Chapter 189: Chapter 184: The Cocoons Stir
Location: Pavilion dical Bay (Pocket Dinsion)
Ti: Day 231 (Doha Actual) - 21 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm (Pavilion - 10:1 Ti Dilation)
Internal Transformation Ti: Day 180 (inside cocoon)
Green had checked the cocoon two thousand one hundred and sixty tis.
She knew the exact number because she’d started counting sowhere around day forty, when the weight of uncertainty beca unbearable, and her mind needed sothing concrete to hold onto. Every two hours, like clockwork. Dawn, mid-morning, noon, afternoon, evening, midnight, and all the spaces between. One hundred eighty days of vigil. Six months inside the Pavilion’s accelerated ti, watching and waiting and praying.
Eight thousand years as a healer, and she’d never felt so helpless.
Dawn light filtered through the dical bay’s crystalline walls, painting everything in soft rose and gold. The three forms dominated the space—Jayde’s cocoon largest, pulsing with rainbow iridescence that had beco almost hypnotic after six months of observation. Reiko’s crystalline scales shimred silver-black nearby, occasional flickers of lightning visible beneath the surface. And Yinxin’s massive dragon form lay against the far wall, scales glowing with the strange internal luminescence that marked deep hibernation.
The wyrmlings had finally fallen asleep around midnight, curled against their mother’s unconscious body. One hundred eighty days they’d waited—six months of their young lives spent pressed against scales that wouldn’t respond, calling for a mother who couldn’t answer. Tianxin’s white-silver scales caught the dawn light, making her look almost ethereal. Shenxin and Huaxin bracketed her, their small forms rising and falling with steady breaths.
Green moved through her routine with practiced efficiency. Check Jayde’s vital signs through the monitoring formations. Verify essence flow rates. Confirm cocoon structural integrity. Record Qi consumption from the crystal array.
Everything stable. Sa as yesterday. Sa as every day for one hundred eighty days.
She turned to Reiko’s crystalline form. Heartbeat steady. Essence transformation progressing. Silver-black lightning patterns shifting beneath the surface in ways that defied conventional shadowbeast evolution.
Stable.
Yinxin next. Hibernation depth unchanged. Essence channels restructuring according to patterns Green still couldn’t fully identify. Dragon physiology was adapting to sothing her dical knowledge had no frawork for.
Stable.
All stable. All unchanging. All—
Green froze.
The cocoon’s pulse rate had increased.
She whirled back to Jayde’s crystalline shell, fractured erald eyes widening as monitoring formations flared with sudden activity. The rainbow essence inside swirled faster, colors bleeding into each other with urgency that hadn’t been there monts ago.
"Isha!" Green’s voice ca out sharper than intended. "Isha, get in here!"
The kitsune materialized instantly, translucent form solidifying as nine tails lashed with alarm. "What’s wrong?"
"Look." Green pointed at the cocoon. "Pulse rate doubled in the last thirty seconds. And the crystals—"
They both turned to the array Isha had placed a few days prior. One thousand spiritual crystals arranged in precise formation around all three transforming beings—crystals that had been empty when he’d set them down, a gamble based on instinct and ancient patterns from the Divine To archives.
Over the past couple of days, the synchronized transformations had filled every single one. The trio’s bond resonance generated and purified essence at rates that defied explanation, pumping power into the array until each crystal blazed with Eternalpyre-quality energy.
They were draining.
Not slowly. Not gradually. Emptying like water through a broken dam, pure white light streaming toward the cocoon in visible rivers of power.
"She’s drawing everything," Isha breathed. "All of it. At once."
The cocoon pulsed again. Brighter. The rainbow essence inside consolidated, shifting from chaotic swirl to organized pattern. Red-gold Inferno threading through silver-blue Torrent. Erald dragon heritage weaving between strands of golden phoenix fire. And there—barely visible—black threads of Voidshadow essence, Reiko’s contribution through their shared Bonded Nexus Core.
Green’s monitoring formations scread data at her.
CULTIVATION TIER: RISING
SPARKFORGED → FLAWROUGHT → INFERNO-TEMPERED (ENTRY)
STABILIZING...
"Her cultivation," Green said, voice tight. "She’s recovering. Sparkforged back up to Entry Inferno-tempered."
"The transformation isn’t just changing her form." Isha’s golden eyes tracked the essence flows with intensity. "It’s rebuilding her foundation. Everything she lost in the battle—the cultivation drain, the ridian damage—it’s all being restored."
Another pulse. Stronger. Cracks appeared in the cocoon’s crystalline surface.
Hair-thin fractures spreading outward from a central point, rainbow light spilling through the gaps like dawn breaking through clouds.
