Location: Dark Forest Mid Ring Cave | Northern Wilderness, Lower Realm, Doha
Time: Mid-morning, Day After Hunt
Jayde stood in the center of the cave, hands on her hips, surveying her new sanctuary with a critical eye that'd evaluated countless safe houses during sixty years of Federation operations.
Defensible entrance. Check. Water source. Check. Existing supplies. Check. Now: inventory, fortify, establish routines.
(It's really ours?) Jade's whisper carried hope and disbelief in equal measure. (We can really stay here?)
For now, Jayde confirmed. Until we're strong enough to move freely. Could be months. Maybe longer.
The cave felt bigger in full daylight—or what passed for daylight in the mid ring's perpetual twilight. Dim light filtered through the narrow fissure entrance, supplemented by faint phosphorescence from moss growing in patches along the walls. The ceiling arched twenty feet overhead, smoothly curved stone that'd been worn by water over centuries. The air smelled of earth and stone and old magic.
And there, near the back wall, the skeleton sat in eternal vigil. Peaceful. Patient. Watching over supplies he'd never use again.
"First things first," Jayde said aloud, her voice—Jade's voice—sounding small in the cave's acoustic. "Inventory. Need to know what we have, what we need, what we can use."
She approached the pile of supplies methodically, Federation training overriding exhaustion. Start with immediate survival needs: water, food, shelter, and defense. Then move to long-term sustainability.
The pool caught her attention first. Maybe six feet across, fed by water trickling down fissures in the stone. The surface was perfectly still, reflecting the cave's dim light like dark glass. She knelt beside it, cupped her hands, brought water to her lips.
Cold. Clean. No chemical taste, no essence contamination that she could detect. She drank deeply, this small body desperately dehydrated despite Isha's healing.
(It's so good,) Jade sighed. (When was the last time we had clean water? Really clean, not recycled pit runoff or stolen sips from the fountain?)
Never, Jayde realized. Not in your lifetime. Federation water was processed, filtered, and chemically treated. This is...
Natural. Pure. The way water was supposed to taste before civilization got its hands on it.
"The pool will serve," she said, mostly to herself but loud enough for Isha to hear if he was listening. "Depth?"
"Approximately four feet at the deepest point," Isha's voice answered immediately in her head. "Fed by an underground spring. The water cycles naturally—what flows in eventually seeps out through cracks in the stone. It's clean. Safe to drink."
Good. One critical resource secured.
Jayde turned to the chests and boxes next, approaching them with the same careful attention she'd given to suspicious containers in enemy territory. Never knew what might be trapped, what might explode, what might—
But these were just wooden chests, old and worn but solid. Five of them, varying sizes, arranged neatly along the back wall. Plus several smaller boxes stacked nearby.
She knelt before the first chest, running her fingers along the lid. No visible locks. No traps that she could see. But the wood looked too well-preserved for its apparent age, and when she touched it, something hummed faintly against her palm.
"Preservation ward," Isha explained. "The old man knew his craft. The ward maintains optimal conditions inside—temperature, humidity, prevents decay. Very sophisticated work."
Magic instead of technology. Still wrapping my head around that.
Jayde lifted the lid.
The hinges moved smoothly, no rust, no resistance. Inside—
Clothing. Tunics and robes folded neatly, fabric that should've rotted decades ago but looked almost new. She lifted a tunic out, examined it. Heavy weave, practical cut, sized for someone much larger than her current body. Dark brown, no decoration. Working clothes, not noble finery.
Beneath the tunics: pants, undergarments, thick socks, a heavy cloak. All practical. All preserved perfectly.
(We can wear real clothes,) Jade whispered, and the longing in her voice made Jayde's chest tighten. (Not rags. Real clothes that fit and don't have holes and don't smell like the pits.)
Too big, Jayde assessed. But we can modify them. Cut them down, resew. Federation training included field repairs.
She set the clothing aside and moved to the second chest.
