Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 125 - 120: Three Days of Joy
Location: Tardide Village
Time: Days 561-563 | Telia: Days 51-53
Realm: Telia (Mission World)
Day One (Day 561 | Telia: Day 51)
The village square transformed overnight into something from a dream.
Long tables stretched in rows, covered with cloth someone had saved for decades waiting for an occasion worthy of its use. Food covered every surface—roasted meats that filled the air with savory smoke, fresh bread still warm from ovens, pastries glazed with honey, fruit piled in mountains, wine flowing from barrels that Elder Ryunzo had been hoarding for twenty years.
"First time in my life I’ve seen this much food," an old man whispered, tears streaming into his beard. "First time anyone in Tardide has."
Over six hundred people from the village, plus two hundred visitors from surrounding hamlets filled the square. Every seat taken, children sitting on parents’ shoulders, elderly given places of honor, veterans grouped together swapping stories, orphans running wild with joy.
Jayde stood at the edge, watching, Reiko sprawled beside her with a plate of tarts someone had pressed into his paws.
[This is excessive,] he observed, but his mental tone was pleased. [Humans celebrate strangely. But I approve.]
"It’s not excessive. It’s earned."
Celebration psychology: Reinforces social bonds, creates shared positive memories, marks transformation from one state to another. Essential for community cohesion. Federation colony founding protocols always include celebration phase.
Musicians started playing as the sun angled toward evening—traditional Telian folk songs with drums and stringed instruments, melodies that spoke of harvest and hope, loss transformed into joy. Simple music, but honest.
The first dancers stepped onto the cleared center space. A young couple, newly married, with wealth that made their future secure. They moved with unpracticed grace, joy more important than skill, and within minutes, dozens joined them.
Children danced with abandon, inventing steps on the spot. Veterans partnered with widows. Orphans held hands in circles, laughing. Master Whitestone—massive blacksmith who looked like he’d crush his partner—moved with surprising lightness, guiding an elderly woman through steps she remembered from youth.
Even Master Rainer danced, his twisted hands unable to cast but capable of holding a partner, his scarred face transformed by a genuine smile.
"Beautiful," Mrs. Ryunzo said, appearing beside Jayde with plates of food. "Eat. You worked as hard as anyone."
"I’m fine."
"Eat anyway." She pressed the plate into Jayde’s hands with the same authority that organized orphan adoptions and harvest logistics. "You’re too thin. Always working, never resting. Tonight, rest."
Jayde ate mechanically, tasting without registering flavor. Her attention stayed fixed on the celebration—on faces transformed by security, on laughter that came without fear underneath, on futures being planned openly instead of whispered as impossible dreams.
(This is what it looks like. Real prosperity. Not just survival, but thriving.)
As darkness fell, someone lit a bonfire in the square’s center. Flames leaped high, casting dancing shadows, painting everything warm gold. The music shifted—slower, more intimate, couples pairing off while children played tag around the fire.
Jayde watched Kira dancing with one of her younger brothers, the fourteen-year-old who’d been ready to die for her siblings, now laughing freely. Tomin showed little Lysa simple steps, the six-year-old following carefully, speaking in full sentences now. "Like this? I’m doing it right?"
"Perfect," Tomin assured her. "You’re perfect."
Social integration: Complete. Trauma indicators: Substantially reduced. Future prospects: Excellent. Mission objectives: Exceeded.
[The small ones are happy,] Reiko observed, finishing his third tart. [Real happy, not survival happy.]
"Yeah. They are."
***
Day Two (Day 562 | Telia: Day 52)
The second day brought competitions.
Sergeant Kelm organized everything with military precision—archery range set up at the field’s edge, wrestling circle marked in the square’s center, racing courses plotted through village streets. Prizes offered for winners, but participation mattered more than victory.
"It’s not about being best," Kelm announced to assembled competitors. "It’s about trying. About pushing yourself. About proving you’re alive enough to compete."
The archery drew a crowd. War veterans demonstrating skills that hadn’t faded despite missing limbs. Hunters showing techniques learned through necessity. Even children trying with small bows, encouraged by adults who cheered every shot regardless of accuracy.
Jayde watched from the sidelines, Reiko beside her, both content to observe.
Until Mrs. Ryunzo found her.
"You’re competing," the older woman declared.
"I’m really not."
"Everyone participates. That’s the rule." Steel underneath kindness. "Choose—archery, wrestling, or racing."
"I don’t—"
"Choose, or I choose for you." Mrs. Ryunzo crossed her arms. "And I’ll choose dancing. In front of everyone. Right now."
Tactical assessment: Resistance futile. Mrs. Ryunzo has social authority that supersedes all arguments. Recommendation: Comply.
(She’s terrifying. How is she terrifying?)
[Because mothers are scarier than alphas,] Reiko observed smugly. [You’re trapped.]
