification—"

"Doc."

Eden looked up. Blue eyes still wet. The smile on her face was radiant — the full, unguarded joy of a mind that had been starving and had just been fed.

"Thank you, Commander."

"We built it together."

"No. Thank you for—" She gestured. At the microscope. At the workshop. At the Pavilion, the family, the impossible life that a woman had built on a world that didn’t understand what she was. "Thank you for this."

Personnel note: the microscope represents a paradigm shift in medical research capability. Pathogen identification, tissue diagnostics, essence-interaction mapping — the applications are extensive. Dr. Shishido Eba’s research capacity has increased by approximately three centuries of developmental equivalent.

(It’s not about the centuries, Commander.)

Clarify.

(She can SEE again. After five years of being blind.)

***

Evening.

The Pavilion’s ambient light had dimmed to its night cycle — warm, golden, the artificial twilight that Isha maintained for the benefit of beings who needed darkness to signal rest. The common room had reclaimed its occupants the way common rooms do: not through invitation, but through the gravitational pull of shared warmth and the quiet comfort of people choosing to be in the same space.

Green had made more tea. Because Green always made more tea. Because the universe could end, and Green would face the heat death of existence with a pot of something herbal and the absolute conviction that everyone needed to sit down and drink before the world finished unravelling.

Eden sat beside Green on the low bench near the eastern wall. They were talking — quiet, heads close together, the conversation of two healers discovering shared ground across an impossible distance. Green’s green eyes were animated — bright, engaged, asking questions with the intensity of a woman who had healed everything this world could produce and had just encountered a mind that worked from entirely different axioms. Eden’s blue eyes were equally bright — sharp, cataloguing, absorbing eight thousand years of healing knowledge that the Federation had never imagined.

They’d known each other for three hours. They were already finishing each other’s sentences.

Yinxin was in human form on the long couch — golden eyes half-closed, silver-white hair pooling around her shoulders. She wasn’t sleeping. She was processing. Three thousand years of inherited queen memories, sorting the evening’s revelations into the vast architecture of what she knew about the world and the girl who had changed it.

Tianxin was asleep on Reiko’s back. Snoring. Small smoke-puffs curling from her nostrils with each exhalation — the involuntary fire-breathing of a wyrmling whose dreams involved burning something. Shenxin had wedged himself between Reiko’s forelegs, his cautious nature satisfied by the complete enclosure. Huaxin had not returned to Yinxin. She was on the floor beside Eden’s feet, curled into a silver ball no larger than a house cat, her lavender-tinted frill pressed against Eden’s ankle.

Eden had not moved that foot in forty minutes.

White was in his chair. Tea at the same level it had been when he’d sat down. He had not spoken since the single comment about Commander Jayde’s footing during the Titan-9 account. But he was here. Still here. And that — White choosing to remain in a room full of conversation and emotion and a new person — was the loudest thing he’d said all evening.

Reiko was sprawled across a quarter of the common room floor, his lion-sized frame occupying space with the territorial confidence of a being who had decided that the universe existed to accommodate him. Jayde sat against his flank. The bond hummed — not words, not communication, just the bass-note vibration of two merged souls existing in proximity. Content.

[The heartbeat’s been right all evening,] Reiko sent.

Jayde didn’t answer. She was watching from her position, gold eyes moving from face to face. Green and Eden with their heads together. Yinxin processing. The wyrmlings arranged like jewels across the room. White, present. Reiko, warm. Isha humming in the walls.

And the microscope on the workbench. The small, elegant instrument that was going to change medical science on this world, sitting beside a half-built Hearthstone Cooker and three empty teacups.

Takara was asleep on the microscope case. Three ribbons catching the low light. His small white body arranged with the territorial precision of a creature who understood that the most strategically important surface in the room was the one he was lying on. Nobody questioned it. Nobody questioned Takara.

(She fits.)

Jade’s voice. Not asking. Not hoping. Stating.

(She fits here.)

Personnel integration: optimal. Recommend permanent inclusion in the operational framework.

(We’re not alone anymore. Not just me. We.)

***

Takara was not asleep.

He was very good at appearing asleep — five thousand years of intelligence work had given him a repertoire of convincing unconscious postures, including the one he used now: nose tucked under left paw, ears relaxed, body curved into the universal shape of a small creature who had absolutely no awareness of its surroundings.

He was aware of everything.

The conversations winding down. Green’s tea growing cold for the third time. Eden’s breathing shifting toward the rhythm of genuine exhaustion — not the nervous alertness she’d maintained for most of the evening, but the deep, settling tiredness of a body that had finally decided it was safe enough to admit it was tired. Yinxin’s golden eyes fully closed now, her breathing regulated, the ancient queen surrendering to rest.

Takara’s large blue eyes cracked open a fraction. Just enough.

He looked up.