"She’s erging," Green whispered. "After six months, she’s finally—"
Movent. Not from the cocoon.
From Reiko.
***
The silver-black crystal encasing the shadowbeast shattered without warning.
Fragnts exploded outward, dissolving into essence mist before they could hit anything. Green threw up a protective barrier instinctively, but the shards weren’t dangerous—they simply ceased to exist the mont they left Reiko’s body.
And the creature that erged...
Green’s breath caught.
This wasn’t the juvenile shadowbeast she’d watched enter the Harmony Chamber months ago. This wasn’t even the young cub who’d curled protectively at Jayde’s cocoon’s base on that first night, six months past.
Reiko stood in the center of dissipating crystal dust, and he was transford.
Size first—that hit her imdiately. He’d been cub-sized before, barely reaching Jayde’s hip. Now he was lion-sized, easily four feet at the shoulder, powerful muscle rippling beneath fur that glead silver-black in the dical bay’s light. His coat had changed too, no longer the simple obsidian of juvenile shadowbeasts but shot through with silver highlights that caught the light like liquid tal.
His eyes opened. Sapphire blue, but brighter than before. Deeper. And there was sothing else in them—a flicker of confusion, as if mories that weren’t quite his own were swimming just beneath the surface, trying to settle into place.
And on his forehead, between his eyes, a rune glowed.
Green stared at it. The mark looked like liquid rcury had been poured onto his fur and then frozen mid-flow—constantly shifting, constantly moving, but maintaining the sa basic shape. A symbol she didn’t recognize, from no magical tradition she’d studied in eight millennia.
"Reiko?" Isha’s voice was careful, testing.
The shadowbeast’s head shook slightly, as if clearing water from his ears. Those impossibly bright eyes focused with intelligence that had definitely not been there before—but also with a strange, distant quality. Like he was listening to voices no one else could hear.
And then Reiko spoke.
Not through the bond with Jayde. Not in the private ntal connection that contracted beasts shared with their partners.
Directly into their minds.
[Where is she?]
Green actually stumbled backward. She could hear him. Clear as spoken words, resonating in her consciousness with a depth that normal telepathy never achieved.
[Where is Jayde?]
"The cocoon," Green managed, pointing with a hand that trembled slightly. "She’s still inside. Erging soon, we think."
Reiko’s massive head swung toward the crystalline shell. His new body moved with fluid grace that spoke of power barely restrained, each step silent despite his increased size. He approached the cocoon and pressed his muzzle against the cracked surface.
[I can feel her,] he said, and now his ntal voice carried sothing Green hadn’t expected from a beast so young.
Relief. Overwhelming relief.
[She’s alive. Stronger. Different, but still her.]
"You can speak to us," Isha said, drifting closer to examine the transford shadowbeast with barely concealed fascination. "Not just to Jayde through your bond—to anyone nearby. And your form... I don’t recognize it. This isn’t standard Apex lineage awakening."
Reiko was quiet for a mont. Sothing flickered behind his eyes—fragnts of knowledge, mories that felt ancient and borrowed, not yet fully integrated. He knew things now. Understood things. But it was all jumbled, like a puzzle dumped from its box, pieces everywhere, but the picture not yet clear.
[This is the shadowbeast primordial form,] he said finally. Careful. Truthful, but not complete. [My bloodline awakened fully during the transformation.]
He didn’t ntion the inherited mories swirling through his consciousness. Didn’t ntion the weight of knowledge that felt far too vast for his young mind. Didn’t ntion the strange certainty growing in his chest about what he was becoming—what he would beco, when he was grown.
So things were for Jayde to hear first. When she woke.
"Primordial form," Isha repeated, golden eyes narrowing with scholarly interest. "I’ve read references, but never seen one manifest. The ancient shadowbeast lords were said to achieve this state, but that knowledge was lost millennia ago."
[Not lost.] Reiko’s ntal voice was quiet. [Sleeping.]
Green frowned at the cryptic response, but before she could press further, Reiko settled back on his haunches.
[I feel different. Bigger. Clearer.] He watched the cocoon with desperate intensity. [But incomplete. Like I’m waiting for sothing else to click into place.]
Despite his increased size, despite the power radiating from his transford body, there was sothing still young about the way he held himself. Still a cub, Green realized. Larger, stronger, fundantally changed—but still a cub wearing a form ant for sothing far greater.
"Your Bonded Nexus Core," Isha said quietly. "You and Jayde share one cultivation foundation. Until she erges and stabilizes, you won’t fully settle either."
[Then I wait.] Simple. Absolute. [I’ve been waiting six months. I can wait longer.]
Movent again.
This ti from Yinxin.
***
The silver dragon’s eyes opened first.
