Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 109 - 104: Breaking Ground

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 109: Chapter 104: Breaking Ground

Location: Tardide Village & Surrounding Fields

Time: Days 517-521 | Telia: Days 8-12

Realm: Telia

The next four days blurred together in a haze of hammer strikes and forge heat.

Master Whitestone worked like a man possessed, his hands moving with the kind of focused intensity Jayde recognized from sixty years of watching specialists perfect their craft. The charcoal made everything easier—hotter fires, cleaner burns, metal that responded like butter under his hammer.

Jayde helped where she could. Holding pieces steady while he welded joints. Pumping the bellows when his shoulders gave out. Adjusting angles based on Federation engineering principles she couldn’t fully explain but knew were correct.

"The curve needs to be exactly thirty-two degrees," she’d say, and Whitestone would squint at the glowing metal, make minute adjustments, and somehow get it perfect.

Craftsman intuition. Translation of theoretical knowledge into practical application. Impressive skill level for pre-industrial society.

(He’s really good at this.)

By the end of the second day, the plow existed. Not as a sketch on parchment, but as an actual physical object—metal and wood and carefully calibrated angles, sitting in the forge’s corner like a promise waiting to be tested.

"Tomorrow," Whitestone said, voice hoarse from two days of constant work. "Tomorrow, we see if your master’s design actually works."

***

The entire village gathered the next morning.

Someone must have spread the word because when Jayde arrived at the test field, three hundred people were already there. Women with children on their hips. Elderly men leaning on walking sticks. Young boys perched in trees for better views. The whole community, holding its collective breath.

Elder Ryunzo stood beside two massive Bildeson—ox-like beasts with heavy shoulders and patient eyes, already harnessed to the gleaming plow.

"Ready?" he asked quietly.

Jayde looked at the assembled crowd. At faces lined with years of backbreaking labor. At hands scarred from gripping wooden hoes. At backs bent from planting by hand, row after endless row.

(This matters. Really matters.)

High-stakes demonstration. Community morale dependent on outcome. Pressure acknowledged.

"Ready," she said.

Master Whitestone made final adjustments to the harness, his movements deliberate despite trembling hands. The plow sat at the field’s edge—an alien machine of curved metal and reinforced wood, looking somehow both simple and impossibly complex.

"The angle’s set for medium depth," he murmured, more to himself than anyone else. "Moldboard curve should turn the soil clean. Bildeson are calm, harness is balanced..."

"It’ll work," Jayde said with more confidence than she felt.

Elder Ryunzo positioned himself at the lead Bildeson’s head. His eldest son—a quiet man named Tavin who’d returned from conscription missing two fingers—took the plow handles.

"Walk forward," Jayde instructed. "Steady pace. Don’t fight the pull—let the animals do the work."

The Bildeson took their first step.

The plow blade bit into earth.

And the world changed.

The sound hit first—not the scraping struggle of hand tools, but a clean, purposeful slice. Metal cutting through soil with mechanical precision. The moldboard’s curve caught the severed earth, lifted it, turned it in a smooth rolling motion that buried weeds and exposed fresh brown soil beneath.

A perfect furrow appeared behind the plow.

Then another.

And another.

The Bildeson walked steadily, unhurried, their massive strength applied through leverage and geometry into pure agricultural efficiency. Tavin held the handles with white-knuckled grip, but the plow barely trembled. Just smooth, relentless progress—earth turning, soil breathing, twenty meters of perfect furrows appearing in the time it would take a person to clear two meters by hand.

Someone in the crowd made a choked sound.

Jayde couldn’t tell who broke first, but suddenly, people were crying. Not quiet tears—gut-wrenching sobs that shook whole bodies. Old men who’d spent seventy years breaking their backs over wooden hoes. Young mothers who’d watched their children go hungry because they couldn’t work enough land to grow sufficient food.

"By all the gods," someone whispered.

The plow continued its inexorable march across the field. Thirty meters. Fifty. A hundred. The furrows stretched behind it like proof of impossible things—perfect, deep, ready for planting.

Efficiency gain: Approximately 2,400% compared to manual cultivation. Psychological impact: Profound.

(They’re seeing their future. All at once.)

A little girl—maybe seven, her dress patched three times over—tugged on her mother’s hand.

"Mama, does this mean we won’t be hungry anymore?"

The mother just pulled her daughter close and wept.

Elder Ryunzo’s face was wet with tears as he walked beside the Bildeson, one hand on the lead beast’s shoulder. When he glanced back at Jayde, his expression held something beyond gratitude. Beyond relief.

Hope. Pure, undiluted, overwhelming hope.

The plow reached the field’s far end. Tavin carefully turned the Bildeson, lining up for the return pass. The machine responded beautifully—no struggling, no fighting, just smooth redirection.

