Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 115 - 110: Breaking Stone, Building Dreams

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Chapter 115: Chapter 110: Breaking Stone, Building Dreams

Location: Tardide Village → Mountain Quarry

Time: Day 524 | Telia: Day 15

Realm: Telia (Mission World)

The wagon wheels creaked as they rolled through Tardide’s gates, and Jayde couldn’t help but smile at the crowd that had gathered. News traveled fast in a village this small. Elder Ryunzo waved from beside her, his weathered face glowing with pride as he called out greetings to the assembled villagers.

"The alliance is secured!" Master Whitestone announced from the wagon behind them, his deep voice carrying across the square. "Oldstrand stands with Tardide!"

Cheers erupted. Children danced, women embraced, and men clasped shoulders and grinned. Jayde watched as Behro, the hunter who’d first guided her to the direwolf den, lifted his young son onto his shoulders. The boy pumped his fists in the air, shouting wordless joy. Mrs. Ryunzo appeared from somewhere in the crowd, tears streaming down her round face, clutching a handkerchief.

Mission objective achieved. Alliance formed. Protection secured.

The celebration felt genuine—raw relief mixing with hope, creating something almost tangible in the air. These people had lived under the threat of warlords and poverty for so long that the promise of powerful allies felt like a miracle.

But Jayde’s tactical mind had already moved three steps ahead. They’d secured protection and trade agreements, yes. Negotiated favorable terms for the mechanical plow and herb distribution. But protection meant nothing if they couldn’t house the refugees they’d promised to take in.

Elder Ryunzo seemed to read her thoughts. As the crowd began to disperse—people returning to afternoon chores, children racing off to play—he leaned close. "The orphans," he murmured. "We promised homes."

"How many buildings do you need?"

"At minimum? One hundred." He grimaced, running a hand through his grey hair. "More would be better. Three hundred children, fifty veterans... even with families doubling up, we need space. Real space. Not sheds and lean-tos."

Jayde glanced toward the village. Tardide had maybe forty structures total—homes ranging from one-room cottages to Elder Ryunzo’s larger house, the smithy, storage buildings, and the communal well house. They’d need to triple their size. Quadruple, really, to do it right.

Construction materials. Priority one. Current village infrastructure insufficient for population expansion.

"Stone," she said. "You’ll need stone for that many buildings. Wood won’t be stable enough for structures that size, and you don’t have enough timber anyway. I’ve seen your forests—mostly scrub growth, nothing suitable for load-bearing construction."

Master Whitestone joined them, wiping sweat from his brow. The big blacksmith looked tired but content, dust from the road coating his leather apron. "The old quarry," he said. "Up in the foothills, about two hours’ walk. We used it decades ago, before the wars. Good granite, proper foundation stone. But..." He trailed off, shaking his head.

"But what?"

"Takes months to quarry enough stone for even a few buildings. We’d need teams working day and night, and we don’t have the manpower." He gestured around the village. "Most of our men are too old or too young for heavy quarry work. The women..." He spread his hands helplessly. "They’re already working the fields, tending children, keeping us fed. We’re stretched thin as it is."

Jayde felt something spark in her chest. Not Inferno—though her Crucible Core hummed with Phoenix fire, golden and eager beneath her sternum. No, this was something else. An idea. A solution that made perfect sense once she thought about it.

Fire magic. Precision application. Thermal expansion creates fractures. Heat applied to fault lines produces controlled breaks. Federation mining techniques adapted for magical implementation.

"What if I helped?" The words came out before she’d fully thought them through, but once spoken, they felt right. Inevitable, even. "My fire magic. I could use it to fracture the stone, make it easier to extract. Faster."

Elder Ryunzo’s eyes widened. "You’d do that? But that’s... that’s days of work. Weeks, even. Hours of continuous magic use."

"It’s faster than six months of hand quarrying with limited manpower." Jayde shrugged, trying to look casual despite the excitement building in her gut. "Besides, what’s the point of power if you don’t use it to build something? I’ve spent enough time destroying things."

The last sentence came out quieter than intended, carrying weight she hadn’t meant to expose. But Elder Ryunzo just nodded, understanding in his weathered face.

"The direwolves needed killing," he said gently. "But yes. Building is better. Always better."

