Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 116 - 111: The Quarry’s Gift
Location: Mountain Quarry
Time: Days 526-527 |Telia: Days 17-18
Realm: Telia (Mission World)
Dawn broke with golden light spilling across the quarry, and Jayde was already awake. Her Crucible Core had recovered overnight—Phoenix-blooded constitution meant faster Qi regeneration, apparently. The hollow ache had faded to a pleasant hum, ready for another day’s work.
She sat on a boulder near the camp’s edge, watching the sun paint the granite walls in shades of amber and gold. Beautiful, really. The mountain had a stark majesty that reminded her of some of the frontier worlds the Federation had explored—raw, ancient, unconcerned with human concerns.
Qi reserves: 95%. Physical condition: Minor muscle soreness, negligible impact on performance. Mental state: Focused. Ready for sustained operations.
The villagers stirred, groaning and stretching. Yesterday’s labor had left them sore but satisfied. Jayde could hear the quiet complaints—backs aching, hands blistered, shoulders protesting every movement. But underneath the grousing ran a current of excitement. They’d accomplished something impossible yesterday, and today they’d do it again.
Breakfast was simple—flatbread that had gone slightly stale, dried meat tough enough to require serious chewing, watered wine that tasted more like vinegar. But the mood felt almost festive. People joked, shared stories, and made plans for what they’d build with all this stone.
"My daughter wants a window," Mira said, tearing off a chunk of flatbread. "A real glass window. Can you imagine? She’s never had one."
"Glass is expensive," Behro pointed out. "But with what we’re earning from this work? Maybe next year."
"Next year," Mira repeated, like it was a prayer. "We have next year now."
Hope as currency. More valuable than gold in a post-war economy.
"Day two," Master Whitestone announced, clapping his hands. His voice carried across the camp, pulling everyone’s attention. "Let’s double yesterday’s haul! Twenty wagons became our baseline. Today we aim for forty!"
Ambitious but achievable. Efficiency improvements from learned technique should compensate for muscle fatigue. Team coordination significantly improved. Morale high.
They fell into rhythm quickly. Faster than yesterday. Jayde would mark a vein, trace the fault lines with her Qi, then strike with precise Ember Strikes. Golden Phoenix fire lanced through granite, fracturing it cleanly. The crack echoed across the quarry like thunder, but controlled thunder. Predictable.
The villagers had learned too. They didn’t wait for Jayde to finish completely before moving in. As soon as the fracture lines appeared, teams would swarm the vein—chiseling, prying, leveraging with practiced efficiency. Some worked on extracting blocks while others prepared the next section. Assembly line thinking, applied to medieval quarrying.
Workflow optimization achieved. Labor division: Three teams rotating between extraction, loading, and preparation. Downtime minimized. Efficiency increased approximately 40% over day one baseline.
Three hours in, they’d already matched yesterday’s morning output. The system worked better than Jayde had dared hope. Her precision had improved dramatically—barely any wasted strikes now, minimal rubble. The Phoenix fire carved through stone like it was meant for this, purified Inferno burning hotter and cleaner than any natural flame.
"You’re getting scary good at this," Elder Ryunzo observed, watching another perfect fracture propagate down a ten-meter vein. The crack ran straight and true, splitting the granite along its natural grain. "How do you know where to strike?"
"I can feel it." Jayde pressed her palm to the stone, closing her eyes. The granite hummed under her touch—not sound exactly, but a vibration she sensed through her Qi. "The way the granite formed, millions of years of pressure and heat. It left patterns. Weaknesses. The fault lines are like... like cracks in ice, before it breaks."
More accurately: thermal imaging combined with Qi sensitivity allows detection of density variations at molecular level. Phoenix fire enhancement provides additional crystalline structure analysis. But ice analogy works for non-cultivators.
"Your master taught you geology?" Elder Ryunzo sounded awed.
"Among other things." Jayde opened her eyes, stepping back as her work crew moved in. "He believed understanding the world made you stronger. Knowledge is power, he used to say."
Federation core principle. Also convenient cover story.
By midday, twenty wagons stood loaded again. Forty total now, sitting in neat rows at the quarry’s edge. Enough stone for... gods, at least twenty-five buildings. Maybe thirty if they were efficient with the cutting and used smaller stones for fill.
