Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 131 - 126: The Road Away From Home
Location: Tardide Village → Dark Forest
Time: Day 568 | Telia: Day 58
Realm: Telia (Mission World)
Dawn broke over Tardide with golden light that felt deliberate, as if the world itself wanted to witness this farewell properly.
Jayde stood at the window of her temporary room—the last time she’d wake here, the last morning in the village that had become home despite impossibility—and watched the settlement wake around her.
But something was different.
The entire village had gathered on the main road leading toward the forest. Not dozens. Hundreds. Six hundred fifty people lining both sides of the street, dressed in their finest clothes, waiting.
Ceremonial assembly: Complete village mobilization. Purpose: Formal farewell. Significance: Maximum honor for departing member. Emotional impact: Devastating.
"They’re all here," she whispered to Reiko, who’d spent the night curled at the foot of her bed. "Everyone."
[Of course they are,] Reiko’s mental voice was gentle. [Did you expect anything less? You changed their world. They’re saying goodbye properly.]
Long tables had been set up in the village square—breakfast feast prepared by every family, contributions combining into abundance that spoke of gratitude too large for simple words. Steam rose from fresh bread. Roasted meats. Pastries glazed with honey. Fruit piled in colorful mountains. Tea and milk, and juice.
A farewell meal. Last communion.
The feast began as the sun climbed higher, washing everything in warm light.
Jayde sat at the head table with Elder Ryunzo, Mrs. Ryunzo, and village elders. All around them, families shared food and stories, voices creating a tapestry of memory and hope.
"Remember when she killed the Alpha?" someone said, laughter coloring the words despite the terrible memory. "Just walked into the forest alone and came back with that direwolf alpha’s head like it was ordinary hunting."
"What about the plows? Nobody believed they’d work. Then harvest came, and suddenly we had more grain than we knew what to do with."
"The orphans," Mrs. Ryunzo said softly, looking at children playing nearby—rescued, adopted, thriving. "Three hundred fifty lives saved because one girl cared enough to try."
Stories flowed like wine, each person sharing their moment with Jayde. Small interactions that had mattered. Kindnesses barely noticed at the time but remembered now with clarity that comes from impending loss.
Master Rainer told about the school’s founding, voice thick with emotion. "She gave me purpose when I thought my life was over. Showed me that teaching matters more than casting. That wisdom survives when power fades."
Master Whitestone shared a story about seven apprentices, how teaching them brought joy he’d forgotten existed. "She reminded me that creating things—whether swords or future blacksmiths—is what makes life worth living."
Milta spoke about peace finally found, about two children who healed wounds that seemed permanent. "My babies are gone, but these little ones need a mother. She helped me see that loving again isn’t betrayal. It’s honoring what I lost by making sure others don’t suffer the same."
The gifted children—all twelve—stood together and recited a promise in unison: "Power serves people. Magic is responsibility. Strength protects the weak. We’ll remember. We’ll honor what you taught us."
Little Lysa, who’d been mute from trauma, spoke in a clear voice that still carried wonder: "Lady Jayde taught me I could make pretty things instead of being scared. Now I make fire that dances. That’s magic."
Social impact assessment: Comprehensive transformation across all demographics. Children: Future secured. Adults: Purpose restored. Elderly: Hope rekindled. Veterans: Dignity reclaimed. Success metrics: Exceeded all projections.
Breakfast stretched toward midday, nobody wanting the moment to end. But eventually, inevitably, Elder Ryunzo stood.
The village fell silent.
"I’m not good with speeches," he began, voice carrying across the assembled crowd. "Never have been. But today—today requires words, because some moments demand witness."
He looked at Jayde, ancient eyes wet.
"This girl came to us as a stranger. Young traveler passing through, answering our call for help. Seeing how young she was, we could have turned her away. Could have viewed her with suspicion, treated her as a threat, protected ourselves through isolation."
His gaze swept across the village.
"Instead, we welcomed her. And she—" His voice cracked. "She repaid that welcome by giving us everything. Our lives. Our futures. Our hope."
Around them, six hundred fifty people listened with absolute attention.
