The tools had given her purpose. Power. The ability to help people in ways she never could have managed alone.
And now they wanted paynt for that gift.
Mokko’s hand landed on her shoulder, gentle but grounding. "Mar? You’re shaking."
She was. Her whole body trembled with the force of trying to hold her ground against the collective will of four ancient, powerful artifacts that did not accept "no" as an answer.
"I can’t," she whispered. Her throat felt tight. "I can’t be what they want to be."
"What do they want?"
"A collector. A thief. Soone who puts their completion above everything else—above respect, above partnership, above my own judgnt."
She turned to face Mokko fully, needing to see a human face. Needing to be reminded that she was more than just a vessel for ancient tools with ancient purposes.
"The Champion earned the Verdant Mortar," Marron said, each word deliberate. "She’s used it for decades to heal and protect and nurture living things. She doesn’t hoard it. She doesn’t hide it. She serves with it. And the tools want to just... take it from her? Because they’re impatient? Because they want their family back?"
"That does sound pretty ssed up when you say it that way," Mokko agreed.
The tools surged with indignation.
She would GIVE it to you if you proved worthy. We’re just making you pursue what you already need to do!
"No," Marron said firmly. "You’re trying to control how I pursue it."
She yanked her pack off her shoulders—the weight of it nearly pulling her down—and set it on the ground between herself and the cart.
"I’ll find the other tools," she told them, speaking to wood and tal and the angry consciousness bound within both. "I’ll keep looking. I’ll keep learning. But I won’t sacrifice who I am to beco your puppet."
The pack rattled violently, the tools inside thrashing like living things trying to break free.
"And if that ans you stop helping ?" Marron’s voice cracked but held. "If that ans I lose your partnership? Then I lose it."
You need us, ca the whispered response, colder now. You’re nothing without us.
"Maybe," Marron admitted. "But at least I’ll still be ."
The tools went abruptly, terribly silent.
It was like several doors were coldly shut in her face. They were telling her that this partnership was over.
The Copper Pot’s steady warmth vanished entirely, leaving her chest feeling hollow.
The Generous Ladle’s giving nature withdrew, taking with it the instinct for perfect portions.
The Precision Blade’s teaching edge dulled to nothing, leaving her hands uncertain.
And the Food Cart—the very first tool she’d partnered with, the one that had started all of this—remained heavy as stone and just as cold.
Marron’s knees went weak. She sat down hard on the mountain stone, feeling the loss like grief. Like four friends had turned their backs simultaneously and walked away without looking back.
Mokko crouched beside her. "What just happened?"
"They left," she whispered. "Not physically. But... they’re not with anymore."
He studied her face, then the silent pack, then the immovable cart. When he spoke, his voice was gentle. "Maybe they need ti."
"Maybe." Marron wrapped her arms around her knees, suddenly cold despite the warm mountain air. "Or maybe I just lost the only things that made special."
"Hey." Mokko’s tone sharpened. "That’s bullshit and you know it."
She looked up, startled.
"You fed and reunited two kingdoms back in Whisperwind," he continued. "You taught the mimics underground that they could be more than just monsters. That happened before you had more than one Legendary Tool."
"I had the cart—"
"No, you had a cart. It was only confird legendary when it was stolen and dragged underground."
Marron wanted to argue, but the words stuck in her throat.
"The tools are powerful," Mokko said, standing and offering his hand. "But they didn’t make you who you are, Mar. They just gave you better equipnt to be it with."
She took his hand and let him pull her up. Her legs felt shaky, uncertain. Like she’d forgotten how to stand without the tools’ constant presence steadying her.
"So what now?" she asked.
Mokko looked at the immovable cart, then back at her. "Now I guess I earn my keep as your assistant and help you drag this stubborn thing down the mountain."
"It weighs as much as a boulder."
"Then we’ll move it like a boulder. Little bit at a ti." He grinned, though it was strained. "How do you think they built this place? One stone after another, even when each one was too heavy to carry."
Despite everything, Marron felt a small smile tug at her lips.
They gripped the cart handles together and pulled. The wheels scraped forward six inches. Stopped. They pulled again. Another six inches. Again. And again.
Slow. Exhausting. Every foot gained was a battle.
But they moved.
As they worked, Marron beca aware of sothing strange: the silence from the tools wasn’t absolute. There was sothing underneath it. Not warmth, not forgiveness, but... attention. They were watching. Waiting. Seeing what she would do now that they’d withdrawn their help.
Testing her.
Or maybe learning from her, the sa way she’d learned from them.
By the ti they reached the base of the Verdant Ring’s mountain, the sun was setting and Marron’s arms felt like they might fall off. The cart sat beside them, still heavy, still cold, but no longer quite so immovable.
Mokko collapsed against a tree, breathing hard. "I take back what I said about earning my keep. You can’t pay enough for this."
Marron sat beside him, every muscle screaming. But underneath the exhaustion was sothing else. Sothing that felt almost like pride.
She’d moved the cart without the cart’s help.
She’d kept going without the tools’ support.
She was still herself, even when they’d tried to make her into sothing else.
And tomorrow, she’d get up and do it again.
Because the tools were right about one thing: the world needed healing. Needed feeding. Needed soone willing to cook with care and skill and absolute dedication to making things better.
But they were wrong about who got to decide how that happened.
"Hey, Mar?" Mokko said quietly.
"Yeah?"
"Whatever you decide to do next—even if it’s stupid, even if it’s hard—I’m with you."
She leaned her head against his shoulder, too tired to hold it up herself. "Thanks."
"Just... maybe we find a place that doesn’t require climbing any more mountains for a while?"
Despite everything, Marron laughed. "Deal."
In her pack, so quietly she almost missed it, the Copper Pot pulsed once.
Not warm. Not welcoming.
But acknowledging.
She’d stood her ground. She’d refused to be controlled.
And the tools—these ancient, powerful, temperantal artifacts—were, perhaps for the first ti, forced to accept that their bearer had a will of her own.
The question now was whether they would learn to respect it.
Or whether this partnership was already over before she’d even found the sixth tool.
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