This one held tools and materials: leather—lots of it, various thicknesses and types. Thick needle, though—no, wait. She dug deeper. Found thread made from some kind of plant fiber, strong and waxed. Flint and steel. Small jars of oil—she opened one, sniffed. Sweet fragrance, oddly familiar.
"Fragrant katydid oil," Isha identified. "Rare insect native to the Deep Dark Forest. The oil burns longer and cleaner than regular lamp oil. What you're holding is worth approximately fifty forge marks on the open market."
Fifty forge marks. Jade's memories provided context—that was months of earnings for a working-class family. "And he had how many jars?"
"I count twelve in that chest alone."
Wealthy, then. Or successful. This old man had lived well, even hidden in a cave in the mid ring.
The third chest held cookware: a metal pot, ceramic bowls, wooden spoons, and utensils. Spices in sealed jars—some she recognized from Jade's memories, others completely foreign. Salt, precious as gold in some parts of Doha. A grindstone for making flour or crushing herbs.
The fourth chest—
Weapons.
Jayde's hands moved before her conscious mind registered what she was seeing. Bow. Composite construction, horn and wood, and sinew, still flexible despite its age. The preservation ward had kept it viable. Quiver full of arrows, their fletching intact, heads sharp.
Two daggers, one long and thin, the other shorter with a curved blade. Both wickedly sharp despite sitting unused for years.
And a sword.
Short katana style, single-edged blade, maybe two feet long. The kind of weapon meant for close-quarters fighting, fast draws, efficient kills. She lifted it carefully, testing the weight and balance.
Perfect. Or close enough that the difference didn't matter.
Been decades since I used a blade, she thought. Federation preferred ranged weapons. But training never leaves you. Muscle memory persists.
She performed a few experimental cuts, letting Federation combat training flow through Jade's small muscles. Slow. Careful. Testing this body's capabilities.
Not bad. The reach was terrible—child's arms couldn't generate adult leverage. But speed? That was still there. Precision? Also intact.
(You look scary when you do that,) Jade whispered. (Like you know exactly where to cut to kill someone fast.)
Because I do. Jayde sheathed the sword. Fifth chest?
This one was smaller, and when she opened it, rows of small bottles and porcelain jars stared back at her. Potions and pills, if Jade's memories were accurate. Different colors, different labels written in script she'd have to study later.
"Medical supplies," Isha confirmed. "Healing potions, Qi restoration pills, antidotes for common poisons. The old man was well-prepared."
Paranoid, Jayde corrected. Smart paranoid. My kind of person.
She closed that chest carefully—didn't want to accidentally ingest something without knowing its effects—and moved to the smaller boxes.
These held miscellaneous supplies: rope, more flint and steel, a whetstone for sharpening blades, a small hatchet, fishing line and hooks, canvas tarps. Survival gear. The kind of equipment someone accumulated over years of living rough.
And against the wall, the desk. Shelves above it packed with books—maybe thirty volumes total. Journals, probably, and reference materials. She'd read them later, when she had time and better light.
The bedding pile caught her attention next. Blankets, sleeping pad, pillow—all surprisingly clean under their waterproof covering. The old man had taken care of his things. Had valued them.
Full inventory complete, Jayde assessed. Clothing, tools, weapons, food preparation equipment, medical supplies, and reference materials. This cave is more equipped than half the Federation safe houses I've used.
"Now," she said aloud, "defenses."
She moved to the fissure entrance, squeezing through to examine it from outside. The crack was barely visible from ten feet away—natural camouflage that'd kept this place hidden for years. But visibility worked both ways. Anyone tracking her, anyone with good eyes and persistence, could find it.
Need early warning. Need something that'll alert me if anything approaches.
"I can establish a basic monitoring perimeter," Isha offered. "My scanning range extends two kilometers. I can alert you if anything—or anyone—enters that radius."
Not enough. You're new to me. Need redundancy. Need passive systems that work even if you're... offline, or whatever happens to soul-bound artifacts.
She thought through options. Federation would've used sensors, motion detectors, and automated defenses. But this was Doha. Magic-based. Different rules.
