Chapter 413 - 408: First Steps
Chapter 413 - 408: First Steps
Location:Obsidian City — Markets and streets
Date/Time:Early Sparkfall, 9941 AZI
Realm:Lower Realm
The courtyard was empty. Jayde checked it twice — once with her eyes, once with the awareness that came from carrying a soul-space full of beings who depended on her not being followed — and then she entered the Pavilion.
Inside, chaos.
Tianxin was vibrating. There was no other word for it. The eldest wyrmling stood in the center of the garden path in a human form she’d mastered three weeks ago, wearing a child’s tunic and trousers that Yinxin had sourced from somewhere, and every line of her small body was humming with an energy that suggested she might detonate if they didn’t leave soon. Her golden eyes were enormous. She’d been told — repeatedly, by Yinxin, by Green, by Jayde herself — that golden eyes were unusual for human children, and she’d need to keep them down in crowds. She was not keeping them down. She was vibrating.
Shenxin stood behind his sister. Arms folded. His golden eyes tracked Jayde’s arrival with the focus of a child who had already calculated the optimal exit route from every room he’d ever been in and was waiting for a new room to calculate. His human form was the most controlled of the three — he’d practiced the longest, refined the details, adjusted until even Isha admitted the disguise was flawless. He looked like a quiet, serious boy. He was a quiet, serious dragon who had decided that being a quiet, serious boy was tactically optimal.
Huaxin held a flower.
Not a new observation. Huaxin always held something — a leaf, a pebble, a seedpod she’d found in the sanctuary gardens where the dragon grass grew thick, and the animals grazed in the filtered light. The sanctuary had trees and streams and birdsong. The wyrmlings knew nature — the Pavilion’s interior garden, the dragon sanctuary with its grass and canopy, and the small creatures Isha maintained. They’d spent most of their lives there, flying circuits above the meadows, tumbling through the garden beds, watching seasons change in the accelerated cycle the Pavilion’s formations created.
What they didn’t know was people.
Yinxin stood by the Pavilion’s interior gate. Human form — five-ten, silver-white hair loose past her shoulders, golden eyes warm in a way the silver dragon queen rarely permitted. Gray robe. Understated. She held herself like royalty that had chosen not to announce itself.
"They’ve been ready since dawn," Yinxin said. The careful neutrality of a mother who had been managing Tianxin’s impatience for three hours.
[Loud,] Reiko observed through the bond. He was padding beside Jayde, dark form low to the ground, mercury rune dimmed. He meant Tianxin. He was not wrong.
"Rules," Jayde said. She looked at the three of them. "Golden eyes stay down in crowds. No touching anything on market stalls without asking. No running. No —" She looked at Tianxin specifically. "No shrieking."
Tianxin’s mouth opened in outrage. Closed. She had learned, in her short life, that arguing with Jayde about rules was like arguing with the Pavilion’s walls about being solid.
"And if anyone asks," Jayde continued, "you’re Yinxin’s children. From the outskirts. Visiting the city for the day."
Shenxin nodded once. He’d already memorized the cover story. Huaxin looked at her flower. Tianxin vibrated harder.
They took the formation from the Pavilion to the estate cellar — Isha’s transit link to the modest property Xinglong had purchased on the city’s outskirts through a shell company. Up the stairs. Through the corridor. Out the estate’s front gate.
And onto the road that led into Obsidian City.
The wyrmlings knew the estate grounds. They’d been coming since the dragons moved out — running the walled garden in dragon form, flying short circuits above the walls where the wards hid them, practicing human forms in the courtyard until Yinxin declared them ready. The estate was familiar. Safe. Theirs.
The road to the city was not theirs. It belonged to everyone.
Tianxin stopped walking thirty paces past the gate.
She wasn’t looking at the sky — she’d seen sky from the estate garden, from the sanctuary’s simulated canopy, from the Pavilion’s formation-dome that projected stars at night. She wasn’t looking at the grass or the trees or the mountains. She was looking at the road. At the other people on it.
