©NovelBuddy
The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 41: Forge Reborn
The Potter held the cinnaite the way he held everything — with the reverent precision of a craftsman who understood that materials were not just resources but answers to questions he’d been asking his entire career.
The mineral was unassuming. Dull brown. Granular. It looked like dried clay or compacted sand — nothing in its appearance suggested that it was the catalyst for the most significant metallurgical breakthrough in the settlement’s history. But the Potter didn’t judge materials by appearance. He judged them by behavior. And when he placed the first sample into the forge crucible alongside a measure of iron and raised the temperature to the threshold that Zephyr’s blueprint specified, the behavior was extraordinary.
The cinnaite didn’t melt. It *fused*. At temperature, the mineral’s granular structure collapsed and bonded with the iron at a molecular level that the Potter’s understanding of metallurgy couldn’t fully explain but his instincts accepted without hesitation. The iron changed color first — losing its grey, taking on the darker, charcoal tone of the stonesteel samples they’d brought from the dungeon. Then the grain appeared — the wood-like internal structure that ran through the alloy, visible at certain angles, invisible at others. And finally, the weight shifted. The mass in the crucible weighed less than the iron that had gone in, as though the cinnaite had consumed the heaviness and left behind something that was simultaneously denser and lighter.
The Potter drew the first ingot at mid-morning.
He tested it immediately. The same tests he’d run on the dungeon samples months ago — edge retention, hardness, flexibility, weight comparison. The results matched. Not approximately — precisely. The alloy he’d produced was identical to the ancient stonesteel. The same dark matte surface. The same permanent edge. The same terrifying ability to shave iron the way a chisel shaved wood.
"It works," the Potter said. Two words. The weight of months of failure compressed into two syllables of success.
Zephyr watched through the divine sense and ran the production calculations that would determine how quickly the discovery could be converted into strategic advantage.
[STONESTEEL PRODUCTION — Analysis]
[Raw cinnaite available: 63 units]
[Production ratio: 4 units iron + 1 unit cinnaite = 1 stonesteel ingot]
[Yield: 63 units cinnaite = 63 stonesteel ingots]
[Allocation:]
[— Military weapons (swords, spearheads, javelin tips): 30 ingots = 30 weapons]
[— Military armor components (reinforced plates): 10 ingots]
[— Agricultural tools (plows, sickles, axes): 15 ingots]
[— Construction tools (chisels, saws, hammers): 8 ingots]
[Total: 63 ingots, fully allocated]
[Timeline: 4-6 weeks for full production at current forge capacity]
[Bottleneck: Forge Hearth is single-unit. One ingot per heat cycle (3 hours). Multiple shifts recommended.]
Sixty-three ingots. Thirty weapons. Enough to arm every enforcer with stonesteel primary weapons and distribute upgraded tools across every industry in the settlement. The technological gap between Zephyr’s civilization and any comparable Rank 2 territory widened from "notable" to "generational." Most Rank 2 gods were still equipping their forces with iron. Some were still using bronze. Zephyr’s enforcers would carry weapons made from an alloy that the ancient civilizations had required centuries of development to produce.
The advantage wasn’t fair. That was the point.
***
The forge ran twenty hours a day.
The Potter worked the first shift — dawn to noon, the hours where his hands were steadiest and his attention sharpest. A lizardman apprentice named Dran took the second shift — the young male who’d been assisting at the Forge Hearth since the early days, learning the craft through repetition and proximity, now capable of producing ingots that met the Potter’s standards seven times out of ten. The third shift was experimental — a Gnoll blacksmith from Harsk’s pack, a female named Kera, who’d been forging iron since before the migration and whose technique was different enough from the Potter’s to be interesting.
Three shifts. Three smiths. Three approaches to the same alloy, producing results that converged toward consistency as the first week of production refined into the second. 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝒆𝙬𝙚𝒃𝙣𝙤𝒗𝓮𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
The weapons came first. Vark had prioritized — his allocation list, presented to Krug with the clinical efficiency of a military procurement officer, specified exactly which units received stonesteel and in what order.
