Weaves of Ashes
Chapter 58 - 53: The Final Assessment
CHAPTER 58: CHAPTER 53: THE FINAL ASSESSMENT
Location: Starforge Nexus - Multiple Training Areas | Luminari Artifact Dimensional Fold Time: Day 365 (One Year Complete)
The garden’s crystallized tree shimmered in eternal twilight, its eight-essence branches casting fractured rainbows across the moss. Jayde stood before it, same as she’d done dozens of times over the past year, but today felt different.
One year. Three hundred sixty-five days.
(A whole year.) The thought carried weight, significance. (We actually made it.)
Temporal milestone achieved. Training duration: optimal. Survival probability when entering: 12%. Current probability: substantially higher.
Green stood on the opposite side of the tree, her petite frame somehow commanding despite barely reaching Jayde’s shoulder. Ash-blonde hair perfectly arranged, flowing green robes immaculate, fractured emerald eyes sharp with assessment. She’d been waiting when Jayde arrived—no explanation, just a simple message through the Pavilion’s communication system.
"Final evaluation. Garden. Now."
"One year," Green said, her voice carrying that particular quality that meant this wasn’t just another training session. "Three hundred sixty-five days of systematic destruction and reconstruction. White broke your body and rebuilt it stronger. I shattered your understanding of magic and forged something better. You burned away trauma and healed wounds most cultivators carry to their graves."
She walked around the tree, each step deliberate.
"Today, we see what all that effort produced."
Jayde’s hands didn’t tremble. A year ago, they would have. A year ago, she’d been a broken slave with a shattered Crucible Core and more trauma than most people accumulated in a lifetime. Now—
(We’re different. Stronger. Ready?)
Assessment pending. Data collection required.
"First," Green said, "cultivation status. Show me your character interface."
Jayde didn’t need to close her eyes anymore. The mental command came as naturally as breathing, calling up the translucent display that only she could see:
╔═══════════════════════════════════════
║ STARFORGE NEXUS - CONTRACTOR INTERFACE ╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ Name: Jayde (Jade Freehold)
║ Age: 15 Years
║ Contractor Level: 1
║ Nexus Merits: 315.0
╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ PHYSICAL STATUS:
║ - Strength: 28.5/100
║ - Agility: 31.8/100
║ - Endurance: 27.2/100
║ - Constitution: 29.4/100
╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ MENTAL STATUS:
║ - Mental Resilience: 62.3/100
║ - Willpower: 58.1/100
║ - Focus: 46.7/100
║ - Emotional Stability: 54.8/100
╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ CULTIVATION STATUS:
║ - Core: Peak Flamewrought (98% to Inferno-tempered)
║ - Core Condition: Healed - Cracks Sealed
║ - Foundation: Solid
║ - Essence Access: 1/8 (Inferno Mastery)
║ - Ember Qi Pool: 2,160/2,200
║ - Regeneration: 180/hour (rest), 90/hour (active) ╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ SKILLS STATUS:
║ - Sparkcasting: Proficient
║ - Runeinfusion: Advanced
║ - Forgeweaving: Advanced
║ - Combat Integration: Expert
║ - Tactical Analysis: Expert (Federation)
║ - Survival Training: Advanced
╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ KNOWN TECHNIQUES:
║ - Flame Spark (4 Qi)
║ - Heat Palm (2 Qi/min)
║ - Ember Shield (12 Qi)
║ - Flame Lance (25 Qi)
║ - Flame Whip (15 Qi)
║ - Inferno Burst (35 Qi)
║ - Heat Sense (5 Qi/min)
╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ SOCIAL STATUS:
║ - Class: Vanguard 12th (Freehold - Exiled) ╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ TRAUMAS PROCESSED:
║ - Major: 8/8 Complete ✓
║ - Moderate: 5/5 Complete ✓
║ - Minor: 15/15 Complete ✓
╠═══════════════════════════════════════
║ PSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILE:
║ Status: STABLE
║ Combat Readiness: EXCEPTIONAL
║ Leadership Potential: EXCELLENT
║ Trauma Interference: MINIMAL
║ Identity Integration: COMPLETE ╚═══════════════════════════════════════
Green studied the air where Jayde’s interface hovered—couldn’t see it, but didn’t need to. "Read it aloud. Everything."
