Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 117 - 112: Forging the Future
Location: Tardide - Master Whitestone’s Smithy
Time: Days 528-532 | Telia: Days 19-23
Realm: Telia (Mission World)
Master Whitestone’s smithy smelled of charcoal, hot metal, and possibility. Jayde stood in the doorway watching the blacksmith work, fascinated by the precision of his hammer strikes, the way he read the steel’s color to judge its temperature.
Behind him, seven boys clustered around the forge. War orphans all—ages, ranging from maybe eight to fourteen. Their faces bore the hollow-eyed look of children who’d seen too much, lost too much. But right now, watching molten steel glow in the forge’s heart, something else flickered in their expressions.
Hope. Interest. The first stirrings of purpose.
"This," Master Whitestone announced, pulling a length of orange-hot steel from the forge, "is the blade assembly. The heart of our mechanical plow. Everything else supports this."
The oldest boy—Torin, his name was—leaned closer. "How hot does it need to be?"
"Cherry red minimum for forging. This?" The blacksmith held up the glowing metal. "This is perfect. Watch."
His hammer fell in measured strikes, shaping the steel. Not brutal force. Controlled, deliberate, each impact serving a purpose. The boys watched, transfixed.
Jayde smiled. Teaching moment. Knowledge transfer across generations. This is how civilizations advance.
"Lady Mage!" The youngest boy—barely eight, named Pip—spotted her in the doorway. "Are you here to help?"
"If Master Whitestone needs me." She stepped inside, feeling the forge’s heat wash over her. Intense but not uncomfortable. Her Phoenix-blooded constitution handled temperature extremes easily. "How’s construction going?"
"Day four," Whitestone said, not pausing in his work. "We’re making good progress. The charcoal helps—burns hotter, cleaner. Steel quality has improved dramatically." He grinned through his beard. "Your hermit master knew his metallurgy."
Cover story maintaining integrity. Good.
"Can I see the designs again?" Torin asked, wiping soot from his face. "I want to understand how the blade assembly connects to the frame."
Jayde pulled out the parchment she’d drawn days ago—detailed schematics of the mechanical plow. Federation-level precision rendered in charcoal and chalk, showing every joint, every angle, every mechanical principle at work.
The boys gathered around, pointing and asking questions. How does this attach? Why this angle? What keeps it stable? Their hunger for knowledge was palpable, almost desperate.
Intellectual curiosity preserved despite trauma. Excellent sign for psychological recovery.
"The blade assembly," Jayde explained, tracing the drawing, "needs to cut into the soil at a specific depth. Too shallow, and it barely scratches the surface. Too deep, and the Bildeson can’t pull it. The angle here"—she tapped the junction point—"is critical. Thirty-seven degrees from horizontal."
"Why thirty-seven?" Pip asked.
"Because that’s the angle that balances cutting efficiency with pulling resistance." Jayde sketched a quick force diagram. "Too steep, and the blade digs in and sticks. Too shallow, and it just scrapes across the top. Thirty-seven degrees gives us clean furrows with manageable effort."
Physics. Engineering. Mathematics. The universal language of problem-solving.
Master Whitestone nodded approvingly. "Listen to her, boys. She understands forces and leverage better than anyone I’ve met."
"Your master must have been amazing," Torin said, studying the diagrams with fierce concentration.
(Guilty. So guilty. We’re lying to these children.)
Necessary deception. Revealing Federation origins would compromise mission parameters. Cover story maintains operational security.
"He was," Jayde said softly, which wasn’t entirely false. Mission Control had taught her things, even if "hermit master" was fictional. "He believed knowledge should be shared, not hoarded."
***
Day one of construction blurred into day two. The forge ran constantly—blade assemblies, attachment brackets, reinforcement straps, adjustment mechanisms. The boys learned fast, their hands steadying as they practiced hammer technique, learned to read steel temperatures, and understood how carbon content affected hardness.
Jayde helped where she could. Her Phoenix fire proved useful for heat treatment—the golden Inferno burned at precise temperatures, perfect for tempering steel. She could hold a blade at exactly the right heat for exactly the right duration, no variation, no guesswork.
"Incredible," Master Whitestone muttered, watching her work. "My forge can’t maintain that kind of consistency. The temperature fluctuates with the charcoal consumption. But you... you’re like a living furnace with perfect control."
Accurate assessment. Phoenix fire maintains thermal stability within 0.5% variation. Superior to any non-magical heat source.
"Just practice," Jayde said, which wasn’t technically lying.
Day three brought the wooden frame construction. Local ashwood—strong, flexible, resistant to rot. The village’s carpenter joined them, teaching the boys basic joinery. How to cut clean joints. How to reinforce stress points. How to account for wood expansion and contraction with seasonal changes.
Jayde watched, absorbing everything. Practical engineering. Low-tech but effective. These principles work regardless of technological level.
"The frame needs to flex slightly," the carpenter explained, demonstrating with his hands. "Too rigid, and it’ll crack when the blade hits a rock. Too flexible, and it’ll wobble and create uneven furrows. You want... springiness. Controlled give."