The second furrow went even faster. And the third. By the fourth pass, Tavin’s grip had relaxed, his movements confident. The Bildeson seemed to understand their task, maintaining a steady pace without constant guidance.

Master Whitestone stood beside Jayde, watching his creation transform lives in real-time.

"It works," he breathed. "It actually works."

"Of course it works." Jayde smiled despite the tightness in her throat. "You built it perfectly."

"No." He shook his head. "You gave us the knowledge. You showed us what was possible. All I did was..." He gestured helplessly at the plow. "All I did was forge metal. You gave us the future."

By midday, they’d plowed five hectares. Work that would normally take the entire village four days of exhausting labor, completed in a single morning by two men and two beasts.

The crowd had grown silent, watching with the kind of reverence usually reserved for religious ceremonies. Because in a way, this was sacred. This was the moment everything changed.

***

"We need more land," Elder Ryunzo said that afternoon, his voice still rough from emotion. "Much more. We have seeds stored—my father’s generation prepared for expansion that never came. But we need cleared fields. Dozens of them."

They stood at the forest’s edge, looking at eighty hectares of dense undergrowth and scattered trees. Good soil beneath, Elder Ryunzo insisted. Perfect for cultivation. But clearing it manually would take months.

"Firebreaks first," Jayde said, tactical mind already mapping the operation. "Wide ones. We can’t risk the fire spreading to the village or the existing fields."

Controlled burn operation. Oxygen management critical. Wind direction assessment required.

She gathered forty volunteers—young men mostly, returned conscripts with strong backs and desperate need for purpose. Showed them how to dig firebreaks: trenches a meter wide, dirt piled on the interior side, cleared of all vegetation.

They worked for two days, carving boundaries around the target area with the kind of focused intensity that came from finally, finally having control over their own fate.

On the third morning, with the firebreaks complete and the wind blowing safely toward empty grassland, Jayde stood at the clearing’s edge and reached for her Inferno essence.

(This is going to be loud.)

Precision fire deployment. Controlled burn pattern. Avoid collateral damage to soil nutrients.

She started small—just a tendril of flame, carefully placed at the clearing’s far corner. Let it catch on dry undergrowth. Fed it gradually, watching how it spread, learning the forest’s particular rhythm.

Then she expanded.

Phoenix fire erupted from her hands in controlled streams—not the wild conflagration she could unleash, but precise, directed heat. The flames obeyed her will, burning exactly where she wanted, exactly how hot she needed.

Undergrowth ignited. Dried brush became ash. Small trees burned clean while their roots remained intact in soil that would nourish future crops. The fire moved in patterns she dictated, consuming everything above ground while leaving the earth itself rich and ready.

The villagers watched from beyond the firebreaks, faces illuminated by the inferno’s glow.

"She’s controlling it," someone whispered. "Every flame."

Federation fire suppression training adapted for agricultural application. Interesting crossover.

Jayde walked the clearing’s perimeter, hands extended, feeding the burn in carefully measured increments. Where fire threatened to spread beyond her intended boundary, she starved it of oxygen. Where it burned too cool, she intensified the heat. Complete dominion over combustion, translated into the most productive destruction these people had ever witnessed.

By evening, eighty hectares of forest had become eighty hectares of ash-covered field, the soil beneath enriched by carbonized vegetation.

"Tomorrow we plow," Elder Ryunzo said, staring at the transformation. "And then... then we plant."

***

The irrigation system was Jayde’s idea, pulled from Federation colony establishment protocols and adapted for medieval technology.

"Water flows downhill," she explained to the assembled work crews on day four. "That’s all this is. Channels from the river, elevated at the source, gravity feeds water through the fields."

They dug for a full day—main channels a meter wide, secondary ditches branching off at calculated intervals. Simple. Ancient. Effective.

When they opened the river gate, and water flowed through the channels for the first time, filling the ditches and spreading across prepared fields, children ran alongside the flow like it was a parade.

"We can water everything," a young woman breathed. "No more carrying buckets. No more crops dying in dry spells. Just... water. Everywhere we need it."

Infrastructure investment. Multiplies agricultural output. Classic development intervention.

(The Federation would approve. Maybe.)

By the fifth day, they were planting.

Jayde walked the newly plowed fields with Elder Ryunzo, discussing crop distribution. Twenty hectares for Afeaso—the valuable medicinal herb that grew fast and sold for fortunes in cities. Ten more for Sapphire Bloom, Wolf Seed, and Golden Mallow. Another thirty for grain and vegetables to actually feed the village.

Reiko trotted beside her, tail swishing through freshly turned earth.

[You’re really doing this,] he observed. [Changing everything.]

"We’re helping. There’s a difference."