Enforcer squad leaders first. The four senior enforcers who commanded the sub-units during Burrow Strike — each one received a stonesteel short sword and a spear with a stonesteel tip. The investment was strategic: the leaders set the standard. When junior enforcers saw their commanders carrying weapons that cut through stone, the effect on morale was worth more than the metal.
Then the scout division. Runt’s javelin tips — six of them, already stonesteel from the dungeon finds — were supplemented with a stonesteel dagger. Pip received a pair of throwing picks with stonesteel points. The scouts’ job was information, not attrition, but the ability to put a stonesteel point through a sentinel’s joint had proven the value of equipping even support units with the alloy.
Then the rank and file. Each enforcer traded their iron sword for stonesteel — the dark blades distributed during morning drill, the enforcers testing the weight, the balance, the edge. The reactions were consistent: a moment of assessment, a test swing, and then the quiet adjustment of a fighter whose body recognized that the weapon in his hand was fundamentally better than the one it replaced.
The agricultural tools followed.
This was Nix’s contribution. The Goblin had argued — with the data-driven persistence that made her both invaluable and exhausting — that stonesteel plows would increase agricultural output by a factor that justified the ingot expenditure. Her math was correct. Iron plows bent in the swamp’s thick clay. Stonesteel plows cut it clean. The farming crews reported the difference immediately: fields that had taken two days to turn were completed in one. The wheat planting expanded by thirty percent in the first week.
Stonesteel sickles for harvesting. Stonesteel axes for timber. Stonesteel chisels for Aldric’s masonry crews, who discovered that cutting stone with stonesteel tools was not just faster but *precise* — the edge carved granite the way iron carved wood, turning construction from brute labor into detail work.
Nix tracked every tool, every ingot, every hour of forge time. Her leather tally sheets — the Goblin accounting system that she’d invented because paper didn’t exist yet and bark was unreliable — filled an entire shelf in her quarters. Each sheet was a masterwork of organized information: production rates, allocation schedules, output projections, material budgets, all arranged in the dense, efficient shorthand that only Nix could read fluently and everyone else had learned to trust without understanding.
Her faith tier ticked up.
[FAITH TIER UPGRADE — Nix (Goblin)]
[Provisional → Casual]
[Daily FP contribution: 1 → 10]
Not because she’d prayed. Not because she’d felt the warmth of the divine or been moved by the gold flame in the Chapel. Because the numbers were undeniable. The settlement’s output had tripled in three months. The tools worked better. The weapons cut deeper. The food grew faster. The engineering was tighter. And all of it traced back, through causal chains that Nix’s analytical mind followed as naturally as breathing, to a god who organized reality the way Nix organized resources.
She didn’t call it faith. She called it recognition of a superior operating system.
The system didn’t care what she called it.
***
Harsk received a stonesteel axe on the morning of the third week.
He didn’t ask for it. Vark brought it to him at the southern gate — the enforcer commander crossing the drill field with the dark-bladed weapon held flat across both palms, the way soldiers presented arms to peers rather than subordinates.
"Not a blessing," Vark said. "A tool. You work the gate. You should work it properly armed."
Harsk looked at the axe. The stonesteel was dark in the morning light — the charcoal surface absorbing the sun rather than reflecting it, the grain running through the metal in lines that were almost invisible. The handle was hardwood, fitted by the Potter’s apprentice, the balance point engineered for a Gnoll’s grip width and striking style.
He picked it up.
The weight was wrong the way a revelation was wrong — it challenged everything he’d assumed about the relationship between mass and capability. The axe was lighter than his iron chopper by nearly half, but the head felt *denser*. More concentrated. The edge — he tested it with a thumbnail, the instinct of a warrior who’d been checking blades since his first hunt — was beyond sharp. It was geometrically perfect. The kind of edge that didn’t exist in nature and shouldn’t exist in a forge run by a one-eyed lizardman and a Gnoll blacksmith and a teenager with soot on his face.
"The cinnaite came from the dungeon," Vark said. "The formula came from the blueprint we found. The forge made it. No blessings involved in the production process. It’s metal. Metal and skill."