Torin nodded, marking measurements on a plank. "Like a bow."
"Exactly like a bow!" The carpenter beamed. "You’ve got the mind for this, boy."
The pride in Torin’s eyes made Jayde’s chest ache. These children had been throwaways—orphaned by war, left to beg in city slums, considered worthless by the society that produced them. But here, given tools and purpose and patient teaching, they blossomed.
Potential unlocked through opportunity. Standard pattern. Tragedy of circumstance, not inherent limitation.
(They deserved better. They all deserved better. And now maybe... maybe they’ll get it.)
***
Day four dawned clear and bright. The plow sat assembled in the smithy’s courtyard, looking... ungainly. Crude. The wooden frame jutted at odd angles, the blade assembly gleamed dully in morning light, and the attachment mechanism consisted of leather straps and iron buckles that seemed almost laughably primitive.
But the engineering was sound. Jayde had triple-checked every joint, every angle, every load-bearing point. The math worked. The physics worked.
Theory confirmed. Practical testing required.
The entire village had gathered to watch. Elder Ryunzo stood front and center, Mrs. Ryunzo beside him. Master Whitestone’s boys clustered around the plow, protective and proud. Even the children had come, sensing that something important was about to happen.
Two Bildeson stood harnessed and ready—massive ox-like beasts with shaggy brown coats and curved horns. Patient, powerful, bred for farm work over generations. They eyed the strange contraption behind them with mild curiosity.
"Ready?" Master Whitestone asked.
Jayde nodded. She and Torin took positions at the plow’s handles—simple wooden grips that let them steer and control depth. Elder Ryunzo’s son, Jinan, stood at the Bildeson’s heads, ready to guide them forward.
"Slow and steady!" Master Whitestone called. "Let the blade find its depth naturally!"
Jinan clicked his tongue, and the Bildeson leaned into their harness. The plow lurched forward—
And immediately dug in too deep. The blade caught in hard-packed earth, twisted violently, and the entire frame shuddered. The Bildeson bellowed in protest, straining against the sudden resistance.
"Stop! Stop!" Jayde called.
Blade angle incorrect. Penetration depth excessive. Pulling force exceeds recommended limits.
The furrow behind them looked... terrible. Not a clean cut but a jagged gouge, torn earth flung to both sides. The blade had practically tried to dig a trench instead of turning soil.
Silence fell across the watching crowd. Disappointed silence. Worried silence.
(Oh no. We failed. In front of everyone. The children are watching, and we failed.)
Master Whitestone knelt beside the plow, examining the blade assembly. "The angle’s wrong," he said grimly. "Too steep. We need to adjust the mounting brackets."
"How long will that take?" Elder Ryunzo asked, trying to keep his voice neutral.
"Hours. Maybe half a day." The blacksmith stood, brushing dirt from his knees. "We’ll need to remove the blade, reheat the brackets, bend them to a shallower angle, then reattach everything."
Jayde’s mind raced. Half a day delay. Village morale impact significant. Need to maintain confidence in technology.
"Do it," she said firmly. "We built this plow in four days. Taking a few hours to perfect it doesn’t mean we failed. It means we’re learning."
Torin stepped forward. "We’ll help. Show us what needs doing."
Youth resilience. Adaptability. These children will build the future.
***
By midday, they’d made the adjustments. The blade assembly now sat at thirty-two degrees—shallower than original, but the calculations suggested it would work better in Tardide’s soil composition. The mounting brackets had been reforged, the attachment points reinforced, weak spots identified and strengthened.
"Try again?" Master Whitestone asked.
The crowd had thinned—people returning to their work, though many still watched from doorways and windows. The boys remained, loyal and determined.
Jayde and Torin took their positions again. Jinan guided the Bildeson forward—slower this time, more cautious.
The blade bit into earth. Clean. Smooth. The plow moved forward, and behind it...
A perfect furrow. Deep enough to matter. Straight enough to please. The blade turned soil instead of tearing it, creating exactly the kind of prepared ground needed for planting.
"It’s working!" Pip shouted. "Look! It’s actually working!"
The Bildeson settled into a steady pace, pulling the plow with what looked like ease. Jayde adjusted the handles slightly, correcting course, and the furrow remained true. Fifty meters. One hundred. Two hundred.
They completed five hectares in three hours—work that would normally take two weeks with hand tools.
When they finally stopped, sweat-soaked and grinning, the watching villagers erupted into cheers. Real cheers this time, not polite hope but genuine celebration.
Master Whitestone picked up a handful of the turned soil, crumbling it between his fingers. "Perfect consistency," he breathed. "Ready for planting. No rocks missed. No compaction. This is... this is going to change everything."
"Can we build more?" Torin asked eagerly. "Ten more? Twenty?"
"Slow down, boy." But Whitestone was grinning. "Yes. We’ll build more. As many as the village needs, and then more for trade."
Elder Ryunzo approached, eyes bright with unshed tears. "How many do you think, Jayde? How many could we reasonably produce?"
Production capacity analysis: Single forge, 7 apprentices, 1 master smith. Material constraints: Iron availability, wood supply, and leather for straps. Time constraints: 4 days per unit currently, will improve with practice.
