Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 107 - 102: Gift of Fire

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 107: Chapter 102: Gift of Fire

Location: Tardide Village - Master Whitestone’s Forge

Time: Day 516 | Telia: Day 7

Realm: Telia

The morning sun painted Tardide’s dirt streets gold as Jayde made her way toward the rhythmic clang of hammer on anvil. Two days had passed since the feast, two days spent hunting for Yinxin’s family and practicing her cultivation. But she’d promised to help the village, and there was more to do than just killing direwolves.

Much more.

[Why are we visiting the loud man?] Reiko asked, trotting beside her. [The one who smells like burning metal?]

"Master Whitestone. And because he needs help."

[Everyone here needs help.]

"Yeah." Jayde’s voice was quiet. "That’s kind of the point."

Village infrastructure assessment required. Identify critical bottlenecks. Federation development protocols emphasize sustainable economic foundations.

(I can actually do something good here. Something that doesn’t involve killing.)

The forge sat at the village’s edge—a squat stone building with a chimney belching gray-black smoke into the morning air. The smell hit her first: wood smoke mixed with hot metal and coal dust. Then the heat, radiating through the open doorway like a physical presence.

Master Whitestone stood at the anvil, hammer raised, sweat streaming down his face despite the early hour. He brought the hammer down—once, twice, three times—shaping a glowing piece of iron into... something. A tool blade, maybe. Hard to tell at this stage.

He glanced up, spotted her, and grunted acknowledgment before returning to his work. The piece went back into the forge, buried in glowing coals fed by wood that crackled and popped.

Inefficient. So inefficient it hurt to watch.

"Morning," Jayde called over the forge’s roar.

Whitestone pulled the piece out, examined it, and frowned. Not hot enough. He shoved it back in, added more wood, and pumped the bellows until his shoulders strained.

"Morning yourself." His voice was rough. "Didn’t expect to see you so soon. Thought you’d be resting after your... work in the forest."

"Rested enough." She stepped closer, studying the forge setup. Wood-burning. Open design. Significant heat loss to atmosphere. Estimated efficiency: thirty percent maximum. "How long does it take to get iron hot enough for proper forging?"

"Depends on the piece." He wiped sweat from his forehead. "Small tools, maybe ten minutes. Larger work, half an hour or more. Why?"

"That’s a long time."

"It’s what I have." There was no bitterness in his voice, just weary acceptance. "Wood burns what it burns. Can’t make it hotter just by wanting it."

Jayde watched him work for another few minutes. The piece came out again—better this time, actually glowing the right color. He hammered it flat, working quickly before the heat faded, then thrust it back into the forge.

More wood. More bellows pumping. More time waiting.

Fuel consumption rate: excessive. Temperature ceiling: insufficient for high-carbon steel work. Production bottleneck identified.

"How much iron work does the village need?" she asked.

Whitestone laughed, but there was no humor in it. "More than I can produce in five lifetimes." He gestured at the corner, where farming tools leaned against the wall—hoes with cracked blades, plows with bent teeth, axes ground down to nubs. "Every family needs tools. They wear out faster than I can replace them. And the warlord’s tax collectors? They want weapons. Always weapons."

"What about buying tools from the city?"

"With what gold?" He shook his head. "Tardide’s poor. Has been for years. We can’t afford city prices."

(They’re trapped. Can’t make enough tools, can’t buy tools, can’t work efficiently without tools.)

Classic poverty cycle. Economic intervention required. Resource optimization: priority one.

"What if you could make your forge hotter?" Jayde asked carefully. "Much hotter. With less fuel."

Whitestone’s hammer paused mid-swing. "That’s... not possible. Wood is wood. It burns what it burns."

"What if it wasn’t wood?"

He turned fully now, hammer lowering. "You know something."

"My master taught me things." The lie came easily now, smoothed by repetition. "About fire. About fuel. About making metal stronger, faster, with less waste."

Interest sparked in his eyes—the kind of hunger that came from years of fighting uphill against insufficient resources. "Show me."

***

They stood in the forest half an hour later, Reiko lounging in a patch of sunlight while Jayde and Whitestone examined a stack of hardwood logs.

"Oak’s best," Jayde explained, running her hand over the bark. "Or any dense hardwood. Softwoods won’t work—they burn too fast, don’t leave enough carbon behind."

"Carbon?" Whitestone frowned. "Like the coal from old peat bogs?"

"Similar idea, different source." She pulled out a small knife, scoring marks on the logs. "Wood is mostly carbon, water, and volatile compounds. When you burn it normally, everything combusts—heat, smoke, ash. But if you burn it slow, in a low-oxygen environment, the volatiles burn off while the carbon structure remains."

Federation chemistry primer, adapted for pre-industrial context. Simplified explanation necessary.

