The morning after the verdict, Marron woke to silence.
Not the comfortable silence of contentnt. The heavy silence of grief.
The tools in her pack weren’t humming. Weren’t pulsing with their usual morning energy. They were just... there. Present but withdrawn, like they were all looking inward at sothing they’d lost.
Marron sat up slowly and reached for her pack. The mont her hand touched the fabric, she felt it—a wave of sorrow so profound it made her chest ache.
They were mourning.
For centuries, the tools had been semi-sentient—powered by magic from their original creator, driven by purpose and will that predated human mory. They’d spent those centuries following that embedded will, that driving need for completion, reunion, the restoration of what had been broken during the Cataclysm.
And now they had a wielder who’d agreed to never pursue that goal. Who’d chosen limitation over their fundantal desire.
For the first ti since they’d been created, they were being asked to accept that their core purpose might never be fulfilled.
Marron pulled the pack into her lap and opened it carefully. The Copper Pot sat at the bottom, its usual warm glow dimd to almost nothing. The Generous Ladle felt heavier than it should. The Precision Blade was completely silent—no hum, no vibration, nothing.
"I’m so sorry," Marron whispered.
The Copper Pot pulsed once, weakly: Not your fault.
It feels like my fault. I’m the one who agreed to the conditions.
You saved us from imprisonnt. This grief is... necessary. But it’s not bla.
Marron closed her eyes and just sat with them, letting herself feel what they were feeling. The loss. The disappointnt. The slow, painful acceptance that reunion might never co.
It was the sa grief she’d felt when her mother’s diner had closed for good. When she’d realized that so dreams, no matter how deeply held, just couldn’t survive reality’s sharp edges.
Lucy stirred in her jar, extending a tendril toward the pack—sensing the mood, wanting to help but not knowing how.
"They need ti," Marron told the little sli. "We all do."
Aldric arrived at the inn around noon, carrying a travel pack and looking profoundly uncomfortable.
"I don’t have to start imdiately," he said when Marron answered the door. "If you need a few days to—"
"It’s fine," Marron interrupted. "We’re leaving tomorrow anyway. Might as well get used to traveling together."
"Where are you going?"
Marron hesitated. She hadn’t actually decided. Before the hearing, she’d been planning to stay in Luria, to search for Marcus Vell and the Ferntation Crock, to add the sixth tool to her collection.
But that wasn’t an option anymore.
"Away from here," she said finally. "Sowhere I can cook without everyone knowing who I am and what I carry. Sowhere quiet."
Aldric nodded. "I know a place. Small coastal town, three days south. Good fishing, decent farming, not many travelers. The kind of place that would appreciate a skilled cook but won’t ask too many questions."
"That sounds perfect."
They made plans to leave at dawn. Aldric would et them at the south gate with supplies. He’d travel with them, observe, take notes, but he promised to be "a companion, not a prison guard."
After he left, Marron returned to her room and sat with her tools again.
They were still grieving. Still quiet. Still processing what their new reality ant.
And Marron found herself thinking about sothing the Champion had said at the Verdant Ring: partnership ans knowing when to step forward and when to step back.
For months, she’d been stepping back. Letting the tools carry more and more of the work. Relying on their magic to compensate for her own limitations.
But now, sitting with their grief, she realized sothing.
Maybe what they needed wasn’t for her to comfort them or fix things or make promises about the future.
Maybe what they needed was for her to grow. To beco more skilled, more capable, more worthy of the partnership they’d chosen. Not because she was trying to collect all seven tools anymore, but because these four deserved a wielder who could truly match them.
She pulled out the Precision Blade and set it on the table.
"I want to start over," she said aloud. "With you. Just you, for now."
The blade stirred slightly—not much, but attention. Interest.
"I’ve been using you for months," Marron continued. "Letting you guide my cuts, trusting your judgnt, following your suggestions. And that’s good partnership. But I realized sothing. I don’t actually understand you. Not really. Not the way I should."
She picked up the blade, feeling its weight, its balance, its edge.
"So I want to learn you again. From the beginning. Like I’m a student who’s never touched a knife before." She t the blade’s attention—that semi-sentient awareness that lived in the tal. "Will you teach ? Not by making perfect. By showing why you make the choices you make?"
The Precision Blade pulsed—not the automatic guidance she was used to, but sothing more thoughtful. Considering.