"Can you detect those preservation wards?" she asked. "Could I set something similar but designed to alert rather than preserve?"
A pause. Then: "Possibly. But that requires understanding of rune-work and essence manipulation you currently don't possess. Your Crucible Core is sealed, remember? You can't actively use magic yet."
Right. Sealed. Can't fight, can't defend magically. Just physical capabilities.
Which were severely limited in a fifteen-year-old's malnourished body.
"Then we do it the old way," Jayde decided. She moved back into the forest, searching. Found thin branches that would snap easily, dried leaves that'd crunch under any weight. Spent the next hour setting up a perimeter around the cave entrance—not sophisticated, but effective. Anyone approaching would make noise. Enough to wake her, enough to grab a weapon.
Not perfect. But better than nothing.
(You're really good at this,) Jade observed. (All the planning and preparation. It's like you've done it before.)
Hundreds of times. Different worlds, same principles. Stay alert. Stay prepared. Stay alive.
By the time she finished, the forest's dim light had shifted—midday passing into afternoon. Her stomach growled, loud enough to echo slightly in the cave.
Food. Right. The old man's supplies included cookware but no actual food—nothing that would've survived four years even with preservation wards. Which meant she needed to eat what little she'd brought from the estate.
Jayde returned to the cave, retrieved the small bundle of supplies she'd gathered during her escape. Dried meat, some hard bread, a few withered vegetables. Not much. Enough for maybe two more days if she rationed carefully.
After that?
Hunt. Forage. Survive. Like always.
She built a small fire in the stone ring—the old man had left kindling and larger wood under tarps, all dry and ready. Used the flint and steel, which worked better than expected. Federation lighters were easier, but these did the job.
The fire caught quickly, flames casting dancing shadows on the cave walls. Warmth spread, chasing away the damp chill that lived in stone. She hung the metal pot over the fire using a tripod arrangement the old man had left, filled it with water from the pool, added some of the dried meat and vegetables.
Not exactly gourmet. But hot food, clean water, shelter from the elements—that was luxury compared to the pits.
While the stew simmered, Jayde turned her attention to the next task: clothing.
Her current outfit—if it could even be called that—was barely holding together. Rags that'd been torn and bloodied and dragged through forest undergrowth. They smelled of sweat and fear and desperation. They made her feel like a slave, like property, like something less than human.
Time to change that.
She pulled out the leather from the chest, laid it on the cave floor, and examined it with practiced eyes. Good quality. Thick enough for protection, soft enough for flexibility. The old man had stored different types—some smooth and fine, others more textured and durable.
Armor. Not full plate—can't work metal here. But leather armor, properly fitted, can stop a blade or claw. Federation marines used similar in close-quarters.
But first: measurements. She needed to know this body's dimensions.
Jayde stripped off the rags, standing naked in the firelight. Examined herself critically, cataloguing what she had to work with.
Small. Gods, so small. This body was fifteen years old chronologically but looked more like twelve or thirteen due to malnutrition. Barely four and a half feet tall, maybe seventy pounds soaking wet. All angles and sharp edges, ribs visible, muscles stringy rather than developed.
The scars stood out more in the firelight. Whip marks across her back, brand marks on her wrists, burns from Saphira's attacks on her arms. Every mark told a story. Every story was pain.
(We're so ugly,) Jade whispered, shame coloring the thought. (All marked up and broken and—)
We're survivors, Jayde corrected firmly. These scars are proof we didn't give up. That we're still here despite everything they did to us.
She took mental measurements, committed them to memory. Then retrieved one of the old tunics, used the curved dagger to carefully cut it apart at the seams. The fabric would provide pattern pieces, show her how things were constructed.
Federation training had included field repairs and improvised equipment creation. You learned to work with what you had, whether that was scavenged tech or animal hides. The principles transferred.
She selected leather pieces—thicker stuff for the critical areas that needed protection, softer for joints and areas requiring flexibility. Laid them out, started cutting.
