Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 208 - 203: The Merchant Caravan

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Chapter 208: Chapter 203: The Merchant Caravan

Location: Eastern Trade Road

Date/Time: Day 793-795 (Since Nexus Contract) - 29 Voidmarch - 1 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm

The caravan stretched along the trade road like a segmented beast—twelve wagons in various states of repair, ranging from gilded merchant coaches to weather-beaten supply carts held together by hope and cheap nails. Jayde counted them from the treeline where her group waited, cataloguing everything with the automatic precision of decades of intelligence work.

Twelve wagons. Three mounted guards visible, two more walking perimeter. Thirty-seven civilians, including drivers. Mixed cargo—textiles from the southern valleys based on wrapping style, spices from the coastal regions given the sealed containers, and at least four crates of cultivation materials, if the protective formations are any indication.

The caravan had stopped at a waystation—little more than a cleared area with a well and some hitching posts—to water their beasts and rest before the next stretch of road. Perfect timing for travelers seeking to join.

"Remember," Jayde said quietly, not looking at her companions. "We’re students traveling to Obsidian Academy. Mei is my older cousin acting as chaperone. We have documentation." She touched the forged papers in her belt pouch—excellent forgeries that Isha had produced with casual expertise. "Don’t volunteer information. Don’t correct anyone’s assumptions. And don’t—"

"Stare at fire like I could command it," Yinxin finished, her voice carrying the particular flatness of someone reciting instructions they found insulting. "You’ve mentioned this."

"Because it bears repeating."

Reiko’s presence at her side drew attention as they emerged from the trees—it always did. A lion-sized shadowbeast wasn’t something people overlooked, even in a world where magical beasts served as common transport. But the salve covering his mercury rune held, and his careful positioning slightly behind Jayde projected "bonded guardian" rather than "apex predator evaluating prey."

The caravan master spotted them first. A heavyset man with the weathered features of someone who’d spent decades on trade roads, he straightened from his conversation with a wagon driver and watched their approach with narrowed eyes. His hand didn’t move toward the sword at his hip, but Jayde noted how his weight shifted—ready to draw if needed.

Professional. Former soldier, probably. The way he positioned himself gives clear sightlines to all three guards. He’s already signaled them with that shoulder roll.

"Travelers," the caravan master called when they were within comfortable speaking distance. Not a greeting. An observation. A request for identification wrapped in a single word.

"Students," Jayde replied, matching his economy of speech. "Heading to Obsidian Academy. We’d like to join your caravan for the journey."

"Students." His eyes moved over their group—lingering on Reiko, flicking to Yinxin’s plain features, settling on the white kitten perched on Jayde’s shoulder. "With a Dark Forest shadowbeast and no visible weapons."

"The shadowbeast is my bond-companion. My cousin carries defensive talismans. And I assure you, we can contribute to the caravan’s security if needed."

The caravan master’s weathered face revealed nothing. "Pretty words. Road’s dangerous. Bandits hit a caravan three days back—took everything, killed two guards who resisted. I’ve got merchants depending on me to get their goods to market and families trusting me to keep them alive." He crossed his arms. "Why should I take on unknowns?"

Direct. Practical. Assessing risk versus reward. He’s already leaning toward accepting—the beast alone would deter most opportunistic attacks—but he wants to see how we handle pressure.

"Because more swords mean more safety," Jayde said simply. "We’re not asking for charity. We’ll take watch shifts, contribute to camp duties, and if bandits are stupid enough to attack a caravan with a shadowbeast..." She let the sentence hang.

Something shifted in the caravan master’s expression. Not quite a smile, but an easing of the hard lines around his mouth. "Fair enough. I’m Garrett. We leave at dawn, make camp at dusk, and anyone who causes trouble gets left at the next waystation. Understood?"

"Understood."

"Find space near the back wagons. And keep that beast fed—I don’t want him eyeing my pack animals."

***

The caravan’s passengers proved to be exactly the mix Jayde had expected from a trade route this size. Merchants dominated—four of them, traveling together for safety, their wagons loaded with goods destined for Obsidian’s markets. A relocating family occupied one of the supply carts: husband, wife, three children under ten, and an elderly grandmother who watched everything with sharp eyes that missed nothing.

The family registers as Ashborn tier—parents, kids, all of them. Except the grandmother. She’s hiding it, but her posture, her awareness... Flamewrought minimum, possibly Inferno-tempered. Former sect member? Retired adventurer? Either way, she’s the family’s real protection.

Two mercenaries traveled with the caravan as additional security—one genuine threat, a scarred woman with the easy confidence of someone who’d survived enough fights to stop counting, and one for show, a younger man whose polished armor had never seen real combat.

And then there was the scholar.

He sat near the front of a merchant’s wagon, ostensibly reviewing scrolls, but Jayde had noticed him the moment they’d joined the caravan. Middle-aged, wearing the simple robes of an academic, with ink-stained fingers and the slightly hunched posture of someone who spent too much time reading.

