Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 311 - 306: The Recognition



Chapter 311 - 306: The Recognition

Location:Obsidian Academy — Workshop, Second Segment → Private CourtyardDate/Time:15 Infernorest, 9939 AZI

Realm:Lower Realm

Jayde’s hand slammed the workbench.

The sound cracked through the workshop like a bone breaking. The practice parchment jumped. An ink pot rattled. An essence stylus rolled off the edge and hit the floor.

The impact was pure instinct — below thought, below identity, below all three voices. Something wired into the brainstem. Not recognition. Rage. The white-hot, reflexive fury of a woman who had spent sixty years fighting to be more than a serial number branded into her soul by the corporation that made her, who had watched her brother — her brother — use that designation while standing over her with a smoking blaster, who had died with that designation ringing in the air like a death sentence because the man she trusted most had never once called her by the name he’d given her when it mattered—

"Doc, just how many times—"

She caught herself. Jaw snapping shut. But it was out. Three words and the beginning of a sentence she’d said a hundred times in another life: Doc, just how many times have I told you not to use our designations?

"Doc."

The nickname. Commander Jayde Centauri’s name for Dr. Shishido Eba. A word from a dead world, spoken in a student workshop on a black mountain, and it fitted like a key in a lock that had been waiting five years to turn.

Eden’s eyes filled. Blue eyes that had been dry and clinical for five years on Doha. Blue eyes that hadn’t cried since she woke up in a young girl’s body with ninety years of memories and nobody — nobody on this entire world — who knew what a Centauri was.

The workshop was empty. First bell hadn’t rung. Just two girls standing three feet apart with expressions that had no right to exist on a Temperday morning in a formation workshop.

On the highest shelf, a white kitten with blue-tipped ears and three ribbons went completely still. Not relaxed stillness. The absolute, locked stillness of something that had just witnessed an event it understood at an operational level and was recording every detail with the focused precision of five thousand years of intelligence tradecraft.

"Not here." Jayde’s voice dropped. Low. Controlled. Not the cold tactical analyst that lived behind her eyes. The real one. The voice that had commanded the Centauri and held dying soldiers and talked a traumatised doctor through screaming nightmares on the Meridian. "Follow me."

***

The courtyard. Warded. Sealed. Silent.

They stood four feet apart. Both in disguise. Both wearing faces that didn’t belong to them.

"Verify." Jayde said it first.

Eden nodded. A jerky, mechanical motion.

"Station Seven medical bay. Designation."

"Med-Bay Sigma-Four. Sublevel Three. You called it the butcher shop because the lighting was bad and the surgical table wobbled."

The air left Jayde’s lungs.

"My ready room console."

"Grey. Standard issue. Photograph of Eden — the planet — on the lower left corner. Logistics told you to remove it. You told them to go kriff themselves and left it there for three more years." Eden’s voice was raw. "You said it reminded you of what you were fighting for."

(Correct.)

Correct. Nobody alive—

"What did I say to you on the Meridian?" Jayde’s voice was barely holding. "The first night. After we got you out of the black site."

Eden’s face changed. The tears running freely, but something behind them shifting — clinical distance collapsing, the person underneath becoming visible.

"’I’ve got you,’" Eden whispered. "’You’re out. You’re safe. Nobody’s going to hurt you again. Not while I’m breathing.’"

Confirmed.

Silence. Two seconds. Three. An eternity.

"Doc."

"Commander."

***

The word broke Eden.

The way a dam breaks — something holding back pressure for years, five years on this world, twenty years in the life before, giving way.

She made a sound that came from somewhere below language. Her face collapsed — every mask she’d worn for five years dropping simultaneously. The village girl. The quiet healer. The orphan with unusual talent. All of them falling away, and behind them: nothing prepared. No expression ready. Just raw, unfiltered, annihilating grief pouring out of a face that had forgotten how to contain it.

She crossed the space between them in two steps. Her hands hit Jayde’s chest — open palms pressing flat, finding the heartbeat, pressing hard enough to feel it.

And then Eden was crying.

Not weeping. Crying — the full-body, air-gulping, devastating kind that happens when a human being has been alone with something too heavy for one person and suddenly isn’t alone anymore, and the relief is indistinguishable from the pain. Her entire body shook. Choking on five years of silence, five years of watching people die of things she could have fixed if she could only say I’m a doctor, a REAL doctor, just let me—

Jayde’s arms came up. Instinct. The instinct below all the voices. She pulled Eden against her chest and held her. Tight. Both arms. Chin on the top of Eden’s head — because Eden was five-two and fitted exactly the way she’d always fitted, the top of her head in the hollow below Jayde’s jaw.