(We can help. Really help. Not just kill things. Build. Make homes. Give people futures instead of just... surviving another day.)

Master Whitestone clapped her on the shoulder, the impact solid enough to make her stagger slightly. "Then let’s do it. I’ll start organizing a work crew. We’ll need tools, supplies, wagons..."

"And people willing to work hard for three days straight," Elder Ryunzo added, already looking around the village square with calculating eyes. "This could work. By the gods, this could actually work."

***

By noon, they’d assembled a work crew. Forty villagers—men and women both—volunteered immediately. Too many people had lost homes to the wars, or watched loved ones struggle in hovels barely fit for animals. The promise of real houses, solid stone structures that would stand for generations, pulled them like moths to flame.

Jayde stood in the village square, watching as families said quick goodbyes. Children hugged their mothers, extracting promises to be good while mama was away. Wives kissed their husbands, pressing small tokens into calloused hands. The older folks—those too frail for quarry work—promised to keep the village running, tend the fields, and mind the children.

It reminded her of military deployments, actually. That same mixture of excitement and trepidation. The Federation called it pre-mission energy—the buzz of people about to undertake something dangerous and important.

Master Whitestone organized the logistics with military precision that would’ve made her old commanders proud. Wagons, twelve of them, lined up in the square. Tools for finishing and shaping stone—chisels, hammers, crowbars, wedges. Food supplies for three days minimum, packed in waxed canvas sacks. Bedrolls. Water barrels lashed to wagon sides. Rope, coiled and ready. Everything rattled and clanked as it was loaded, the sound oddly comforting.

Supply chain established. Personnel allocated. Equipment verified. Objective clear. Mission parameters acceptable.

A woman approached—Mira, one of the farmers whose husband had died in the wars. She had three children and lived in a structure that could barely be called a house. "Lady Mage," she said, voice hesitant. "Is it true? We’ll really have stone for new homes?"

"If we work hard, yes." Jayde met her eyes directly. "Fifty buildings’ worth, minimum. Maybe more."

Mira’s face crumpled. She covered her mouth with both hands, her shoulders shaking. "My children... they’ll have real walls. Real floors. Not mud and thatch that leaks every time it rains."

Jayde didn’t know what to say to that kind of raw hope, so she just nodded. Sometimes words failed where actions succeeded.

Reiko padded up beside her, tail swishing. The shadowbeast had grown since they’d arrived on Telia—not much, but enough that villagers no longer flinched when she appeared. Children had even started trying to pet her, much to Reiko’s bemused tolerance.

[Ready?] Reiko’s mental voice carried amusement and anticipation.

Ready as we’ll ever be. Three days of sustained magical output. Qi management will be critical.

[You’ve done longer. We have had hunts that lasted five days.]

True. But that was combat cycling—burst output followed by recovery periods. This will be sustained, controlled output for hours at a time.

[You’ll manage. You always do.]

The confidence in Reiko’s mental tone warmed something in Jayde’s chest. They’d come so far since that desperate contract in the Dark Forest. From strangers bound by necessity to... friends. Partners. Family, maybe.

"Move out!" Master Whitestone called, his voice carrying across the square.

The wagons creaked into motion, wheels groaning under the weight of supplies. The work crew fell in alongside them, some riding, most walking. Children ran alongside for the first hundred meters, waving and calling encouragement, until their parents sent them back.

The journey took two hours, just as Master Whitestone had promised. The road—barely more than a dirt path, really—wound up through rolling hills that gradually steepened into proper foothills. Grass gave way to scrub brush, then scattered trees clinging to rocky slopes with gnarled roots.

The air changed as they climbed. Cooler, thinner. Jayde tasted dust on her tongue, felt grit between her teeth with every breath. The sun beat down from a cloudless sky, but up here the breeze carried a bite that spoke of altitude and stone. Different from the lowland heat of Tardide’s valley.

The work crew chatted as they walked, sharing stories and speculation. What would their new homes look like? How big could they be? Would there be enough stone for shops, maybe even a proper school building?

Jayde listened, absorbing details. These people had dreamed of better lives for so long that the prospect of actually achieving those dreams left them almost giddy. It was... nice. Hopeful in a way that made her chest ache with complicated emotions she didn’t quite want to examine.

