Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 94 - 89: The Village of Survivors
Location: Tardide Village
Time: Day 510 | Telia: Day 1 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂
Realm: Dimension 137 (Telia)
Tardide appeared on the horizon like something out of a history text.
Wooden walls—rough-hewn logs lashed together with rope that had seen better days—surrounded a cluster of buildings that couldn’t have housed more than three hundred people. Smoke rose from chimneys in thin wisps, too thin, the kind that said firewood was rationed carefully. Fields stretched beyond the walls, tended by figures who moved with the methodical slowness of exhaustion.
Strategic assessment: Minimal defensive capability. Walls wouldn’t stop Sparkforged-tier threat. Population depleted. Infrastructure degraded.
(But they’re trying. Look at them—they’re still trying.)
Jayde stood at the top of the hill, one hand resting on Reiko’s shadowy head, and felt something twist in her chest. The village was poor. Desperately poor. The kind of poverty that ground people down until there was nothing left but survival.
But there was something else too. Something in the way the figures in the fields moved together, the way smoke rose from every chimney despite the scarcity, the way the walls—however inadequate—stood maintained and whole.
Dignity.
"They haven’t given up," she murmured.
[Should they have?] Reiko’s mental voice was confused. [Why would they give up their home?]
Because sometimes survival means knowing when to retreat. When to abandon untenable positions.
But these people hadn’t retreated. They’d stayed. They’d endured.
"Come on," Jayde said quietly. "Let’s go meet them."
***
The village gate stood open—another sign of either desperation or faith in their remote location. A single guard watched the road, an older man with grey in his beard and a spear that had been repaired so many times the shaft was more splint than wood.
He straightened when he saw her approach, eyes widening slightly at the sight of Reiko.
"State your business, traveler."
His voice was firm despite his obvious age. Maintaining protocol even when undermanned. Discipline holding despite circumstances.
"I’m looking for Elder Ryunzo," Jayde said. "I was told he might have work for someone with my skills."
The guard’s expression shifted—hope flickering across weathered features before being carefully suppressed. "You’re a cultivator?"
"I am."
"Wait here, please." He turned and called into the village. "Behro! Behro, come quick!"
A young man appeared within moments—early twenties, lean and wiry, moving with the grace of someone who spent more time in the wilderness than civilization. His eyes were sharp, assessing, taking in everything about Jayde in a single sweep.
Combat assessment: Trained scout. Good instincts. Undernourished but capable.
"You the one asking for Elder Ryunzo?" His voice was cautious, careful. "You here about the... problem?"
The way he said ’problem’ suggested something specific. Something dangerous.
Mission parameters unclear. Gathering intelligence is required before commitment.
"I’m here to offer my services," Jayde said neutrally. "What the work entails, I’ll discuss with the Elder."
Behro studied her for another moment, then nodded slowly. "Follow me. Elder Ryunzo’s at home—we’ve been... hoping someone would answer."
The walk through Tardide was an education in quiet desperation.
The buildings were well-maintained, given their circumstances—roofs patched, walls mended, streets swept clean despite the ever-present dust. But there was no hiding the poverty. Gardens planted in every available space, grown with the intensity of people who knew hunger intimately. Chicken coops that probably held the village’s entire protein supply. A well that was clearly the center of community life, with water carefully portioned.
And the people.
(So many women. So many children. Where are all the men?)
Conscription patterns match the refugee family’s story. Male population depleted. Labor shortage critical.
An old woman tended a garden plot, her hands gnarled with arthritis but still working. Three children played in the street with a ball made of wrapped cloth, their laughter bright despite clothing that had been mended a dozen times. A young mother nursed an infant while simultaneously watching a cooking pot, exhaustion carved into every line of her face.
They all stopped to watch Jayde pass.
Not with fear—though there was wariness there, especially directed at Reiko. But with something else. Something that made her chest tight.
Hope.
(They’re hoping I can help. They’re hoping I’m the answer to whatever’s been hurting them.)
Pressure identified: Civilian expectations. Cannot afford failure.
"Don’t mind the stares," Behro said quietly. "We don’t get many visitors. Especially not cultivators."
"The nearest city doesn’t send patrols?"
"Oldstrand?" Behro’s laugh was bitter. "They’ve got their own problems. Lord Hakken’s conscription quotas don’t leave them much to spare for protecting villages. We’re on our own out here."