(This is how we used to hold her.)

Yes. On the Meridian. Every night for six months.

The pattern was the same. Different arms. Different body. Same hold. Tight enough to contain. Loose enough to breathe. Steady enough to say I’m here without speaking.

Eden cried for a long time. The ward held the sound. The morning light moved across the flagstones.

Then the words came.

"You left me."

Muffled against Jayde’s chest. Broken apart by the crying. Eden’s fists tightened in the robes.

"You — you left me—"

A fist hit Jayde’s sternum. Small. Not trying to hurt — trying to express something the voice couldn’t carry. The impact landed in exactly the same place, the same way, that Eden used to hit the mattress on the Meridian during the worst nightmares when the screaming turned to hitting because the terror needed somewhere physical to go.

"You promised." Another hit. Harder. "You looked me in the eyes — on the Meridian — in the corridor outside Sigma-Four — and you promised you wouldn’t leave me—"

(She did. She promised. "Not while I’m breathing." Those were the exact words.)

"—and then Lawrence — he shot you — I watched the recording, I watched him shoot you in the back, and you SMILED—" Eden’s voice climbing, shredding. "You smiled, and you triggered the switch, and you CHOSE IT—"

Another hit. Her fist opening. Palm pressing flat over Jayde’s heart. Fingers digging into the fabric as if she could hold the organ directly, keep it beating through grip alone.

"You chose to die. You chose to leave me. You looked at the camera, and you SMILED, and your last words were—" Her voice collapsed into something barely audible. "’I’d rather die standing than live on my knees.’ And I had to watch it. I had to watch them play that recording over and over while the Centauri turned you into a legend, and I was just — I was the doctor who couldn’t save you—"

The crying took over. Deep, heaving sobs that came from somewhere the body stored the things the mind couldn’t process.

Jayde held tighter.

She held her the way she’d held her a hundred times on the Meridian. After the rescue from the black site. Six months of evenings — Eba waking screaming from dreams that smelled like antiseptic and restraints, the only thing between her and the void being Commander Jayde’s arms and Commander Jayde’s voice saying I’ve got you, Doc, you’re out, you’re safe—

And then the Commander had died. Chosen to die. Triggered a switch, smiled, and left behind a recording that became the founding document of an empire built on grief and rage. And Doc had spent fifty years alone in that empire, surrounded by statues of the woman she couldn’t save, watching the Centauri grow from thousands to millions, watching the Federation crumble, watching Commander Jayde Centauri become something more than a person — a symbol, a creed, a name children recited like a prayer.

And none of it brought her back.

So Doc had built a machine. A time machine. Because if she could reach back — just one second, one millisecond before the switch triggered — she could pull Jayde out. Save her. Bring her home.

The machine killed her. And the soul that had spent fifty years refusing to let go followed the wake of the soul it was chasing, across the barrier between lives, and landed on Doha in a dead girl’s body with ninety years of memories and nobody who knew her name.

Five years.

Five years alone.

Jayde’s jaw was clenched so tight her teeth ached. Her eyes burned. The tears came — not the ugly, breaking kind but the quiet, terrible kind that fall when you understand exactly what your death cost someone, and there is nothing in any training manual for holding that knowledge.

"I didn’t mean to." Her voice cracked. The real voice — not the Commander’s authority, not the cold analyst she hid behind, just Jayde, broken open on the truth. "Doc, I didn’t mean to leave you. I thought if I triggered the switch — if I took the base and Xi and Lawrence with me — you’d be safe. The colony would be safe. I thought—"

"I didn’t WANT to be safe." Eden pulled back just enough to look up. Face wrecked — swollen eyes, tear-tracks, five years of performance shattered. Blue eyes staring up with the raw, stripped openness of someone who had nothing left to hide. "I wanted you to be ALIVE. I watched you choose to die on that recording, and I screamed at the screen — I screamed at you — because you promised, you PROMISED me—"

Her voice broke again. She pressed her face back into Jayde’s chest. Her body shaking with tremors that started in the core.