The Pavilion’s ceiling — the pocket dimension’s interpretation of a sky — stretched above him in an endless vault of shifting light. Not stars. Not exactly. But close enough that a being with imagination could look at the soft, cycling luminescence and see the echo of a real sky. A real cosmos. The kind of sky that existed above a world where the air was real, and the stars were suns, and the distance between them was measured in units so vast that even Takara, who had lived for five millennia, struggled to hold the concept.

Ships made of steel.

He turned the idea over the way he turned all ideas — methodically, from every angle, with the patient analytical rigour of a warrior who had served the Oceanus Domain’s intelligence network since before most nations on Doha had names.

Ships. Made. Of. Steel.

Not essence-woven crystal. Not dragon-bone and formation arrays. Not the divine-touched materials that Doha’s greatest civilisations used to build their vessels. Steel. Ordinary, unremarkable, non-magical steel, shaped by heat and hammers and the ingenuity of beings who had never felt essence flow through their meridians because they didn’t HAVE meridians.

They had built ships. Crossed the void between stars. Found worlds. Made homes.

And in those ships, on those worlds, a woman — no essence channels, no Crucible Core, no divine blood, no ancient patron, no cultivation whatsoever — had held a corridor for eighteen hours against creatures that evolved mid-battle. Had destroyed twelve warships with one ship and an asteroid field. Had built a planet and held a baby and cried alone in her quarters for two hundred dead fighters and then got up the next morning and did it again.

Takara was five thousand years old. He had served queens and kings. He had stood in the presence of Fahmjir, the Beast Lord, whose power could reshape landscapes. He had watched Eternalpyre-tier cultivators tear holes in reality with a gesture. He had seen the accumulated might of civilisations that had refined the art of cultivation for a hundred thousand years, producing warriors whose power was indistinguishable from natural disaster.

Not one of them had done what she did.

Not one of them had done it without magic.

The realisation settled into the ancient warrior’s chest like a stone dropping into deep water. Not pride — he would never call it pride, because pride implied emotional investment, and Takara was a professional whose relationship with his charge was purely operational, thank you very much. Not admiration — because admiration was for beings who impressed you, and Takara did not get impressed by seventeen-year-old girls, regardless of how many sealed bloodlines they carried or how many lifetimes they’d lived.

It was something else. Something that didn’t have a comfortable name.

He looked at Jayde — the girl leaning against her shadowbeast, gold eyes soft in the Pavilion’s low light, nascent wings catching the luminescence. She was watching her family with an expression he’d catalogued before but never fully understood. The expression of someone who had carried weight for so long that the moments without it felt like floating.

He looked at Eden — the small woman whose breathing had finally evened into genuine rest, whose body was pressed against Green’s side as though proximity to warmth was a biological necessity, whose soul now carried a thread connecting her to the girl in the doorway across every lifetime.

This woman had built a time machine. Had poured her genius, her grief, her decades of accumulated expertise into a device that violated the fundamental architecture of spacetime, for the sole purpose of snatching one person from the moment of death. It had killed her. She had known it might. She had done it anyway.

Because Commander Jayde Centauri — the human one, the unmagical one, the woman with no essence and no cultivation and no divine blood — had been worth dying for.

Not because of power. Because of character.

Something shifted in Takara’s chest. Something warm and inconvenient and deeply unwelcome. He would deny it until the heat death of every star in every universe Eden had described. If Fahmjir himself asked — if the Beast Lord turned those ancient eyes on his operative and said "Do you feel honoured to guard this child?" — Takara would give him the look. THE look. The one that had made grown Lightning Panthera reconsider career choices.

But lying here on a microscope case in a Luminari pocket dimension, watching a girl with wings lean against her companion while her family slept around her — a family that included an ancient dragon queen, a primordial shadowbeast, eight-thousand-year-old warriors, baby dragons, and now a Federation doctor who had died to reach her — Takara felt something he had not felt in a very, very long time.

Honoured.

Not just tasked. Not just assigned. Not just carrying out Fahmjir’s orders with the professional excellence that was expected of every Lightning Panthera operative.

Honoured. To be the one watching over this particular soul.

She had needed no magic to be extraordinary. She had needed no divine blood to earn worship. She had needed nothing but herself — her mind, her stubbornness, her fury, her inconvenient, irrational, magnificent refusal to let the people behind her die.

And now she had magic. Had divine blood. Had sealed powers that even Fahmjir didn’t fully understand. Had wings growing from her shoulders and a phoenix’s fire in her eyes and eight bloodlines coiled in her soul like sleeping dragons.

The universe, Takara thought, had no idea what it had created. A weapon with a soul. A god who had already learned to be human.

He closed his eyes. Tucked his nose under his paw. The picture of a sleeping kitten.

Inside: a five-thousand-year-old warrior, humbled for the first time in millennia, lying on a microscope case and thinking about ships made of steel.

He would tell no one. He would take it to his grave.

But he knew.

And that was enough.

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