Chapter 395: Chapter 390: The Voice
Location: Kael’thoren — War Council chamber
Date/Time: Early Frostforge, 9940 AZI
Realm: Demon Realm (Upper Realm)
The map covered the entire war council table.
Formation-etched parchment — the demon realm laid out in precise detail. Mountain ranges. Desert expanses. River systems. Garrison positions. Clan holdings. Every feature of a civilisation that spanned a continent, rendered in ink and essence. freёweɓnovel.com
Thirty-one red marks. Scattered across the map. Each one was a dismantled gateway — the mini teleport gates that the hollow ones had planted over centuries, designed to open simultaneously and deliver an army from inside.
Thirty-one. And Ren knew it wasn’t enough.
He stood over the map. Kaelen beside him. Jhirek across the table. The three of them had been staring at the same problem for days.
"Each gate transports approximately two thousand," Kaelen said. The strategist’s pale silver eyes tracing the red marks. "Thirty-one gates. Sixty-two thousand. A significant strike force — but not enough to take the demon realm from inside. Not against our garrison strength. Not against Ren personally."
"So there are more," Jhirek said.
"There are more."
"Where?"
That was the question. Ren’s teams had searched. Essence sweeps. Formation detection arrays. Ground patrols. The dismantled gates had been buried deep — some beneath desert, some beneath mountain stone, some under farmland that had been cultivated for centuries without anyone knowing what lay beneath the soil.
The gates were dormant. Shielded. Designed to be invisible until the moment they activated. Ren’s people had found thirty-one only because Saelith’s intelligence had given them exact coordinates. Without coordinates, the gates were ghosts.
"We could excavate," Ren said.
Kaelen looked at him.
"Systematic excavation. Grid the realm. Dig. Every square mile."
"That would take decades," Kaelen said. "And displace millions."
"I know."
"And there’s no guarantee we’d find them all. The shielding is sophisticated — we could dig directly above one and miss it."
"I know."
Jhirek leaned back. "There has to be another way."
There wasn’t. Ren had spent days looking for another way. Without exact coordinates, the gates were ghosts.
The four escaped hollow ones remained at large. The hunting teams were closing — Sorvak’s scouts narrowing the search areas, the basin programme catching traces. But four hollow ones who knew they were hunted and had centuries of practice at hiding were not easy prey.
And somewhere in the realm, the leader waited. The one whose interest in Ren was personal. The one who wanted his body.
Ren stared at the map. Thirty-one red marks in a realm that should have had hundreds.
***
Heiteng’s communication crystal activated that evening.
The formation surface flickered. The black dragon’s face resolved — mercury silver eyes, the horn-line visible at the temples. Behind him, different stone walls than last time. He’d been moving.
"I have information," Heiteng said. "From her people."
The emphasis on her — the same weight Ren had used when he’d said she needs to know. Both of them circling the same unnamed woman. Both of them knowing exactly who they meant.
"Go ahead."
Heiteng relayed. The Nematomorpha — parasitic creatures buried underground, draining essence. A locator had been built that could detect them by essence signature. It could also track old feeding grounds — dead zones where the creatures had drained the land completely.
"The Nematomorpha were planted roughly nine thousand years ago," Heiteng said. "A single breeding pair. There are thousands now. Where they feed, the land dies — nothing grows, nothing recovers."
Ren went still. Dead zones. Nothing grows. Nothing recovers.
The desert.
The demon realm’s desert had been expanding for millennia. Relentlessly. Scholars had debated causes for centuries — climate shifts, essence depletion, the natural degradation of a realm inhabited too long. His advisors had called it the sign of a dying realm — the land weakening, the women unable to conceive, a civilisation withering from the root.
"The desert spread too fast," Ren said quietly. "My people said so for centuries. The rate didn’t match natural depletion. We thought it was connected to the fertility crisis."
He stared at the map. The vast expanse of dead sand.
"There’s a connection," Heiteng continued. "The fragment — ’keeping her asleep.’ She believes it’s Ala. The world spirit. The Nematomorpha have been draining her — weakening her. Ala is awake now, but barely. She’ll need to sleep soon to recover, and she believes the sleep will last far longer than a hundred years this time. The damage is severe."