The work was familiar in a way that surprised her. Hands moving with certainty, mind calculating angles and measurements. She'd done this before in the Federation—not with leather, but with composite armor panels, with salvaged material from destroyed equipment.
Making something from nothing. Creating protection from scraps.
It took hours. The stew finished cooking; she ate mechanically, not really tasting it, too focused on the work. The fire needed more wood; she fed it absently, mind occupied with stitching patterns and structural integrity.
The bone needle idea from the old story wouldn't work—these leather pieces were too thick, required more force than bone could handle without breaking. But the old man had left a proper leather needle in his tool chest, thick and strong. And the waxed thread was perfect.
She worked through the afternoon and into early evening, fingers moving in rhythm. Cut, place, stitch. Cut, place, stitch. Building protection one piece at a time.
(You're really making something,) Jade said, wonder in her mental voice. (Like actually creating clothes from nothing.)
From supplies and knowledge. Same thing Federation engineers did, just different materials.
Pants came together first. Fitted close to the legs for mobility, reinforced at the knees and thighs where protection mattered most. She'd designed them to allow full range of motion—needed to be able to run, climb, fight without restriction.
She tried them on. Not perfect, but functional. The leather felt strange against her scarred skin, but it fit. Actually fit, not hanging loose like stolen rags or cutting tight like slave collars.
(We look... different,) Jade observed. (More like a person. Less like property.)
That's the point.
The shirt took longer. She designed it like Federation combat gear—close-fitting torso for protection, looser sleeves for arm movement. Extra reinforcement over vital organs. Leather ties instead of buttons because buttons required materials she didn't have.
She worked by firelight as evening deepened outside, fingers steady despite exhaustion. This mattered. This was more than just clothing.
This was reclaiming identity. Taking control. Choosing who she was instead of accepting what they'd made her.
Finally, past midnight by her internal clock, she finished the last stitch. Held up the completed outfit—pants and shirt, crude but functional, leather armor that would actually protect her.
She put it on. Tied the front of the shirt closed, buckled the improvised belt, adjusted the fit.
Then stood and moved through combat forms. Testing flexibility, checking for binding or restriction.
Good. Better than expected, actually. Full range of motion. Should stop most blades or claws that don't come from cultivators. Won't help against magic, but one problem at a time.
(We look like a warrior,) Jade whispered, awe and fear mixing in equal measure. (Like someone dangerous.)
We ARE dangerous, Jayde thought back. Or we will be, once training starts. Once we get stronger.
She caught her reflection in the still water of the pool. Distorted by firelight, but clear enough.
Small figure in dark leather. Black hair hanging to her shoulders, tangled and filthy from days of running and hiding. Eyes that'd seen too much for their apparent age.
The hair bothered her. Practical problems: too long, got in the way during combat, required maintenance she didn't have time for. Symbolic problems: it was Jade's hair, the slave's hair, fifteen years of growing out something she'd never chosen.
Needs to go.
She retrieved the curved dagger, knelt beside the pool where light was best.
"Wait." Jade's voice wasn't a whisper this time but a shout of panic through their shared consciousness. "Wait, wait, wait, what are you doing?!"
Cutting it, Jayde explained calmly, gathering a section of hair. It's a liability. Gets caught, blocks vision, requires care we can't spare.
(But—but women don't have short hair! Not on Doha! Only men cut their hair short! Everyone will know something's wrong!)
Everyone already knows something's wrong. We're Voidforge, remember? We're marked as slaves. We don't get to care about social conventions.
(But it's—) Jade's distress was almost physical, a tightness in their shared chest. (It's the only pretty thing about us! The only thing that makes us look like a girl instead of a broken doll!)
Jayde paused, blade against hair, considering.
"It'll grow back," she said aloud, gentle but firm. "Hair always grows back. But you know what doesn't? People who get killed because they were too busy worrying about appearance to focus on survival."
She'd seen it happen in the Federation. Soldiers who maintained impractical hairstyles, who refused to adapt, who let vanity override tactical sense. Most of them died. The ones who survived learned to prioritize function over form.