Jayde did, voice steady. Each stat, each skill, each cleared trauma. The numbers that represented a year of blood and sweat and systematic healing.
When she finished, Green was quiet for a long moment.
"Peak Flamewrought," she finally said. "Ninety-eight percent progress to Inferno-tempered. Ember Qi capacity at twenty-one hundred sixty—that’s approaching the theoretical maximum for your tier. Regeneration rate increased fifteen-fold from when you started." Her fractured emerald eyes held something that might’ve been approval. "Your Crucible Core was shattered. Healing it should’ve taken decades, if it worked at all. You did it in one year."
(We did it.) Pride, warm and fierce. (We actually fixed it.)
Core integrity confirmed. Foundation stable. Advancement to next tier: viable within two to three months, given appropriate catalyst experience.
"Physical stats," Green continued, "are pretty good. Not exceptional by Doha standards, but solid. Strength, agility, endurance—all in a functional range for your tier. You’ll need to keep improving them as you advance, but they’re not holding you back." She paused. "What’s remarkable is how you use them. That’s the Federation training showing through."
She gestured at the skills section.
"Sparkcasting proficient. Runeinfusion advanced. Forgeweaving advanced. Combat integration expert." Green’s voice carried genuine respect. "Most cultivators take five years to reach proficient in a single school. You mastered three schools and integrated them into combat doctrine in twelve months."
A pause. Longer this time.
"And then there’s the tactical analysis. Expert level. Federation grade." Green met Jayde’s eyes. "Sixty years of combat experience doesn’t just disappear because you’re in a younger body. You fight like someone who’s survived a thousand battles because you have. That makes you dangerous."
Acknowledged. The capability assessment is accurate. Federation combat doctrine provides a multiplicative advantage.
"Which brings us," Green said, "to the combat demonstration. I want to see what a Federation tactical specialist looks like when she’s had a year to adapt those skills to cultivation. Show me everything."
The combat arena materialized around them—Green’s doing, the Pavilion responding to her commands. The stone floor stretched thirty meters across, weapon racks lined the walls, and the air tasted like ozone and anticipation. No fancy terrain this time. No water pools or elevated platforms. Just open space and five training constructs standing in formation.
Jayde drew her sword—real steel now, not practice wood. The blade sang as it cleared the scabbard, runeinfused metal that had cost her three months of saved merits. Flame Edge patterns spiraled down the fuller, dormant but ready. The weight was perfect, the balance sublime, the grip worn smooth from daily drilling.
(This is it. Everything we learned.)
Affirmative. Combat assessment commencing. Demonstrate full capability integration.
"Begin when ready," Green said from the arena’s edge. She’d produced a crystalline tablet from somewhere, fingers already moving across its surface. Recording. Evaluating. Judging every movement.
Jayde didn’t charge.
She closed her eyes, reached inward, and felt the heat of her Crucible Core pulsing below her navel. Drew essence through meridians that had been shattered and rebuilt, channeled Inferno through pathways that flowed like molten rivers. Heat Sense activated—the world shifting, overlaying thermal patterns across her vision.
The constructs glowed orange-red against the cool blue stone. Five heat signatures, arranged in textbook pincer formation. Three advancing center, two sweeping wide for flanking positions.
Standard tactical approach. Predictable. Exploitable.
She opened her eyes.
The left flanker was already moving, trying to circle behind while she focused on the central three. Federation doctrine said to eliminate flankers first—reduce enemy numbers before the main engagement. Cultivation doctrine said to charge the strongest opponent to prove dominance.
Jayde trusted Federation doctrine.
She moved right, angling toward the opposite flanker. Let the left one think it had succeeded, that she hadn’t noticed its repositioning. Let it commit to the flank.
The right flanker rushed to intercept. Good. Exactly what she wanted.
Flame Spark formed in her off-hand—barely a thought, just intent and essence flowing together. The bolt launched, red-gold fire screaming across the distance. The construct raised its practice shield.
Jayde was already casting again. Second Spark, aimed low, catching the construct’s leading knee. The shield protected the torso and head, but the legs? Legs were exposed.
The construct stumbled.