A farmer with a cart. Two women carrying baskets. A boy leading a goat. An old man walking with a staff, moving slowly, joints arguing with the morning cold.
People. Strangers. Human beings who didn’t know the three golden-eyed children staring at them were silver dragons wearing human skin.
Tianxin’s hand found Jayde’s. Not fear — processing. The eldest wyrmling who charged headfirst into everything needed a moment to process the fact that the world contained beings she hadn’t met.
"They’re just people," Jayde said.
"There are so many," Tianxin whispered.
There were seven. On a quiet road. On a slow morning. Jayde decided not to mention what the market would look like.
***
The market hit them like a wall.
Obsidian City’s central market was not large by Lower Realm standards — a few hundred stalls arranged in concentric rings around a stone fountain, with vendor carts along the outer streets and food sellers clustered near the eastern gate where the morning sun warmed the cobblestones. On a Sparkfall morning, it held perhaps three thousand people, moving and shouting and haggling and cooking and carrying and arguing and being alive in the chaos that human settlements generated when enough people wanted different things in the same place at the same time.
To three dragon children who had spent most of their lives inside a Pavilion with a population of twelve, it was the most overwhelming thing they had ever experienced.
Shenxin stopped at the market’s edge. His eyes — down, as instructed, but tracking — swept the crowd with the systematic focus of a military strategist encountering unfamiliar terrain. Jayde could see him cataloguing: entry points, exit routes, crowd density, the flow patterns that markets created as people moved between stalls. He was mapping it. In his head. Automatically.
The voice in her head was not hers. Takara, weary and resigned.
Commander. The smallest one has stopped moving.
Jayde looked down. Huaxin had frozen. Not frightened — overwhelmed. The quiet wyrmling who communed with ancient queens and heard things below the range of anyone else’s perception was standing in the middle of a market surrounded by three thousand living, breathing, feeling human beings, and every one of them was projecting emotion. Joy, frustration, hunger, impatience, boredom, love, irritation — the ambient noise of a crowd’s inner life, hitting a child with unprecedented empathic sensitivity like a wave hitting a seawall.
Yinxin knelt. Gray robe pooling on the cobblestones. She took Huaxin’s face in both hands. Golden eyes meeting golden eyes. She spoke softly — too softly for Jayde to hear, but whatever she said, Huaxin’s breathing steadied. The small hands that had been clenching the flower relaxed. The flower survived. Huaxin nodded.
Tianxin, meanwhile, had discovered a food stall.
Jayde smelled it before she saw what had captured the eldest wyrmling’s attention — roasted nuts glazed with honey, the caramelized sweetness that Lower Realm vendors achieved with a simple heating formation and a copper pan. Tianxin was standing three feet from the stall with an expression of religious revelation. She had eaten food her entire life — Green’s cooking, Pavilion-grown produce, the careful nutrition that Yinxin maintained for growing dragons. She had never smelled food being cooked for strangers. Food that performed.
"Can I—"
"No touching without asking," Jayde said.
"I’m asking."
[She has a point,] Kazren observed from the soul-space. No contractions. Bone-dry. [The child’s logic is structurally sound, if ethically opportunistic.]
Jayde bought three paper cones of honeyed nuts. Tianxin ate hers in four bites and spent the next ten minutes trying to identify the vendor’s heating formation by staring at the copper pan. Shenxin ate his methodically, one nut at a time, while continuing to map the crowd. Huaxin held hers in one hand and her flower in the other, deciding which she loved more.
Reiko padded beside Jayde, sized down to something closer to a large dog — unremarkable among the contracted beasts that accompanied cultivators through the city’s streets. His silver-black fur caught the light in ways that drew the occasional glance, but nothing more. He held himself with the dignity of a shadowbeast compressed into a shape that was beneath him and finding the entire exercise tedious. His bond hummed with warm amusement at the wyrmlings’ reactions.
