Time/Date: TC1853.01.10-11 (Night to Evening, Day 1-2)
Location: Grandpa Coop's Safe House, Craftsman's Quarter, Ring 6
The garden materialized like a dream, becoming solid.
Soft grass beneath her. She could move again—the paralysis had vanished. The bone-shattering agony retreated to background noise, present but no longer all-consuming.
Raven sat up slowly, disoriented. Cherry trees in full bloom scattered petals across manicured paths. A pond reflected clouds that moved too slowly. Everything was soft and peaceful and wrong, because her body was broken somewhere else.
"Mama?"
The voice stopped her heart.
A little girl stood beneath a cherry tree. Six or seven years old, with dark hair and eyes that were heartbreakingly familiar. Raven's eyes in a face shaped by Kael's genetics.
Novara.
The daughter who would never exist. Who Raven had erased by choosing a different path.
"You came," the child said, but there was something off about her tone. Too flat. Too empty. "I've been waiting for you."
Raven's throat closed. "Starlight, I—"
"Don't call me that." The little girl's voice turned sharp. "You don't get to call me that anymore."
The cherry blossoms stopped falling. The wind died. Even the clouds froze in place.
"Why didn't you want me, Mama?"
The question hit like a blade between the ribs.
"I did want you," Raven whispered. "I loved you more than—"
"Liar." Novara took a step closer, and her eyes—those familiar eyes—held nothing but accusation. "If you loved me, why didn't you protect me? In that life, when Father took me away, when they hurt me, where were you?"
"I searched for you! For two days I—"
"Too late. Always too late." Another step. "You knew what he was. You knew what they'd do. But you stayed anyway. Kept hoping he'd change. Kept believing things would get better. And I paid the price."
Raven felt tears streaming down her face. "I was trapped. I couldn't—"
"Couldn't? Or wouldn't?" The little girl's face twisted with something cruel. "You had power, Mama. Even then, you could've run. Could've hidden us. Could've killed him before he killed me."
"I tried! I fought back, I—"
"You hesitated." Novara's voice dropped to a hiss. "When it mattered most, you hesitated. Because part of you still loved him. Still wanted to believe the monster was a man."
The guilt crashed over Raven like a tidal wave. She'd known. Deep down, she'd known what Kael was capable of. But she'd stayed. Kept trying to make it work. And Novara had died screaming.
"And this life?" The child continued, relentless. "You stood over that glass of Amber Kiss, and you chose. Justice over me. Revenge over motherhood. You could've drunk it. Could've given me a chance to exist. But no—your pride, your pain, your need for vengeance mattered more than my life."
"It wasn't like that—"
"Wasn't it?" Novara laughed, and it was a horrible sound. "Be honest, Mama. For once in ninety-nine lives, be honest. You were relieved. Relieved you didn't have to carry me. Didn't have to watch me suffer again. Easier to just erase me before I even existed."
Raven collapsed to her knees, sobbing. "No... I wanted to protect you..."
"And in all those other lives?" The little girl circled her now, predatory. "Those ninety-nine merit worlds? Where was I then, Mama? Did you think of me even once?"
The question froze Raven's blood.
"You forgot me," Novara whispered. "Lived entire lifetimes—loved other children, protected other daughters—and never once remembered your Starlight. I died calling for you, and you forgot I ever existed."
"The trials... they took my memories of—"
"Convenient." The word dripped venom. "How convenient that you remembered everything else. Every betrayal, every enemy, every slight against you. But me? Your own daughter? Gone from your mind like I never mattered at all."
Raven's chest felt like it was caving in. The guilt, the shame, the terrible truth of it—
"What kind of mother are you?" Novara demanded. "What kind of mother forgets her child? What kind of mother chooses revenge over her daughter's life? What kind of mother stands by while her baby is tortured and killed?"
"I'm sorry," Raven sobbed. "I'm so sorry, I—"
"Sorry?" The child's face began to change. Her features stretched, twisted. "Sorry means nothing to the dead, Mama."
The skin around Novara's eyes darkened, cracking like porcelain. Her fingers elongated into claws. Her smile widened too far, revealing teeth that were too sharp, too many.