She closed the distance. Three steps, blade rising. The construct recovered fast—these things learned, adapted—bringing its sword around in a desperate parry.
Metal rang against metal. Jayde didn’t try to overpower it. Strength wasn’t her advantage. Instead, she redirected, let the construct’s own force carry its blade past her guard, and used the momentum to spin inside its reach.
Her sword found the gap between neck and shoulder. The construct’s chest cavity cracked, essence leaking from the wound like smoke. It collapsed.
One down.
The left flanker hit her from behind.
Jayde felt the displacement of air, the subtle heat signature shifting in her peripheral thermal vision. Dropped into a crouch. The construct’s blade passed over her head, so close she felt the wind of its passage.
She pivoted, sword coming up in a vicious arc that caught the construct’s extended wrist. Severed the hand. The practice blade clattered across stone.
Flame Whip erupted from her off-hand without conscious thought—pure instinct, muscle memory from a hundred training drills. The burning lash wrapped around the construct’s remaining arm, yanked hard. Off-balance. Exposed.
Her blade punched through its chest. Twist. Withdraw.
Two down.
The three center constructs had closed distance during the exchange. Coordinating now, learning from their fallen companions’ mistakes. They spread out, forming a loose triangle that gave each other coverage while preventing Jayde from isolating any single target.
(Smart. They’re getting smarter.)
Confirmed. Adaptive response patterns engaging. Difficulty escalating.
The constructs attacked simultaneously. Left, right, center—blades converging on her position from three vectors. No room to dodge all three. No time to parry every strike.
Ember Shield.
The barrier materialized between her and the center construct, angled forty-five degrees. Not a wall—a wedge. The center blade skidded off the shield’s sloped surface, deflected into the path of the right-side attack. Two blades tangled together, a moment’s confusion.
Jayde used it.
She lunged left, engaging the isolated construct one-on-one. Its blade came around fast—these things didn’t tire, didn’t slow down. She parried high, letting her inferior strength work for her by allowing the force to push her blade upward in an arc that ended with her weapon behind the construct’s guard.
Forward thrust. Twist. The blade scraped between artificial ribs.
Three down.
The remaining two separated, circling. Learning. Adapting. Refusing to bunch up and give her another multi-target opportunity.
Tactical assessment: Opponents demonstrating advanced combat cognition. Recommend escalation to area-effect techniques.
Jayde triggered Flame Edge. The runic patterns along her blade blazed to life, Inferno essence coursing through inscribed channels. The sword erupted with red-gold fire, heat shimmering in the air around its edge. The temperature in the immediate vicinity spiked.
She moved.
Not toward the constructs. Toward the nearest weapon rack. Grabbed a practice dagger left-handed without breaking stride, now dual-wielding. The constructs tracked her movement, adjusting positions to maintain distance.
They were being cautious. Smart.
Too smart.
Jayde hurled the dagger—not at a construct, but at the stone floor between them. The blade skittered across stone, spinning, making noise. Both constructs tracked it reflexively.
She cast Flame Spark at the floor directly beneath the left construct’s feet. The bolt impacted stone, exploded upward in a shower of heated fragments and fire. The construct staggered, thermal bloom disrupting its visual sensors.
Jayde closed the distance before it recovered. Flame Edge sword carved through its torso like a heated knife through wax, the superheated blade meeting almost no resistance. The construct fell in two pieces.
Four down.
The last construct charged—aggressive, desperate. It had seen every tactic in her arsenal now. Adapted to her patterns. Predicted her movements.
So Jayde changed tactics entirely.
She dropped her sword.
The construct hesitated. Just for a fraction of a second. Confusion in its artificial cognition—why would an opponent disarm themselves?
That fraction of a second was enough.
Inferno Burst.
Jayde poured essence into the arena floor beneath her feet. Not a focused point like the earlier Flame Spark—this was area denial, tactical control of the battlefield. The essence spread out in a three-meter radius, saturating stone that couldn’t possibly hold that much power.
The arena floor detonated.
Fire erupted upward in a ring of flame that caught the charging construct mid-stride. The explosion hurled it backward, artificial flesh charring, construct materials cracking under thermal stress.
Jayde snatched her fallen sword from the ground—it had landed perfectly within reach, exactly where she’d calculated it would fall—and closed the distance before the construct could recover.
