Time/Date: TC1853.01.11-12 (Day 2-3 Post-Transformation)
Location: Grandpa Coop's Safe House, Craftsman's Quarter, Ring 6
Raven woke to pain.
Not the catastrophic agony of bones shattering or marrow dissolving—this was different. Duller. More like every muscle in her body had been torn apart and imperfectly reassembled. Which, considering what she'd just been through, was exactly what had happened.
She tried to move and immediately regretted it. Her arm refused to cooperate properly, jerking with too much force before she could stop it and slamming into the floor with a crack that made her freeze.
Did I just break the floorboard?
Then she noticed the smell.
Acrid. Sour. Like something had died and rotted in concentrated form. Raven's nose wrinkled, and she forced herself to look down at her body.
She was covered in sludge.
A thick, black-grey coating covered her skin from head to toe—viscous and foul-smelling, like tar mixed with decay. It had soaked through her clothes, matting fabric against skin in ways that made her want to immediately tear everything off and burn it.
The toxins. Right. Seventeen years of systematic poisoning, purged when her cells had been completely rewritten. The dragon essence hadn't just transformed her—it had expelled every impurity her body had been carrying. And apparently, that process involved becoming coated in the physical manifestation of everything wrong that had been done to her.
"Wonderful," Raven muttered, voice rough from days of screaming during the transformation. "I survive divine reconstruction and wake up looking like I crawled through a sewer."
Carefully—so carefully—she pushed herself upright. Her arms moved too quickly, muscles responding with more force than she'd intended. She caught herself before falling forward, but the movement sent dried flakes of the sludge crumbling off her skin.
The safe house had a small washroom. That's where she needed to be. Now.
Standing proved to be an adventure all over again. Raven braced herself against the floor and pushed up—too hard, way too hard—and shot upward like a spring-loaded mechanism. She overshot by what felt like a foot, windmilling her arms to keep from toppling over.
Everything is stronger now. Every single muscle. By the Light, even standing up is dangerous.
But there was something else, too. Something that made her pause mid-flail.
Everything felt... higher. Her perspective had shifted. The room looked slightly different, angles changed in ways that had nothing to do with being disoriented.
Later. She'd figure that out later. Right now, she needed water and soap, and possibly to burn these clothes.
The walk to the washroom was a careful exercise in not breaking anything. Each step required intense concentration—too much force and she'd crack floorboards, too little and she'd stumble. Her body insisted it knew how to walk, but the calibration was all wrong. Like wearing someone else's legs.
By the time she reached the washroom, Raven was sweating from concentration alone.
The privacy wards extended here, which was good. She didn't need anyone sensing what was about to happen—namely, her probably destroying half the plumbing while trying to figure out how to turn taps without ripping them off the wall.
Raven stripped carefully, peeling clothes away from sludge-covered skin. Everything went into a corner to be dealt with later. Possibly by burning. Definitely by burning, actually.
The mirror caught her attention.
She'd been deliberately not looking at it, focused on the practical matter of getting clean. But now, standing there covered in the physical remnants of her past, Raven couldn't avoid it any longer.
She looked.
And froze.
The face staring back at her was... hers. Undeniably hers. Same heart-shaped structure, same delicate bone structure, same slightly tilted phoenix-shaped eyes that marked her as Zhao blood.
But everything else was different.
Her skin, where it wasn't covered in sludge, showed a pale golden undertone she'd never had before. Not the sallow, sickly pallor of poisoning, but something that looked almost luminous in the dim light.
And her eyes.
By the Light, her eyes.
Not muddy brown anymore. The toxins that had leached the color for seventeen years were gone, expelled with everything else that had been poisoning her. What stared back at her now were her true eyes—vibrant violet with streaks of green and silver running through the iris like veins of precious metal. A thin silver ring encircled the pupil, gleaming like polished moonlight.
Phoenix eyes. Unmistakably, undeniably, Zhao bloodline eyes.
"They were always there," Raven whispered to her reflection. "Under all that poison, they were always there."
She touched her face carefully, watching her reflection do the same. The bone structure was more refined now, elegant in ways it hadn't been before. The transformation hadn't changed her features so much as... perfected them. Revealed what had always been meant to be, without malnutrition and abuse obscuring it.
And she was taller.
Raven turned sideways, comparing her height to marks on the wall she'd subconsciously been using as reference points. Three inches. Maybe more. She'd grown three inches during the transformation, bones restructuring into something longer, more elegant.
No wonder everything feels wrong. I'm literally not the same size I was three days ago.
Her clothes wouldn't fit anymore. Her reach had changed. Her center of balance was different. Everything she'd learned about moving through the world had been based on a body that no longer existed.
She was going to have to relearn how to exist all over again.
But first—the sludge.