"Sorry doesn't bring me back," the thing wearing Novara's face hissed. "Sorry doesn't undo the pain. Sorry is what weak mothers say when they fail."
Raven watched in horror as the transformation continued. This wasn't her daughter. This was something else—something feeding on her guilt, her shame, her deepest fears.
"You'll never be free of me," the demon crooned in Novara's voice. "Every choice you make, I'll be there. Every child you try to save, you'll see my face. You'll remember how you failed me. How you forgot me. How you chose revenge over love."
The thing that was not Novara reached for her with twisted claws—
"No."
Raven's voice cut through the garden like a blade.
"You're not my daughter." She forced herself to her feet, tears still streaming, but her eyes clear. "My Starlight would never—"
"Your Starlight is DEAD!" the demon shrieked.
"You're not her." Raven's voice strengthened. "You're my guilt. My fear. My shame given form. But you're NOT my Novara."
The demon lunged—
And shattered like glass against an invisible barrier.
The garden went silent.
Then, softly, like the first light of dawn:
"Hello, Mama."
Raven spun. A different child stood beneath the cherry tree. Same age, same face, but different. This one glowed with gentle warmth. This one had eyes full of love, not accusation.
"Starlight?" Raven breathed.
"That's better." The real Novara smiled. "I was wondering when you'd figure it out."
"I'm sorry," Raven whispered, fresh tears falling. "I'm so sorry for everything. For not protecting you. For not saving you. For forgetting you in those other lives. For choosing justice over giving you life in this one—"
"Stop." Novara walked closer, her steps leaving small flowers in her wake. "Mama, stop apologizing."
"But I failed you—"
"No. You didn't." Novara took her mother's hands. "In that life, you were trapped. You did search for me. You tried to save me. It wasn't your fault that Father was a monster."
"But I stayed with him—"
"Because you had hope. Because you believed people could change. That's not weakness, Mama. That's not failure." Novara squeezed her hands. "And yes, he killed me. But that was his crime, not yours."
"I should've been stronger—"
"You were seventeen. Powerless. Trapped." Novara's voice was gentle but firm. "The only person responsible for my death was the man who ordered it. Not you."
Raven sobbed harder. "And this life? I chose not to drink that poison. I chose to end you before you could even—"
"Do you know what my life would've been?" Novara interrupted softly. "If you'd drunk that Amber Kiss?"
The garden shifted. Images bloomed in the air—scenes from a life that would never be.
Novara, as an infant, crying in a cold room while Kael ignored her existence. Proof of his shame.
Novara at three, watching her mother being beaten bloody.
Novara at four, used as leverage. Behave, or we'll hurt your daughter.
Novara at six, screaming as they extracted bone marrow for "research." Her cultivation potential harvested like crops, and while dying asking her mother if Daddy hated her.
"That was my future, Mama," Novara said quietly. "That was the life you would've given me by falling into their trap. Another cycle of suffering. Another generation of pain."
"But at least you would've lived—"
"Would I?" Novara asked. "Would a few years of agony and terror really be 'life'? Or would it just be... surviving until they killed me?"
Raven couldn't answer.
"You broke the cycle," Novara continued. "You chose differently. And yes, that meant I wouldn't be conceived in this timeline. But Mama..." She cupped Raven's face with small hands. "I'm grateful."
"How can you—"
"Because I'm free." Novara smiled. "My soul isn't trapped in that horrible future. I get to choose differently now. To wait for better parents, a better time, a better life."
"And the merit worlds?" Raven whispered. "I forgot you. I—"
"The trials took your memories." Novara's voice held no accusation. "That's what they do. You couldn't remember me because the cosmos needed you to earn merit without that pain weighing you down. It wasn't forgetting, Mama. It was mercy."
"I should've remembered—"
"If you had, you would've broken. You would've failed every trial, desperate to find me again." Novara wiped away Raven's tears. "The universe was protecting both of us. Letting you grow strong enough to actually save me."
Raven stared at her daughter. "Save you?"
"I heard your promise, Mama." Novara's eyes glowed with something ancient. "To grow strong. Strong enough to cross dimensions. Strong enough to protect me no matter where I am."