"Archery," Jayde conceded. "I’ll do archery."
She stepped to the line, borrowed a bow from a village hunter, and forced herself to breathe normally despite dozens of eyes watching. The target sat fifty meters away—reasonable distance, nothing complex.
Muscle memory: Intact. Federation marksmanship training: Applicable. Probability of success: High.
She drew, aimed, released. The arrow flew true, embedding just off center.
Applause erupted. Someone shouted encouragement. She shot again—closer to center. Again—dead center. Three more shots, all hitting within hand’s width of each other, grouping that demonstrated trained skill.
"Who taught you?" Master Rainer asked quietly, appearing beside her.
"My master," Jayde said, maintaining the cover story. "Taught me many things."
"Mm." He didn’t sound convinced, but let it pass. "You’re skilled. Very skilled. But you hold yourself apart, like you’re afraid to truly participate."
(Because I’m leaving. Because getting too attached makes departure harder.)
But she didn’t say it. Just handed back the bow and retreated to her observation post.
The wrestling drew bigger crowds. Men grappling in the circle, techniques ranging from trained to improvised, everyone cheering regardless of outcome. Veterans coaching younger competitors. Master Whitestone winning his bracket through sheer mass advantage, then bowing respectfully to his final opponent.
Racing brought children flooding into competition—short sprints through streets, longer courses around the village perimeter, relay teams mixing orphans with the original villagers’ kids. Laughter and shouting, winners celebrating, but everyone getting praise.
As afternoon stretched toward evening, Mrs. Ryunzo found Jayde again.
"Dancing. Now."
"I already competed—"
"Archery was a skill. Dancing is community. You don’t get to hide."
She grabbed Jayde’s wrist with surprising strength and dragged her toward where musicians were starting evening songs. Other villagers formed circles, traditional dances that required partners and coordination.
"I don’t know the steps," Jayde protested.
"Then learn. Watch and follow." Mrs. Ryunzo pushed her into the circle between two teenagers. "Everyone here learned these dances as children. You’re fifteen—time you learned too."
The music started. Simple rhythm, four counts repeating. The circle moved—step, step, turn, clap. Jayde tried following, stumbled, caught herself, and kept trying. The teenagers on either side guided her patiently, showing steps again when she missed them.
Social integration exercise: Deliberately designed to force participation. Observation: Effective. Unable to maintain distance when physically included in group activities.
Step, step, turn, clap. Step, step, turn, clap. She stopped thinking and just moved, letting muscle memory from sixty years ago adapt to new patterns. The rhythm settled into her bones—not perfect, not graceful, but genuine.
Around the circle, villagers smiled. Not mockery—approval. Acceptance.
"See?" the girl beside her said. "You’re doing it!"
The song ended. Everyone applauded everyone else. Jayde tried to slip away, but Mrs. Ryunzo was already directing the next dance—this one with partners switching, more complex, requiring coordination and communication.
Jayde found herself passed between partners—Elder Ryunzo, who guided with gentle firmness, Master Whitestone, who apologized for nearly stepping on her feet, Sergeant Kelm, who moved with military precision, and young Tomin, who treated dancing with utmost seriousness.
And somehow, despite awkwardness and missed steps and a complete lack of grace, she was dancing. Really dancing. Part of the celebration, instead of observer, participant instead of outsider.
The song ended. The circle broke. Someone handed her water, someone else offered a pastry, and suddenly she was surrounded by people, including her, naturally in their joy.
"You’re one of us now," Mrs. Ryunzo said firmly. "No more hiding on the sidelines. You’re part of this village, whether you like it or not."
(But I’m leaving. I can’t stay. Mission has time limits, and I have promises to keep and—)
"Thank you," Jayde said instead, because the truth would hurt them and kindness cost nothing.
***
Later, Elder Ryunzo found Jayde sitting quietly watching the dancers and pulled her aside.
"I meant what I said," he told her quietly. "You changed our world. When you leave—whenever that is—Tardide will remember. We’ll tell stories about the girl who taught us to dream, who showed us prosperity was possible, who refused fortune because our futures mattered more than her wealth."
"Don’t make me a legend," Jayde protested. "I’m just someone who shared knowledge."
"That’s exactly what makes you legendary." He smiled, his weathered face crinkling. "Gods know we have enough tales about conquerors and destroyers. Time we had stories about builders and teachers."
He handed her a scroll, sealed with wax.
"What’s this?"
"Formal alliance document. Between Tardide and... wherever you’re from. Your homeland might not exist on any map I know, but this document says you’re always welcome here. Always have a home, allies, sanctuary if needed. It’s signed by every village elder and stamped with our official seal."
Jayde opened it, reading formal language that essentially said: You’re family. Forever.
"Thank you," she managed past the sudden tightness in her throat.
