Chapter 398 - 393: What Grows in Silence
Chapter 398 - 393: What Grows in Silence
Location:Obsidian Academy / Starforge Nexus Pavilion
Date/Time:Late Frostforge, 9940 AZI
Realm:Lower Realm
The gate locator worked in the lab.
Jayde confirmed the calibration against the crystal shards first — the prototype detecting each sample through increasing layers of stone and soil that Eden packed into formation-shielded containers. The inverted frequency principle held. The silence where the shielding hid the crystal became the signal that found it.
Lab confirmed. Field test next.
She asked Takara to have two of his companions bury crystal fragments outside the Academy — different locations, different depths, at least ten leagues apart. A blind test. If the locator could find two known samples buried in unknown locations, the calibration was proven.
Canirr and Prota took the fragments that night. The reconnaissance specialist and the scarred veteran — both capable of crossing leagues of terrain without leaving a trace.
The next morning, Jayde deployed the locator.
She’d refined the detection range from the original Nematomorpha design — two hundred leagues under ideal conditions, maybe more depending on the depth and density of the shielding. The formation array hummed. The scan expanded outward from the Academy in concentric arcs. Reaching. Listening for the specific silence of inverted gate-crystal shielding.
Two signals appeared. Clear. Distinct. Exactly where she’d expected — the general directions Takara’s companions had gone.
Then a third.
Jayde stared at the display. Three signals. She’d buried two test pieces. The third sat twenty-seven leagues southwest of the Academy. Faint but unmistakable — the identical inverted frequency signature. Not a test piece. Something that had been there long before she started looking.
She confirmed with Takara. Canirr’s fragment — north. Prota’s — east. Both matched. The third was neither.
Twenty-seven leagues southwest. Jayde pulled up her intelligence map. Temple property. A minor administrative holding — records office, storage facilities, the kind of Temple outpost that existed in every district and drew no attention.
A gate. Buried near a Temple facility. In the Lower Realm.
"Suki," Jayde said to Takara. "Tonight. Quietly. I need whatever is buried at that location brought back intact."
Jayde gave Suki a spatial ring — small, tied around the Panthera’s neck. One trip. No trace.
The midnight-black Panthera moved that night. Ten and a half feet of near-invisible predator crossing twenty-seven leagues in the dark. She found the site. Dug. The gate was buried six feet down — not a single crystal but a formation ring. Seven crystals arranged in a circle, each the size of a fist, connected by essence conduits. Shielding layers encasing the entire assembly. Dormant. Waiting. A teleportation circle designed to activate simultaneously, opening a passage large enough for armed soldiers to pour through.
Suki stored the entire assembly in the spatial ring. Filled the hole. Smoothed the earth. Left no trace. Returned before dawn.
Jayde laid the seven crystals out on her workbench in their original configuration. A complete, intact, dormant gate — buried near a Temple facility in the Lower Realm, waiting for an activation signal.
The hollow ones had prepared this realm, too.
She pulled clean schematics. Everything the demon king’s people would need to build their own locators.
"Heiteng. Tell the demon king — the Lower Realm has them. I found one near a Temple facility. There will be more. The schematics are ready for his people. And tell him —" She looked at the dormant gate on her workbench. The shielding layers. The activation sequences waiting inside. "Tell him I have an intact gate to study. Not a shard. The whole thing."
***
The Pavilion was quiet when Jayde entered that evening.
Not empty — the Pavilion was never empty. The wyrmlings slept in a tangle near the garden’s warm stones, three small shapes curled together. Tianxin’s tail (still present in her half-shifted attempts) wrapped around Shenxin’s ankle. Huaxin’s claw-hands tucked against her chest. Reiko lay beside them — the mercury rune pulsing in slow rhythm, the silver eyes half-closed, the shadowbeast’s massive body forming a warm wall between the wyrmlings and the garden’s cooler edges.
Takara was draped across Reiko’s back. The Lightning Panthera in kitten form, blue-tipped ears flat, three ribbons slightly askew. Asleep. Or pretending to be asleep. With Takara, the distinction was academic.
The quiet was the living kind — breath and heartbeat and the gentle hum of the Pavilion’s formation network running beneath everything like a heartbeat of its own.
Jayde almost didn’t hear the singing.