The implications stacked. Barriers staying thin. The next Zartonesh invasion with nothing to stop it. The realm exposed for centuries.
"Critical warnings," Heiteng said. "The Nematomorpha cannot be attacked directly. Only Silver Dragon Queen magic can kill them. Nothing else. And disturbing a nest is dangerous — they burrow deeper, scatter, trigger responses. Track them. Map every nest. Do not touch."
Ren filed it. Silver Dragon Queen magic. Yinxin — the one being alive who could kill the Nematomorpha.
"Send me the schematics," Ren said. "We’ll build locators and scan the demon realm. If those things are under our feet, I want to know where."
***
The schematics arrived through Heiteng’s secure channel. Formation diagrams. Calibration settings. The technical architecture of a device that could detect buried Nematomorpha by their essence signature.
Ren studied them. Not the Nematomorpha-detection specifics — the principle. The underlying design.
A formation array calibrated to a specific essence frequency. Buried underground, the target invisible to standard detection. But the locator could find it — because everything that existed had an essence signature, and the device was tuned to read that signature through stone, soil, sand, water. Through anything.
Ren looked at the schematics. Looked at the map. At the thirty-one red marks.
The gates had an essence signature, too. Every formation crystal did. The shielding hid them from standard sweeps — but this wasn’t a standard sweep. This was a fundamentally different approach. Not looking for the gate. Looking for the specific frequency of the crystal that powered it.
"Kaelen."
The strategist looked up from the security redesign he’d been working on for days.
"Look at this."
Kaelen crossed to Ren’s side. Studied the schematics. The pale silver eyes moving through the formation architecture with the particular focus of a mind that processed systems the way musicians processed melody.
"It’s elegant," Kaelen said. "Calibrated essence detection. Not brute-force scanning — frequency matching. You’re thinking the gates."
"If we had the gate crystal frequency — if someone could build a version calibrated to our gate crystals instead of the Nematomorpha—"
"We could find every gate in the realm. Without digging."
Kaelen studied the schematics. The pale silver eyes moving through the formation architecture with something Ren had never seen on that face before — admiration.
"This is brilliant," the strategist said. "Incredibly elegant. Working on principles we barely understand." He looked up. "Who built this?"
"Someone in the Lower Realm."
Kaelen looked at the schematics again. Recalculating. A mind in the Lower Realm that could design something his team couldn’t replicate, let alone improve upon.
"The same principle could work for the gates." The excitement was barely contained beneath the dry voice. "Essence frequency matching. If the gate crystals have a consistent signature — and they should, they’re standardised formations — a device calibrated to that frequency could find every one of them. Through the shielding. Through the stone."
"That’s what I’m thinking."
"We’d need the original designer. This isn’t something we can reverse-engineer."
"I know. Get these schematics to the workshop first. Build Nematomorpha sensors. I want the demon realm scanned — we need to know if any nests are still active here or if they’ve all migrated."
Kaelen took the schematics. The strategist who had just called someone else’s work brilliant — a word Ren had never heard Kaelen use — left the chamber with the energy of a mind that had found something worth studying.
The door closed. Ren was alone.
***
He activated the communication crystal.
Heiteng’s face resolved. Mercury silver eyes. The horn-line at the temples.
"We found something in the Nematomorpha schematics," Ren said. "A principle. Calibrated essence frequency detection — it finds things buried underground by matching their specific signature."
Heiteng listened.
"We have a problem the schematics don’t solve — but the principle might. We’ve dismantled thirty-one mini teleport gates. My experts say there must be hundreds more. Buried. Shielded. We can’t find them — we’ve tried everything. I was contemplating excavating the realm."
He paused.
"Could she—" The word weighted. The tips of his ears warming. "Could she design a version calibrated to the gate crystals? The same principle. Different target."
"Hold on," Heiteng said. "She’s right here. This is faster."
"Wait—"
Heiteng had already turned. The crystal’s perspective shifting — stone walls blurring, then settling on a different angle. Ren heard Heiteng’s voice, slightly distant, addressing someone off-crystal.