Raven turned to the washbasin, approaching the taps like they were explosive devices that might detonate if handled wrong. Which, given her new strength, wasn't far from the truth.
She gripped the cold water tap with what felt like the lightest possible touch.
And immediately ripped it halfway off the wall.
"No no no—" Water sprayed everywhere as the broken tap gushed. Raven lunged for it, trying to push it back into place, which only made things worse. Water hit her in the face, soaking her sludge-covered hair and sending rivulets of black-grey toxin streaming down her body.
By the time she managed to wrestle the tap into a position where it merely dripped instead of gushed, Raven was soaking wet, half the floor was flooded, and she'd probably destroyed Grandpa Coop's plumbing.
But—and this was important—the sludge was starting to wash off.
Raven looked down at her arms, where water had sluiced away the coating. Clean, golden-toned skin appeared underneath. Not perfect yet, still marked by years of abuse, but undeniably healthier than it had ever been.
She could work with this.
***
Twenty minutes later, Raven sat on the edge of the bed wearing a spare set of clothes she'd found in a storage chest—clothes that were still too small, hem hitting mid-calf instead of her ankles—and assessed the damage.
The washroom looked like a small typhoon had hit it. Water everywhere. Broken tap. Cracked tile where she'd gripped the edge of the basin too hard. The sludge-soaked clothes were bundled in the corner, ready for incineration.
But she was clean.
Her hair, free of seventeen years of accumulated toxins, had dried into lustrous black waves with midnight-blue undertones that caught the light like a raven's wing. It was longer, too—hitting the middle of her back now instead of her shoulders. The transformation had affected even that.
Raven ran her fingers through it, marveling at the texture. She'd spent her entire life with dull, lifeless hair that hung limp no matter what she did. This... this was different. This was what her hair had always meant to be, before poison and neglect had stolen it from her.
Everything about her was what it had always meant to be.
The thought was almost overwhelming.
She looked down at her hands—the same hands she'd had yesterday, but stronger now. Capable of breaking wood with casual pressure. Capable of ripping metal fixtures from walls. Capable of things she didn't fully understand yet.
I need to eat. Then I need to figure out how to exist in this body without destroying everything I touch.
The kitchen area beckoned. Grandpa Coop had stocked the safe house with basic supplies—dried meat, hard bread, and some vegetables that were probably on their last day of edibility. Not a feast, but it would work.
Raven approached the food with the same caution she'd given the taps.
Picking up the dried meat required concentration. Too much pressure and she'd crush it. Too little and it would slip from her grip. She fumbled through three attempts before successfully securing a piece between thumb and forefinger without pulverizing it.
Biting required care, too. Her jaw muscles were stronger, her teeth reinforced by the transformation. She'd nearly bitten through her tongue twice during the first few experimental chews before learning to be gentle with herself.
Everything that used to be automatic now requires thought, Raven noted with frustration, carefully tearing off another piece of meat. How long until this becomes natural again?
She was halfway through her meal—if you could call slowly, painstakingly eating while trying not to accidentally bite through your own cheek a meal—when she felt something shift inside her.
Warmth bloomed in her chest. Not painful, but intense. Present in a way she'd never experienced before. It spread outward through pathways that hadn't existed three days ago, following routes carved into her very bones by dragon essence.
Spiritual energy.
Raven froze, suddenly hyper-aware of the power flowing through her new bone-meridians. This was cultivation. Real, actual cultivation. She could sense the energy in her dantian—newly formed, still settling—and feel how it moved through channels that had been created specifically to carry this power.
And beneath it all, something else. Something that felt distinctly non-human. Dragon essence humming in her bones like a second heartbeat, warm and alive and utterly foreign.
The warmth in her chest intensified. Built. Demanded outlet.
What—
Fire erupted from her palm.
Not metaphorical fire. Actual flames, golden-red and blazing hot, shooting up from her hand like she'd become a human torch. Raven yelped and jerked her hand, which only made the fire arc across the room in a blazing trail.
A pillow on the bed caught fire.
"No no no—" Raven frantically tried to make the fire stop, waving her hand like that would somehow help. It didn't help. More flames poured from her palm, feeding the growing blaze on the pillow.
The pillow was really burning now, smoke beginning to fill the small space.
Stop. STOP. Cut it off!
She clamped down on the energy flow with desperate mental force, and the flames vanished as suddenly as they'd appeared. Raven stood there panting, staring at her hand in shock, while the pillow smoldered.
She rushed to the bed and beat out the flames with her other hand—carefully, so carefully, because she could kill someone with a casual slap now. The fire died, leaving behind a ruined pillow and the acrid smell of burnt feathers.
"Okay," Raven said to the empty room, voice shaky. "Fire powers. I have fire powers now. That's... that's going to take some getting used to."