Confirming Mission Control briefing: Minimal central authority support. Villages abandoned to self-sufficiency.
Elder Ryunzo’s home stood near the village center—larger than the others but not by much. Two stories, wooden construction, with a small garden that was clearly tended with love. Wind chimes hung from the eaves, their soft music the only decoration visible.
Behro knocked. "Elder Ryunzo? There’s someone here to see you."
The door opened to reveal a man in his sixties, grey-haired and weathered but with eyes that still held sharp intelligence. He looked at Jayde, then at Reiko, and something like relief flooded his features.
"You’re a cultivator," he said. Not a question. "Please, come in. Come in."
***
The interior of the Ryunzo home was a study in making the most of little.
Simple furniture, worn smooth by use but meticulously maintained. Woven rugs that added warmth without luxury. Walls decorated not with art but with children’s drawings and what looked like family records written in careful script.
And the smell—gods, the smell. Bread baking. Something savory simmering. Real food, prepared with care.
(When was the last time I smelled cooking that wasn’t over a campfire?)
A woman emerged from what must be the kitchen—mid-fifties, grey-streaked dark hair pulled back in a practical bun, wearing an apron that had seen better days but was spotlessly clean. Her smile was genuine, reaching eyes that crinkled at the corners.
"Oh, Jothan, we have a guest!" She bustled forward, wiping flour-dusted hands on her apron. "Welcome, dear, welcome. I’m Mrs. Ryunzo. You must be exhausted from traveling. Please, sit, sit. I’ll bring tea."
The kindness in her voice was so immediate, so unguarded, that Jayde felt something crack inside her chest.
No interrogation. No suspicion. Just... hospitality.
(They don’t even know why I’m here, and they’re already offering food.)
"I don’t want to impose," Jayde started, but Mrs. Ryunzo waved her off.
"Nonsense! Any friend of our village is a friend of ours. Behro, dear, run and fetch your brother. And ask Master Whitestone if he’s available for dinner. We have much to discuss, I think."
Behro nodded and vanished back out the door.
Elder Ryunzo gestured to a chair. "Please, sit. My wife is right—we have much to discuss. But first, introductions. I am Jothan Ryunzo, elder of Tardide. And you are?"
"Jayde." She settled into the offered chair, Reiko curling at her feet. "Just Jayde. I heard there might be work here."
"Work." Elder Ryunzo’s expression turned grim. "Yes. Work that’s been killing us slowly for two years now."
Before he could elaborate, Mrs. Ryunzo returned with a tea service—simple ceramic cups and a pot that had been mended along one crack. But the tea itself was good, hot and fragrant, and she served it with small sweet cakes that must have taken precious sugar to make.
[These smell amazing,] Reiko observed, his mental voice wistful. [Can I—]
"Of course," Mrs. Ryunzo said warmly, somehow intuiting the question despite no verbal request. She set a small plate on the floor. "What a beautiful creature. Is he a—what do you call them—shadowbeast?"
"He is. His name is Reiko."
"Reiko." She smiled. "What a lovely name. Welcome to our home, Reiko."
The shadowbeast gave her a gentle mental purr of thanks, delicately taking one of the offered cakes.
***
The full gathering happened an hour later, after the sun had begun its descent toward the horizon.
The Ryunzo home filled with people—not crowded, but comfortably full in the way that spoke of community dinners being common practice. Mrs. Ryunzo directed operations from the kitchen with the precision of a military commander, somehow producing a meal that should have been impossible given the village’s obvious poverty.
Behro arrived with his younger brother—Jinko, maybe nineteen, with the same lean build and watchful eyes. Both moved with the easy coordination of people who’d worked together their entire lives.
Master Whitestone came next—a broad-shouldered man in his forties, hands scarred from decades of forge work, with the kind of practical intelligence that showed in how he immediately noticed the quality of Jayde’s blade and nodded approval. His clothing was singed in places, and he smelled faintly of coal smoke and metal.
"Heard we had a visitor," he said, his voice a deep rumble. "Cultivator, Behro said?"
"Inferno-tempered tier," Jayde confirmed.
Something like awe flickered across his face. "That’s... that’s higher than anyone we’ve seen in years."