"—and then the Centauri turned you into a god. Statues. At every base. Your face. Your words. Children reciting your name before meals like a prayer. ’Commander Jayde Centauri, who gave everything so we could be free.’ And I had to LIVE in that. For fifty years. Surrounded by your face carved in moonrock. Listening to people worship a woman who held me together through nightmares every night for six months."

Her hand pressed flat against Jayde’s heartbeat. Feeling it. Confirming.

"They didn’t know you. They knew the legend. The recording. The sacrifice. They didn’t know you hated cold tea. They didn’t know you tapped your pen when you were thinking. They didn’t know you were scared every single day and did it anyway because scared wasn’t an excuse."

A shudder. Deep. The kind that precedes stillness.

"I knew you. And you left me."

Jayde’s arms tightened until her own muscles ached. Her eyes were streaming. The tears falling without sound — the Commander’s last discipline, the inability to cry loudly even when the silence was breaking her.

(We left her. We chose to die, and we left her, and she spent fifty years drowning.)

We saved twenty thousand people. We saved Eden. We saved the colony.

(And we broke Doc.)

...yes.

"I’m sorry." Barely a whisper. The most inadequate words in any language, and the only ones that were true. "I’m sorry, Doc. I’m here now. I’m here."

They stood in the courtyard for a long time.

The crying changed. Slowly. The violence easing. The gasps becoming breaths. The trembling softening.

Eden’s hands uncurled from Jayde’s robes. Her palm stayed where it was — over the heartbeat. She pressed once. Confirming.

"You’re alive."

"I’m alive."

"You’re here."

"I’m here."

A breath. Two. Eden’s weight settled against Jayde — not collapsing but leaning. The exhausted lean of someone who had been standing alone for too long and had finally found a wall.

"I thought I was the only one." Barely a whisper. "For five years. The only person on this entire planet who knew what a star looked like."

"I know. I thought the same thing."

***

They sat on the bench. Shoulders touching.

Eden’s crying had stopped. What remained was the shaky, wrung-out quiet of someone who’d just evacuated fifty years of grief and was blinking at the empty space left behind.

"How long?" Eden’s voice was hoarse.

"Seventeen years in this body. Aware — truly aware — about four."

"I’ve had five. Five years pretending to be a village orphan."

"I’ve been pretending to be a frontier girl who’s good with formations."

A pause. Then Eden straightened. The doctor coming back online. The scientist. The mind that needed data.

"After the switch — after you—" She stopped. Swallowed. "The recording spread through the Centauri networks within days. Every mess hall, every base, every ship. The crew caught everything — Lawrence’s betrayal, Xi’s confession, your choice. It became the founding document."

(Lawrence.)

The name hit like shrapnel. Jayde’s jaw tightened. The wound — sixty years of brotherhood revealed as sixty years of deception — hadn’t healed across lives. She doubted it ever would.

"The Centauri rose." Eden’s voice steadied as she moved into territory that was factual rather than emotional. "Not just survived — rose. Your sacrifice broke something open. The rage, the grief — it unified cells that had been hiding for decades. They stormed Xi Corp facilities. Freed thousands of GESS. Shielded worlds from corporate exploitation." A breath. "The Federation fell, Jayde. XI Corp. The whole system. It collapsed within a generation. What replaced it — what the Centauri built from the rubble — numbered in the millions by the time I—"

She stopped.

"By the time you what?"

"By the time I built the machine." Quiet. Ashamed. "Fifty years. I spent fifty years in a Centauri Empire that you made possible, surrounded by people who worshipped a dead woman, and I couldn’t — I couldn’t let you go. I built a time machine because I thought if I could reach back far enough, I could pull you out one second before the switch—"

"You used yourself as the test subject."

"Nobody else volunteered. I couldn’t ask anyone else to risk it."

"You died."

"The machine failed. Something pulled my soul through. I woke up here." A pause. Then, with the ghost of something that might have been dark humor in another context: "So we both died saving someone. And we both ended up on the same magic planet. The statistical probability of that is—"

"Incalculable."

"I was going to say stupid."

The laugh came from somewhere unexpected. Not a real laugh — a broken thing that started as relief and caught on grief and arrived as something wet and ugly and raw. Two people who had been carrying weight alone for so long that the sudden lightness felt like falling.

"They got the jaw wrong," Eden said. "On the statues. Your jaw was sharper."

"They always get the jaw wrong."