"Start with ten," Jayde said. "For village use primarily. Get your farmers trained on operation and maintenance. Then... then we think about trading them."
"President Andillevé will want to see this," Master Whitestone said. "When he visits next week, we’ll give him a proper demonstration."
Yes. Political alliance plus technology demonstration equals increased village security and prosperity.
"He’ll want to buy them immediately," Elder Ryunzo predicted. "Every farmer in Oldstrand’s territory will want one. Every city will want the designs."
"Let them want," Jayde said. "You set the terms. Remember—you own this technology. They need you more than you need them."
Economic leverage. Political power. Self-determination. All derivative of technological advancement.
The boys surrounded the plow, touching it reverently. Their creation. Their success. The oldest failure had been devastating, but they’d fixed it. They’d problem-solved and adapted and succeeded.
Pip looked up at Jayde, eyes shining. "Can we build more tomorrow? Please?"
"Tomorrow we rest," Master Whitestone said firmly. "Then we build ten more. And you boys will help with every one." He ruffled Pip’s hair fondly. "You’re craftsmen now. Builders. That’s something to be proud of."
Identity formation. Purpose discovery. Trauma processing through productive activity. Optimal psychological outcome.
(They’re going to be okay. These children are going to be okay.)
The sun began its descent toward the horizon, painting Tardide in golden light. The village looked different now—not just the physical changes from new construction starting, but something less tangible. The air felt lighter. People walked with straighter spines. Hope had returned, solid and real, built from stone and steel and success.
Jayde stood in the smithy courtyard, watching families drift home for evening meals. Reiko materialized beside her, tail swishing contentedly.
[Good day,] the shadowbeast observed.
Affirmative. Objectives achieved. Technology successfully demonstrated. Production pipeline established. Economic transformation initiated.
"Yeah," Jayde agreed softly. "Good day."
Master Whitestone joined them, wiping soot and sweat from his face. "Thank you," he said simply. "For the knowledge. For the patience. For... for giving these boys something to build instead of something to mourn."
"They did the work."
"You showed them it was possible." He squeezed her shoulder, grip firm and warm. "That’s everything. Possibility. Hope. The belief that tomorrow can be better than today."
Federation core principle: Universal right to self-determination through access to knowledge and resources.
(This is what we’re supposed to do. Not conquer. Not control. Just... help. Share. Build together.)
The celebration that night was smaller than after the quarry success, but no less meaningful. The seven apprentice boys sat together, proudly displaying the calluses forming on their hands, trading stories about who’d made which piece, who’d learned fastest, who’d made the funniest mistake.
Jayde watched them, smiling. They’d come to this village as orphans—lost, purposeless, damaged. But now? Now they were craftsmen. Builders. Young men with skills and pride and futures.
Mission success metrics: Exceeded in all categories. Tangible outcomes: Fifty buildings’ worth of stone quarried. Coal deposit discovered. Mechanical plow designed, built, and successfully tested. Intangible outcomes: Morale restored. Hope rekindled. Skills transferred to next generation. Economic independence achieved.
Mrs. Ryunzo appeared with a plate of tarts—fresh-baked, still warm, smelling of berries and butter. "For you and Reiko," she said, pressing them into Jayde’s hands. "You’ve earned a thousand tarts. This is just a start."
"Thank you." Jayde took one, bit into sweet-tart perfection. "These are amazing."
"Then you’ll have to stay." Mrs. Ryunzo’s smile wobbled. "At least until we’ve repaid even a fraction of what you’ve given us."
Temporal limitations acknowledged. Mission duration finite. Return to Doha inevitable.
"I’ll stay as long as I can," Jayde said, which was the best promise she could offer. "Long enough to see those fifty buildings finished."
"That’s all we can ask." The older woman hugged her quickly, then bustled away to distribute more food.
Jayde sat alone with her tarts and her shadowbeast, watching the village celebrate small, everyday miracles. Tomorrow they’d begin constructing the promised buildings. Next week, President Andillevé would arrive for the formal demonstration. The week after, orphans would begin arriving—three hundred children who’d go from begging on streets to having homes, families, futures.
All because of stone and steel and the willingness to share knowledge across technological divides.
Acceptable outcome, her tactical mind assessed. Mission parameters exceeded. Additional objectives accomplished. Performance: Exemplary.
(We built something. We really built something. Not walls or weapons. Homes. Hope. Futures.)
Reiko pressed against her leg, radiating contentment. [You’re happy.]
"Yeah," Jayde admitted, surprised by how true it was. "I am."
Above, Telia’s stars glittered—unknown constellations, alien but beautiful. Somewhere out there, Doha existed in frozen stasis, waiting for her return. The Freehold Clan still searched for the child who’d escaped. Dangers still lurked.
But here, now, in this moment? Jayde sat in a village she’d helped transform, surrounded by people she’d helped save, having built things that would last generations.
This, she thought, watching Master Whitestone’s apprentices laugh together, this is what power should be for.
And tomorrow, they’d build even more.







