©NovelBuddy
Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 275 - 270: The Kindness That Costs Nothing
Location: Obsidian Academy
Date/Time: 24 Emberrise, 9939 AZI
Realm: Lower Realm
The Refining lab smelled like something between a forest floor and a forge.
Not unpleasant — layered. Crushed mineral compounds underneath, a sharp clarity of purified essence ingredients over the top, and beneath both, the faint burnt-copper tang of reagents being processed at temperatures that would have interested a metallurgist. Jayde breathed it in from her seat three rows back and catalogued the components without thinking about it. Habit. Her more practical mind had opinions about chemical composition that Doha’s refining terminology couldn’t quite capture, so she filed them in the space between languages and focused on the crucible in front of her.
Her pill was adequate. Solidly average. The kind of result that said "competent new student" without saying anything else — exactly the profile she’d designed for Jayde Ashford, Entry Inferno-tempered, orphan from the frontier, nothing remarkable. She could have done better. Much better. But Jayde Ashford didn’t know molecular interaction theory or thermal dynamics, and she would continue not knowing them until the curriculum said otherwise.
The bell rang. Students filed out. Jayde packed her materials and headed toward the Elite dining hall, where the midday crowd was already thinning.
Eden was sitting at their usual table. Takara had claimed his customary position on top of Jayde’s Formation notes, his small white body arranged with the territorial precision of a creature who understood exactly where he’d cause the most inconvenience. The cook had left dried fish in a cloth napkin. Takara was eating it with the dignity of a being who was absolutely not enjoying this.
Eden looked — not quite pleased. Something more contained than that. The careful blankness she wore when she was managing information.
"Grade Two," Eden said. "Effective immediately."
Jayde sat down. "Which subject?"
"All three. Alchemy, Healing Arts, Poison Arts."
"In two weeks."
"The instructor called it unprecedented. He’s reporting it to the Academy council."
Advancement velocity: anomalous. Grade-One curriculum designed for three months of instruction before students attempt independent refinement. Three simultaneous advancements in two weeks. She’s not learning — she’s translating knowledge she already possesses into local methodology.
Eden’s hands rested on the table — steady as stone, the kind of stillness that came from precision, not calm. Surgeon’s hands. That word kept surfacing every time Jayde watched Eden work. The way she handled tools, reagents, even chopsticks — no wasted motion, no hesitation, the fluid efficiency of someone whose hands had been trained to operate under conditions where hesitation killed.
Her precision exceeds the parameters of self-taught talent. Surgical. That word again. File it.
"I had a good teacher before I came here," Eden said. The explanation she’d given the instructor. The one that was supposed to close the question.
The village healer from Millhaven. That’s the claimed source. A village healer from a frontier settlement does not produce this caliber of pharmaceutical precision. The gap between stated origin and demonstrated capability is widening with every class she attends.
"Be careful," Jayde said. Quietly.
"Always am."
***
The announcement came during the afternoon assembly.
Headmaster Qin stood on the raised platform at the centre of the main courtyard, his ancient frame as still as carved stone. Behind him, eight Academy instructors sat in their usual formation — robes colour-coded by discipline, faces set in varying degrees of professional indifference.
And beside them, someone new.
A woman. Mid-thirties, maybe, though age sat lightly on her. Brown hair gathered in a loose arrangement that looked effortless and wasn’t. Robes that were simple but well-made — cream and pale gold, Temple colours, but understated. Not the heavy formal vestments of a Temple official. More like someone who’d chosen comfort over ceremony, who wanted you to see the person before the institution.
She smiled at the assembled students. It reached her eyes.
(She looks kind.)
Assessment: High-confidence communicator. Posture open, shoulders relaxed, hands visible — classic trust-building body language. Eye contact pattern: sweeping, inclusive, with micro-pauses on individuals. Making each person feel seen without holding anyone long enough to create pressure. Professional. Practised. The question is whether the skill serves genuine warmth or replaces it.
"Students," Qin said. His voice carried without effort. "The Academy has always valued the development of the whole cultivator — body, mind, and spirit. To that end, we welcome Instructor Lanhua, who joins us as a visiting advisor from the Temple of Light."
Instructor Lanhua stepped forward. Her smile didn’t change — still warm, still reaching her eyes, still making the specific calculation of appearing uncalculated.
"I’m not here to preach," she said. Her voice was warm. Rich. The kind of voice that made you lean forward without realising it. "I know what students think when they hear ’Temple.’ But I’m not here to convert anyone or lecture about the Radiant Path." A self-deprecating laugh. Several students laughed with her. "I’m here because the Academy asked for help. You’re young. You’re far from home. Some of you are struggling — with cultivation, with classes, with being away from everything familiar for the first time."
She paused. Let the silence work.
"I’m offering support groups. Voluntary. No pressure, no commitment. A place where you can talk about what you’re going through with people who understand. Share strategies. Share struggles." Another pause. "Share a meal, honestly. I brought good tea."
Laughter. Genuine, this time. Several students exchanged glances — the particular hopeful glance of lonely people being offered community.