"Two months ago, Tardide was dying. Direwolves killed our children. Poverty crushed our spirits. We survived, but survival isn’t living. It’s just... continuing. Waiting for the end we couldn’t prevent."
He paused, gathering strength.
"Then she walked through our gates. Fifteen years old. Traveling alone. Carrying mysteries she couldn’t explain. And instead of taking advantage of a desperate village, instead of exploiting our weakness, she asked what we needed. Then she gave it to us."
His hand gestured toward the forest edge where direwolf territory used to be.
"She killed monsters that terrorized us for generations. Walked into a dark forest and ended a threat we’d accepted as permanent. Then she taught us to build plows that revolutionized farming. Showed us herbs worth fortunes. Organized rescue of three hundred fifty people and their integration into the community."
Around the square, people nodded, remembering each miracle.
"She established a school for gifted children. Left us knowledge to continue building. Gave us not just prosperity but a framework for maintaining it across generations. Taught us that communities thrive through cooperation, that power serves people, that hope isn’t foolish when backed by work and will."
Elder Ryunzo’s voice grew stronger, commanding.
"She showed us we could be more than survivors. Taught us to dream again. Proved that circumstances don’t define us—choices do. And when we chose to believe in her, when we chose to trust a stranger with a mysterious past, she rewarded that faith with transformation beyond imagination."
He looked directly at Jayde.
"We built you a house. Stored your gifts. Prepared a place in our hearts that will always belong to you. Because, regardless of whether you return—and we know you might not—you’re family forever. Part of Tardide’s history. Foundation of our future."
His voice broke completely.
"Tardide will never forget. Not in a generation, not in ten generations. We’ll tell your story to our children and grandchildren. We’ll teach them that one person with courage and compassion can change everything. That hope is real when backed by action. That miracles happen when ordinary people dare to believe in extraordinary possibilities."
Silence hung heavy across the square. Then—slowly at first, building like a wave—the entire village rose to their feet.
Applause erupted. Not polite. Thunderous. Six hundred fifty people expressing gratitude that transcended words, honoring a girl who’d given them the world.
Emotional saturation: Maximum. Further speech inadvisable. Physical response only appropriate.
Jayde tried to stand, found her legs wouldn’t support her. Tried to speak, found her throat completely closed. Tears streamed down her face unchecked, and she couldn’t even pretend to have control. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚
Finally, managing words past constriction:
"You gave me something too." Voice barely audible despite silence. "A place to belong. A home. Family I chose and who chose me back."
She looked across faces she’d memorized.
"Thank you. For accepting a stranger. For ta rusting outsider. For letting me help despite the mysteries I couldn’t explain. For showing me that kindness exists. That communities can thrive. That hope isn’t weakness—it’s strength."
Breath hitched, words fragmenting.
"Build the future you deserve. Teach your children well. Remember that power serves people. That magic is responsibility. That strength protects the weak." She paused. "And when warlords notice your prosperity, when they come demanding tribute or submission—remember you have a choice. Use the knowledge I left. Defend what you’ve built. Never go back to just surviving."
Final directive: Issued. Legacy instructions: Complete. Additional speech: Impossible.
She sat, unable to continue, and the village erupted again—cheering, crying, celebrating, and mourning simultaneously.
***
The walk began as the sun reached its zenith.
The main road stretched toward the forest, and on both sides, the entire village lined the street. Children in front. Adults behind. The elderly given chairs. Veterans standing at attention. Everyone present.
Jayde and Reiko walked slowly, ceremonially, processing through the community they’d helped transform.
Villagers cheered. Waved. Cried openly. Hands reached out to touch her as she passed—quick brushes, gentle pats, physical contact expressing what words couldn’t.
Children ran alongside, laughing and crying simultaneously, throwing flowers that carpeted the road. Songs rose—traditional Telian farewell melodies, harmonies that spoke of journeys ending and beginning, of partings that hurt but carried blessings.
Mrs. Ryunzo’s four adopted children ran up, the youngest—a tiny girl with large blue eyes—pressing a carefully folded paper into Jayde’s hand.
"Don’t forget us," she whispered.
"Never. I promise."