Slow. Confused. Golden irises swimming with disorientation as consciousness returned after six months of hibernation so deep it barely qualified as sleep.
But there was sothing different about those eyes now. Sothing ancient. As if centuries of accumulated wisdom had settled behind the gold—mories that stretched far beyond Yinxin’s three thousand years of life.
"Yinxin?" Green moved toward her carefully, keeping her voice gentle. "Can you hear ? You’re in the Pavilion dical bay. You’re safe."
The dragon’s massive head lifted. Scales that had been dimd by exhaustion now glead with healthy silver luminescence, brighter than Green had ever seen them. Her essence channels—visible beneath translucent scales—pulsed with reorganized power that spoke of fundantal change.
"I..." Yinxin’s voice ca out hoarse, unused for six months. Then she stopped. Blinked. Her expression shifted—confusion giving way to sothing like wonder, then settling into a stillness that seed far older than her years.
"What happened? Where—"
[Mother!]
Tianxin’s shriek of joy cut through the dical bay like a blade.
The white-silver wyrmling launched herself at Yinxin with absolutely no regard for the fact that her mother had just regained consciousness. She slamd into Yinxin’s neck, tiny claws scrabbling for purchase, voice a constant stream of chirps and yelps and fragntary words.
"You’re awake! You’re awake! Mother, you’re finally awake! I was so scared! Green said you were hibernating, but you didn’t MOVE, and I didn’t know if you’d ever wake up and—"
Shenxin and Huaxin piled on monts later. The male with his gold-edged frill pressed against Yinxin’s jaw, silent tears streaming down his small face. Huaxin, the smallest with her lavender frill, just buried herself against her mother’s chest and sobbed.
Yinxin’s expression transford. Disorientation lted into sothing fierce and protective, and her wings ca up to wrap around all three wyrmlings, pulling them close despite the strangeness settling into her bones.
"I’m here," she murmured, voice still rough but gaining strength. "I’m here, little ones. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry for frightening you."
Green watched the reunion with a tightness in her chest that had nothing to do with dical concern. Six months the wyrmlings had waited, too young to understand hibernation, only knowing their mother wouldn’t wake up no matter how many tis they called her na.
"How long?" Yinxin asked over Tianxin’s continued chattering, those ancient-looking golden eyes finding Green. Green couldn’t stop staring at them. Sa color, but the depth behind them had changed utterly. Like staring into a well that had no bottom.
"One hundred eighty days inside the Pavilion. Only eighteen days in Doha ti, due to ti dilation." Green moved closer, running diagnostic formations over the dragon’s form. "Your essence channels have completely restructured during the hibernation. I’ve never seen anything like it—species-level adaptation triggered by bond resonance with Jayde’s transformation."
"Jayde." Yinxin’s head snapped toward the cocoon, and her eyes went wide. "The cocoon—she’s still inside? After six months?"
"She’s erging now," Isha said, gesturing at the cracked crystalline shell. "Any mont."
The dragon tried to rise, but her legs wouldn’t support her. Too much muscle atrophy, too little ti to recover from extended hibernation. She collapsed back with a frustrated growl.
"Easy," Green cautioned. "Your body needs ti to readjust. You’ve been unconscious for six months—don’t try to move too quickly."
"But Jayde—"
[She’s stable,] Reiko said, and Yinxin’s ancient golden eyes went impossibly wide at hearing the shadowbeast’s voice in her mind. [Transformation completing. She’ll erge soon.]
"Reiko?" Yinxin stared at the lion-sized creature who’d been a cub the last ti she was conscious. "You... you’re speaking. To all of us. And your form—"
She stopped. Sothing flickered behind her eyes. Recognition that shouldn’t be there—knowledge settling into place from mories that weren’t quite her own.
[Primordial awakening,] Reiko said quietly, eting her gaze with understanding that passed between them like a current. [You feel it too.]
For a long mont, dragon and shadowbeast simply looked at each other. Two beings who had been ordinary—powerful, yes, but ordinary—and had awakened to sothing far greater during the sa transformation.
"Yes," Yinxin said finally. Her voice had changed. Still her own, but carrying weight it hadn’t before. "My inheritance awakened."
She didn’t explain further. Didn’t ntion the flood of mories now settling into her mind—every Silver Queen who had ever lived, their experiences and wisdom and sorrows, all compressed into knowledge that would take years to fully process. That was private. Sacred.
That was for Jayde to hear, when she woke.
Green frowned, sensing there was more being left unsaid. "Inheritance? What kind of inheritance?"
Yinxin’s ancient eyes t hers. "The kind that takes ti to understand." A pause. "I will explain more when Jayde wakes. She should hear it first."
Before Green could press further, the cocoon pulsed again.
Brilliantly. Blinding. Rainbow light erupting through the cracks with a force that made everyone shield their eyes.