"There," Elder Ryunzo said, pointing ahead as they crested a final rise.

The old quarry opened before them like a wound in the mountainside. Granite walls rose in rough-hewn tiers, marked by ancient chisel cuts and weathering. Decades of exposure had softened the edges, but the basic structure remained—three levels of cut stone, each about four meters high, forming a giant’s staircase into the mountain.

Rubble littered the floor—chunks of rejected stone, shattered fragments, evidence of decades-old labor. Tools lay abandoned, rusted and broken. A collapsed shelter in one corner spoke of workers who’d once called this place their daily routine.

But deeper in, Jayde could see good stone. Clean, solid veins of grey granite that would serve beautifully for foundations and walls. The kind of stone that lasted centuries, that turned houses into homes that generations inherited.

Target acquired. Quality confirmed. Structural integrity excellent. Now... how to extract it efficiently without destroying usable material?

The villagers set up camp while Jayde walked the quarry face, one hand trailing along the stone. Cold. Rough. Unyielding under her palm. But not immovable. Never immovable. Everything had weaknesses if you knew where to look.

She could feel the fault lines in the rock, sense where heat and pressure would make it fracture cleanly. Her Phoenix-blooded senses extended beyond normal perception, reading the stone like text on a page. Temperature differentials, density variations, and moisture content—all of it mapped itself in her awareness.

This is fascinating. The geological formation patterns... I can actually trace the mountain’s formation history. Millions of years of pressure and heat, layer by layer.

"Here," she called, marking a spot with chalk borrowed from Master Whitestone. "Good vein. Minimal flaws. The grain runs horizontal for at least six meters, perfect for foundation blocks. If I crack it right, you should be able to extract clean sections."

The blacksmith joined her, squinting at the wall. His experienced eyes traced the same lines Jayde’s magical senses detected. "I see it," he murmured. "The color variation, see? Lighter grey means denser stone. But how do you plan to—"

"Fire," Jayde said. "Controlled, precise application of heat. Thermal expansion creates stress fractures along existing fault lines. It’s how... how my master taught me to work with stone."

Lie. Federation mining techniques. But the principle is sound regardless of source.

Master Whitestone looked skeptical. "Fire usually shatters stone. Makes it useless."

"Regular fire, yes. But my fire burns hotter and cleaner. More controlled." She held up one hand, letting golden flames dance across her palm. The other villagers gasped, but Whitestone just watched with intense focus.

"Show me," he said.

Jayde turned back to the wall, dismissing the flame from her hand. She gathered Inferno in her Crucible Core—not the red-orange flames most mages wielded, but Phoenix fire. Golden. Purified. Twice as potent and infinitely more precise. The Qi flowed through her channels like molten sunlight, warm but not burning, eager and ready.

She could feel the fault line under her awareness, trace its path through the granite. A natural weakness created by ancient geological stress, running exactly where she needed it.

Controlled burst. Concentrated heat. Along the fault line only. Power output: 30% maximum. Duration: 2.5 seconds. Focus: Linear penetration to a depth of 15 centimeters.

"Ember Strike!"

Golden fire lanced from her palm, slamming into the granite. The stone hissed like a living thing. Steam erupted as trapped moisture flash-boiled instantly. The smell of scorched rock filled the air—sharp, mineral, oddly clean. 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂

And then—

CRACK.

But not the clean fracture she’d intended. The entire face shattered. Chunks of granite exploded outward in a devastating cascade, some as small as pebbles, others the size of a man’s torso. The villagers yelped and dove for cover. One piece whistled past Jayde’s head close enough to ruffle her hair. Dust filled the air, choking and thick, turning the afternoon sunlight into murky haze.

When it cleared, Jayde stared at the destruction. Not a clean fracture. Not surgical extraction. Just... rubble. Useless, broken rubble scattered across twenty meters of quarry floor. The vein she’d targeted was gone, pulverized into gravel.

"Well," Master Whitestone said carefully, coughing dust from his lungs. "That’s one approach."

Jayde’s cheeks burned hotter than her Inferno. Forty villagers stared at her, expressions ranging from shocked to worried to—gods help her—amused. Behro was actually grinning, the bastard.