The textile stall was where Shenxin broke.
Not visibly — Shenxin never broke visibly. But the boy who had been cataloguing the market with military precision stopped at a stall selling dyed cloth. Bolts of fabric in every color the Lower Realm’s dye-makers could produce — deep blues, forest greens, burnt oranges, the crimson that only cinnabar-root achieved. Shenxin stood in front of the crimson bolt and stared.
They had colors in the Pavilion. They had Isha’s formation-light and the sanctuary’s filtered glow and Green’s garden and the ancient queens’ silver luminescence. What they didn’t have was human color — the specific, imperfect, hand-achieved vibrancy of dye pressed into cloth by people who had spent generations perfecting something that dragons could achieve in seconds with essence manipulation.
The imperfection was what held him. Jayde watched the tactical wyrmling study the uneven edges where the dye hadn’t quite saturated, the slight variation in shade from one end of the bolt to the other, the way the morning light caught the weave differently depending on the angle. He was fascinated by the limitation. By the fact that humans couldn’t simply make the color perfect and had to work within what their materials allowed.
"Would you like some?" Yinxin asked. Quietly. The mother who saw everything.
Shenxin looked up. His eyes — down, mostly, as instructed — flicked to his mother’s face and back to the cloth. He nodded. Once. He wanted something very badly and had decided that dignified restraint was the appropriate response.
Yinxin bought a half-length of the crimson. Shenxin carried it the rest of the morning, folded precisely, held against his chest like something breakable.
Commander, Takara’s voice again. More strained now. A child has offered me a piece of dried fish.
"That sounds like a gift," Jayde said aloud, keeping her tone conversational.
It is being held approximately two inches from my face. The child appears to believe I am hungry. I am a five-thousand-year-old Lightning Panthera. I do not eat dried fish from the hands of —
A pause. Long.
I have eaten the fish. The child is now petting me. I would like it noted that this is occurring under protest and should not be referenced in any future operational briefing.
Jayde did not laugh. She wanted to. She didn’t. The control required was considerable.
[The ancient warrior consumed a fish offering from an infant,] Kazren said. [I will remember this for approximately as long as I exist. Which is, I should note, functionally forever.]
Huaxin had found the flower stall.
This was inevitable. A child who had grown up communing with plants in the Pavilion sanctuary, who could feel growing things the way other children felt warmth or cold, standing in front of forty buckets of cut flowers and potted seedlings and living herbs in ceramic pots. She hadn’t moved in two minutes. Her golden eyes were wide. The flower she’d brought from the Pavilion — still clutched in her left hand — had been forgotten entirely in the face of so many new flowers.
She was talking to them. Not aloud — Huaxin rarely spoke aloud. But her lips moved, and her free hand hovered over the pots, and the flower seller watched with the bemused patience of a woman who had seen many children fascinated by her wares but never one who was conducting a conversation with a potted fern.
"Your daughter likes plants," the flower seller said to Yinxin.
"She does," Yinxin said. The silver dragon queen buying a potted herb from a market vendor. The vendor had no idea. The herb had no idea. Only Jayde, standing three feet away with a shadowbeast at her side and a kitten-shaped ancient warrior on her shoulder enduring post-fish-humiliation, understood the full absurdity of the scene.
Huaxin carried the potted herb with both hands. The Pavilion flower had been transferred to the crook of her arm. She walked the rest of the morning with the careful, concentrated steps of a child carrying something alive through a world full of elbows.
***
They ate lunch at a street stall near the eastern gate. Noodles in broth. Tianxin burned her tongue and was outraged. Shenxin ate his at the precise temperature boundary between too-hot and acceptable, because he’d been watching the broth cool and had timed his first bite to the second. Huaxin’s noodles went cold because she was watching a bird on the stall’s awning with the focus of someone conducting important interspecies research.
