Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 393 - 388: The Hunt



Chapter 393 - 388: The Hunt

Location:Kael’thoren / Multiple sites across the Demon Realm

Date/Time:Late Ashbloom, 9940 AZI — three weeks later

Realm:Demon Realm (Upper Realm)

The Voidshadow restraints took three weeks to forge.

Ren made each one personally. Eighteen sets — bands of compressed void, dark as the space between stars, humming with the particular frequency of an essence that existed to devour. Each restraint carried enough Voidshadow to suppress a partial transformation. Not enough to stop a full one — nothing short of a Peak EternalPyre could manage that. But enough to buy the decapitation team three seconds if the target started shedding its skin.

Three seconds. The difference between a clean kill and a massacre.

He forged them in the war council chamber. Alone. The door sealed. The Common Path wrapped around the room like a cocoon. Each restraint cost him — the Voidshadow pulled from reserves that had barely recovered from the Hall. Theron watched the drain the way a healer watched a wound reopening. Said nothing. The restraints had to be made. The king had to make them. The cost was the cost.

Eighteen sets. Three weeks. By the end, Ren’s purple eyes had dimmed to something closer to violet — the colour of a man running on the last fumes of a deep reserve that would take months to fully replenish.

He didn’t have months.

***

Kaelen built the operation.

The strategist’s pale silver eyes hadn’t closed in days — the calculations running behind them too complex to interrupt with something as wasteful as sleep. Eighteen targets. Eleven confirmed locations. Four probable. Three unknown — the hollow ones that Saelith hadn’t been able to place.

The three unknowns were found through the basin programme. Sorvak’s deployment teams had pushed reagent to every garrison, every outpost, every clan holding in the realm. The monitors watched. Hands touched water. Most came away clean. Three didn’t.

Two scratched. One flinched — the briefest contraction, barely visible, but the monitor had been trained by Sorvak personally, and Sorvak’s training didn’t miss details.

Eighteen confirmed. Eighteen located. The net complete.

Kaelen mapped the strikes. Simultaneous. Path-only communication. Every team receiving the signal at the same heartbeat — the Common Path carrying the king’s command across the realm in the time it took to think it.

The teams: thirty to forty high-tier demons per target. EternalPyre and Apexblight cultivators. Each team carrying a set of Voidshadow restraints. Each team briefed through the Path — the target’s cover identity, their known habits, and the optimal approach window. Each team carrying the same instruction, repeated until it was etched into their combat instincts:

Decapitate before they transform. If the skin starts to shed — restraints first, then blade. If the restraints fail — fall back. Seal the area. Wait for the king.

No heroics. No engagement. Speed and precision or retreat and containment. Nothing between.

***

Ren gave the signal at the third bell past midnight.

Eighteen teams. Spread across the demon realm — garrison towns, border outposts, clan holdings, the administrative centres where the hollow ones had embedded themselves into the fabric of governance. Eighteen targets sleeping, or pretending to sleep, in beds that demons had made for them in good faith.

The Path carried the command. One thought. Eighteen destinations. Simultaneously.

***

Garrison Commander Thalvrek lived on the eastern border.

A respected officer. Centuries of service. The garrison under his command protected a mountain pass that had been a Zartonesh entry point during the Third Incursion — strategically critical, heavily fortified, the kind of posting that attracted serious demons with long records and proven loyalty.

Thalvrek had all of those things. The record. The reputation. The respect of the four thousand demons who served under him.

He also had a blank space on the Common Path where his soul should have been.

The team arrived through the garrison’s own infrastructure — the patrol corridors, the service passages, the routes that Thalvrek himself had designed for defensive purposes and that now served as the approach vectors for his own death. Thirty-two demons. Twelve EternalPyre. Twenty Apexblight. Moving in formation through the pre-dawn dark with the particular silence of people who understood that the thing sleeping in the commander’s quarters could kill all of them if it had three seconds to transform.

They didn’t give it three seconds.

The door came off the hinges. Thirty-two demons flooding the room — the quarters that Thalvrek had occupied for decades, the desk covered in patrol reports, the ceremonial blade hanging on the wall, the bed where a garrison commander slept with the disciplined stillness of a career soldier.