One thrust. Through the chest. Into the ground beneath.
Pinned.
She held it there until the light faded from its eyes.
Five constructs. Ninety seconds. Zero injuries.
Jayde deactivated Flame Edge, letting the sword cool. The arena fell silent except for her breathing—steady, controlled, barely elevated. A year ago, she’d have been gasping. Now her Endurance stat made this level of exertion feel manageable.
(Did we just—)
Performance analysis: Exceptional. All tactical objectives achieved. Resource management optimal. Combat flow flawless. Zero critical errors.
She straightened, rolled her shoulders. Felt the year of training settle into movements that had become instinctive. The sword felt like an extension of her arm. The magic felt like breathing. The tactical analysis felt like vision—just another sense, always active, always processing.
Green’s tablet chimed. She studied the display, ash-blonde hair catching the garden’s eternal twilight glow as she bent over her notes. Her fractured emerald eyes moved across data, calculations, and measurements that Jayde couldn’t see.
When she looked up, her expression was utterly neutral.
"Combat prodigy."
(Wait, what?)
Query: Verification required. Assessment appears... highly positive.
"Your cultivation tier is Flamewrought," Green said, walking into the arena. Each step deliberate, measured. "Your physical stats are in the thirtieth percentile for your age. Your Ember Qi capacity is excellent for your tier." She stopped beside the fallen constructs, crouched, and examined the precision of the killing strikes. "But you fight like someone three tiers higher. That’s not hyperbole. That’s measured observation."
She stood, brushed dust from her flowing green robes.
"Five Vassal-tier opponents eliminated in ninety seconds. Zero injuries sustained. Tactical decisions: optimal in every exchange. Adaptation speed: instantaneous. Combat flow: flawless." Her fractured emerald eyes locked onto Jayde’s. "I’ve trained cultivators for three thousand years. I’ve seen Inferno-tempered practitioners struggle with what you just did."
Performance validation confirmed. Federation combat methodology proven superior to standard cultivation combat doctrine.
"You’re not just competent," Green continued, voice carrying absolute certainty. "You’re a combat specialist with sixty years of military experience applied to a cultivation framework. You read opponents like a tactical computer. You manage resources like a logistics officer. You adapt to threats like a special forces operator." She paused. "Because that’s exactly what you are."
(She gets it. She actually understands what we are.)
"Your physical stats will improve as you advance tiers," Green said. "Your Qi capacity will grow. Your techniques will become more powerful. But the tactical genius? The combat instincts? The ability to make perfect decisions under pressure?" She shook her head slowly. "That’s already at master level. That’s what sixty years of Federation warfare gives you. That’s what makes you exceptional."
She waved her hand. The constructs dissolved into motes of light, the arena fading back to garden tranquility. The crystallized tree stood witness to the assessment, eight essences flowing in perfect harmony.
"Against cultivators, your own tier? You’ll win," Green stated flatly. "Against cultivators one tier higher? You’ll probably win. Against cultivators two tiers higher?" Her expression was serious. "You’d have a chance. Not a good chance, but a chance. That’s unheard of for Peak Flamewrought."
She turned toward the stone table that appeared at her mental command.
"Which is why the Dark Forest won’t kill you. It’ll be dangerous—life-threatening, even. But you have something most cultivators don’t: You know how to survive. Really survive. Not just power through with brute force, but adapt, improvise, read the situation, and make the call that keeps you breathing."
Assessment accurate. Survival probability is significantly above baseline for the cultivation tier. Federation training provides a decisive advantage.
"Theoretical knowledge test," Green said, gesturing at the table. "But I already know you’ll excel."
They sat across from each other, the crystallized tree towering behind them like a sentinel. Green conjured a holographic display between them—eight symbols rotating slowly. Inferno, Torrent, Verdant, Terracore, Metallurge, Galebreath, Radiance, Voidshadow.
"Eight essences," Green said, her voice taking on the particular quality of a teacher about to test a favored student. "Explain their relationships. Not the basics—I know you know fire opposes water, light opposes dark. Tell me something that demonstrates understanding, not memorization."
Jayde studied the rotating symbols. Let both perspectives—Jade’s emotional wisdom and Jayde’s tactical analysis—process the question together.