"Thank you for giving us something worth protecting."
He walked away, leaving her holding proof that even temporary connections could matter deeply. That two months could forge bonds lasting lifetimes.
(This. This is why we do it. Not for merits or missions or cultivation advancement. For moments like this—when people realize they deserve better and actually achieve it. When hope stops being abstract and becomes concrete gold in their hands, better homes, children’s futures.)
***
That evening, she visited the cave with Reiko, both exhausted from the celebration.
The wyrmlings ambushed them immediately. Tianxin had learned to do barrel rolls while flying, demonstrating with obvious pride. Shenxin showed off a new hunting dive he’d been practicing on field mice. Huaxin had discovered she could blow smoke rings and was making dozens, laughing at her own cleverness.
[You danced,] Yinxin observed, massive head emerging from shadows. [I felt your joy. And your sadness underneath.]
"How do you always know?"
[Because I’m ancient and sometimes you broadcast emotions like a beacon. Also, wyrmlings gossip. Tianxin saw everything.]
The little silver dragon chirped unrepentantly from Jayde’s shoulder.
"I’m leaving soon," Jayde said quietly. "After tomorrow, maybe. The celebration ends, and I need to... I need to fulfill my promises. Take you to safety. Return to my world. Continue my path."
[We know. We’ve always known.] Yinxin’s ancient eyes held understanding. [Homes are temporary for those who walk far roads. But that doesn’t make them less real while they last.]
***
Day Three (Day 563 | Telia: Day 53)
The final evening arrived with surprising quietness.
The grand feast was done. The competitions concluded. What remained was intimacy—smaller groups gathered around fire pits, sharing stories and wine, celebrating with words instead of spectacle.
Master Rainer stood in the square’s center, his elderly voice carrying across the assembly.
"Forty years ago," he began, "Tardide was prosperous. We had trade, security, and futures. Then the warlord wars started, and everything burned. Men conscripted. Women widowed. Children orphaned. We survived, but survival isn’t living."
Heads nodded. Everyone remembered those years.
"For decades, we stayed trapped in survival. Hoping just to see another winter. Never dreaming of more because dreaming hurt too much when nothing changed."
He paused, looking across familiar faces illuminated by firelight.
"Then a girl walked through our gates. Fifteen years old, traveling alone except for her shadowbeast companion. We thought she was lost, needed help, maybe dangerous. Instead—" He smiled. "Instead, she was our salvation."
(Oh no. Please don’t make this about me.)
"Lady Jayde taught us that prosperity was possible. That technology could be shared. That power could serve instead of dominate. She killed the direwolves that terrorized us. She designed plows that revolutionized farming. She showed us how to grow wealth instead of just surviving poverty."
Around the fires, people nodded. Some wiped tears.
"But more than that—" Master Rainer’s voice thickened with emotion. "She taught us to hope. To believe we deserved better. To understand that circumstances didn’t define us, that we could choose different futures."
Elder Ryunzo stood, moving to join Rainer. The village leader looked across his people—six hundred fifty souls who’d become family, a community that had survived everything thrown at it.
"This girl saved us," he said simply. "Not through magic or power, though she has both. She saved us by showing us we could save ourselves. By teaching instead of conquering. By giving us tools and trusting us to use them wisely."
He turned to face Jayde, who’d been trying unsuccessfully to disappear into the shadows.
"You gave us hope when we had none. Taught us we could be more than victims. Showed us that suffering doesn’t last forever if people work together to end it."
The village stood as one. Six hundred fifty people rising, facing her, and applauding.
Not polite applause. Genuine gratitude expressed through sound—for direwolves killed and orphans saved, for plows built and herbs harvested, for wealth distributed fairly and futures secured. For the transformation from a dying village to a thriving community.
Jayde stood frozen, uncomfortable with praise, wanting to deflect but unable to do so without insulting their sincerity.
(They did the work. I just showed them how. They deserve the credit, not me.)
Assessment: Accurate but irrelevant. Leadership requires both vision and execution. They provided execution, but vision came first. Both necessary. Both valuable.
"Thank you," she managed, voice barely carrying. "But you did the work. You took risks when you had nothing. You believed in possibilities that seemed impossible. You—"
"We followed where you led," Elder Ryunzo interrupted gently. "Leadership matters. Vision matters. You gave us both."
The applause continued until she sat down, face burning, Reiko pressed against her leg, offering silent support.
Stories followed—people sharing memories of the past two months. The day Jayde killed the Alpha. The first plow working perfectly. The harvest that exceeded all expectations. Orphans finding homes. Veterans regaining dignity. Master Rainer’s school teaching ethical magic.
"You’ll leave soon," Mrs. Ryunzo said as night deepened. Not a question.
"Yes," Jayde confirmed quietly. "Soon."