Except scholars didn’t move like that.

Fluid. Balanced. Weight distributed for quick response. He scanned our entire group in under two seconds and dismissed Yinxin as the greater threat before I even spoke. That’s not academic training.

She’d have to watch him.

***

The first day passed without incident. The caravan moved at the steady pace of beasts bred for endurance rather than speed, covering ground with the relentless patience of experienced travelers. Jayde used the time to observe, filing away details with the methodical focus of someone who’d spent decades analyzing operational environments.

Trade goods: textiles, spices, low-grade cultivation materials. No standardized weights—each merchant uses their own measures, adjusted by mutual agreement. Barter system alongside currency, with conversion rates that seem to fluctuate based on relationship rather than fixed values.

Pre-industrial economics with magical augmentation. Fascinating.

The merchants haggled with each other during rest stops, trading information as readily as goods. Prices in Obsidian. Road conditions ahead. Which inns charged fair rates and which ones watered their ale. The casual exchange of intelligence that formed the backbone of any trade network.

No electronic communications. No standardized information systems. Everything travels at the speed of conversation and beast-carried mail. Yet the network functions—perhaps more efficiently than Federation commerce in some ways. Fewer points of systematic failure. No central authority to corrupt or compromise.

"You’re staring again."

Yinxin’s voice interrupted her analysis. The dragon-turned-human sat beside her on the wagon bench, looking uncomfortable in a way that had nothing to do with the wooden seat.

"I’m observing."

"You’re staring. At everything. Like you’re cataloguing inventory."

Because I am. "Habit."

"Suspicious habit." Yinxin shifted, and Jayde caught the subtle wrongness in the movement—too fluid, too controlled, lacking the small inefficiencies of human motion. "You told me to act more human. Perhaps take your own advice."

(She has a point.)

She does.

Jayde forced herself to look away from the merchant currently demonstrating preservation runes to an interested customer. Forced her posture to relax into something approaching casual. It felt like wearing ill-fitting armor, but Yinxin was right. Drawing attention served no one.

"Better," Yinxin murmured. "Now you only look mildly paranoid instead of actively hunting threats."

***

The scholar approached during the afternoon rest stop.

Jayde had been expecting it—she’d caught him watching her three times during the morning’s travel, his attention lingering with the particular focus of someone conducting their own assessment. When he finally made his move, settling onto a nearby rock with his scrolls as though seeking a quiet place to read, she was ready.

"Interesting beast," he said without preamble, nodding toward Reiko. The shadowbeast had positioned himself between Jayde and the main caravan, close enough for conversation but far enough to intercept any threat. "Dark Forest bonded, you said?"

"Yes."

"Unusual for someone your age. The bonding process typically requires significant cultivation advancement." His tone remained casual, academic, but his eyes were sharp. "Or exceptional circumstances."

Testing. Probing for information without direct questions. Classic intelligence technique.

"Exceptional circumstances," Jayde agreed, offering nothing more.

The scholar smiled—a thin expression that didn’t reach his eyes. "You assess threats like a professional, young lady. The way you evaluated our guards, catalogued the merchants, and identified the weak points in our formation. That’s not frontier awareness. That’s training."

(He noticed. Of course, he noticed.)

Deflect. Don’t confirm, don’t deny. Redirect.

"My father was a caravan guard. Before." She let grief flicker across her features—genuine enough, borrowed from older memories that never quite healed. "He taught me to watch. To see danger before it arrived."

"I’m sorry for your loss."

"It was years ago."

The scholar nodded slowly, and Jayde couldn’t tell if he believed her or simply chose not to press. "I’m Chen Wei. Traveling to Obsidian to consult their archives. Ancient history—specifically the pre-invasion era. Dry work, but someone must do it."

Chen Wei. Common enough name. The archives at Obsidian are renowned for historical documents—plausible cover. But that doesn’t explain the military bearing or the way he positioned himself with clear sightlines to three escape routes.

"Jayde Ashford. Student, also bound for Obsidian." She offered nothing else.

"A pleasure to meet you, Miss Ashford." Chen Wei gathered his scrolls and rose, movements smooth and controlled. "Perhaps we’ll have the opportunity to discuss history during our journey. I find young people’s perspectives... illuminating."

He walked away before she could respond, which was probably intentional.

[He’s more dangerous than he appears,] Reiko observed through their bond, his mental voice carrying the weight of a predator’s assessment. [The way he moves. The way he watches. He’s hunting something.]

I know. The question is whether we’re the prey or just fellow travelers.

[Does it matter? We can kill him if necessary.]

(That’s not very student-like thinking.)

No. But it’s accurate.

***

Night camp brought new challenges.

The caravan formed a defensive circle—wagons arranged to create a barrier, campfires positioned for light and warmth, guards taking shifts on the perimeter. Standard practice for road travel, executed with the casual efficiency of people who’d done this countless times.