Master Whitestone walked among the loaded wagons, running his hands over the granite blocks. "The quality," he murmured. "It’s exceptional. Your fire technique creates such clean breaks. No internal fractures, no weaknesses. This stone will last centuries."
"Will it be enough?" Jayde asked. "For the orphans?"
"More than enough. With proper planning, we could house twice that many." He grinned through his dust-caked beard. "Though I won’t complain if you want to keep quarrying. We’ll need stone for schools, workshops, a proper meeting hall..."
Infrastructure expansion beyond immediate needs. Long-term planning. Good sign of community confidence in future stability.
"Keep going?" Jayde asked.
"Keep going," Master Whitestone confirmed. "We’ve got daylight and muscle. Let’s use both."
***
The discovery came late on day three, when the afternoon sun slanted low across the quarry face.
Jayde had been working a particularly deep vein, one that ran far back into the mountain. She’d had to cut away several meters of surface granite to reach it, but the effort was worth it—the stone here was of exceptional quality. Darker, almost black in places, shot through with metallic inclusions that gleamed in the sunlight. Beautiful stone. Strong stone. The kind wealthy merchants would pay premium prices for.
She struck with Phoenix fire, channeling the golden Inferno along what should have been a straightforward fault line. The usual crack echoed across the quarry, that deep BOOM that had become familiar background noise.
But this time, the fracture exposed something... different.
A seam. Black. Running horizontally through the granite like a dark ribbon, maybe a meter wide, extending back into the mountain as far as Jayde could see.
She stepped closer, frowning. Not granite. Not any kind of rock she recognized from Telia. The texture was completely wrong—layered, almost flaky, with a strange matte finish that absorbed light rather than reflecting it. She reached out, broke off a piece.
Cool to the touch. Surprisingly light for its size. And when she rubbed it between her fingers, it left black smudges on her skin, almost like charcoal but different. Greasier.
Chemical composition unknown to Telia natives. Appearance and properties consistent with compressed carbon deposits. Sedimentary formation, organic origin. Fossil fuel source. This is... this is coal. Actual coal.
Jayde’s heart hammered. She knew exactly what this meant. Had studied Old Earth’s industrial revolution in Federation history courses. Coal had powered humanity’s rise from agrarian society to space-faring civilization. It was the foundation of everything—steel production, steam power, chemical synthesis. The difference between medieval stagnation and industrial explosion.
"Master Whitestone!" Her voice came out sharper than intended, tinged with an excitement she couldn’t quite suppress. "Come look at this! Now!"
The blacksmith hurried over, followed by Elder Ryunzo and several curious villagers. They clustered around the exposed seam, staring at the black streak running through otherwise pristine grey granite.
"What is it?" someone asked. "Never seen rock that color before."
"Some kind of ore?" Behro suggested, reaching out to touch it.
Jayde’s mind raced, cataloguing possibilities. This changes everything. This single deposit could transform Tardide from a village to an industrial center within a generation. But they don’t even have a name for it. Need to explain carefully, establish proper usage protocols, prevent toxic exposure...
"Coal," she breathed. "It’s coal."
Master Whitestone picked up a chunk, turning it over in his scarred hands. Studied it with a craftsman’s eye, noting the layered structure, the unusual weight. "Coal? I’ve never heard of—"
"Because you call it something else here, or don’t have a name for it at all." Jayde grabbed the piece, her fingers trembling slightly. "Remember when I told you about charcoal? How it burns hotter than wood with less smoke? This is... this is nature’s version. Formed underground over millions of years from compressed plant matter. Forests that died and got buried, crushed under mountains, transformed by heat and pressure into this."
She held up the black rock, letting sunlight play across its surface. "It burns much hotter than charcoal, with barely any smoke. And it’s abundant. Once you learn to mine it properly, you have fuel for generations."
"How do you—" Elder Ryunzo stopped himself, shaking his head. A knowing smile crossed his weathered face. "Your master. The hermit."
Cover story holding. Good. Maintain consistency.
"He told me to look for it," Jayde said, which wasn’t entirely a lie. Mission Control’s briefing had mentioned Telia’s geological formations included coal deposits, though finding one here was pure luck. "He said old peat bogs sometimes become coal, deep underground, when the conditions are right. And didn’t you mention ancient peat bogs near the village?"
"I did." The elder’s eyes widened, understanding dawning. "By the gods. We used to cut peat for fuel when I was a boy, before the wars. But that was surface material. If deeper layers became this coal..."