[Is there?] His mental voice was thoughtful, not challenging. [Mission Control said, assess the situation and complete Elder Ryunzo’s task. You killed the direwolves. Mission accomplished. But you’re still here, teaching them technology, clearing land, building irrigation...]

Jayde paused mid-step. Around them, villagers planted seeds in careful rows, their movements precise and hopeful.

"The mission parameters," she said carefully, "were to assess the local situation and provide assistance. Complete whatever task Elder Ryunzo requested."

[He requested direwolf elimination.]

"He requested help saving his village." She met Reiko’s gaze. "The direwolves were just the immediate threat. The real problem was always the poverty. The starvation. The lack of resources and knowledge."

[That’s a very gray area,] Reiko pointed out. [Mission Control said, assess and assist. Not revolutionize agriculture. Not transform the economy. Not teach advanced technology.]

Valid concern. Mission scope expansion beyond stated parameters. Potential violation of non-interference protocols.

(But they needed help. Real help.)

"I was given thirty days," Jayde said quietly. "Thirty days for a mission that should have taken one week to complete. The system doesn’t hand out month-long timeframes for simple monster hunting. It expected... something more."

[Or it expected complications.]

"Maybe." She crouched, running her fingers through the rich soil. "But I choose to interpret it as permission. As acknowledgment that real assistance means more than just killing threats. It means giving people tools to build better lives."

Reiko sat beside her, his shadowy form somehow conveying amusement. [You’re justifying breaking rules by claiming you’re technically following them.]

"I’m providing the assistance requested." Jayde smiled slightly. "Elder Ryunzo asked me to help his village survive. That’s what I’m doing."

[The Federation fell because people justified exceptions to the rules.]

The observation hit harder than Reiko probably intended. Jayde looked at her hands—fifteen years old but carrying sixty years of memories. Remembering officers who’d bent regulations for "operational necessity." Politicians who’d suspended civil rights for "public safety." Systems that had collapsed under the weight of accumulated compromises.

Historical pattern recognition: Justified exceptions lead to systemic corruption. Slippery slope acknowledged.

"You’re right," she said finally. "This is a gray area. I’m probably overstepping mission parameters. But..."

She gestured at the fields. At women planting seeds with actual hope on their faces. At children who wouldn’t go hungry next winter. At men who’d found dignity in purposeful work instead of dying in warlords’ pointless wars.

"But I can’t look at people suffering and just walk away when I have knowledge that could help them. The Federation forgot that somewhere along the way. Forgot that rules exist to serve people, not the other way around."

[So you’re choosing to help anyway.]

"I’m choosing to help anyway." She stood, brushing dirt from her hands. "And if Mission Control decides I violated parameters, I’ll accept the consequences. But I won’t regret giving these people a chance."

Reiko’s tail swished thoughtfully. [Yinxin was right about you. You’re compelled to fix things. To help. It’s not strategy or calculation—it’s just who you are.]

(Is that bad?)

Character trait assessment: Excessive empathy. Potentially exploitable weakness. Also primary source of moral compass.

"Your Federation tactical voice is judging you right now," Reiko said with uncanny perception. "I can tell."

"It thinks I’m making strategic mistakes."

[What does Jade’s voice think?]

The question caught her off guard. The fifteen-year-old part of her consciousness—the child who’d survived slavery and fighting pits, who’d escaped the Freehold Clan with nothing but desperation and rage.

(We’re helping people like us. People who couldn’t help themselves. That’s what power should be for.)

"Jade thinks we’re doing the right thing," Jayde said softly. "Even if it’s complicated."

[Then that’s enough.]

They stood together in the field, watching the sun sink toward the horizon. Around them, three hundred people worked with purpose and hope. Seeds going into the earth that would actually feed them. Water flowing through channels that would sustain crops. Metal plows waiting to break new ground.

A revolution, built from charcoal and curved steel and knowledge freely given.

"Later," Jayde said, "we should probably hunt for Yinxin. She’ll be getting hungry."

[And tomorrow?]

"Tomorrow, we visit Olstrand, and we keep building. Keep teaching. Keep helping." She smiled. "Until Mission Control calls me home or the thirty days run out."

[Or until you’ve transformed the entire planet.]

"Let’s not get carried away."

But Reiko’s amused mental tone suggested he knew better. That once Jayde started fixing things, she didn’t stop until the job was done.

Around them, Tardide village planted its future in rich soil, fed by water that flowed freely, worked by tools that multiplied human strength.

And somewhere in the distance, the forest waited—full of dragons who needed feeding, mysteries that required solving, and a mission that was becoming something much larger than simple monster hunting.

But that was tomorrow’s concern.

Tonight, they’d helped break ground for prosperity.

That was enough.