Master Whitestone stood with his seven apprentices, all saluting as she passed. "You changed my world, girl. Made it worth living again."
Master Rainer and the twelve gifted students formed a group, each child touching the teacher’s shoulders in a gesture of unity. "We’ll honor your teachings. Power serves people. We’ll never forget."
Sergeant Kelm and the veterans formed an honor guard, one-armed man leading them in a final salute. "Ma’am. It’s been a privilege."
Every family, every individual, every life she’d touched—all present, all witnessing departure that felt like sunset: beautiful, necessary, impossible to stop.
Procession assessment: Maximum honor. Ceremony significance: Equivalent to royal departure. Emotional weight: Unbearable. Memory permanence: Absolute.
The road stretched longer than it should, each step feeling weighted with significance. But eventually, inevitably, they reached the village boundary.
Jayde turned back.
The entire village stood gathered where the road met the settlement proper. Six hundred fifty people—original three hundred plus rescued orphans and veterans, all integrated, all family now—raising their hands in unified farewell.
Sun hung behind them, washing everything in golden light that made the scene look painted. Ethereal. Perfect.
Children waved frantically. Adults held position with quiet dignity. Elderly smiled through tears. Veterans maintained salute.
And in that moment—sun-gilded figures against familiar buildings, hands raised in blessing and goodbye—Jayde burned the image into memory that would last forever.
Visual encoding: Maximum priority. Memory permanence: Absolute. Recall clarity: Perfect regardless of time elapsed. This image = foundation for remaining lifetime.
(This. This moment. Never forget. Never lose this.)
She raised her own hand—a simple gesture, farewell and promise and gratitude combined—then turned toward the forest.
The hill rose gently, the path winding through grass toward the tree line. Jayde and Reiko climbed without speaking, letting silence hold weight words couldn’t bear.
At the crest, Jayde stopped, looked back one final time.
Tardide stretched below—stone buildings, expanded fields, prosperity visible in every direction. And still, at the village boundary, hundreds of figures maintaining farewell, refusing to disperse until she disappeared completely from view.
Then she crested the hill, and the village vanished.
***
Just like that. One moment present, next moment gone. Hidden by terrain, by distance, by the simple reality of walking forward.
[We’ll never come back, will we?] Reiko asked quietly.
"No. Probably not."
[Different dimension. Different world. No way to transit without Nexus, and Nexus only sends contractors to mission worlds, not places we choose personally.]
"Right."
[Then we made it count,] Reiko said firmly. [Two months that transformed six hundred fifty lives. Village saved. Prosperity secured. Children educated. Veterans honored. Future built. That’s legacy worth having.]
"We did. We really did."
They walked in silence, following a familiar path toward the cave where dragons waited. Behind them, Tardide continued living—children learning in Master Rainer’s school, adults working prosperous fields, veterans training militia, the entire community building future Jayde had helped plant.
Mission assessment: Tardide mission = complete. All objectives exceeded. Village transformation: Comprehensive. Personal growth: Substantial. Emotional cost: High but justified. Overall evaluation: Exceptional success.
(They’ll tell stories about the girl who saved them. Pass down the knowledge I left. Teach their children and grandchildren. The village will remember long after I’m gone. That’s enough. That has to be enough.)
Small figure with navy-blue highlights walking beside massive shadowbeast companion, both silhouettes against the afternoon sun. Getting smaller with distance. Fading toward the tree line.
One last glimpse—tiny shapes barely visible—then the forest swallowed them completely.
Gone.
Never to return.
But the mark they left would never fade.
Six hundred fifty lives changed. Community transformed. Hope restored. Future secured.
Two months that mattered more than some people’s lifetimes.
And in Tardide, in a house built for a return that would never happen, in scrolls left for the future that needed guidance, in children taught and veterans honored and prosperity established—in all of it, Jayde would remain.
Not present. But permanent.
A legacy that would echo through generations.
Until the village itself faded into history, and even then, the lessons would persist.
Power serves people.
Magic is responsibility.
Strength protects the weak.
Hope isn’t foolish when backed by action.
One person can change everything.
The girl was gone.
But the truth remained.
Forever.