The Voidshadow restraints hit him before his eyes opened. Dark bands locking around his wrists, his ankles, his throat — the compressed void suppressing the transformation, pressing down on whatever lived inside the demon skin, holding it in place for the heartbeats it would take.

Thalvrek’s copper eyes snapped open. Not with the confusion of a demon woken from sleep. With the clarity of something that had been waiting — that had known, somewhere in the cold calculation of its borrowed mind, that this moment would come.

The skin started to shed.

Around the wrists first — the demon-jade darkening, cracking, the alabaster glow pushing through. The restraints held. The Voidshadow pressing against the transformation, devouring the emerging flesh as fast as it appeared. The hollow one inside fighting the restraints with a strength that made the formation around the bed grind.

The lead officer didn’t hesitate. EternalPyre. A demon whose name would never appear in any report because the operation would never officially exist. He stepped forward. The blade came down.

Clean. Through the neck. One stroke.

The head separated. The body disintegrated — the demon skin collapsing, the alabaster form beneath crumbling, everything dissolving into mist. The restraints fell through the space where a body had been and clattered against the bed frame.

A black crystal hit the mattress. Bounced. Rolled to the edge.

The lead officer caught it before it fell. Held it in gloved hands — the Voidshadow-treated fabric preventing skin contact. The crystal pulsed against the glove. Dark. Hungry. Still alive.

He placed it in the warded box that the team had brought. The formation-glass lid sealed. The crystal’s pulse continued — visible through the glass. Patient.

It would wait for the king.

***

Reports came through the Path.

Ren stood in the war council chamber. Kaelen beside him. Jhirek at the formation table. Theron at the door — the healer who had been told to rest and had refused with the particular stubbornness of someone who intended to count every cost personally.

The reports arrived as impressions. Not words — the Path didn’t carry language across distances this vast. Emotions. Images. The particular satisfaction of a clean strike, or the particular tension of a complication.

Eastern border. Clean. Crystal secured.

Northern garrison. Clean. Crystal secured.

Clan holding, western highlands. Clean. Target never woke.

Southern outpost. Clean. But the crystal cracked during containment — partial shattering. Souls emerging. The team held the area and waited.

One after another. The simultaneous strikes landing across the realm. Decades of patience from the hollow ones — centuries of careful infiltration, of building cover identities, of eating at demon tables and attending demon councils — undone in the space between one heartbeat and the next.

Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen.

Then the fourteenth report. Not clean.

Mining settlement. Southern desert. Target identified. Team breached. The hollow one was awake.

The impression that came through the Path was not satisfaction. It was heat. Light. The particular frequency of Radiance being channeled through an alabaster body that had shed its demon skin in the time it took the door to break.

The team had retreated. The hollow one — true form deployed, feathered wings spread in a chamber too small to contain them — had killed two of the thirty before the rest pulled back and sealed the building.

Ren was moving before the report finished.

***

The mining settlement was four hours by flight.

Ren covered it in two. War form — horns, wings, three pairs unfurling, the Voidshadow trailing from his body like dark contrails across the desert sky. The Common Path singing beneath him. Millions of threads. The weight of the realm.

He arrived to find the building surrounded. The containment holding — barely. Radiance blasts had punched through two walls. The golden-white light still flickering inside — the hollow one pacing, channeling, waiting for its own kind of rescue that would never come.

Ren entered through the roof.

The fight was brief. The hollow one had been embedded for centuries in a mining settlement — a low-tier operative, not a warrior. It fought with Radiance and desperation and the frantic energy of something that had heard its brethren die through whatever channel they used and knew it was the last.

Voidshadow met Radiance. The chamber cratered. The hollow one’s porcelain armour cracked under a strike that carried the weight of a king’s fury and the precision of someone who had done this before and was very, very tired of it.

Decapitation. Disintegration. Crystal.

Ren held the crystal in his hand. The revulsion crawling through his palm. He shattered it there — seven essences, the scream, the freed souls rising through the shattered roof into the desert sky.

Fifteen. Fourteen of the simultaneous strike. One follow-up.

The Path carried the final tally as Ren flew back to Kael’thoren. The desert below him dark. The stars above cold and real.

Fifteen crystals secured. Fifteen hollow ones confirmed dead — their demon bodies disintegrated, their crystals waiting for the king’s hands. One crystal shattered on-site.