"Also," she added, running fingers through the tangled mess, "look at this. Really look. It's damaged, Jade. Fifteen years of malnutrition, harsh treatment, no proper care. The ends are split, it's brittle, there are sections where it won't even grow anymore because the follicles are damaged. Cutting it off isn't destroying something beautiful. It's removing something dead so healthy growth can replace it."
(But...)
But what?
A long pause. Then, quietly: (I wanted at least one thing about me to be normal. Pretty, even. Something that wasn't marked or broken or wrong.)
And there it was. The real issue. Not about hair length or social conventions.
About wanting to be something other than what slavery had made her.
Jayde softened her mental voice. "I understand. I do. You want to look in water and see someone who isn't defined by suffering. Someone who fits, who belongs, who's accepted."
(Yes.)
"But we're not that person. We're not normal, and we never will be. Our soul is shattered across dimensions. We have sixty years of military experience in a fifteen-year-old body. We're hunted by our own clan. We're living in a cave in the Dark Forest." She paused. "Normal died the day we were declared Voidforge. Maybe even before that, when someone cursed us before we were born."
(So we just... give up on ever being normal?)
"No. We give up on pretending. We accept what we are and make it work for us." Jayde positioned the blade again. "Short hair is easier to care for. Easier to keep clean with limited resources. Doesn't get grabbed in a fight. Doesn't block vision. And most importantly: when it grows back—and it will—it'll grow back healthy. Not damaged like this is."
She started cutting before Jade could protest further. Sections of black hair fell into her lap, long strands that'd taken years to grow. The blade was sharp, made clean cuts. She worked methodically, keeping it as even as possible, until what remained was maybe three inches long all around.
Not styled. Not pretty. But functional. Practical. Easy to manage.
When she finished, she gathered the cut hair and tossed it into the fire. It crackled, burning with a faint acrid smell.
(It's gone,) Jade whispered. (All gone.)
New start, Jayde corrected. Clean slate. When it grows back, it'll be ours, not something we inherited from slave days.
She touched her head, feeling the short crop. Strange. Different. But also... lighter. Like she'd shed physical weight along with the hair.
The pool's reflection showed someone new. Or maybe someone old, wearing a younger face. Short dark hair, leather armor, knife at her belt. Eyes that'd seen death and dealt it, learned to survive in situations that should've been fatal.
Not a slave.
Not a victim.
A survivor. Maybe, eventually, a warrior.
(We look like a boy,) Jade said quietly.
We look like someone who can fight. That's more important.
Jayde cleaned up the work area—put away unused leather, stored the needle and thread, banked the fire so it wouldn't go out completely. Set the pot aside to clean in the morning. Laid out the bedding pile, making a sleeping area that was actually comfortable instead of bare stone.
Her body was exhausted—this had been the longest day. Running from hunters, soul merger, finding the cave, inventory, defense setup, making armor, cutting hair. Too much for a malnourished fifteen-year-old body, even one being piloted by a sixty-year-old tactical mind.
But before sleep, she knelt beside the skeleton one more time. Studied the peaceful bones, the peaceful death.
"Thank you," she said softly. "For the shelter. For the supplies. For the sanctuary." She touched the skull gently, a gesture of respect between survivors. "I'll take care of this place. I promise."
The cave didn't answer. But the fire crackled warmly, and the forest outside remained quiet, and for the first time in fifteen years—or seventy-five, counting both lives—Jayde felt something almost like safety.
She lay down on the bedding, pulled a blanket over her leather-clad body. The armor would probably be uncomfortable to sleep in, but she'd learned in the Federation: never go to sleep without protection. Never be unprepared for midnight attacks.
(Home,) Jade whispered as consciousness faded. (This is really home.)
For now, Jayde agreed. Tomorrow we start training. Start getting stronger. Start preparing for whatever comes next.
(Together?)
Together.
And surrounded by stone and firelight and the old man's lingering presence, Jayde closed her eyes and slept.
Dreamlessly.
Peacefully.
Protected.