"There’s one in every base. Every settlement. Every school, hospital, and assembly hall. Moonrock with bioluminescent veins. Your face. Your words carved underneath: ’I would rather die standing than live on my knees.’"

They turned me into a creed.

(They turned us into a creed.)

"Children recite it," Eden continued. "Before meals. Before classes. Before bed. ’Commander Jayde Centauri, who gave everything so we could be free.’ They tell the story — the conspiracy, the betrayal, your choice. They tell it like scripture."

Something moved in Jayde’s chest. Not pride. Something stranger and heavier — the vertigo of discovering that your death meant more than your life, that the thing you gave up became the foundation of something larger than you could have imagined. She’d died to save twenty thousand people. Twenty years later, there were millions. And they said her name like a prayer.

"I’m a dead legend on a magic planet," she said, "making cooking devices."

"I’m a biowarfare specialist making bandages and calling them potions."

The laughter came again. The kind that bordered on tears and didn’t care about the border. Eden pressed her hand over her mouth. Jayde’s shoulders were shaking. Isha’s wards held the sound inside, and two women who had lost everything — civilisation, identity, each other — sat on a stone bench and laughed the way you laugh when the joke is too big to be funny and too real to be anything else.

***

The laughter faded. The quiet that replaced it was different — warmer.

"Ground rules," Jayde said. The Commander — not the performance but the real version. The one that planned. That protected.

"Nobody can know."

"I understand."

"I need to verify you. Weeks. Observation."

Eden’s blue eyes held steady. Red-rimmed. Exhausted. Understanding.

"Lawrence," she said.

One word. That was all she needed.

The silence that followed was dense with sixty years of shared knowledge. Lawrence. Who had named Jayde. Who had been her brother for sixty years. Who had been a Xi Corp spy the entire time. Who had shot her in the back while calling her by her serial number. Who had stood over her with a smoking blaster while a corporate executive applauded. Who had broken trust so completely and so fundamentally that the wound had followed Jayde across lives, across deaths, across the barrier between worlds.

Eden had seen the recording. She knew exactly what Lawrence had done. She knew exactly what it had cost. And she knew exactly why the woman sitting beside her — who desperately wanted to trust, who needed to trust, who had been alone with the weight of distrust for two years — couldn’t simply accept. Not without verification. Not without time. Not after Lawrence.

"If you’re really Commander Jayde," Eden said, voice steady, "you’re going to test me whether I want you to or not. Because the last person you trusted absolutely turned out to be a weapon aimed at everything you loved."

"If you’re really Doc, you won’t just understand — you’ll insist."

"I insist." No hesitation. "Take however long you need. Weeks. Months. I spent fifty years trying to reach you. I can wait for you to be sure."

Jayde looked at her. At the blue eyes that held no hurt, no offence. Only the fierce, clear-eyed understanding of someone who’d watched the recording of Lawrence’s betrayal and knew — viscerally, in the place where knowledge lives below argument — exactly what it meant. Not just what it cost Jayde. What it cost trust. What it cost the ability to believe anyone, ever again, completely.

"Thank you," Jayde said. And meant it in a way that the word rarely carried.

"We continue as normal," she went on. "Academy students. Workshop partners. The masks go back on. But between us — when we’re alone, when the wards are up — real."

"Real." Eden repeated the word as if tasting it. Testing its weight. Finding it bearable. "I can do real."

"And Doc—"

"Don’t call you by your designation." The faintest smile. The echo of a prologue. "I know how you feel about that."

Something loosened in Jayde’s chest. A knot that had been tied since the first Chapter of a life she’d left behind, pulled free by someone who remembered the same moment.

"The things I need to tell you — about what I’ve found here, about what I am, about what’s coming — they’re going to change everything you think you know about this world."

"I built a time machine and killed myself trying to bring you back." Eden’s voice was steady now. Rough-edged and raw, but steady. "Whatever you tell me, it won’t be stranger than waking up on a planet with no electricity and finding out magic is real."

***

Jayde exited the warded courtyard first.

The Academy’s morning was in full motion. Students between tiers. Formation lamps brightening. The distant sound of combat training from the northern yards. A world that didn’t know.

On the ground beside the entrance, a white kitten sat exactly where he’d positioned himself. Paws together. Tail curled. Three ribbons undisturbed. He looked up at Jayde with large blue eyes that contained absolutely no indication of what he’d spent the last hour doing.

His ears rotated once. Forward. Then settled.