Love-bombing. Stage One of a textbook radicalization pipeline. Target selection through voluntary participation — the ones who show up first are the most vulnerable, the most isolated, the most hungry for belonging. The tea is a nice touch. Shared meals create bonding rituals. Bonding rituals create loyalty. Loyalty creates compliance.
Radicalization methodology. Applicable in any institutional framework, any world, any species. The structure is universal: identify needs, meet them generously, create dependency, then redirect. Timeline to full ideological capture: three to six months, depending on target vulnerability and operator skill.
This operator is skilled.
(But she looks so KIND.)
That’s the point.
Dozens of students surged forward when the assembly ended. Lanhua greeted each one by name — she’d done her research, memorised the roster, knew who they were before they introduced themselves. The students didn’t notice that. They noticed that someone important remembered them. That someone warm and powerful was paying attention to THEM, the forgotten ones, the poor kids from frontier villages and struggling Lower Realm families who’d never had anyone important pay attention to them in their lives.
The sign-up sheet filled a page in minutes.
***
Eden didn’t attend the support group.
Neither did Jayde. They sat on the stone bench outside the Elite dormitory that evening, the courtyard cooling as the last classes ended. Takara was curled in Jayde’s lap, his small white body a warm weight against her legs, one blue-tipped ear angled toward the support group meeting room across the way.
"The new teacher," Eden said. Carefully. She was sitting with her back against the wall, knees drawn up, her blue eyes fixed on something in the middle distance. "She reminds me of something."
"Me too," Jayde said.
Silence. The kind of silence that said more than conversation could. Two women who shouldn’t recognise professional-grade psychological manipulation both recognising it instantly — and both choosing not to explain how.
Another data point. She saw it. Not ’suspected’ — SAW it. Immediately. No hesitation, no uncertainty. Whatever Eden’s actual background is, it includes exposure to institutional manipulation at a level that produced instant pattern recognition. Village orphan. Frontier healer. The gap is becoming difficult to rationalise.
She’s filing me, too. Has to be. The recognition was mutual. She knows I saw it as quickly as she did, and she’s asking herself the same questions I am.
"The tea was a nice detail," Eden said.
"Shared meals. Creates ritual."
"Ritual creates loyalty."
"Loyalty creates — " Jayde stopped. They were finishing each other’s tactical analysis. That was too much. Too fast.
Eden leaned her head back against the stone. When she looked at Jayde again, her expression was carefully blank. "She’s good at what she does."
"Very."
"The students who signed up — "
"Vulnerable. Isolated. Looking for belonging." Jayde kept her voice even. "The exact profile."
"What do we do?"
Observe. Document. Map the operation’s scope. Do NOT confront — confrontation tips off the operator and achieves nothing except burning your own position. Better to watch, understand the pipeline, identify the handler above the operator, and determine the strategic objective before taking action.
"Watch," Jayde said. "For now."
Eden nodded. Folded her arms over her knees and went back to watching the courtyard as if they’d been discussing nothing more significant than the weather.
Takara lifted his head from Jayde’s lap and blinked one large blue eye at both of them. Then settled back down, his small body warm against her legs, a white shape of absolute unconcern between two people who were anything but.
(Two people who shouldn’t know what that was. Both knowing. Both choosing silence.)
The file on Eden grows thicker. The file she’s keeping on me is probably growing, too. Mutually assured observation. At some point, one of us will have to decide whether the other is a threat or an asset.
Not today.
***
Meiling was already sitting in the front row when Jayde passed the support group room the next morning.
Not the elaborate, calculated positioning Meiling usually employed — the careful arrangement of robes, the precise angle of her chin, the performance of noble bearing that she wore like armour against everything she’d lost. This was different. Meiling sat forward, her posture open, her face — that beautiful, calculating face — tilted upward toward Instructor Lanhua with an expression Jayde had never seen on her before.
Hunger.
Not for power. Not for status. For something rawer than that. Lanhua was speaking — something about inner strength, about the Radiant Path offering purpose to those who’d been cast aside — and Meiling was drinking it in like water after a drought.
Stage One complete. Target has self-selected. Profile: former nobility, disgraced, exiled, family ties severed, support network nonexistent, identity built on status that no longer exists. Vulnerability index: maximum. The operator will have her fully committed within a month.
(She looks — )
(Don’t.)
Jayde walked past. Didn’t slow down. Didn’t look back.
The thing about radicalization was that it worked because it met real needs. Meiling wasn’t stupid. She wasn’t even wrong to want what Lanhua was offering — community, purpose, belonging. Those were human needs, and Meiling had been starving for all of them since her family discarded her like a broken tool.
The problem wasn’t the need. The problem was who was meeting it, and why, and what they’d eventually ask for in return.
Nothing is free. The kindness that costs nothing now will cost everything later. That’s how the pipeline works. By the time the price becomes visible, the buyer is already too invested to walk away.
***
Sixth bell. Training grounds. Empty stomach.
Heizan was already there, sitting cross-legged on the packed earth with a piece of fruit in his remaining fingers. He didn’t look up when Jayde arrived. He rarely did. Some mornings she wondered if he registered her arrival through sound, through the vibration of her footsteps on the ground, or through some other sense entirely that she couldn’t identify.