"You’re talking about charcoal." His voice was uncertain. "We use that for drawing sometimes, when the traveling merchants bring it through."

"Drawing charcoal works, but this is different. This is fuel charcoal—made specifically to burn hot and clean." She gestured at the logs. "Help me stack these."

They built a cone of wood—carefully arranged so air could flow through but not too freely. Jayde packed it with smaller kindling at the center, then covered the entire structure with a layer of earth and turf, leaving only a small opening at the top and bottom.

"Now we burn it," she said, touching Inferno essence to the kindling through the top opening.

Flames caught, spread, filled the interior with orange light. Smoke poured from the top opening—thick, white, acrid.

"That’s the volatiles burning off," Jayde explained, watching the smoke’s color. "The water vapor, the resins, the light hydrocarbons. When the smoke turns thin and blue, the carbonization is nearly complete."

"How long does that take?"

"Day and a half, maybe two days for a pile this size." She sealed the top opening with more earth, controlling the airflow. "It has to burn slow. Too much oxygen and it just becomes ash. Too little and it won’t carbonize properly."

Whitestone studied the smoking mound with the intensity of a man seeing possibility where before there’d been only limitation. "And this... charcoal... it burns hotter than wood?"

"Much hotter. Wood burns around four hundred degrees. Charcoal burns closer to a thousand."

His eyes widened. "That’s..."

"Enough to forge high-carbon steel. Enough to work larger pieces without constant reheating. Enough to cut your fuel costs in half while doubling your output." Jayde smiled slightly. "My master said knowledge is the most valuable thing a person can have. More valuable than gold or magic."

Federation development protocol: sustainable technology transfer creates lasting economic improvement.

(This feels right. Helping without just throwing power around.)

"Your master..." Whitestone’s voice was careful. "He must have been very wise."

"He was." The lie and truth tangled together. A hermit mage who never existed, and a lifetime of Federation technical knowledge. Both equally real in their own way. "He taught me that power isn’t just about cultivation or magic. It’s about understanding how the world works. About using that knowledge to help people."

They stood in silence for a moment, watching smoke curl from the earth-covered mound.

"The village," Whitestone said quietly, "we’ve been surviving for so long that we forgot what it’s like to actually thrive. Then you arrive, kill our direwolves, and now you’re teaching me how to revolutionize metalworking." He shook his head. "Who are you, really?"

Jayde thought about silver dragons and dimensional contracts, about Pavilion training and Federation memories, about being fifteen and sixty simultaneously.

"Just someone who wants to help," she said finally.

[That’s true,] Reiko observed. [You’re terrible at not helping.]

***

They returned to the forest the next morning to check the charcoal mound. The smoke had thinned to almost nothing—a thin blue wisp that spoke of complete carbonization.

Carefully, reverently, they uncovered the pile.

The logs had transformed. Black, light, structurally intact but fundamentally changed. Jayde broke off a piece, examined it. Perfect carbonization—solid black core, no brown heartwood remaining.

"By the gods," Whitestone breathed. "It’s so light."

"All the water and volatiles burned off. What’s left is almost pure carbon." She handed him a piece. "Now let’s see what it can do."

Back in the forge, Whitestone loaded the charcoal with trembling hands. The pieces clinked together, musical and strange. He placed a piece of iron in the center, then added more charcoal around it.

"Same amount you’d use with wood?" Jayde asked.

"Less than half." His voice was awed. "These pieces are so much more concentrated."

He pumped the bellows.

The charcoal caught with a whisper of flame—no crackling, no popping, just clean combustion. The color shifted from orange to yellow to brilliant white almost immediately.

"It’s—" Whitestone’s voice cracked. "It’s so hot."

Surface temperature estimate: nineteen hundred degrees. Optimal range for steel forging.

The iron glowed cherry red, then orange, then yellow-white in what felt like seconds rather than minutes. Whitestone pulled it out, eyes wide, and brought his hammer down.

The metal shaped like butter.

Perfect malleability. Perfect heat distribution. He worked it with long, smooth strokes, each hammer blow precisely placed because he wasn’t racing against cooling time.

"This is..." He couldn’t finish the sentence. The piece went back into the forge, came out seconds later still blazing white-hot. More hammering. More shaping. Work that should have taken an hour compressed into minutes.

When he finally quenched the finished tool in water, steam erupted with a hiss that echoed through the forge.

Whitestone just stood there, staring at his work. At the perfect blade he’d forged in a fraction of the usual time with half the usual fuel.

"My entire life," he said hoarsely, "I’ve been fighting my forge. Fighting to get metal hot enough, fast enough, for long enough. And you just... you just..." He looked at her, eyes wet. "Where did your master learn this?"