Master Whitestone had gone very still, the way people do when their entire worldview shifts. "If this burns hotter than charcoal," he said slowly, working through the implications, "I could forge better steel. Much better steel. The temperatures I could reach..." He trailed off, calculating. "And if there’s enough of it... the whole village could heat their homes through winter. We could run forges year-round. We could sell it. Trade it to every smithy in the territory."
"We’d need to mine it carefully," Jayde warned, switching into instructor mode. "You can’t burn coal indoors for cooking—the fumes are poisonous. It releases something called coal gas when it burns, invisible but deadly in enclosed spaces. But for forges with proper chimneys? For smelting? For heating large spaces with ventilation?" She grinned. "This is going to change everything."
"Test it," someone called from the crowd. "Burn some! Let’s see if she’s right!"
"Good idea." Master Whitestone looked around. "We’ve got a forge set up for tool repairs. Let’s run a proper test."
They gathered around the small portable forge the work crew had brought—just a stone-lined pit with a bellows, but sufficient for basic metalwork. Master Whitestone built up the charcoal bed until it glowed orange, then carefully added several chunks of coal.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then the coal caught.
It didn’t burn like wood. Didn’t even burn quite like charcoal. The flames came slowly at first, almost reluctant, blue-tinged and strange. But once they caught properly, the heat was intense. Jayde felt it from three meters away, a radiating furnace-heat that made the afternoon sun feel cool by comparison.
Master Whitestone held his palm near the forge, gauging temperature by experienced instinct. His eyes widened. "By all the gods," he whispered. "It’s hotter. Much hotter. And look—barely any smoke."
He was right. Charcoal produced substantial smoke even when burning cleanly. But the coal burned with just a faint haze, most of the combustion happening as pure heat rather than visible smoke.
"How much hotter?" Elder Ryunzo asked.
"Enough to matter." Whitestone grabbed a scrap of iron, thrust it into the coal fire. Within minutes—minutes, not the quarter-hour charcoal required—the metal glowed white-hot. "I could weld at this temperature. Could forge proper laminated steel. Could work metals I’ve only read about in old texts."
The villagers erupted into excited chatter. Someone ran to examine the coal seam more closely. Others crowded around the forge, marveling at the heat. A few started calculating—if coal burned this hot, how much less would they need? How many more hours could they work? What could they build?
Technology adoption curve: Immediate. No resistance to innovation when benefits are obvious and immediate. Optimal conditions for cultural transformation.
Elder Ryunzo pulled Jayde aside, voice low enough that others couldn’t hear. "You predicted this. Back in Oldstrand, when we were talking to President Andillevé, you mentioned coal. You knew we’d find it."
Careful. Don’t reveal too much. Maintain cover story integrity.
"I hoped," Jayde said carefully. "The geology was right. Old mountains, sedimentary layers, and evidence of ancient forests in the rock formations. But finding it this quickly? That’s luck. Pure luck."
"Or fate." The old man smiled, eyes crinkling. "Your hermit master must have been a very wise man, to teach you such things. Reading mountains, understanding how ancient forests become fuel... that’s knowledge most mages would never learn."
(He would’ve liked you. Mission Control, I mean. He’d approve of ethical technology transfer, uplifting civilizations, giving people tools to build better futures.)
Sentimental but accurate. Technology transfer approved under Prime Directive exceptions for pre-industrial societies facing existential threats. Outcome positive. Continue mission parameters.
They extracted samples carefully. Jayde showed them how to identify the coal seam, how to tell where it was thickest by color variations and layer structure. How to avoid collapsing the vein during extraction—coal was softer than granite, more prone to crumbling if you weren’t careful.
The Federation tactical part of her mind catalogued everything—depth (approximately 15 meters from surface), width (varying 0.5-2 meters), extent (visible for at least 50 meters into the mountain, possibly continuing much further). She estimated volume, calculated extraction rates, and projected long-term sustainability.
Seam extends minimum 50 meters into mountain, possibly hundreds. Width varies but averages 1.2 meters. Estimated total volume: 5,000+ cubic meters minimum, potentially 20,000+ if deposits continue deeper. Coal density approximately 1.3 tonnes per cubic meter. Total fuel reserve: 6,500-26,000 tonnes. At 2 tonnes per year for the entire village: Sufficient supply for 3,250-13,000 years. Effective resource cap: Unlimited for practical purposes.