(Too much. Way too much power. Stupid. These people are counting on us, and we just wasted valuable stone because we couldn’t control basic magical output.)

Recalibrate. Error identified: Power output excessive for target material. Thermal shock created uncontrolled fracture propagation. Reduce output by minimum 70%. Narrow focus. Precision over power. This is engineering, not combat.

"Let me try again," Jayde muttered, turning away from the destroyed vein. Her voice came out more defensive than she’d intended. "Different spot. Less... explosive. I need to adjust the technique."

Elder Ryunzo approached, dusting off his clothes. "No harm done. Well, except to the stone. But we expected a learning curve."

"I should’ve started with lower power," Jayde admitted. "Combat training focuses on maximum impact. This is different."

"This is different," Whitestone agreed. "But you’ll figure it out. You’re smart, and magic is magic. It can be controlled."

Confidence in my abilities despite immediate evidence to the contrary. Interesting command psychology. Maintain team morale by expressing certainty in eventual success.

Jayde moved to a different section of the quarry wall, this one showing a slightly darker vein of granite. She pressed her palm flat against the stone, closing her eyes, really feeling it this time. Not just scanning for fault lines but understanding the stone’s fundamental structure.

Granite was crystalline. Quartz, feldspar, and mica—all locked together in a matrix formed under immense pressure. Breaking it required finding the natural weaknesses where crystal boundaries met, where different minerals created structural stress points.

There. A natural plane of weakness running at a shallow angle through the vein. Perfect.

Power output: 10% maximum. Much more conservative. Duration: 1.5 seconds. Focus: Surface heating only, allow thermal expansion to do the work.

She gathered Phoenix fire again, but this time shaped it differently. Not a lance but a blade—thin, controlled, surgical. The golden Inferno flowed from her palm in a narrow line barely wider than her finger.

The stone hissed again, but quieter. Steam rose in delicate wisps. And this time, when it cracked, it cracked cleanly. A fracture line appeared along the vein, spider-webbing in exactly the pattern Jayde had intended. The granite broke into manageable sections without pulverizing, each piece large enough to be useful.

"There!" Elder Ryunzo rushed forward, running his hands over the fractured stone with evident delight. "Perfect! Look at this, Whitestone. Clean breaks, no waste. We can work with this!"

The villagers moved in with chisels and hammers, leveraging the cracked sections apart. The work went surprisingly fast—Jayde’s magical fracturing had done most of the hard labor, leaving them to simply separate pieces that were already loose.

Within an hour, they’d extracted six large blocks—each big enough to form the corner of a building’s foundation. Heavy. Solid. Beautiful in their simple, geometric perfection. The villagers loaded them onto the first wagon with obvious pride, arranging them carefully to distribute the weight.

Jayde moved to the next vein, and the next, learning as she went. Each strike refined her technique. Too much power shattered. Too little left the stone barely scratched. But Phoenix fire... Phoenix fire made it easier. The purified Inferno burned hotter and cleaner than regular flame, cutting through granite like regular fire through parchment.

She learned to read the stone’s grain, to trace the fault lines with her Qi before striking. Learned to angle her strikes so the fractures propagated down the vein rather than across it. Learned to adjust for density—darker granite needed slightly more heat, lighter granite slightly less. Moisture content mattered too. Wet stone fractured easier but less cleanly.

Pattern recognition improving. Efficiency increasing by approximately 15% per iteration. Current performance: Acceptable. Projected performance by end of day one: Highly efficient.

The work fell into a rhythm. Jayde would mark a promising vein, study its structure, strike with precise golden fire. CRACK. The villagers would swarm in, chiseling and prying, working with practiced efficiency born of lives spent in hard manual labor. Load the blocks. Move to the next vein. Repeat.

The sun tracked across the sky, shadows lengthening across the quarry floor. Jayde’s Crucible Core gradually depleted, that familiar hollow ache building in her chest as Qi reserves dropped. But she’d managed worse. The direwolf hunt had pushed her far closer to complete exhaustion.

Current Qi reserves: 35%. Sustainable for another two hours of intermittent output. Recovery tonight: Full regeneration expected with proper rest and meditation.

