Home Weaves of Ashes Chapter 414 - 409: Appointments

Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 414 - 409: Appointments
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Chapter 414: Chapter 409: Appointments

Location: Obsidian Academy — Qin’s office, then the grounds

Date/Time: Mid Sparkfall, 9941 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm

Qin’s office smelled of tea and old paper and the dry warmth of a room that had been lived in by the same person for so long that the walls had absorbed his habits. Scrolls lined the shelves in an organization system that was chaotic and was, Jayde suspected, indexed in a way that only Qin understood — filed not by subject or date but by some internal logic that mapped to the headmaster’s private mental architecture. The morning light came through the narrow window at an angle that put Qin’s desk in a stripe of gold and left his visitors in shadow. This was not an accident. Qin did nothing by accident.

He sat behind the desk with his tea — the same chipped cup he’d been using since before Jayde enrolled — and his pale gray eyes settled on her with the patient weight of centuries spent evaluating the distance between what students said and what they meant.

Takara sat on Jayde’s shoulder. Ears forward. Blue-tipped points tracking Qin with an attentiveness that had nothing to do with feline curiosity. His ribbons — pink left, blue right, gold at the neck — were still. At Jayde’s feet, Reiko was sized down to his contracted-beast cover, silver-black fur catching the office light, mercury rune dimmed.

"Headmaster," Jayde said. "I have a healer in my household. She’s been looking for purpose outside the home. I thought the Academy could use her."

"Always room for healers," Qin said. His white-translucent hair drifted in a faint draft from the window — a draft that existed only around him, the way the ambient essence currents bent toward a damaged Eternalpyre core. His ink-stained fingers wrapped around the cup. "The medical quarter lost two practitioners last semester. Burnout, not attrition — they went to village postings. Better hours. Fewer students who’ve poisoned themselves trying unsupervised alchemy experiments." He paused. "Bring her in."

Green stepped through the doorway.

Five-two. Ash-blonde hair tied back with a strip of cloth that had been white once and was now the soft gray of something washed too many times. Fractured emerald eyes — shattered glass holding together through sheer structural stubbornness, light catching differently in each fragment. She wore a healer’s plain robe. There was flour on her right sleeve from the morning’s baking, and a faint smudge of herb-paste on her left cuff where she’d been grinding a poultice before Jayde pulled her away. Green did not stop working simply because she was going somewhere. Working was where she lived.

"This is Green," Jayde said. "She has some experience."

Qin studied Green. The posture, the hands, the eyes — the way a healer held herself when she wasn’t performing for anyone. Three seconds. His gaze cataloguing what he saw.

"Some experience," he repeated. "Mm. Green. Unusual name."

"It suits me," Green said. Her voice was soft. Delicate. Gentleness used as both comfort and precision instrument — not weakness, but a register chosen from a much wider range because it was the one that put frightened people at ease. She had been using that voice for longer than most bloodlines lasted.

"Well then." Qin set down his tea. "Standard questions. Where did you train?"

"Under a private healer. Non-institutional."

"How long?"

"A long time."

The briefest flicker behind Qin’s eyes. He heard the weight in those three words — a duration that couldn’t be stated in a room where casual questions expected casual answers. He moved past it.

"Specialties?"

"Herbology, essence-assisted wound closure, internal cultivation damage repair, poison identification and neutralization, obstetric complications, formation-adjacent healing." She paused. Not for effect — for accuracy. Green was always accurate. "I should mention — my approach to herb preparation differs from the current Academy standard. I dry at lower temperatures and for longer durations. The modern method is faster but loses approximately twelve percent of the active essence compounds. The remaining eighty-eight percent is sufficient for most applications, but for critical treatments — battlefield wounds, cultivation fractures, obstetric emergencies — that twelve percent is the difference between recovery and permanent damage."

Qin’s teacup had been halfway to his mouth. It stayed there. Suspended. He was listening not just to words but to the architecture behind them — the depth of knowledge that allowed someone to quantify an essence-compound degradation rate to the percentage point and cite its clinical significance without hesitation.

"Twelve percent," he said.

"Eleven point seven, if you’d like precision. I rounded for conversational purposes."

Something shifted behind his gaze. Not amusement — recognition. The academic mask slipped for one breath. Beneath it was the man who had spent centuries recognizing what standard metrics couldn’t measure, whose first question about a practitioner was never what they’d been taught but what they knew. He saw the same pattern he’d seen in Jayde: competence that shouldn’t exist in the context presented. A household healer who could cite essence-compound degradation rates to the decimal point and discuss obstetric complications with the authority of someone who’d delivered hundreds of babies over a span that defied the length of a human career.