"We should mark it," Master Whitestone said. "Come back with proper mining equipment after we’ve delivered this stone. Set up a permanent mining operation."
"Agreed." Elder Ryunzo nodded decisively. "We’ll need to learn proper extraction techniques, safety protocols. Lady Jayde, would you be willing to teach us?"
Mission creep. But acceptable. Technology transfer benefits exceed time investment.
"Of course," Jayde said. "Mining coal safely requires specific knowledge. The fumes, the dust... there are dangers. But managed properly, this deposit will serve Tardide for generations."
By sunset on day three, they’d loaded the last wagon with granite. Sixty wagons total over three days. Each wagon carried at least two tonnes of cut stone—120 tonnes of building material. Enough for at least fifty large buildings, maybe sixty depending on design efficiency and whether they used the stone for full walls or just foundations.
Plus, they’d marked the coal deposit with stakes and flags. Surveyed its extent, documented the location, and established preliminary safety protocols for future mining operations.
The work crew looked exhausted but triumphant. Dust coated every surface—clothes, skin, hair, tools. But underneath the grime, people glowed with accomplishment.
Mission objectives: Exceeded. Stone quarried: 300% of minimum requirement. Additional resource discovered: Coal deposit of strategic importance. Team morale: Excellent. Physical condition: Fatigued but functional. Overall assessment: Exemplary success.
The return journey felt different than the outward trek. Triumphant. The wagons creaked under their heavy loads, wheels groaning in protest, but the villagers sang anyway—work songs and tavern ditties and even a few children’s rhymes. Joy bubbled through the column like fresh spring water.
Jayde rode in the lead wagon beside Elder Ryunzo, watching Tardide grow larger on the horizon. The village looked so small from here, nestled in its valley like a child’s toy. So fragile. But it wouldn’t stay that way. With this stone, they’d build. With the coal, they’d prosper. With the alliance, they’d be protected.
Infrastructure established. Resource base secured. Economic sustainability achieved. Political protection confirmed. Mission parameters exceeded on all fronts.
"You’re quiet," Elder Ryunzo observed.
"Just thinking." Jayde leaned back against a granite block, feeling its cool solidity through her shirt. The stone radiated a pleasant chill despite the afternoon heat. "Three days ago, you needed stone. Now you have enough for fifty buildings. Three days ago, coal was just a theory. Now you have a deposit that’ll last generations. Three days ago, orphans were begging in Oldstrand’s streets. Soon they’ll have homes here."
"Three days ago, we were desperate survivors." The elder’s voice grew thick with emotion. "Hanging on by our fingernails, hoping to make it through another winter. Now we’re... builders. We have a future again. Real future, not just the next meal or the next season. My grandchildren will grow up in a prosperous village because of what we’re building."
Reiko’s presence brushed against Jayde’s mind, warm and approving. [You did good.]
We did good. Team effort. Collective achievement. Acceptable performance.
(We helped. We really helped. Not killing. Not destroying. Building. Creating. Giving people futures instead of just... taking away threats. This is better. This is what power should be for.)
The village gates came into view as the sun touched the western horizon. Jayde spotted the crowd already gathering—more people than lived in Tardide, which meant farmers from outlying areas had come in to see. News of their return must have spread throughout the valley.
Children pointed and jumped, waving frantically. Women wiped tears from their faces. Men stood tall, shoulders back, pride evident in their posture.
As the first wagon rolled through the gates, the cheering began. Not polite applause. Raw, visceral celebration—whoops and hollers and pure joy. The kind of noise people make when hope returns after years of absence. The kind of sound that means survival just became living.
Master Whitestone stood in his wagon, arms raised, grinning like a mad fool. Granite dust turned his beard grey, made him look ancient. But his voice carried strong and clear: "Sixty wagons! Fifty buildings! And we found coal!"
The cheering redoubled, building like a wave. Someone started crying—ugly, gasping sobs of relief. Others took up the chant: "Jayde! Jayde! Jayde!"
(Oh no. No no no. Stop. This is too much. I’m not... I’m just...)
But Jayde’s internal protests died as she saw their faces. Not worship. Not idolization. Just... gratitude. Pure, simple gratitude from people who’d been drowning and finally found solid ground to stand on.
Elder Ryunzo stood, offering his hand to help Jayde down from the wagon. "Come," he said gently. "Let them thank you. They need this. You need this."