"The demon king’s forces have dismantled thirty-one mini teleport gates hidden across the demon realm. His experts believe there are hundreds more — buried, shielded, undetectable by anything they’ve tried. He wants to know if you can adapt your locator design to detect the gate crystals. Same principle as the Nematomorpha device. Different target."
A pause. Then—
"The principle should be transferable." A woman’s voice. Clear. Confident. Moving through the problem as she spoke. "If the gate crystals use a standardised formation substrate, the calibration is straightforward. The challenge would be the shielding — but shielding has its own frequency. It’s inverted relative to the emission signature. If we calibrate for the inversion rather than the emission, the shielding itself becomes the detection vector. I’d need samples of the gate crystals, though. A minimum of three, from different locations, to confirm frequency consistency."
Ren stopped breathing.
Not the words. The voice. The sound of it hitting somewhere inside him that hadn’t existed until this moment.
It wasn’t polished. Wasn’t shaped for effect. It was alive. The cadence of a mind in motion — each thought precise, each connection certain, the technical language flowing like water finding its path. Someone who lived in this space. Who owned it.
Something in his chest shifted. Not the beast. Not the Common Path. Something older.
The beast went still. Completely still. The perpetual restless pressure — the pacing, the pushing — stopped. For the first time in Ren’s memory, the beast was motionless.
...oh.
Her voice. Oh, it’s — she’s — she sounds like—
The beast couldn’t finish the sentence.
Heiteng turned the crystal back to his own face. The mercury silver eyes found Ren.
The demon king was staring. Lips slightly parted. Purple eyes unfocused. Ears crimson.
Heiteng cleared his throat.
Nothing.
Heiteng cleared his throat again.
"Ren."
"...what?"
Heiteng’s mouth twitched. The dragon who had known Ren through wars and the fall of tyrants — watching the demon king surface from wherever he’d gone like a man waking from a dream he didn’t want to leave.
"She can build it. Needs three gate crystal samples from different locations. Can you provide those?"
"Yes." Steady. Because it had to be. "Yes. I can provide those."
"Good. I’ll tell her."
The crystal dimmed.
Ren sat in the silence.
That is our mate. The beast. Not demanding. Not pushing. The voice of something struck by lightning and still standing. That is our mate, and she is brilliant, and her voice is the most beautiful sound in all the realms.
Ren said nothing. Because the beast was right. And because the first time he’d heard his truemate’s voice — the woman his soul had been waiting for — he hadn’t said a single word to her.
Not hello. Not his name. Nothing.
He’d sat there. Mute. While Heiteng covered for him.
You are useless, the beast said. Almost fondly. She was RIGHT THERE. Her voice was in the crystal. You could have spoken to her. Could have said ANYTHING. freēwebnovel.com
"I know."
Next time. NEXT TIME you speak to her. You say hello. You tell her she’s brilliant. Even you can manage that.
"I know."
Useless, the beast repeated. But the word was warm.
***
Ren stood. The voice already gone from the air. Already settling into the place in his memory where it would live permanently.
He walked to the chamber where the elven teleport scroll was kept — one of three remaining, each one worth more than a garrison’s annual budget. Single use.
He began packaging the gate crystal samples. Three crystals from three dismantled gates. Several vials of the concentrated basin reagent. Technical documentation. Formation diagrams.
The beast watched. Patient for once. Waiting.
Ren finished the practical items. Sealed the container. Reached for the scroll.
One more thing. Quietly. Without the usual demands. Almost gentle. Please.
Ren’s hand paused.
Something for her. Not for the mission. For her. Something that tells her someone is thinking about her.
The beast had never said please. Not once. Not in ten thousand years.
Ren walked to his private quarters. The small collection of things that weren’t military. He chose carefully. Something beautiful. Something practical enough to justify — something she could accept from a demon king she’d never met without reading more into it than diplomatic courtesy.
Something with aesthetic value. Because the beast had asked. And the beast had said please.
He slipped it into the shipment. Told Heiteng to frame it as a token of appreciation.
Heiteng looked at the item. Looked at Ren. Looked at the item again.
Said nothing.
The silence was more eloquent than any speech the dragon had ever delivered.
Ren activated the scroll. The container vanished — pulled across realms, heading toward a woman whose voice was still echoing in the chamber where a demon king stood with red ears and a beast that had learned to say please.