"He traveled widely." Careful truth wrapped in necessary lies. "Learned from many sources. He believed knowledge should be shared, not hoarded."

Federation development doctrine: appropriate technology transfer accelerates societal advancement without creating dependency.

"There’s more," Jayde added. "Charcoal we make ourselves, but there’s also coal."

"Coal?" Whitestone wiped his face. "I’ve heard of it. Ancient peat bogs, compressed over thousands of years?"

"Exactly. It’s similar to charcoal but mined from the ground. Burns even hotter in some cases." She paused. "You can’t use it for cooking—gives off poisonous fumes when burned in enclosed spaces. But for forges? For heating larger spaces with good ventilation? Perfect."

"Do you know where to find coal?"

"Not specifically. But old peat bogs are the key. Places where ancient forests died and got buried."

The forge door opened. Elder Ryunzo stepped in, pulled by the sound of unusual activity. He stopped short, staring at the brilliantly glowing forge.

"What in the name of—" His eyes found the charcoal pieces. The finished blade. Whitestone’s stunned expression. "What happened here?"

"Jayde taught me how to make charcoal," Whitestone said, voice shaking. "Real charcoal, Elder. Fuel charcoal. It burns twice as hot as wood with half the fuel."

Elder Ryunzo’s sharp mind caught up immediately. "Which means..."

"I can forge better tools faster with less cost." Whitestone’s hands trembled. "I can actually meet the village’s needs. Can make surplus for trade. This changes everything."

The elder’s gaze swung to Jayde. "Your master taught you this?"

"Among other things."

Observation: Ryunzo processes information rapidly. Strategic thinker. Valuable local asset.

"And this coal you mentioned," Elder Ryunzo said slowly. "Old peat bogs..."

Recognition dawned across his weathered face.

"There’s a bog," he said. "Three miles northeast of the village. Been there since before my grandfather’s time. Dark earth, strange smell, sometimes catches fire on its own during dry seasons." His voice quickened. "We always avoided it because the ground’s unstable. But if what you’re saying is true—"

"It’s coal," Jayde confirmed. "Or will be, with proper mining. It takes a while to dig out, needs careful extraction to avoid cave-ins, but the payoff..."

"We could have our own fuel source." Whitestone’s mind was racing now. "Wouldn’t need to depend on forest wood. Could forge year-round without worrying about winter supplies."

"More than that." Elder Ryunzo’s eyes gleamed with the same hunger Whitestone had shown. "We could trade it. Sell it to other villages, to the city. A reliable coal source? That’s worth gold. Real gold."

(They’re seeing it. The possibilities opening up.)

Economic transformation initiated. Sustainable resource exploitation plus knowledge transfer equals long-term stability improvement.

"But we’d need labor," Whitestone said. "Mining’s dangerous work—"

"We have young men coming back from the warlord’s conscription all the time," Elder Ryunzo interrupted. "Give them honest work, fair wages, and they’d jump at it." His face softened. "Give them dignity again."

The three of them stood in the forge’s heat, smoke curling around them, possibilities multiplying like sparks from struck steel.

"Your master," Elder Ryunzo said quietly, "he taught you all this? Just... gave you this knowledge?"

"He said power without purpose was just destruction waiting to happen." Jayde met his eyes. "That real strength came from building things up, not tearing them down."

Federation officer training: leadership through service. Power obligated to protect, not exploit.

The lie was starting to feel more true than the truth.

Elder Ryunzo clasped her shoulder—brief but firm, a gesture of respect. "Then he raised you well. And Tardide is blessed you found your way here."

***

Later, walking back through the village with Reiko, Jayde felt something settle in her chest. Something warm and solid that had nothing to do with Inferno essence.

[You’re happy,] Reiko observed. [Different from fighting happy. Building happy.]

"Yeah." She looked back at the forge, where Whitestone was already testing another piece, marveling at the heat. "Fighting’s necessary sometimes. But this? This actually changes things."

[The village loves you now. They’ll probably want you to stay.]

(I can’t stay. Mission has limits. Yinxin needs help. Doha’s waiting.)

"I know." Her voice dropped. "But while I’m here, I can teach them things. Give them tools to build something better."

Federation Prime Directive: First contact protocols prioritize sustainable development over dependency creation.

[Your master would be proud,] Reiko said. Then, with characteristic shadowbeast bluntness: [Even if he’s made up.]

Jayde laughed despite herself. "Yeah. Even if he’s made up."

The sun climbed higher as they walked. Behind them, Master Whitestone’s forge burned hotter and cleaner than it ever had before. Ahead of them, a village full of people who’d survived despite everything now had something they’d almost forgotten.

Hope for actual prosperity.

And tomorrow?

Tomorrow, Jayde would show them how to build a mechanical plow.

But that was tomorrow’s revolution.

Today’s was enough.