Acceptance of gratitude: Socially appropriate. Refusal: Would cause confusion and hurt. Logical choice: Accept graciously. Allow cultural bonding moment.
Jayde took his hand and stepped down. The crowd surged forward—not threatening, just eager. Hands reached to clasp hers, pat her shoulder, touch her arm. Voices overlapped in a babble of thanks and blessings and promises.
"My daughter will have a real home!"
"The orphans won’t freeze this winter!"
"Gods bless you, Lady Mage!"
"The hermit master chose well!"
"You saved us! You saved all of us!"
Mrs. Ryunzo pushed through the crowd, her round face wet with tears. She grabbed Jayde in a fierce hug that smelled of bread and herbs and safety. "You gave us hope," she whispered into Jayde’s hair. "Real hope. Not empty promises but actual, tangible hope we can build on. Thank you. Thank you."
(She’s warm. So warm. Like... like Mama Dee used to be. Like home used to feel before everything went wrong.)
Jayde hugged back, blinking hard against sudden moisture in her own eyes. "It’s just stone," she managed.
"It’s homes," Mrs. Ryunzo corrected, pulling back to cup Jayde’s face in work-roughened hands. "It’s futures. It’s everything we thought we’d lost forever. And you gave it back to us."
The celebration lasted into the evening. Someone broke out stored wine—the good stuff, saved for weddings and births. Musicians appeared with drums and pipes, playing lively dance tunes. The village square transformed into an impromptu festival, complete with dancing and singing and more food than seemed possible from their limited supplies.
Jayde escaped to the edge of the gathering after an hour, overwhelmed by the intensity of emotion. Reiko materialized beside her, and they sat together on the low wall surrounding the village well. The stone was cool under Jayde’s legs, a pleasant contrast to the warmth of celebration.
[You’re exhausted,] Reiko observed.
Qi reserves at 40%. Muscle fatigue significant. Emotional processing... complicated. Three days sustained magical output plus social stress equals system overload.
"Yeah," Jayde admitted. "All of that."
[But satisfied?]
She thought about it. Really thought about it. Three days of constant magic use. Three days of splitting stone and reading fault lines and burning through her Phoenix fire reserves like they were infinite. Three days of physical labor harder than any hunting expedition, more draining than any combat operation.
And yet...
"Yeah," she said softly, surprising herself with how true it felt. "Satisfied. This is... this is what I want to do. Not just kill things. Build things. Help people have futures instead of just... surviving day to day. The Federation talks about uplifting civilizations, but they do it with treaties and political maneuvering. This feels more real. More meaningful."
[The Federation would be proud anyway,] Reiko said. [You’re embodying their values. Technology transfer, peaceful development, ethical intervention.]
Agreed. Optimal use of resources. Positive impact on civilian population. Ethical application of superior technology. This is what I was supposed to do all along, I think. Not be a soldier. Be... a builder.
(Mama Dee would be proud. I think. I hope. She always said power should protect, not dominate. Should lift up, not tear down. And that’s what we did. We lifted them up.)
Master Whitestone found her eventually, pressing a mug of wine into her hands. "Drink," he ordered. "You earned it three times over."
"We all did."
"True. But you made it possible." He clinked his mug against hers, the ceramic making a dull thunk. "To futures built from stone and fired by coal."
"To futures," Jayde echoed, and drank.
The wine burned going down, warm and sweet and slightly too strong. Around them, the village celebrated—and for the first time since arriving on Telia, Jayde felt like she truly belonged somewhere. Not as a savior or a hero or a powerful mage. Not as a Federation officer or a Freehold slave or even as a Nexus contractor.
Just as someone who’d helped. Someone who’d built instead of destroyed. Someone who’d used power to lift people up instead of tearing them down.
Mission objective achieved. Additional resources discovered. Village prosperity ensured. Performance: Exemplary. Personal satisfaction: Unexpected but profound.
(We did good. We really, really did good. And tomorrow we get to do it again. Build more. Help more. Be better than we were.)
Tomorrow they’d start construction. Tomorrow, the orphans would begin their journey from Oldstrand. Tomorrow, the future would take shape in stone and mortar and hope.
But tonight? Tonight they celebrated the simple, profound joy of having enough. Of knowing tomorrow would be better than today. Of believing in futures that seemed impossible just days ago.
And that, Jayde thought, was worth every ounce of Qi she’d burned.