"Stance," he said. One word. He bit into the fruit.
Jayde drew the weighted practice sword and settled into her opening form. The wood was heavy in her hands — deliberately heavy, designed to fatigue muscle groups that controlled blade angle and transition speed. Heizan’s method. 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
He watched. Chewing. Dark eyes tracking the micro-adjustments of her feet, her hips, the angle of her leading shoulder.
"Stop."
She stopped.
He set down the fruit. Rose with an economy of movement that always surprised her — gaunt, iron-grey hair, three fingers missing from his left hand, the kind of body that looked fragile until it moved and then looked like something that had survived things that would have killed anything less stubborn.
He crossed to her. Adjusted her grip with his two remaining left-hand fingers — precise, clinical, the touch of someone who understood exactly what information a hand could transmit. Then stepped back.
"Again. But wrong."
She blinked. "Wrong?"
"Your stance is too good. It’s correct in ways that a first-year student should not be correct. The way you distribute weight across the rear foot, the angle of your lead shoulder — these are not instinctive. They are trained." He looked at her. Steady. "Whoever taught you understood weight distribution at a level that I have encountered perhaps three times in my life. And none of those encounters involved an Academy student."
(He knows.)
He’s known since the first session. He’s choosing to protect the information rather than report it. The question is why.
"I need to teach you to walk like everyone else," Heizan said. "Not to unlearn what you know — that would be criminal. But to wear it differently. A competent student who is improving naturally, not a corrected ancient form that would make any swordmaster in this realm ask uncomfortable questions."
He demonstrated. The same stance — her stance — but softer. Slightly off-balance in a way that looked like inexperience rather than precision. The weight distribution was actually identical, but the visible presentation read as clumsy-competent rather than trained-correct.
"Camouflage," Jayde said.
"Survival," Heizan corrected. His dark eyes held hers. "There are people who would take great interest in a student who moves the way you do. Not all of that interest would be kind."
He picked up his fruit. Sat back down. "Again. Wrong this time."
She shifted her stance. Made it look worse than it was. Made the ancient form her body wanted to default to wear the skin of mediocrity.
Heizan chewed. Watching. After thirty repetitions: "Better. Your seventh form is still showing through the disguise. Loosen the wrist. No — more. More. Good. You look terrible."
"Thank you?"
"That was a compliment." He didn’t smile. But something around his dark eyes shifted — a micro-expression that might have been approval, or might have been the quiet satisfaction of a man who’d spent his life collecting fragments of something beautiful, finding someone else who carried a piece.
***
By evening, the Academy felt different.
Not dramatically. Not in any single identifiable way. The corridors were the same, the classrooms were the same, the bell schedule rang the same iron tones at the same intervals. But something underneath had shifted — a frequency, a temperature, a current moving through the student body like water finding its level.
Lanhua’s support group met for the second time. More students attended than the first. Jayde counted from across the courtyard — forty-three, up from thirty-one yesterday. The laughter drifting out of the meeting room was genuine. The conversations she could catch fragments of were earnest, vulnerable, the kind of sharing that lonely people do when someone finally asks them how they’re feeling.
Kiran walked past the meeting room with his shoulders high. Someone inside called out — "Hey, come join us!" — and his jaw tightened. He kept walking. Sea-green eyes flat, hair falling forward to cover his ears.
Ryo sat in the far corner of the dining hall, tawny amber eyes tracking the same patterns Jayde was tracking. He didn’t look at her. Didn’t acknowledge the parallel observation. But he was counting too. She could tell by the way his gaze moved — systematic, thorough, the kind of assessment that mapped a room by threat and influence rather than friendship.
He sees it. Or he sees something. Whether he recognises the specific methodology or simply the shift in social dynamics, he’s watching. Another one who watches.
Takara was asleep on Jayde’s Formation textbook. Or performing sleep with the commitment of a creature who’d elevated napping to an art form. His small white body rose and fell with breathing that was too even to be entirely natural, his blue-tipped ears occasionally rotating to track sounds he shouldn’t have been able to hear from that depth of apparent unconsciousness.
The pink ribbon on his left ear had been re-tied — one of the younger Elite students had done it during lunch, cooing over him while Takara endured the indignity with the stillness of a being who was absolutely, definitely, categorically not purring.
He’d purred. Jayde had heard it. She hadn’t mentioned it.
(I have a kitten who sleeps on my homework and a cook who saves him fish and classmates who tie his ribbons and a swordmaster who teaches me to look ordinary and a friend who sees the same dangers I see.)
(This is — )
Don’t name it.
(I know.)
She turned back to her Formation diagrams. The courtyard darkened as the last light faded. Across the Academy, Lanhua’s second meeting ended with warm goodbyes and promises to return tomorrow. Meiling lingered at the door, speaking to Lanhua in a low voice. Lanhua placed a hand on Meiling’s shoulder — brief, warm, the exact gesture that says I see you, I understand, you matter.
Meiling’s face did something Jayde had never seen it do before. It softened.
The kindness that costs nothing.
The most expensive kind there is.