It was coming from the far garden. The space that Yinxin had claimed as her own — the alcove behind the formation-crystal trellis where the silver dragon queen kept her private collection of botanical projects, her dragon-scale pottery, and the ceramic bowl that held the seedling.
Jayde followed the sound. Through the garden path. Past the sleeping wyrmlings (Tianxin’s tail twitched but didn’t wake). Past Reiko (one silver eye opened, tracked her, closed again). Around the trellis.
Yinxin was sitting cross-legged on the garden stones. The silver-white hair loose around her shoulders. The golden eyes soft — softer than Jayde had ever seen them. Not the queen’s eyes. Not the warrior’s eyes. Something older. Something that came from the inherited memories of a thousand dragon queens who had tended living things across millennia.
She was singing to the seedling.
Not a formation chant. Not a cultivation technique. A lullaby. Low and wordless, the melody following a pattern that felt older than language — the particular song that living things sang to other living things when they wanted them to know they were safe.
The seedling had grown.
The last time Jayde had looked — and she realized with a jolt that she couldn’t remember the last time she’d looked, not properly — it had been two pale silver leaves on a thin stem in a ceramic bowl. Small. Quiet. Easy to forget in the chaos of Soulbloom pills and gate locators and Nematomorpha and hollow ones.
Now it stood a foot tall. The stem had thickened — still silver, still pale, but with a solidity that hadn’t been there before. Four leaves instead of two. The new pair larger than the originals, unfurled like tiny hands reaching for something invisible. The slow silver pulse that had always been there was stronger now — visible, rhythmic, beating in time with something that might have been the Pavilion’s formation network or might have been something else entirely.
And the roots. Jayde could see them through the ceramic bowl’s translucent glaze — silver threads spreading through the soil, reaching beyond the bowl’s edges, pressing against the clay. Growing. Reaching. Looking for more room.
"Yinxin."
The singing stopped. The golden eyes lifted — caught. The expression of someone discovered doing something private that wasn’t embarrassing, but wasn’t meant for an audience either.
"How long has it been doing that?"
"Growing? Weeks. Months, maybe. Since —" Yinxin stopped. Her hand went to her forehead. Palm flat. The gesture of someone who had just remembered something they’d forgotten and couldn’t believe they’d forgotten it. "Oh. Oh, I never told you."
"Told me what?"
"What it is." Yinxin looked mortified. The Silver Dragon Queen, who managed a pharmaceutical empire and coordinated wyrmling shapeshifting lessons and maintained diplomatic channels with five shadow dragons — looking at Jayde with the particular horror of someone who had dropped an important task and only just realized it. "With the Soulbloom pills and the Academy revenue and the Nematomorpha and the — everything. It just —"
"Got forgotten."
"I am so sorry."
"Yinxin. What is it?"
The seedling wilted.
Not naturally. Not the slow droop of a plant that needed water. Dramatically. The four leaves curled inward. The stem bent. The silver pulse dimmed to something faint and pitiful. The entire plant adopting the posture of something that had been neglected and was making absolutely sure everyone in the room knew it.
Jayde stared. "Is it — did I hurt it?"
"No." Yinxin was trying not to laugh. The golden eyes bright. "No, you didn’t hurt it. It’s being dramatic."
"It can HEAR me?"
"It can hear you. It can feel your essence. It can sense emotional states within a certain radius." Yinxin reached out and touched one of the curled leaves. Gently. The leaf uncurled slightly — then curled back harder. Committed to the performance. "It’s been doing this whenever someone walks past without acknowledging it. Huaxin is the only one it doesn’t sulk for — Huaxin sits with it for hours."
"It’s... aware."
"Very."
Jayde knelt beside the bowl. The seedling leaned away from her. Pointed. The silver pulse barely visible. The four leaves tucked tight like a child crossing its arms.
"I’m sorry," Jayde said. To a plant. In a ceramic bowl. In a soul dimension inside her own essence. "I should have paid more attention."
The seedling paused. One leaf uncurled. Testing. The silver pulse brightened a fraction.
"I mean it. I forgot about you, and that wasn’t right."
Two leaves uncurled. The stem straightened slightly. The pulse stronger.
Yinxin was laughing now. Quietly. The hand over her mouth. The golden eyes streaming.