Jayde looked at him. He looked at her. A kitten and a girl exchanging a glance that contained — from the kitten’s side — approximately five thousand years of intelligence tradecraft compressed into the angle of two blue-tipped ears, and from the girl’s side, the warm gratitude of someone who didn’t know why her stray cat had followed her to the courtyard but was glad for the company.

She bent down. Scooped him up. He allowed it with the particular dignity of a creature for whom being carried was a tactical concession, and settled against her chest with his head under her chin. His eyes closed. His ears did not.

Eden emerged a minute later. Face washed. Eyes still red, but composure rebuilt. The village healer refitted.

She looked at Jayde. At the kitten. At the morning.

"Tea," Eden said. "I left two cups in the workshop. They’ll be cold."

"I hate cold tea."

"I know. You complained about it every morning for six months on the Meridian and never once got up early enough to drink it hot."

"That is—" Jayde stopped. Felt the corner of her mouth pulling. Lost the fight against it. "—accurate."

They walked toward the workshop. Side by side. A normal distance apart. Nothing had changed. Everything had changed. Two Centauri souls on a magic planet, walking to a workshop to drink cold tea, wearing faces that didn’t belong to them, carrying a secret that nobody on this world could understand.

Takara’s ears tracked the corridor from his position against Jayde’s chest. Forward. Right. Left. Forward.

The Academy hummed around them. Stone and ambition and the distant rumble of something sealed beneath the mountain.

***

Evening.

Jayde sat in her dormitory. The courtyard outside her window was empty. The formation lamps had dimmed from amber to bronze. Through the bond, Reiko’s presence pulsed — warm, steady, curious. He’d felt the emotional upheaval hours ago. She’d pushed reassurance without explanation: I’m fine. Something happened. Good something. I’ll tell you later. He’d sent back trust, edged with the indignation of a shadowbeast who didn’t like being told to wait.

[You’re doing the shaking thing,] came through the bond. Distant. Warm. [Your hands. I can feel it from here.]

She looked down. Her hands were trembling in her lap.

Not fear. Not exhaustion. A different kind of shaking — the physiological response of a nervous system that had been running at the frequency of alone for two years and had just had that frequency fundamentally altered. The way a tuning fork adjusts when a second fork begins to hum beside it.

[Whatever happened,] Reiko sent, [your heartbeat changed. It’s been different since midmorning. Steadier. As if something that was missing came back.]

She pressed her palms flat on her knees. Let the shaking happen. Let the smile happen — the one she’d been fighting all day, through afternoon classes, through evening meal where Eden sat three tables away and didn’t look at her, and Jayde didn’t look at Eden, and neither of them needed to because the knowledge between them was a living thing that didn’t require eye contact.

(Doc’s here.)

The thought came from Jade, seventeen years old, the child who carried feelings too big for analysis and too important for tactics.

(Doc’s here. Doc is here.)

Yes.

(She cried. She hit us. She said we left her.)

We did leave her.

(We didn’t mean to.)

No. But we did. And she spent fifty years building a machine to bring us back, and she died trying, and she ended up on the same planet we did, and for five years she was alone. Just like us.

(But not anymore.)

No. Not anymore.

(She said they turned us into a god.)

A legend. Not a god.

(Children say our name like a prayer. Statues at every base. "I would rather die standing than live on my knees." That’s more than a legend, Commander.)

The child’s voice was quiet. Certain. Carrying a weight that had nothing to do with seventeen years of life on Doha and everything to do with a legacy that had grown beyond the person who created it.

That was another life.

(Was it?)

Jayde pressed her palms harder. The shaking continued. The smile wouldn’t stop.

Somewhere in this Academy, a five-foot-two healer with blue eyes and surgeon’s hands was sitting in her own dormitory with her own shaking hands and her own unkillable smile, carrying the same secret, breathing the same relief. Adjusting to the same new frequency.

Not alone.

For the first time since she woke up on Doha.

For the first time in two years of carrying memories from a dead world in a body that had never seen a star.

For the first time since she’d triggered a switch and smiled and chosen to die standing so that twenty thousand people could live, and those twenty thousand had become millions, and the millions had turned her name into a faith.

Not alone.

(Doc’s here.)

She let the tears fall. Quiet ones. The kind that comes when the body has finally processed what the mind accepted hours ago, and the relief hits the bloodstream like medication, and everything that was clenched releases at once.

And smiled.


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