Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 314 - 309: The Impossible Life



Chapter 314 - 309: The Impossible Life

Location:Obsidian Academy → Nexus Pavilion

Date/Time:Early Cinderfall, 9939 AZI — Evening

Realm:Lower Realm / Pavilion Sub-space

The mountain path was empty at the ninth bell.

Jayde had timed it — three weeks of observation, logged in the same methodical notation she’d once used for guard rotations on rebel bases. The eastern corridor cleared between the eighth and tenth bells. Students retreated to their courtyards or the communal halls. Instructors held their evening meetings in the western wing. The only traffic was the occasional cook’s assistant hauling wash water, and they took the lower route.

Eden walked beside her. Not speaking. Not needing to. Two soldiers moving through contested territory toward a safe house — the rhythm was sixty years old and required no discussion.

Takara sat on Jayde’s shoulder, his small body warm against her neck. Three ribbons — pink on the left ear, blue on the right, gold around the neck. His large blue eyes tracked the path ahead with the patient attention of a kitten who was not a kitten.

They reached the courtyard. Jayde’s courtyard — the corner position she’d chosen on the first day of Elite tier, with its single approach corridor and clear sight lines. The privacy ward hummed as they crossed the threshold, sealing them from observation.

Jayde swept the space. Habit. The Commander’s instinct, checking every shadow, every angle, the faint essence signatures of the Academy’s monitoring formations pressing uselessly against her ward. Nothing. Clean.

"Ready?" she said.

Eden’s blue eyes were steady. "I’ve been ready since you said ’Pavilion.’"

(She’s not wrong. She’s been ready since Meridian.)

Acknowledged.

Jayde closed her eyes. Reached for the bond — the deep one, the Pavilion anchor that lived in her soul space alongside Reiko’s thread and Vael’kir’s warmth and the dragon contract’s distant pulse. Isha was there. Always there.

We’re coming in. I’m bringing her.

The response was immediate. Not words — warmth. The Pavilion opening itself the way a door opens for someone expected.

"Take my hand," Jayde said.

Eden’s surgeon’s fingers closed around hers. Dry. Steady. The hands of a woman who had held scalpels in operating theatres and rifles in fire zones and a dying Commander’s hand on the deck of a rebel ship, and had never once let any of them shake.

The world folded.

***

Light.

Not the harsh fluorescence of a Federation medical bay or the warm amber of an Academy lamp. This light was alive — layered, shifting, responsive. It breathed. It moved with the gentle, cycling rhythm of something that had been alive for longer than the concept of light had words attached to it.

Eden’s hand tightened in Jayde’s.

They stood in the Pavilion’s entry hall — a space Jayde had walked through a thousand times and still couldn’t fully describe. The architecture defied the language of any world she’d lived on. Walls that curved like the interior of a shell, veined with formation arrays so complex they looked organic. A ceiling that vaulted upward into a sky that wasn’t a sky — a pocket dimension’s interpretation of openness, complete with shifting lights that approximated stars without quite being them. Surfaces that responded to intent — warming when someone was cold, brightening when someone needed light, adjusting in a hundred micro-ways that made the space feel less like a building and more like a living thing wearing the shape of architecture.

Eden’s hand dropped.

She stood in the centre of the entry hall with her arms at her sides and her blue eyes moving — tracking, cataloguing, processing. The surgeon’s hands had gone still. Her mouth was slightly open. She wasn’t breathing.

Then she breathed.

"This is a self-sustaining dimensional construct with integrated bioresponsive architecture."

The words came out in a whisper. Not the careful phrasing of a village healer from Millhaven. Dr. Shishido Eba, Federation scientist, identifying what she was seeing with the precision of someone whose mind sorted the universe into categories as naturally as breathing.

(She talks like that when she’s excited. She always did.)

Dr. Shishido Eba’s observation is accurate. The Pavilion’s construction predates current Doha civilizations by a significant margin.

"Welcome to my impossible life, Doc."

Eden didn’t respond. She was still processing — her eyes moving from the formation arrays in the walls to the living surfaces to the ambient light that had already adjusted to accommodate a new presence. The Pavilion was reading her. Accommodating. The way it had accommodated Yinxin, Reiko, and every being that had entered its space and been accepted.

"The formation density alone—" Eden moved to the nearest wall, her hand hovering over the surface without touching. "These arrays are layered. Not just dual-layer — I count at least seven interlocking systems operating simultaneously. The energy throughput would require a power source that—" She stopped. Turned. "How OLD is this?"

"Hundreds of thousands of years. At minimum."

"Hundreds of—" Eden sat down. Not on a chair — on the floor. Just sat, right there in the entry hall, her legs folding under her with the sudden bonelessness of a mind whose structural supports had just been exceeded.

"Take your time."

"I’m going to need a moment. Possibly several."

***

Jayde gave her five minutes. Eden spent them sitting on the floor of the entry hall, her blue eyes moving ceaselessly, her lips occasionally forming words in a language that wasn’t Standard or Doha — Federation technical jargon, the private vocabulary of a scientist encountering something that rewrote her understanding of what was possible.

Then Jayde said: "Doc. There’s something else. Before you meet everyone."

Eden looked up. The analytical frenzy paused — replaced by the sharp, focused attention of a woman who heard something in Jayde’s tone that she’d learned to take seriously across two lifetimes.

"Show me."

Jayde took a breath. Reached for the disguise artifact — the thing that had hidden her for months, the shell of brown eyes and black hair and ordinary human features that let Jayde Ashford exist in a world where Jayde Centauri would be hunted.