An older woman entered then, moving slowly with the careful steps of someone whose joints no longer cooperated fully. Her hands were gnarled with arthritis, fingers twisted, but she still carried sewing supplies—a basket of mending that never seemed to end.
"This is Widow Chen," Mrs. Ryunzo said softly. "Our best seamstress."
The old woman’s eyes were distant, sad in a way that spoke of losses too great to fully process. "My sons," she said without preamble, her voice papery thin. "Lord Hakken took them eight years ago. Both of them. Said it was their duty to serve."
(Eight years. And she’s still here. Still working. Still surviving.)
"I’m sorry," Jayde said quietly.
"Sorry doesn’t bring them back." But there was no accusation in Widow Chen’s voice. Just... weariness. "You’re here about the direwolves?"
Mission parameters becoming clearer. Direwolf problem. Explains the desperation.
"I don’t know yet," Jayde admitted. "I’m still learning what the situation is."
The last to arrive was a young woman—mid-twenties, with an infant strapped to her back and exhaustion carved into her face. She moved with the jerky motions of someone running on too little sleep and too much worry.
"This is Mira," Mrs. Ryunzo said gently. "Her husband was conscripted last year."
Mira’s smile was fragile. "He promised he’d come back. They all promise." Her voice broke slightly. "None of them ever do."
The room fell silent for a moment.
Then Mrs. Ryunzo clapped her hands. "Enough of that. We have a guest, and dinner is ready. Everyone, sit. Let’s eat."
***
The meal was simple but good—vegetable stew thick with root vegetables, fresh bread that must have been made that afternoon, and a small amount of preserved meat stretched to feed everyone.
As they ate, the story emerged piece by piece.
"Twenty years ago," Elder Ryunzo said, his voice heavy with memory, "Tardide was prosperous. We had three hundred families. Good harvests. Trade with Oldstrand and beyond. Young people stayed because there was opportunity here."
"What changed?" Jayde asked.
"Lord Hakken rose to power." Master Whitestone’s voice was bitter. "Him and Lord Varkos. Started fighting over territory. Twenty years of war."
"War means taxes," Behro added. "Heavy taxes. To fund armies. To buy weapons. To pay mercenaries."
"We gave everything we could," Widow Chen said softly. "Gold. Food. Animals. Everything."
"And men," Jinko said, his voice tight. "Every year, they come. Take every male between fifteen and forty. Call it ’conscription.’ Call it ’duty.’"
Systematic population depletion. Unsustainable extraction model. Classic pre-collapse civilization pattern.
(They’re being bled dry. Slowly. Methodically. Until there’s nothing left.)
Elder Ryunzo continued, "Ten years ago, we had enough men to work the fields properly. To maintain our walls. To hunt the dangerous beasts that live in the surrounding forests. Now..." He gestured around the table. "Now we have Behro and Jinko. Master Whitestone. Maybe twenty men total in a village that should have a hundred."
"The women do the field work now," Mira said quietly, rocking her infant. "The children help where they can. We survive. But it’s... hard."
"And two years ago," Master Whitestone said, "the direwolves moved into the area."
There it was. The mission.
"Direwolves," Jayde repeated. "How many?"
"We think there’s a pack of eight or nine," Behro said. "Led by an alpha. They’ve killed six people. Four children." His voice cracked slightly. "Four children who were just... playing too far from the village walls."
(Children. They killed children.)
Threat assessment: Pack hunters. Organized. Alpha-led indicates higher intelligence. Significant danger to civilian population.
"We’ve tried fighting them," Jinko added. "Lost three men trying. We can’t... we don’t have the strength. Not with so few able-bodied adults."
"So the children don’t play far from home anymore," Mrs. Ryunzo said, her voice thick. "They don’t explore. Don’t run free. They stay close to the walls and live in fear."
The table fell silent again.
Jayde looked around at these people—these survivors who’d endured twenty years of systematic exploitation, who’d lost sons and husbands and brothers, who worked themselves to exhaustion just to eat, who faced a threat they couldn’t fight.
And they were still trying.
Still maintaining their dignity. Still caring for each other. Still hoping.
(The Federation was supposed to protect people like this. That’s what we fought for—a galaxy where children didn’t have to live in fear. Where communities didn’t get ground down by those with power.)