"They’re not really opposites," she said slowly. "That’s oversimplification. Inferno and Torrent oppose each other tactically—fire evaporates water, water extinguishes fire. But philosophically, they’re complementary. Inferno transforms through destruction. Torrent transforms through erosion. Both change what they touch, just at different speeds."
She traced the relationships with one finger, not touching the hologram but following the connections.
"Radiance and Voidshadow are the same. Light reveals, shadow conceals—opposites. But both manipulate perception. Both control what’s seen versus what’s hidden. A master of both could manipulate reality itself because they’d control observation."
Philosophical synthesis rather than mechanical recitation. Demonstrates higher-order understanding.
"The real relationships," Jayde continued, "are about what cultivation path you walk. Bladeguard cultivators favor physical essences—Inferno for offense, Terracore for defense, Metallurge for enhancement. Runemind cultivators favor conceptual essences—Radiance for clarity, Voidshadow for mystery, Galebreath for transmission. It’s not about opposition. It’s about the application."
Green’s expression didn’t change, but something in her posture relaxed fractionally.
"Sacrifice mechanics," she said. "Why do ethical sacrifices work differently than traditional methods?"
(Oh. This is the one she really cares about.)
Affirmative. Green’s entire philosophy centers on ethical cultivation. This answer determines her final assessment.
"Traditional cultivation," Jayde said carefully, "burns pieces of yourself you still need. Emotions you’re actively using. Memories that define you. Relationships that give you purpose. It works fast because you’re consuming vital components—like burning structural supports to heat your house. Power now, collapse later."
She met Green’s fractured emerald gaze.
"Ethical sacrifice burns what’s already damaged. Trauma that’s destroying you anyway. Pain that serves no purpose except to hurt. Grief that’s become toxic rather than healing. You’re not sacrificing parts of yourself—you’re sacrificing the corruption that’s eating you from inside." A pause. "It works slower because you have to process the trauma first, understand it, and accept it. Can’t just throw it in the fire and forget. But the power you gain is clean. Sustainable. Built on healing rather than harm."
Additional insight: Federation perspective applicable. Resource management doctrine—never consume irreplaceable assets for short-term gain. Sustainable operations over quick wins.
"And there’s the tactical advantage," Jayde added. "Traditional cultivators become hollow. Empty. Powerful but brittle. Ethical cultivators stay whole. Complete. We can make better decisions because we’re not missing the pieces that let us understand consequences."
Green was quiet for a long time. When she spoke, her voice carried something Jayde had never heard from her before.
Pride.
"Pass," she said simply. "Pass with distinction."
The hologram vanished. The crystallized tree behind them seemed to glow brighter, eight essences pulsing in approval.
"One year ago," Green said, "you were a broken slave with a shattered Crucible Core and enough trauma to drown most people. I thought you’d last maybe a month before the Overseer terminated your contract for failure." She stood, flowing green robes settling around her like water. "I was wrong."
(She was wrong? Green admits being wrong?)
Unprecedented. Record this moment.
"You’re not just exceptional," Green continued. "You’re extraordinary. Not because your stats are high—they’re above average at best. Not because your techniques are advanced—they’re basic compared to true masters. You’re extraordinary because you understand what you’re doing and why. Because you think strategically, act tactically, and learn from every single mistake. Because you took the worst possible starting position and turned it into a viable foundation."
She walked to the garden’s edge, looking out over the Pavilion’s impossible geometry.
"White built your body," she said quietly. "I forged your mind and your magic. But you—both of you, child and veteran, Jade and Jayde—you healed your soul. That’s not something we could teach. That’s something you did."
The emergency supplies appeared on the stone table—Green’s doing. Ten small pills in a crystal case, glowing faintly with healing essence. Three talismans inscribed with complex runic patterns, each one thrumming with stored Qi.
"Healing pills," Green said, gesturing at the case. "Mid-grade. Consume one when you’re injured—it’ll stabilize you, stop bleeding, numb pain, and give you about an hour of functionality before you need proper treatment. Don’t waste them on minor wounds. These are for ’I’m about to die’ situations."
She picked up one of the talismans. Paper-thin but dense with power.