Yinxin sat beside Jayde on the stone bench. Their shoulders almost touched. The silver dragon queen and the infant goddess, eating noodles, watching three children learn that the world contained strangers and honeyed nuts and crimson cloth and dried fish and flowers in pots and noodles that burned your tongue if you were impatient.
"They’re ready," Yinxin said. Quietly. Not about the noodles.
Jayde looked at her.
"They can do this," Yinxin said. Her eyes were on her children — all three, constantly, the way a mother tracked the things that mattered most regardless of what else was happening. "Human form. Crowds. Rules. They understand. They can live in both worlds."
She was right. The morning had been proof. Three dragon children in a human market, and nobody had noticed anything except that the quiet girl talked to flowers, the serious boy had good taste in fabric, and the loud one ate too fast.
"The Pavilion kept them safe," Jayde said.
"It did."
"They don’t need to be kept anymore."
Yinxin’s golden eyes held something too large for the small smile she allowed herself. She had hidden her children since before they hatched, carried them through a soul-space and across a realm and into a dimension built for keeping things alive. The keeping was ending. The living was beginning.
"No," Yinxin said. "They need to be let free to grow."
***
The walk back to the estate was quieter. Three children processing a morning’s worth of everything. Tianxin was talking — she was always talking — but the pace had slowed. The vibrating had settled into something warmer. She was telling Shenxin about the heating formation on the nut vendor’s copper pan, and Shenxin was listening with the expression of someone who had already identified three improvements to the formation’s efficiency but was choosing not to mention them because his sister was happy.
Huaxin walked between her parents — Yinxin on one side, the potted herb on the other (the herb counted as a parent in Huaxin’s taxonomy of important relationships). The Pavilion flower was tucked behind her ear. The bird from the noodle stall had followed them for half a block, which Huaxin considered a personal triumph.
Reiko trotted ahead, silver-black and compact, navigating the thinning crowd with the ease of a beast who had mapped every obstacle on the route hours before they’d arrived. His bond carried satisfaction. The outing had been clean. No incidents. No cover breaks. Three dragon children successfully integrated into a human crowd for four hours, and nobody had died, been set on fire, or required Isha’s emergency medical formations.
Takara’s mental voice arrived as they reached the estate gate: Commander. I still smell of fish.
"I know."
This is unacceptable.
"You’ll survive."
I have survived five thousand years of service. I have endured indignities that would break lesser beings. But I want it formally acknowledged that today was among the most challenging operational environments I have ever —
Tianxin scooped him off Jayde’s shoulder. Held him against her chest. Buried her face in his fur.
"Kitty had a good day," she announced.
The silence from Takara’s mental channel was the loudest thing Jayde had heard all morning.
They went through the estate gate. Down the corridor. Into the cellar. Through the formation. Back to the Pavilion, where the sanctuary waited with its grass and trees and filtered light and the quiet that came from being home.
Tianxin set Takara down. He shook himself once — the full-body shudder of a cat reclaiming his dignity — and stalked toward his perch on the garden wall with the precise, measured steps of a being who was absolutely not sulking.
Huaxin went straight to the sanctuary garden. The potted herb needed planting. The Pavilion flower needed returning to its bed. The bird wasn’t here, which was disappointing, but the ancient queens’ chamber hummed with the silver light that meant they were waiting, and Huaxin had a morning’s worth of things to tell them.
Shenxin sat on the garden wall. The crimson cloth was spread across his knees. He smoothed it with both hands. Said nothing. The tactical wyrmling who had mapped a market in his head and found the most beautiful thing in it wasn’t a weapon or a formation or a tactical advantage. It was a color, made imperfectly, by human hands.
Yinxin watched them scatter. Relief and pride and the ache of knowing that today was the first of many days, and that each one would take them further from the sanctuary and closer to the world she’d hidden them from.
That was the point. That had always been the point. You built the shelter for the storm. When the storm passed, you opened the door.
The door was open now.
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