***
The crystalline structure thinned.
Green watched through monitoring formations as the cocoon’s walls went from opaque to translucent to nearly transparent. Inside, a form beca visible—humanoid, small, curled in a fetal position.
Jayde.
But different.
The cracks widened. Spread. Connected into fracture patterns that covered the entire surface.
Essence poured out now, not just light but actual power—Inferno and Torrent and dragon heritage and phoenix fire, all woven together in patterns that shouldn’t be able to coexist. The dical bay filled with the scent of burning cedar and sumr storms and sothing ancient, sothing that made Green’s eight-thousand-year-old instincts want to kneel.
Divine essence. Unmistakable now, even without the Veil to confirm it.
"Everyone back," Isha commanded. "The final ergence will release massive energy. We need to give her space."
Green retreated, pulling monitoring formations with her. Reiko pressed against the far wall but refused to look away, sapphire eyes fixed on the cracking cocoon with desperate intensity. Yinxin gathered her wyrmlings beneath her wings, shielding them while watching over their huddled forms.
The cracks deepened.
The light intensified.
And then—
A hand pressed against the cocoon’s inner surface from inside. Small. Human. Fingers spreading against crystalline walls.
The structure groaned. Shuddered.
Began to break apart.
Rainbow light exploded outward in a silent detonation that made reality itself seem to ripple. The spiritual crystals—already drained—shattered from proximity to power they couldn’t contain. Monitoring formations overloaded, went dark, rebooted with confused readings they couldn’t process.
When the light faded...
The cocoon was gone.
And in its place, collapsed on the dical bay floor, lay a figure wreathed in fading essence.
Jayde.
Changed.
Alive.
Green moved first. Healer’s instincts overriding everything else. She knelt beside the unconscious girl, hands already weaving diagnostic formations—and then stopped, breath catching at what she saw.
The girl’s hair had transford. No longer simple black, it flowed across the dical bay floor like liquid moonlight, silver-white strands that seed to shimr with their own inner luminescence. And on her back—
Green’s eyes went wide.
Wings. Nascent, undeveloped, but unmistakably present. Small protrusions of folded mbrane and delicate bone structure, pressed flat against her shoulder blades. They looked fragile, incomplete—structures that would take ti to fully develop, months or perhaps years before they’d be capable of actual flight.
But they were there.
And her hands—human in shape, the fingers she rembered, but the nails had changed. Transford into talons that caught the dical bay’s light like cut diamonds, gleaming with an edge that looked sharp enough to slice through steel.
"By the ancient flas," Green breathed.
"Vital signs?" Isha’s voice was tight. Controlled.
Green shook herself, forcing professional focus through her shock. Diagnostic formations flared. "Strong. Essence channels are stable. Cultivation tier..." She paused. Checked again. "Entry Inferno-tempered. Confird. She recovered everything she lost."
But that wasn’t what held her attention. The physical changes—the moonlight hair, the nascent wings, the diamond talons—those spoke of transformation far beyond simple cultivation recovery.
Reiko approached slowly, massive form sohow moving without sound. He lowered his muzzle to Jayde’s face, breathing in her scent, verifying through senses beyond the physical. His eyes lingered on the wings, on the changed hair, but he didn’t seem surprised.
[It’s her,] he said, and his ntal voice carried such profound relief that it made Green’s chest ache. [Still her. Different, but still Jayde.]
Yinxin’s ancient golden eyes glistened as she took in the transford girl. "She survived."
"She more than survived," Isha said quietly, staring at the unconscious girl with an expression Green couldn’t quite read. "She’s beco sothing new. Sothing that hasn’t existed in hundreds of thousands of years."
"What?" Yinxin demanded. "What has she beco?"
Isha was silent for a long mont.
Then: "When she wakes, we’ll explain everything. She deserves to hear the truth first."
Jayde’s eyelids fluttered. Her diamond-tipped fingers twitched against the floor.
Not waking yet. Not quite. But close.
So close.
Green settled back on her heels, keeping one hand on the monitoring formation to track vital signs. Around her, everyone watched. Waited. Held their breath.
Reiko lay down beside his bonded partner, massive body forming a protective barrier, his muzzle resting near her moonlight hair. Yinxin struggled to her feet despite her weakness, forcing herself upright through sheer will, wyrmlings pressed against her legs. Isha’s translucent form solidified fully, nine tails still, golden eyes fixed on the girl who carried the fate of worlds in her changed flesh.
One hundred eighty days of transformation.
Six months of waiting.
And now, finally, the cocoons had stirred.
Whatever ca next would change everything.
But for this mont—this single, precious mont—they were together.
Family.
Waiting for their heart to wake up.
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