"Escape talismans. Crush one and it’ll teleport you to a random location within ten kilometers. Random—you can’t control the destination. It could drop you deeper in danger, could save your life. Use them when you’re cornered with no other option."
(These are gifts. Free. She’s really worried about us.)
Affirmative. Gift-giving behavior indicates emotional investment. Green has developed attachment despite professional detachment protocols.
"Thank you," Jayde said, carefully storing both cases in her void-storage ring. "I’ll use them wisely."
"Use them at all," Green corrected sharply. "Most cultivators die because they hoard emergency resources. They save the healing pill for a worse situation that never comes because they bled out waiting. They refuse to waste the talisman and die in the fight they could’ve escaped. Pride kills more cultivators than monsters."
Her fractured emerald eyes bored into Jayde’s.
"If you get in over your head, run. If running doesn’t work, use the talisman. If you’re injured, use the pill. Don’t die because you’re too stubborn to use resources. You understand?"
"Yes, instructor."
"Green," she said. The correction was soft. "Just Green. You’re not a student anymore. You’re a cultivator. A Vanguard, even if the clan that gave you that rank doesn’t acknowledge it."
(She called herself just Green. Not Instructor Green. Not Overseer Green. Just... Green.)
Relationship status update: Professional distance reduced. Interpersonal connection established. Classification: Mentor who cares.
Green turned away, but not before Jayde caught the expression on her face. Something vulnerable, quickly hidden.
"The Dark Forest isn’t a training ground," Green said, voice controlled again. "It’s where cultivators die. Ashborn and Sparkforged die to basic spirit beasts. Flamewrought die to apex predators. Even Inferno-tempered cultivators vanish in the deep territories. The forest has stood for ten thousand years. It’s killed more people than most wars."
She produced a map—actual paper, not a hologram. Spread it on the table. The Dark Forest rendered in meticulous detail, with different regions marked with danger ratings.
"Perimeter territories." Green’s finger traced the outermost ring. "Relatively safe. Spirit beasts at Voidforge to Ashborn strength. You can handle these easily. They’ll test your combat integration but won’t kill you if you’re smart."
Her finger moved inward.
"Mid territories. Ashborn to Flamewrought beasts. More dangerous. Requires tactics, not just power. This is where you’ll spend most of your time, hunting, gathering, and gaining practical experience."
Deeper still.
"Deep territories. Flamewrought to Inferno-tempered threats. You’re not ready for this yet. Even at peak Flamewrought, you’d be taking serious risks. Wait until you advance tiers, then start exploring carefully."
And finally, the center.
"Heart territories. Inferno-tempered and above. Ancient apex predators. Environmental hazards that’ll kill you without even trying. The old man who owned the cave before you? He was a Blazecrowned tier. He didn’t venture into the heart." Green met Jayde’s eyes. "You definitely won’t."
She rolled up the map, handed it over.
"You need to experience the Dark Forest to break through to Inferno-tempered," Green said. "Real combat, real stakes, real consequences. The Pavilion can train you, but it can’t give you the life-or-death pressure required for advancement. You need to face actual danger. Survive actual threats. Feel actual fear and push through it anyway."
(Oh, good. Actual fear. My favorite.)
Combat experience under genuine threat conditions is required for the psychological trigger necessary to achieve a breakthrough. Assessment: Accurate. Federation advancement procedures required similar stress testing.
"How long?" Jayde asked. "Until breakthrough?"
"Couple months, maybe." Green shrugged. "Depends on how much you push yourself. The Dark Forest experience will accelerate it. Once you’re consistently fighting Flamewrought-tier threats, surviving life-or-death situations, your Crucible Core will naturally expand to accommodate the increased power flow. But rush it and you’ll crack your foundation. Take it too slow and you’ll stagnate."
She pulled out another item—a small jade token inscribed with her essence signature.
"Emergency contact. If something goes catastrophically wrong—’about to die and nothing can save me’ level wrong—channel Qi into this. It’ll send me an alert. I’ll come extract you, assuming I can reach you in time." Her expression was stern. "But using this costs massive amounts of my stored essence and five hundred merits from your balance. Don’t abuse it."
(Five hundred merits, and she still gave it to us.)