Harsk understood what wasn’t being said. The axe was an acknowledgment — not of his faith, which didn’t exist, but of his contribution. He’d worked the gate for months. He’d carried stone for the Chapel he wouldn’t pray in. He’d stood watch on nights when the blessed enforcers were resting because the settlement’s security mattered more than the identity of the people providing it.
The stonesteel axe was the settlement paying its debt. In iron. In craft. In the currency Harsk accepted.
He ran his thumb along the edge again. Slowly. The blade was cold. Not the living warmth of blessed metal — just metal. Good metal. The best metal in the world, and it didn’t ask him to kneel.
"Thank you," Harsk said. The word came out rough. Unused. Two syllables that the Gnoll alpha had been hoarding for months, waiting for something worth spending them on.
Vark nodded. Turned. Walked back to the drill field.
Harsk stood at the gate with the stonesteel axe and watched the settlement he defended but didn’t worship — the Chapel with its gold flame, the forge with its dark smoke, the fields with their impossible wheat, the tunnel entrances where Kobolds appeared and disappeared like clockwork. A hundred and three believers and six defenders. Five races. One territory.
The axe rested against his shoulder. The weight was different. Everything was different. And the question that had sat in his chest since the day Varekh died — *is it worth it?* — didn’t have an answer yet.
But the axe was very good.
***
Zephyr reviewed the state of the kingdom.
Not the settlement. The kingdom. The word had crept into his internal lexicon sometime during the third month — the moment when the population crossed a hundred, the Chapel went up, and the social structure diversified beyond what the word "settlement" could contain. A settlement was thirty lizardmen with a fire. A kingdom was five races with a Chapel, a military, an agricultural sector, a forge industry, an underground tunnel network, and a divine economy that outperformed territories twice its age.
The believers had started using a name. Not officially — no decree had been issued, no sign had been posted. It had emerged the way names always emerged in organic communities: someone said it, someone else repeated it, and within two weeks it was the word everyone used without remembering who’d used it first.
Ashenveil.
The name came from the swamp itself — the grey ash-colored mist that rose from the wetlands every morning and every evening, veiling the settlement in a soft, diffuse light that made the buildings appear and disappear like something half-remembered. The believers said *Ashenveil* the way people said the name of a place they belonged to — casually, possessively, with the unconscious ownership that came from having built the thing they were naming.
Zephyr didn’t choose the name. He noted it. Filed it. And felt, in the deep-processing part of his divine awareness, something that might have been satisfaction. Not the optimizer’s satisfaction of a metric achieved. Something older. The satisfaction of a builder watching other builders name what they’d built together.
[TERRITORY STATUS — Ashenveil]
[Population: 103 believers + 6 defenders]
[Rank: Demigod (Rank 2)]
[Domains: Forge, Knowledge, Life, Earth (Partial), Authority]
[FP/day: 803 (net surplus: 653)]
[Military: 42 combat-capable (12 blessed enforcers, full stonesteel armament)]
[Infrastructure: Chapel, Forge Hearth, 4 agricultural fields, Kobold tunnel network]
[Technology: Stonesteel (Tier 2) — full production capability]
The settlement wasn’t a camp anymore. It was a forge town with a chapel and a military and an underground tunnel network and an economy that was growing at rates that would make Rank 3 gods uncomfortable.
Three months since the refugees arrived. Six months since the first fire on the first altar. The fastest rise in Theos history — achieved not through conquest or inheritance or the wholesale absorption of a pre-built civilization, but through integration. Five races that fought and built and argued and compromised and produced something that none of them could have built alone.
Zephyr looked south. The divine sense — five kilometers beyond the territory boundary — detected the war. Still raging. Still distant. Demeterra, still busy.
He looked at the numbers. The exponential curve. The Authority flywheel spinning faster with each passing day.
Not enough. Not yet. But closer. Every day, closer.
The forge rang. The fields grew. The enforcers drilled with stonesteel swords. And in the Chapel, a gold flame burned behind four walls that five races had built together, lighting the interior of a building that a man who didn’t believe in gods had laid the foundations for.
Ashenveil.
The name fit.