By sunset, twenty wagons sat loaded with stone. Massive blocks of grey granite, some as long as Jayde was tall, others smaller but no less valuable. The villagers had worked like demons—hauling, chiseling, leveraging, loading. Sweat soaked through their clothes despite the mountain chill, faces grimy with granite dust.

But they were smiling. Actually smiling. Tired smiles, yes, but genuine. The kind of smiles people wore when they’d accomplished something meaningful.

They’d extracted in one day what would normally take three weeks of backbreaking traditional quarrying. Twenty full wagon loads. Enough stone for... Jayde did quick calculations. Ten buildings, maybe? Twelve if they were efficient with the cutting and used smaller stones for fill?

And this was just day one.

Elder Ryunzo approached, offering a waterskin. Water sloshed inside—still cool despite the afternoon heat. "You’re sure you can keep this up?"

"I’m sure." Jayde drank deeply, the water cold and sweet, tasting faintly of the leather skin. "Two more days. We’ll have enough stone for fifty buildings minimum. Maybe sixty if we’re lucky and find good veins."

"Fifty..." The old man’s voice cracked. He stared at the loaded wagons, then back at Jayde, then at the wagons again. "Jayde. Do you understand what you’ve done?"

Accelerated construction timeline. Increased village capacity. Enabled refugee integration. Provided raw materials for infrastructure expansion.

But that wasn’t what he meant. Jayde could see it in his eyes—the wonder, the gratitude, the almost religious awe. His hands shook slightly as he held the waterskin.

"You’ve given us a future," Elder Ryunzo whispered. "A real future. Not survival. Not scraping by day to day, hoping we make it through another winter. But... growth. Hope. The ability to build something lasting. Everything we thought we’d lost when the warlords destroyed our world."

His voice broke on the last word. Tears tracked through the granite dust on his weathered cheeks.

(He’s crying. Don’t cry. Please don’t cry. We’re just... helping. Moving rocks. It’s not...)

But it was. Jayde knew it was. These people had suffered for decades. Lost homes, families, futures. And she’d walked into their lives and started fixing things. Not through violence or conquest but through simple application of power toward constructive ends.

Jayde looked away, uncomfortable with the raw emotion. "It’s just stone," she muttered.

"No." Master Whitestone joined them, his massive frame silhouetted against the setting sun. Smoke from the campfires rose in thin columns behind him. "It’s homes. Schools. Workshops. Everything we couldn’t build before because we lacked the materials and manpower. You’re not just moving rock, girl. You’re building dreams."

Reiko pressed against Jayde’s leg, offering silent support. The shadowbeast’s presence was warm and solid and reassuring. [They’re right. This matters. You matter. What we’re doing here matters.]

Mission objective expanded. Original goal: Eliminate direwolf threat. Secondary goal: Establish trade relationships. Current goal: Transform village infrastructure and enable population expansion. New priority: Continue until completion. Adjust return timeline as necessary.

The camp settled into evening routines. Fires for cooking, flames dancing in the growing darkness. Bedrolls spread on cleared ground, arranged in neat rows by people who knew how to camp efficiently. Quiet conversations, exhausted but content. Someone started humming—a work song, old and rhythmic. Others joined in, voices blending in rough harmony.

Jayde sat apart, watching. The golden Phoenix fire still hummed in her veins, eager for more work despite her depleted reserves. Tomorrow they’d return to the quarry. Tomorrow she’d fracture more stone, cut more veins, and help load more wagons. Tomorrow they’d make even more progress.

Tomorrow they’d build fifty futures. Sixty, if they were lucky.

(Maybe this is what power should feel like. Not destroying. Not killing. Building. Helping people have... homes. Families. Hope. Everything I never had in the Federation.)

Agreed. Optimal use of resources. Construct, not destruct. This aligns with core Federation values better than combat operations ever did.

She smiled, leaning back against a boulder still warm from the day’s sun. Above, stars began to emerge—different constellations than Doha’s, strange and beautiful. Telia’s night sky, she was learning, held its own wonders. No red tint from volcanic haze, no jade glow from corrupted essence. Just clean, clear stars in countless thousands.

And tomorrow, they’d quarry more dreams from the mountain.

Tomorrow, they’d build.