Cost-benefit analysis: Green values our survival more than resource expenditure. Emotional investment confirmed.
"And before you enter the Dark Forest," Green said, "you need proper equipment. Practice swords and training leathers won’t cut it out there."
She gestured, and the Pavilion’s interface appeared—Nexus Exchange access, merchant listings, equipment catalogs scrolling past.
"You’ve earned three hundred fifteen Nexus Merits through training completions, technique mastery, and consistent performance. Time to spend them." Green pulled up the equipment category. "You need a real weapon—something runeinfused for sustained combat, not just practice. Armor that can actually stop a spirit beast’s claws. Survival gear—tent, bedroll, fire-starting kit, water purification tablets. Storage solutions beyond just your ring. Maybe some utility talismans for situations healing pills won’t fix."
The catalog was extensive. Overwhelming, actually. Swords from fifty merits to five hundred. Armor sets ranging from basic leather to enchanted plate. Camping equipment, alchemical supplies, communication devices, mapping tools, detection arrays—
(This is like shopping for a military deployment.) Jade’s voice held familiar comfort. (Except instead of requisition forms, we’re using magic money.)
Accurate comparison. Equipment selection is critical for mission success. Recommendation: Prioritize defensive capabilities and versatile tools over specialized offensive enhancement.
"Take tomorrow," Green said. "Visit the Nexus Exchange. Talk to merchants. Compare options. Make smart choices. Your life depends on your preparation." She paused, something flickering in her fractured emerald eyes. "Day after tomorrow, you enter the cave and face the real world."
She turned to leave, then stopped.
"Jayde?"
"Yes?"
"White built your body. I forged your spirit. Now the Dark Forest will test your worth." Green’s voice was soft, almost gentle. "Don’t die out there. You’re—"
She cut herself off. Started again.
"You’re the best student I’ve trained in three thousand years. It would be a waste if some overgrown shadowbeast ate you because you made a stupid mistake."
(Three thousand years? She’s trained people for three thousand years, and we’re the best?)
Significant data point. Green’s assessment carries the weight of extreme experience. Validates training methodology and personal capability.
Before Jayde could respond, Green was gone. Vanished in a shimmer of essence, leaving Jayde alone in the garden with the crystallized tree and the weight of everything she’d just heard.
One year complete.
Final assessment: Combat prodigy. Extraordinary. Best student in three millennia.
Emergency supplies given. Equipment shopping tomorrow. Dark Forest the day after.
Jayde looked up at the tree, eight essences flowing in perfect harmony through its crystallized branches. A year ago, she’d barely understood what those essences were. Now she knew them. Could wield one. Understood their philosophy, their application, their place in cultivation’s grand design.
(Tomorrow we shop for gear. The day after, we leave.)
Confirmed. Preparation phase commencing. Real-world operations beginning. Transition from training to application.
(Are we ready?)
Jayde didn’t answer immediately. Let both perspectives—Jade’s emotional wisdom and Jayde’s tactical analysis—assess the question honestly.
"We’re as ready as we’re going to be," she finally said aloud. Both voices speaking, unified. "Not perfect. Not masterful. But better than most."
And a combat prodigy, according to an instructor with three thousand years of experience.
(Combat prodigy.) The thought settled warm in her chest. (Yeah. We are, aren’t we?)
The tree’s light pulsed once, almost like approval. Or maybe just a coincidence. Hard to tell with Luminari artifacts.
Jayde stood, rolled her shoulders, felt the year of training settle into her muscles and bones and Crucible Core. Felt the healed wounds where trauma used to live. Felt the strength—not overwhelming, not exceptional by pure numbers, but real and earned and augmented by sixty years of knowing exactly how to use it.
Tomorrow: equipment.
Day after: the Dark Forest.
And then, eventually, when she was strong enough—
(The clan that threw us away.)
The father who ordered the execution.
(Saphira, who watched and said nothing.)
Za’thul, who chose power over blood.
The unified thought crystallized, sharp and clear and cold:
One day, they’d regret what they’d done.
But first, survival.
One day at a time. One essence at a time. One fight at a time.
Until surviving stopped being the goal and justice became possible.
Jayde left the garden.
The crystallized tree watched her go, eight essences burning steady in the dimensional twilight.