"Stop laughing and tell me what it is."
Yinxin wiped her eyes. Composed herself. The inherited memories settling behind the golden irises — the knowledge of queens stretching back to the first Silver Dragon, the accumulated wisdom of a lineage that had tended the world’s living heart since before recorded history.
"My inherited memories identified it the moment I saw it sprout," Yinxin said. "There are references — fragments, scattered across hundreds of queens’ lifetimes. Most of them thought it was a myth. A story the eldest queens told the youngest. Something from before the Sundering. Before the realms separated."
She looked at the seedling. The four leaves are now fully uncurled. Showing off. The silver pulse strong and rhythmic — the plant equivalent of preening.
"It’s a seedling of the original. The first tree. The one that grew at the center of Doha before the Sundering tore everything apart. The queens called it the Mother-Root — the living heart of the world. When Doha broke, the tree was lost. Destroyed, most believed. But the queens’ memories say that seeds survived. Scattered. Hidden in places where the essence ran deepest."
"The Secret Realm," Jayde said.
"A hollow in the deep zone. Where the essence was oldest and densest. The seed waited there for someone to find it." Yinxin’s golden eyes were serious now. The laughter gone. "Not just anyone. The queens’ memories are specific about this — the seed chooses. It sat in that hollow for longer than I can calculate, and it chose to sprout for you."
The seedling turned toward Jayde. The four leaves angling like tiny hands reaching for her. The silver pulse synchronized with something — her heartbeat, or her essence rhythm, or the Pavilion’s formation network that was ultimately an extension of her soul.
"It’s bonded to the Pavilion for now," Yinxin continued. "The Pavilion’s essence is sustaining it — giving it what it needs to grow. But this isn’t where it belongs."
She paused. The inherited memories deep behind her eyes.
"The Mother-Root grew from Ala. It was part of her — the way a heartbeat is part of a body. When the tree was destroyed in the Sundering, Ala lost something she’s never recovered. The queens believed that if a seedling could be grown strong enough and planted near the world spirit..." She trailed off. The implications settling.
"It could help her heal," Jayde said quietly.
"It’s part of her. The way a severed limb could be restored — not a replacement, but the original, regrown. The seedling would need to be planted near Ala eventually. Close to where the world spirit rests. It would reconnect. Become what the original was — the living heart of the world."
Jayde looked at the foot-tall seedling. The four silver leaves reaching upward. A piece of Ala, growing in a ceramic bowl in a soul dimension, waiting to be returned to the mother it had been separated from since before recorded history.
"How big will it get?"
Yinxin looked at the seedling. The roots pressing against the clay. The leaves reaching for the sky of a dimension that existed inside a teenage girl’s soul.
"The queens’ memories describe the original as large enough to shade a kingdom."
Jayde looked at the seedling. The seedling looked back. Four leaves. One foot tall. Sulking five minutes ago because nobody had said hello.
Large enough to shade a kingdom.
"It’s going to need a bigger pot," Jayde said.
The seedling perked up. All four leaves unfurling wide. The silver pulse blazing. The roots pressing harder against the bowl — as if it had understood every word and was already planning its expansion.
Yinxin laughed again. The genuine sound. The warm sound. The sound of someone who had been carrying a secret without meaning to and was relieved to finally share it.
"I really am sorry I forgot to tell you."
"You were running a pharmaceutical empire and raising three dragon babies."
"That’s not an excuse."
"It’s a pretty good excuse."
The seedling swayed. No wind. Just movement — the slow, contented sway of something alive and happy and finally being paid attention to.
Jayde touched one of the leaves. Silver-warm under her fingertip. The pulse traveling through the contact — from seedling to skin to essence to soul. Connection. The kind that didn’t need words or formations or cultivation. Just life recognizing life.
She’d found a seed in a hollow. Forgotten about it. Yinxin had planted it. Forgotten to explain it. And now it was growing in her Pavilion — the seedling of something that had once been the living heart of the world, bonding itself to her soul dimension with the quiet determination of a plant that had waited longer than any of them could comprehend and had no intention of being forgotten again.
"Get it a bigger pot," Jayde said. "And don’t stop singing to it."
Yinxin smiled. Picked up the lullaby where she’d left off. The seedling swayed in time.
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