Three targets not at their confirmed locations when the teams arrived. Empty beds. Cold quarters. Gone.

One target’s location had been wrong — the probable, not confirmed. The team found a genuine demon sleeping in the quarters. Confused. Apologised to. Released.

Fourteen taken. Four at large. The net had missed them — warned somehow, or simply not where Saelith’s intelligence said they’d be. Luck. Bad timing. Or something else.

***

Ren returned to Kael’thoren at dawn.

Fifteen crystals in warded boxes on the war council table. Each one pulsing. Each one containing an enemy soul and whatever demon souls it had consumed. Each one waiting.

He shattered them one at a time. Methodically. Seven essences. The scream. The freed souls. The rainbow light — fainter each time, the Tree reaching down with the particular patience of something that had been gathering lost children for a very long time.

Fifteen. His reserves — rebuilt over three weeks of forging restraints and briefing teams — draining back to nothing. Theron beside him. The healer’s hands on his shoulders after the tenth. The twelfth. The fifteenth.

By the end, Ren sat in the chair at the head of the war council table. The warded boxes empty. The crystals dust. The souls freed.

The beast was quiet. Satisfied in the way predators were satisfied after a successful hunt — not with joy, but with the settling of something that had been coiled.

Fourteen. Four left.

Four left, Ren agreed.

And the leader.

And the leader.

***

Ren contacted Heiteng that evening.

The communication crystal hummed to life — the formation-etched surface flickering, then resolving into Heiteng’s face. The black dragon in human form. Mercury silver eyes. The single clean horn-line was visible at the temples where the human disguise thinned. Behind him, the suggestion of stone walls — wherever Heiteng was, it was deep underground.

Ren’s own face reflected in the crystal’s surface for a heartbeat before the connection stabilised. Two sworn brothers looking at each other across the distance between realms.

Heiteng read Ren’s face the way he always had — the exhaustion, the burns not fully healed, the eyes dimmed from purple to violet. The dragon’s mercury silver gaze sharpened.

"What happened?"

"Something you need to know," Ren said. "And she needs to know."

The emphasis deliberate. Quiet. Ren didn’t know her name. Didn’t know where she was or what she looked like. But he knew Heiteng was soul-bonded to his truemate — the woman his soul had been waiting for. Wherever she was, Heiteng could find her.

Heiteng’s mercury silver eyes held steady. The dragon understood. He always understood.

He told Heiteng everything.

The hollow ones. What they were — not devils. Something else. Possessed demon bodies with crystals in their chests. The crystals surviving the body’s death. Only shattering the crystal killed them truly. They used Radiance. They were invisible on the Common Path.

The hunt. Fourteen taken. Four at large. The leader — still hidden, somewhere in the realm, wanting Ren’s body.

The fragments from Saelith’s intelligence: "keeping her asleep" — someone, something, being kept unconscious. "The realm above" — a place the hollow ones’ leadership cared about more than anything. "They gave up their bodies to hide" — from what, Saelith never learned.

The gateways. Thirty-one mini teleport gates found and mostly dismantled. But his experts said thirty-one wasn’t enough for a real invasion. There had to be more. Hidden. Buried. Undetectable by anything his people had tried.

"If you encounter one," Ren said. "If your people in the Lower Realm encounter anything that fits this description — disengage. Escape. Do not engage under any circumstances. Even in their demon disguise, they can kill five warriors in three seconds. In their true form, anything below Peak EternalPyre dies."

Heiteng listened. The dragon who had carried intelligence between two sides of a war that was larger than either of them had known — absorbing the information with the discipline of someone who understood that every detail mattered.

"I’ll tell them," Heiteng said. "All of it."

The crystal dimmed. Heiteng’s face fading from the surface. The connection closed.

Ren sat in the dark of the war council chamber. The empty warded boxes on the table. The crystal dust dissolving.

Fourteen down. Four at large. The leader hidden. The gateways not fully mapped. The fragments unexplained.

The hunt wasn’t over. But the first blood had been drawn.

And somewhere in the Lower Realm, a dragon was carrying the demon king’s warning to people Ren had never met, who were fighting the same war from a direction he couldn’t see.


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.