Mission parameters confirmed: Eliminate direwolf pack. Protect civilian population. Restore security to allow children normal childhood development.
"I’ll help," Jayde said quietly.
The entire table froze.
"You... you’ll help?" Elder Ryunzo’s voice was barely a whisper.
"I’ll eliminate the direwolf pack. Give your children their safety back."
Mrs. Ryunzo’s eyes filled with tears. Master Whitestone looked like he’d been struck. Widow Chen’s hands stilled on her mending. Mira clutched her infant tighter, hope and disbelief warring on her face.
"We don’t have much to pay you," Elder Ryunzo said, struggling to keep his voice steady. "We can offer food, shelter, what little gold we’ve managed to save—"
"I don’t want gold." Not from people who have nothing. "Just... tell me everything you know about these direwolves. Their patterns. Where they den. When they hunt."
Behro and Jinko exchanged glances, then began describing what they’d learned through two years of careful observation and terrible loss.
***
Dinner stretched into evening, the conversation ranging from direwolf intelligence to village layout to the best routes through the surrounding forest. Master Whitestone described the crude spears they’d tried to make, Widow Chen mentioned which children had lost parents, Mira talked about her husband’s last letter before he’d stopped writing.
Through it all, Mrs. Ryunzo kept everyone fed and watered, her presence a steady anchor of warmth and care.
Eventually, as the moon rose outside, she stood. "Jayde, dear, you must be exhausted. Let me show you where you’ll sleep."
The guest room was small but spotlessly clean—a narrow bed with handmade quilts, a washbasin with fresh water, and a small table with an oil lamp. A window looked out over the village, its shutters currently open to let in the cool night air.
"It’s not much," Mrs. Ryunzo said apologetically.
"It’s perfect." And Jayde meant it.
(A real bed. A clean room. Safety. When was the last time I had any of this?)
The Federation bunks had been sterile and functional. The slave quarters had been crowded cages. The Dark Forest cave had been cold stone. Even the Pavilion rooms had felt temporary, training spaces rather than homes.
But this...
"Thank you," Jayde said, her voice catching slightly. "For your kindness. For trusting me."
Mrs. Ryunzo’s smile was gentle, maternal in a way that made something ache behind Jayde’s ribs. "You’re doing us the kindness, dear. Giving us hope when we’d almost forgotten what that felt like."
She squeezed Jayde’s shoulder once, then left, closing the door softly behind her.
Jayde stood in the center of the small room, Reiko beside her, and felt the weight of the day settle into her bones.
[This place feels... nice,] Reiko observed. [The people here. They’re good people.]
"Yeah." Jayde moved to the window, looking out over Tardide’s quiet streets. "They are."
(They remind me of what we were supposed to be fighting for. All those years. All those missions. It was supposed to be for people like this—communities that just wanted to live in peace. To raise their children. To have enough.)
Federation Core Principle Seven: Those with power have a responsibility to protect those without. Not to exploit. Not to extract. To protect.
She’d failed to protect the refugee family earlier—could only give them food and hope and the slim chance they’d reach safety.
But here, maybe, she could do more.
"Reiko," she said softly. "Tomorrow, we start gathering intelligence on those direwolves. And then we’re going to give these people their children’s safety back."
[Good.] The shadowbeast’s mental voice was firm. [They deserve it.]
Jayde turned from the window and lay down on the bed—the first real bed she’d slept in since escaping the Freehold Estate six months ago. The quilts smelled like sunshine and lavender. The mattress was worn but comfortable. Through the walls, she could hear the quiet sounds of the Ryunzo household settling for the night.
(I could get used to this. To belonging somewhere. To being part of something that isn’t just survival or training or running.)
Caution: Emotional attachment creates operational complications. Maintain professional distance.
But the Federation officer in her was quiet tonight, overshadowed by the fifteen-year-old girl who’d grown up without family, without community, without the simple kindness of people who cared.
(Just for tonight. Just let me have this.)
Jayde closed her eyes, Reiko’s warm presence curled against her side, and for the first time in longer than she could remember, felt something very close to safe.
Tomorrow would bring plans and strategy and danger.
But tonight, in a small village that refused to surrender despite everything, she’d found something she hadn’t even known she was looking for.
A place that felt almost like home.







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