Her hand still tingled where the flames had been. Not burned—the dragon fire couldn't hurt her, she realized. It was part of her now, as natural as breathing.
Except she didn't know how to control it yet.
Raven looked at her palm, turning it over slowly. No marks. No burns. Just her own skin, unchanged and undamaged despite having just channeled enough heat to ignite a pillow.
Dragon fire mastery, the inherited knowledge supplied. Can generate and manipulate flames at will. Temperature range from gentle warmth to metal-melting heat.
"At will," Raven muttered, glaring at her traitorous hand. "Apparently 'at will' includes 'whenever I get surprised or emotional.' Great. That's not dangerous at all."
She needed to practice. Needed to learn control before she accidentally burned down the safe house or set herself on fire or—
Wait. Could she set herself on fire? Was that even possible now?
Questions for later. Right now, she needed to master the absolute basics: making fire appear and disappear on command without also setting everything around her ablaze.
Raven sat cross-legged on the floor—carefully, always so carefully now—and held her hand out palm-up.
"Small flame," she said aloud, as if naming it would help. "Just a small one. Candle-sized. Nothing dramatic."
She focused on the energy in her chest, that warm presence that had demanded outlet moments ago. Tried to direct just a tiny trickle of it toward her hand.
A fireball the size of her head exploded into existence above her palm.
Raven shrieked and cut off the flow. The fireball vanished, leaving behind the smell of singed hair and her heart pounding against her ribs.
"Too much," she gasped. "Way too much. Smaller. Think smaller."
She tried again. This time, she barely let any energy flow at all—just the barest whisper of power.
A flame appeared. Tiny. Flickering. About the size of a match head.
"There!" Raven watched it dance on her palm, golden-red and gentle. "That's—"
The flame guttered out.
"—Or not." She sighed. "Again."
The next hour was an exercise in frustration. Too much power and flames exploded in dangerous bursts. Too little and they flickered out immediately. The sweet spot where fire burned steady and controlled was somewhere in between, and Raven kept overshooting or undershooting by margins that would have been comical if they weren't also potentially deadly.
By the time afternoon light slanted through the grimy windows, Raven had managed to:
- Set the same pillow on fire twice more
- Accidentally ignite a section of the floorboards
- Create a flame that lasted exactly fourteen seconds before exploding
- Burn through two fingertips of an old glove she'd been using for practice
- Nearly gave herself a heart attack when fire appeared from both hands simultaneously
Progress, in the loosest possible definition of the word.
But there was something else she'd noticed during the practice. Something that didn't quite make sense.
The fire felt... wrong.
Not bad, exactly. Not dangerous or evil. Just... disconnected. Like she was forcing it into shapes it didn't naturally want to take. Every time she created a flame, there was resistance—subtle but present, like trying to write with her non-dominant hand.
In Tianxing, fire magic had felt different. Fluid. Natural. She'd spent centuries mastering cultivation techniques, learning to speak the ancient tongue that shaped reality, commanding flames with words of power that resonated with cosmic truth.
But here, now, the fire didn't respond to words. Didn't care about technique or proper form. It just... existed. Inside her. Part of her.
Why does this feel so different? I spent five hundred years working with fire. I should be better at this.
The thought nagged at her as she carefully—so carefully—tested her new strength on the furniture.
***
Strength testing revealed that Raven had destroyed:
- Three cups (crushed while trying to drink)
- Two plates (cracked just from setting them down)
- One chair (sat down too hard, seat split like kindling)
- The door handle (twisted it too forcefully, the metal bent like clay)
- A section of floorboard (stepped wrong, wood cracked under pressure)
The safe house was starting to show signs of her occupation, and not in a good way.
"This is ridiculous," Raven muttered, examining the twisted door handle in her palm. "I can't even open a door properly."
She needed to test her limits. Figure out exactly how strong she'd become so she could learn to compensate. But how did you test superhuman strength without breaking everything around you?
The answer: very carefully, and with things you didn't mind destroying.
Raven moved the broken chair to the center of the room and positioned herself over it. The chair had been solid wood, and she'd cracked the seat just by sitting normally. Time to see what she could do intentionally.
She gripped the chair's backrest—gently, so gently it barely counted as holding—and pulled upward.
The wood groaned. She applied more pressure, feeling the grain begin to separate. More pressure still, and the backrest tore free from the seat with a crack that echoed through the small space.
Okay. So I can tear apart furniture with moderate effort.
Raven examined the piece of wood in her hand. Solid oak, maybe two inches thick. She gripped it with both hands and tried to break it.
Snap.
It broke like a twig.
Ten times stronger than normal, the inherited knowledge confirmed. Base strength increased tenfold across all muscle groups.