He didn’t push. He was Qin. He protected exceptional people. The protection included not asking the questions that would force them to lie.

"Formation-adjacent healing," he said. "Explain."

"Standard healing channels essence through the practitioner’s core to the patient’s injury. Formation-adjacent work uses external formation structures — ward arrays, essence lattices, resonance fields — as intermediaries. The practitioner builds the healing architecture outside the body, and the patient’s own system draws from it. It’s slower. It’s also safer for the practitioner, since you’re not filtering damaged essence through your own meridians. And it allows precision that direct-channel healing can’t achieve — you can target a specific meridian junction without affecting adjacent channels."

She said this the way Heizan ate a peach. With the absolute casualness of mastery so deep it didn’t recognize itself as exceptional.

Qin set his tea down. Picked up a stylus. Put it down again. His ink-stained fingers tapped once against the desk surface.

"How long have you been practicing?" he asked. Mild. Conversational. Small talk, except that Qin never made small talk, and every word he spoke was a probe disguised as politeness.

"A long time," Green said again. Her eyes steady. Not nervous. Not evasive. Simply stating a fact that couldn’t be quantified in a room full of conventional assumptions. She had been healing since before the current cultivation system was formalized. An interview was a quaint concept. She was here because Jayde had asked, and because the Pavilion’s walls had become too small, and because there were people in this Academy who were sick or hurt or recovering from unsupervised alchemy experiments, and Green could not exist in proximity to suffering without addressing it. It was not a choice. It was architecture.

"When can you start?" Qin said.

Studied casualness — a man trying very hard not to look like he’d found a treasure in a student’s courtyard. His eyes had gone sharp, bright with the intensity of an academic who had just been handed a practitioner he couldn’t explain and didn’t want to lose.

"Tomorrow," Green said.

"Tomorrow." Qin nodded. Wrote something on a slip — the motion fast, decisive, securing an asset before the universe changed its mind. "Report to the medical quarter at sixth bell. Ask for Healer Luo. She runs the morning rotation." He paused. Looked up from the slip. Held Green’s gaze for a breath.

"The Academy values competence," Qin said. "It values discretion equally. Whatever your experience encompasses — and I suspect it encompasses considerably more than herb preparation — you’ll find we don’t ask questions we don’t need answered."

Two ancient people recognizing each other across the gap of context and cover. The headmaster who protected exceptional people and the healer who had been exceptional since before his Academy existed. Neither acknowledged what they saw. Both knew the other saw it.

"That suits me," Green said. The same phrase. Quieter this time. The smallest shift at the corner of her mouth — not quite a smile. A woman who had been hiding for a very long time being told, by someone who understood hiding, that the hiding was permitted here.

The voice in her head was not hers.

The old one knows. Not what she is. That she is more.

[Adequate,] Kazren observed from the soul-space. [The institution gains a competent healer. The healer gains a stage. Whether the stage deserves the performer remains to be seen.]

Green left first. She paused in the corridor outside Qin’s office, and Jayde watched her run one hand along the stone wall — not steadying herself, but reading the building. Her fingers traced a ward inscription so old the grooves had been filled in with centuries of paint. She tilted her head. Frowned. The frown of a woman who had just identified the formation’s purpose, assessed its deterioration, and calculated the repair cost in the time it took to exhale.

"The medical quarter is east," Jayde said.

"I know." Green was already walking. The flour on her sleeve caught the corridor light. "I could smell the healing tinctures from the front gate."

***

The Sparkfall air outside was warm and green-smelling, the Academy grounds thick with the second bloom of the season. Students moved between buildings in loose clusters, black robes catching the breeze. Someone was practicing sword forms on the lower terrace — the rhythmic tok tok tok of a training blade against a wooden post carried up from the valley like a pulse.

Reiko fell into step beside her, still in his contracted-beast cover. The bond hummed — low, steady, the wordless contentment of a beast who had watched his person place two of her own people exactly where they needed to be. His silver eyes tracked the perimeter as they walked. Even at this size, he read the terrain the way a predator did: approach lanes, choke points, cover. He and White would get along. Neither of them needed words to understand the other’s purpose.

White was on the eastern wall.