Jayde’s group claimed a spot near the edge of the formation, close enough for protection but far enough for privacy. She’d chosen the location deliberately—good sightlines, multiple escape routes, and enough shadow for Reiko to blend into the darkness if needed.

"The food here is..." Yinxin paused, staring at the bowl of stew one of the merchants’ wives had offered them. Her nose wrinkled almost imperceptibly.

Jayde shot her a look.

"...adequate," Yinxin finished, the word emerging like it physically pained her. "Perfectly adequate."

"Eat it anyway."

"I am eating it." Yinxin took a pointed bite, her expression suggesting she was consuming something considerably less appetizing than travel stew. "See? Eating. Like a human. Who enjoys... adequate food."

(She’s trying. Give her credit for trying.)

Credit given. But she needs to try harder.

"Don’t hold the spoon like that."

"Like what?"

"Like you’re considering whether it would make an effective weapon."

Yinxin glanced down at her hand, adjusted her grip, and somehow managed to make even that look predatory. "Better?"

"No."

A sound that might have been a growl escaped Yinxin’s throat. "Humans are exhausting. How do you manage this constantly? The inefficient movements, the pointless small talk, the—" she gestured vaguely at the campfire "—sitting around flames like they’re not instruments of destruction?"

"Practice."

"I’ve had three days of practice. It’s not helping."

"It took me fifteen years." Jayde kept her voice low, mindful of nearby travelers. "Give yourself more than three days."

Yinxin’s expression flickered—something complicated passing behind her dark eyes. The dragon who’d lived for centuries, who’d commanded storms and claimed territories spanning mountain ranges, was reduced to struggling with how to hold a spoon.

"I hate this," she said quietly. "Not being... myself."

"I know." And Jayde did know. The Federation memories that weren’t quite hers, the constant translation between who she’d been and who she needed to become. "But it won’t be forever. Just until we’re safe."

"And when will that be?"

Good question.

(I don’t know.)

"Soon," Jayde said, because it was the only answer she could give.

***

Takara endured.

The pink ribbon tied around his neck—a gift from the wyrmlings before departure, presented with such earnest enthusiasm that refusing would have required explaining why a kitten found ribbons objectionable—caught the firelight as he sat on Jayde’s shoulder. Several of the merchants’ children had already approached to pet him, cooing about how adorable he was, how soft his fur felt, how cute his little blue-tipped ears looked.

He’d allowed it. Because he was a professional. Because maintaining cover required sacrifice. Because the alternative was revealing himself as a five-thousand-year-old Lightning Panthera and explaining why he was masquerading as a housecat.

But internally, Takara contemplated violence.

Adorable. They called me adorable. I have killed void-beasts that would make their ancestors weep. I have stood against invasion forces that blackened the sky. I have—

"Kitty want some fish?"

One of the merchant children—a girl of perhaps seven with gap-toothed smile—held out a piece of dried fish, waving it enticingly.

Takara stared at it.

I am going to destroy something when this mission is over. Something large. Something that screams.

But he took the fish, because his cover demanded it, and because it was actually quite good fish, and because the child’s delighted laughter when he accepted it was... not entirely unpleasant.

Not that he would ever admit that.

"Such a good kitty," the girl declared, patting his head with the enthusiastic clumsiness of childhood. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝕨𝕖𝗯𝚗𝚘𝕧𝕖𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝕞

Takara endured.

***

Later, when the camp had settled, and most travelers had retreated to bedrolls and wagon-beds, Jayde sat in the darkness at the edge of the firelight, watching the stars wheel overhead.

Same constellations. Different names, but the same patterns. That cluster there—the Federation called it Orion’s Belt. Here, they call it the Hunter’s Path. Light-years of distance, centuries of separation, and the stars remain constant.

(It’s pretty.)

It’s navigation. Reference points for travel without electronic systems.

(It can be both.)

She supposed it could.

Reiko lay beside her, a warm shadow against the cooling night. Through their bond, she felt his contentment—simple pleasure in rest after travel, in proximity to his bonded, in the absence of immediate threat.

The scholar—Chen Wei—had retired early, but Jayde had noted which wagon he’d chosen and how he’d positioned his bedroll. Defensive. Alert even in sleep.

Tomorrow we continue. Three more days to the river crossing, then another week to Obsidian. Plenty of time for him to make another approach. Plenty of time to determine what he’s really after.

(Maybe he’s just a scholar.)

And maybe Takara is just a kitten.

(Fair point.)

The fire crackled. The stars turned. Somewhere in the darkness, guards walked their perimeter and merchants dreamed of profits.

Jayde watched it all, cataloguing and assessing and planning, because that was what she did. What she’d always done. What she would continue to do until the mission was complete or she was dead.

But for one moment, just one, she let herself simply look at the stars.

They really were beautiful.