Which meant she needed to be extraordinarily careful until this became natural. A casual gesture could seriously hurt someone. A moment of anger could be deadly. She was a walking weapon that needed to learn control before she accidentally killed someone.
I spent ninety-nine lives learning restraint, Raven reminded herself, setting down the broken wood carefully. I can learn this too. Just needs time.
But time was the one thing she wasn't sure she had.
***
As evening fell on her second day post-transformation, Raven dedicated herself to fire practice with renewed determination. She couldn't keep accidentally setting things ablaze. That was unacceptable.
She sat cross-legged on the floor—carefully, always so carefully now—and focused on the energy flowing through her new meridians. The dragon essence thrummed in her bones, eager to be used. Fire was its nature. Destruction and transformation.
But fire can be gentle too, Raven reminded herself. Warmth without burning. Light without consuming.
She raised her palm and let the smallest possible trickle of energy flow outward.
A flame appeared. Tiny. Barely larger than a candle's flicker. It danced on her palm, golden-red and warm but not hot. Not burning her skin, just existing in perfect balance.
Raven held it there, watching it pulse in rhythm with her heartbeat. This was control. This was mastery. Not the wild explosion from earlier, but a deliberate manifestation of power.
She held the flame for ten seconds. Twenty. Thirty—her record so far.
The flame guttered slightly as her concentration wavered. She steadied it, maintaining the precise balance of energy needed to keep it burning without overwhelming it.
Forty seconds. Fifty.
At one minute, the flame was still going strong. Small but stable, proof that she was learning.
Raven allowed herself a small smile and carefully extinguished the flame by cutting off the energy flow.
Progress.
She tried again, this time making the flame slightly larger. Palm-sized. Still controlled, still manageable. It took more concentration, but she could hold it steady.
Then she tried something new. Temperature control.
The golden-red flame deepened to pure gold as she pushed more energy into it. The heat intensified until the air above her palm shimmered visibly. But it didn't explode. Didn't rage out of control. Just burned hotter in response to her will.
And cooler...
The flame shifted back to golden-red, then orange-red. The temperature dropped until it was barely warmer than body heat. A flame that gave light without burning.
But something still felt off. Like she was fighting against the fire's nature instead of working with it. Every adjustment required more effort than it should have. Every sustained flame demanded concentration that felt... wrong. Forced.
Why? I commanded armies of flames in Tianxing. I could speak fire into existence with words alone. Why is this so much harder?
The question circled in her mind as she practiced through the evening. Creating flames, holding them, adjusting the temperature, and extinguishing them. By the time full darkness fell, she could reliably:
Create palm-sized flames on commandHold them steady for several minutesControl their temperature across a reasonable rangeExtinguish them without accidentally creating new ones
It wasn't mastery. But it was functional control. Enough that she probably wouldn't burn down the safe house if she got startled.
Probably.
***
Raven lay on the bed—carefully, always carefully—and took stock of her situation.
Two days since the transformation began. Her body had been completely rebuilt on a cellular level. She was no longer fully human, though she could probably pass for one if she was careful about hiding her new capabilities.
Her capabilities now included:
- Superhuman strength (roughly ten times normal)
- Enhanced durability (diamond-hard bones, tougher flesh)
- Accelerated healing (bone injuries would heal fifty times faster)
- Heightened senses (hearing, sight, thermal sensing)
- Dragon fire manipulation (crude but functional)
- Cultivation base (Essence Gathering Realm, First Stage)
- Techno-circuit awakening (bio-thermal regulation and control)
- Expanded soul space (could actually store things now)
But all of these came with drawbacks:
- Poor control (constantly breaking things)
- Sensory overload (too much information)
- Energy management issues (fire appearing unexpectedly)
- Complete lack of combat training with new abilities
- No understanding of why fire felt so different from Tianxing
That last one bothered her more than she wanted to admit. Five hundred years of cultivation mastery should count for something. But here, now, with fire that came from within instead of without...
Everything I learned seems useless, Raven thought, staring at the ceiling. Like I'm starting from zero despite having more experience than most cultivators could dream of.
Tomorrow, she'd need to figure out what that meant. For now, she let herself drift toward sleep, feeling the dragon essence humming contentedly in her bones.
Outside, the city continued its normal rhythms. People living ordinary lives, unaware that someone who could burn them to ash with a thought was hiding two streets over.
I need to be better than them, Raven reminded herself. Better than the people who would use power to hurt others. Which means learning control. Learning restraint. Learning when not to use these abilities.
The dragon essence pulsed in agreement, warm and alive.
Tomorrow would bring new challenges. New discoveries. But tonight, she would rest and let her transformed body continue adapting to its new reality.
The girl named Mara Brenner was gone, burned away in dragon fire. What remained was something other. Something more.
Something that needed to learn how to exist in the world without destroying it by accident.