"I meant it," Raven breathed. "I'll find you. I'll watch over you. I'll make sure you're born to a family who loves you, and I'll protect you from the shadows if I must—"
"What if..." Novara hesitated. "What if I don't want another family?"
Raven's breath caught.
"What if," Novara continued slowly, "when you're ready—when you're truly strong, truly safe, truly free—what if I chose to wait? To be born to you again?"
"Starlight—"
"Not now. Not soon. Not until you've become who you're meant to be." Novara smiled. "But someday, Mama. When you've fought your battles and won your wars and built a world where children don't suffer... what if I came back to you then?"
"You'd wait?" Raven whispered. "For me?"
"If I could choose any mother in any world..." Novara's voice grew distant, fading. "I'd choose you. Every time."
"I promise," Raven choked out. "I promise I'll be ready. I'll become strong enough, safe enough, worthy enough—"
"You already are." Novara's form began to shimmer like morning mist. "You always were. You just had to forgive yourself first."
"Don't go—"
"I'm not going far." Novara's voice echoed strangely, as if coming from everywhere and nowhere at once. "I'll be watching, Mama. Waiting. And when the time is right..."
The garden dissolved, but something remained—a warmth in Raven's chest that hadn't been there before. Not imagination. Not wishful thinking. Something real. A connection. A promise written into the fabric of the universe itself.
"I'll wait for you," Novara's voice whispered one last time. "My brave, beautiful Mama. I'll wait."
And Raven woke screaming as her bones began to regrow—but this time, the screams carried not just pain, but hope.
***
Hours 13-24: Bone Regrowth
The spiritual trial was complete. Permission granted. And now the transformation could finish.
New bones grew from the transformed marrow outward, and this pain was different from the shattering. Not crushing—burning. Rebuilding. The sensation of structure forming where chaos had reigned.
Thread by thread, the new bones assembled themselves. But these weren't ordinary bones. They were diamond-hard, spiritually conductive, designed to channel energy like meridians. Each one grew according to specifications written in dragon essence, slightly different from their human predecessors.
Raven felt herself changing. Her frame stretching slightly as bones reformed longer. Her skeleton becoming more elegant, more refined. The structure that would support her for the rest of her life being rebuilt from a mythical foundation.
The golden glow beneath her skin intensified as bone growth accelerated. Her body blazed with internal light, and if anyone had seen her, they would've thought she was transforming into something divine.
Maybe she was.
The hours crawled past. Growth. Integration. The new bones connecting to reformed marrow, to transformed muscle, to redesigned nervous system. Everything knitting together into a unified whole that was simultaneously Raven and something fundamentally other.
As dawn broke outside—TC1853.01.11, the first full day of transformation—the final bones completed their growth.
And then the energy came.
***
Hours 25-26: Cultivation Awakening
The massive release of power from the completed transformation hit like a tidal wave.
Spiritual energy that had been locked in the transformation process suddenly flooded through Raven's new meridian-like bone structure. The dragon essence had fundamentally altered her body into something that could cultivate—and now it was forcing that cultivation to awaken.
From absolute zero to the Vessel Forging Realm in seconds.
Level 1. 2. 3. The stages blurred together as spiritual energy carved pathways through her enhanced flesh. Her dantian formed and expanded. Her meridians blazed to life for the first time.
Level 4. 5. 6. The power kept building, kept flowing, using the momentum from transformation to push past barriers that normally took years to overcome.
Level 7. 8. 9. Raven's soul space expanded with each stage, growing from its cramped 40cm³ to something actually usable. Objects could be stored now. The beads that had been cramped finally had room.
Level 10.
And then the breakthrough into the Essence Gathering Realm.
The spiritual energy compressed, refined, and became something purer. Raven felt her cultivation solidify at the first stage of Essence Gathering—a realm most cultivators took decades to reach, achieved in hours through dragon essence transformation.
Then, finally, the energy release stopped.
Silence.
Raven lay on the floor of the safe house, golden glow fading from her skin, body completely transformed. She tried to move and found she could—barely. Her muscles felt like water, her new bones solid but unfamiliar.
She'd done it.
She'd survived the Dragon Blood Essence awakening.
And now she would never be the same.