She let it go.

The change was immediate. Not gradual — the artifact didn’t fade. It dropped, like a curtain falling. One heartbeat: a seventeen-year-old girl with brown eyes and black hair, unremarkable, the kind of face you’d pass on a mountain road and forget by the next turning.

Next heartbeat: gold.

Gold eyes with a phoenix-amber core that caught the Pavilion’s light and threw it back like a challenge. Silver-white hair falling past her shoulders in a cascade that belonged on a temple mural, not on a teenager. Skin that held a faint luminescence — not glowing, not exactly, but LIT, as if the light came from somewhere beneath the surface, somewhere that had nothing to do with physics or biology or anything Eden had a name for. And the hands — diamond talons, crystalline, catching and splitting light into tiny prisms with every movement.

Not human. Not divine. Something between that the universe was still deciding how to categorise.

Eden stared.

She didn’t make a sound. Her surgeon’s hands — those hands that had been moving, cataloguing, reaching for walls — went still at her sides. The analytical engine behind her eyes stopped processing and just... looked.

Five seconds. Ten.

"Commander."

Not a question. Recognition. Even in a body that looked nothing like the six-foot warrior with jade-green eyes she’d known — Eden looked at this girl with gold eyes and silver-white hair and saw JAYDE. The bearing. The stance. The way she held herself — shoulders back, chin level, the unconscious posture of someone who had carried authority so long it lived in her spine.

"You look like—" Eden stopped. Started again. "You look like what you always were. On the inside."

(That is the most Doc thing anyone has ever said.)

Noted. The Commander concurs.

Jayde opened her mouth to respond —

And Eden’s gaze shifted.

It happened in the space between one heartbeat and the next. Eden’s eyes tracked past Jayde’s face, past her shoulders, to something behind her. Something catching the Pavilion’s light.

The wings.

They were nascent — developing, post-cocoon, still growing into whatever they would eventually become. Not full wings. Not flight-ready. More like the promise of wings — translucent membranes that caught the ambient light and scattered it into faint prismatic patterns, visible in certain angles, invisible in others. When Jayde stood still, they were almost imperceptible. When she moved — when she turned, just now, to face Eden — they caught the light and for one moment were unmistakably, undeniably THERE.

Wings.

Eden made a sound.

It was not a sound that Dr. Shishido Eba, ninety-year-old Federation scientist and veteran of biowarfare research, should have been capable of producing. It was high-pitched. It was involuntary. It belonged to a twelve-year-old girl who had just been told her deepest, silliest, most impossible wish had come true.

Her hands flew to her mouth. Her blue eyes went wider than Jayde had ever seen them — wider than the Recognition, wider than the Pavilion, wider than the formation arrays and the living architecture and the pocket dimension that defied physics.

"You have WINGS."

"They’re not — they’re still developing, they’re not functional—"

"YOU HAVE WINGS."

Eden circled her. Actually circled her — walked a full three-hundred-and-sixty-degree path around Jayde Centauri, Commander of the Centauri Rebellion, founder of Eden, infant goddess of eight sealed bloodlines, while making sounds that belonged at a festival and not in the presence of ancient Luminari architecture.

Her hands hovered. Not touching — hovering, tracing the shape of the translucent membranes with the reverent distance of a scientist who understood that you did not TOUCH a specimen until you had fully catalogued it, and also of a woman who was barely restraining herself from grabbing them.

"The membrane structure—" Eden’s voice was shaking. Not with fear. With JOY. The specific, vibrating, barely-contained joy of a wish granted after a hundred years of impossibility. "The vascular patterning suggests autonomous essence circulation. They’re not decorative — they’re functional precursors. Given sufficient development time and essence saturation, these will achieve full articulation. Commander, you are going to FLY."

"Doc—"

"I told you." Eden stopped circling. Stood in front of Jayde. Her blue eyes were wet — not crying, not quite, but bright with the particular liquid quality of emotion that has exceeded the container built to hold it. "On the Meridian. After the Kepler engagement. I told you I wished I had wings."

"I remember." Jayde did. Eba, covered in engine grease, exhausted from sixteen hours of battlefield surgery, standing at the viewport watching a nebula drift past. "I wish I had wings." Said so quietly that only Jayde, standing behind her in the doorway, had heard it.

She’d laughed. Not at Eba — at the absurd beauty of it. A woman who had just saved thirty-seven lives, who had been elbows-deep in blood and bone and the terrible mathematics of triage for sixteen hours, looking at the stars and wanting something so pure.

"You laughed," Eden said. "You tried to hide it, but you laughed."

"It was—"

"Perfect. The wish was perfect. And now YOU have them." Eden pressed both hands to her own chest — over her heart, where the destiny thread from the Soul Oath lived. "My Commander has wings. This is the best day of my entire life. Both of them."

(She’s crying, Commander.)

Observed. Recommend allowing it.

(OBVIOUSLY allow it. She’s earned it.)

Jayde stood there — gold eyes, silver-white hair, diamond talons, nascent wings catching the light — and let herself be seen. Truly seen. Not as a tactical asset or a divine vessel or a cultivation anomaly. As a woman whose oldest friend had just looked at her and seen something beautiful.

"They’re not finished," Jayde said. Quiet.

"Nothing about you has ever been finished, Commander." Eden wiped her eyes with the back of her hand — an efficient, unsentimental motion, the surgeon’s composure reasserting itself over the twelve-year-old girl’s joy. "That’s what makes you magnificent."


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