Jayde discovered this not from White — White did not announce things — but from an Academy guard she passed on the path back from Qin’s office. The guard was a solidly built man with fifteen years of perimeter experience and the expression of someone processing an event that didn’t fit his understanding of how the world operated.

"Ashford," the guard said. He stopped. Started. Stopped again. "There’s a man on the eastern patrol route."

"Describe him."

"Large. Very large. White hair. Carries a whip — bone handle, long lash, the kind you don’t see outside specialist combat circles. Scarred. Everywhere. Hands, face, arms. The scars are old, but they’re..." He trailed off. "He has the bearing of someone who’s been patrolling longer than I’ve been alive."

"That’s mine," Jayde said.

"He’s been walking the route since fourth bell. Nobody assigned him. Nobody can find a record of him entering the Academy through any registered gate." The guard paused. He wanted to ask seventeen questions and was choosing the one that mattered most. "He found the gap."

"The gap."

"Third bell to fifth bell. Eastern quadrant. There’s a window where the shift rotation leaves the eastern approach uncovered for approximately forty minutes. We’ve been requesting additional personnel for three years. Budget keeps getting redirected." The guard looked at her with something that wasn’t quite suspicion and wasn’t quite relief. "He’s covering it. The gap we’ve been filing reports about for three years. He found it in — how long has he been here?"

"He arrived this morning."

The guard’s face did something complicated. "He found a three-year security gap in four hours."

"He’s thorough."

"Ashford." The guard leaned in slightly. Not threatening — conspiratorial. "Can he stay?"

Jayde found White on the eastern wall. Six-eight. Steel-gray eyes scanning the tree line below the Academy’s perimeter. Scarred hands resting on the bone-handled whip coiled at his hip. White hair catching the Sparkfall wind. He stood on the wall’s edge the way he stood everywhere — with the absolute stillness of a sentinel carved from the same stone as the fortification, who simply hadn’t bothered to inform anyone that he was alive.

The eastern approach was dense forest for half a league, then open scrubland running down to the river valley. From up here, Jayde could see the trade road winding south toward the border settlements, the glint of water through the canopy, the distant haze where the mountains softened into foothills. Good sightlines. White would have catalogued every blind spot in the tree line within his first hour.

He didn’t turn when she approached. He’d heard her at forty paces. He’d heard the guard’s conversation. He’d probably heard Qin’s interview through three walls, because White heard everything and mentioned nothing and filed it all in the vast, meticulous archive behind those steel-gray eyes.

"You could have asked," Jayde said.

"Asked what." His voice was low. Even. Flat in the way of a man who did not waste words on questions he considered self-answering.

"For permission. To join the security rotation."

"The rotation had a gap. Third bell to fifth bell, eastern quadrant. Nobody covering it." He paused. Not hesitation — White allowing the obvious to settle before delivering the rest. "Now someone is."

He has already mapped the entire perimeter. In four hours. He has also identified seven structural weaknesses in the ward lattice. I counted six.

[I counted six as well,] Kazren said. [I am forced to concede he is not entirely useless.]

From Kazren, this bordered on a marriage proposal.

Jayde looked at the compound below the wall. The Academy spreading across the mountainside — dormitories, training grounds, Qin’s office where Green was probably already mentally reorganizing the medical quarter’s herb storage. The workshop where Eden built things that changed the world. The courtyard where Jayde’s privacy ward hummed. The perimeter where White now stood as if he’d always been there, as if the wall had been waiting for him, as if three years of unfilled security reports had been a place held open for a man who hadn’t yet arrived.

The Pavilion was emptying. Not all at once. Not dramatically. Green starting at the medical quarter tomorrow. White already covering a gap nobody had been able to fill. Two people who had lived inside a hidden dimension finding the world — Green through introduction, White through insertion. Both methods perfectly suited to the person using them. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺

Green would teach. She’d already seen the junior healers’ herb-preparation technique, and Jayde could tell from the set of her eyes that a correction was coming. It would be gentle. It would be devastating. It would improve their survival rates by approximately twelve percent — eleven point seven, if you wanted precision.

White would guard. He’d found the gap, filled it, and would expand from there — mapping the full perimeter, identifying weaknesses, quietly upgrading the Academy’s security infrastructure until it matched his standards.

Green in the medical quarter. White on the wall. Two doors opened today. More would follow.

Jayde turned from the wall and walked toward the training grounds. There was work to do. There was always work to do. But the shape of it was changing, and the change was good.

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