"We know. We’ve always known." The older woman smiled sadly. "People like you don’t stay. You’re needed elsewhere, pulled by destinies we can’t understand. But—" She gripped Jayde’s hand. "You’ll always have home here. Always have family. No matter where you go or how long you’re gone, Tardide remembers."
Late that night, after the fires burned low and people drifted homeward, Jayde sat alone on Elder Ryunzo’s roof, watching the village sleep.
Scrolls lay beside her—documents she’d prepared over the past week. Weapon designs adapted for feudal technology. Defensive fortifications. Ethics frameworks for power use. Sustainable development principles. Environmental protection guidelines.
Everything Tardide would need to defend itself when she left. Everything they’d need to continue building without her guidance.
Mission completion: Imminent. All objectives achieved. Direwolves eliminated, village transformed, ethical framework established, economic foundation secured. Additional objective: Dragon rescue successful. Overall assessment: Exceeded expectations.
(But it doesn’t feel complete. It feels... bittersweet.)
Reiko joined her, settling into familiar position beside her.
[You’re sad about leaving.]
"I found something here. Belonging, maybe. Purpose. A place where I wasn’t running or hiding or fighting—just helping. Being useful without being used."
[You’ll find it again. Other places. Other people who need help.]
"But it won’t be this place. These people."
[No,] Reiko agreed. [It won’t be.]
Below, Tardide breathed peacefully. Shops closed for the night. Families safe in homes that wouldn’t collapse. Children sleeping without fear. Veterans resting with dignity. Orphans dreaming of futures that were genuinely possible.
Master Rainer’s school stood dark, waiting for tomorrow’s students. Master Whitestone’s forge was cold but would roar again at dawn. The herb fields stretched toward the horizon, next season’s wealth already planned.
They’d continue without her. That was the point—build systems that didn’t need her, teach people to succeed independently, create foundations that outlasted her presence.
But knowing you did it right didn’t make leaving hurt less.
Emotional attachment: Unexpected but understandable. First genuine community integration since Federation. First time being accepted rather than used. First experience of belonging without strings attached. Departure will be difficult.
(I can’t stay. I have promises to keep. Academy to attend. Cultivation to advance. Contracts to fulfill. I still need to find the parts of my soul that are missing, energy stones for the Pavilion, and hunt down the person who tried to kill me before I was born. There’s so much left to do.)
[But for tonight, you’re here. That’s enough.]
"Yeah. Tonight, I’m here."
She pulled out the scrolls again, reviewing the contents one final time. Detailed weapon designs—crossbows with mechanical advantage, fortification patterns that maximized defensive capability, tactical formations for village militia. All adapted to Tardide’s resources, all achievable with their current skill level.
Ethics frameworks—Federation principles translated to a feudal context. Power serves people. Strength protects the weak. Magic is responsibility, not privilege. Knowledge should be shared. Prosperity spreads through teaching.
Sustainable development—agricultural rotation, environmental balance, resource management. How to grow wealth without destroying the land. How to expand without losing community cohesion.
Everything they’d need to defend themselves, to maintain prosperity, to continue building something worth protecting.
She’d leave them tomorrow. Give Elder Ryunzo the scrolls, embrace Mrs. Ryunzo one last time, and let Master Rainer and Master Whitestone know their work mattered. Pack her barrels of gold and sacks of Afeaso. Lastly, find a safe haven for Yinxin and the wyrmlings.
And then—dimensional transit back to Doha. Back to academy preparations. Back to the next phase of a journey that felt endless.
(Two months. That’s all. Eight weeks that changed everything.)
Mission duration: 54 days Telia time. Impact: Transformative. Village population: 300 to 650. Economic status: Poverty to prosperity. Social cohesion: Fractured to strong. Educational infrastructure: None to functioning school. Military capability: Vulnerable to defended. Long-term sustainability: Excellent.
The stars wheeled overhead, indifferent to human achievement or loss, beautiful in their distance. Jayde watched them until exhaustion pulled her toward sleep, Reiko’s steady breathing a counterpoint to her thoughts.
Tomorrow would bring goodbyes.
Tonight, she had belonging.
That was enough.
It had to be enough.
***
Dawn came too quickly, pulling Jayde from dreams of villages that thrived and dragons that flew free, into reality where departures waited, and promises demanded fulfillment.
She stood, stretching cramped muscles, watching Tardide wake around her. Shops opening. Children heading to school. Veterans beginning morning training. The ordinary continuation of extraordinary transformation.
They’d be fine without her.
That was the whole point.
(Seeds planted. Foundations built. Now they grow on their own strength.)
She climbed down from the roof, Reiko following, both moving toward the inevitable moment when staying became impossible and leaving became necessary.
Two months that changed a world.
Time to see what the next Chapter held.