Then it humd, and images flooded Marron’s mind:
Grain structure in wood. The way cells align and separate.Muscle fibers in at. Which direction creates tender cuts versus tough.The geotry of vegetables. How angle affects cooking ti and texture.The physics of edge maintenance. How steel wants to move through resistance.
It was overwhelming. Too much information too fast. But underneath all of it was a simple ssage:
I don’t just cut. I understand what I’m cutting. Every choice I make cos from knowledge.
"Teach that knowledge," Marron said. "Show what you see. Not so I can copy you, but so I can understand why you’re right."
The blade pulsed with sothing that felt almost like relief.
Finally, it seed to say. Finally, soone asks to learn instead of just to use.
They spent the afternoon on the basics.
Marron borrowed vegetables from Jenny’s kitchen—carrots, onions, potatoes, celery—and set up a cutting board in her room.
The Precision Blade didn’t guide her cuts. Instead, it showed her what it was seeing.
When she positioned a carrot, the blade pulsed images: See the grain? See how the fibers run lengthwise? Cut with the grain for strips. Cut across it for rounds. Diagonal cuts expose more surface area for faster cooking.
Marron adjusted her angle. Cut. The slice was uneven—too thick on one side.
Why? the blade asked.
"I... don’t know?"
Your hand tilted. You were watching the knife instead of feeling the resistance. The carrot pushed back. You didn’t adapt.
Marron tried again, this ti paying attention to the feedback through her hand. The slight increase in resistance when the knife tried to drift off-angle. The smooth, easy motion when everything aligned correctly.
This cut was better. Not perfect, but better.
Good, the blade said. Again.
They worked for two hours. Just cutting vegetables. Nothing fancy. Nothing complex. Just the absolute basics of knife work, dissected and examined and explained.
Marron’s hand cramped. Her cuts were inconsistent. She made a dozen mistakes the Precision Blade would normally have prevented automatically.
But she learned.
She learned that cutting wasn’t just about sharpness. It was about understanding material, about reading resistance, about adapting pressure and angle to what you were working with.
She learned that the blade’s "guidance" wasn’t magic. It was knowledge—centuries of accumulated understanding about how things wanted to be divided.
And she learned that she’d been using the blade like a crutch when she could have been using it like a teacher.
By the ti the sun started setting, Marron’s cuts still weren’t perfect. But they were thoughtful. Deliberate. Made with understanding instead of just trust.
The Precision Blade pulsed with sothing that felt like satisfaction—and underneath that, sothing else. Sothing that had been missing during its grief.
Purpose.
Not the grand purpose of reunion with its siblings. But the imdiate, tangible purpose of teaching. Of sharing knowledge. Of partnering with soone who actually wanted to understand instead of just benefit.
Tomorrow, the blade said, we’ll work on angle consistency.
I’d like that, Marron thought back.
She cleaned the blade carefully and set it aside, then pulled out the Generous Ladle.
It was still withdrawn, still grieving, but she felt it stir with cautious interest.
"Your turn next," Marron told it. "I want to understand why you portion things the way you do. What you’re seeing that I’m missing. What makes a portion ’right’ versus just ’adequate.’"
The ladle pulsed—not enthusiasm, not yet, but consideration. Curiosity.
Maybe even hope.
The Copper Pot humd from her pack: And then ?
"And then you," Marron agreed. "I want to understand temperature. Not just ’hot enough’ but why certain temperatures matter. What’s happening to food at different heat levels. Why you choose what you choose."
That will take weeks, the pot warned.
"Then we’ll take weeks. I have ti. And you..." Marron touched her pack gently. "You deserve a partner who understands you. Really understands you. Not just soone who carries you around and benefits from your magic."
The tools went quiet for a long mont.
Then, one by one, they pulsed with sothing that wasn’t joy—they were still grieving, still processing their loss—but sothing adjacent to it.
Recognition, maybe. Appreciation.
The understanding that even though they’d lost the possibility of reunion, they’d gained sothing else. Sothing they’d never had before, in all their centuries of existence.
A wielder who wanted to know them as individuals. Who cared about their knowledge and experience and perspective beyond just what they could do.
A true partner, not just a user.
This won’t bring back the others, the Copper Pot said quietly.
"I know," Marron replied.
Won’t make us whole.
"I know that too."
But it’s... sothing. Better than grief alone.
"Yes," Marron agreed. "It is."
Outside, the sun finished setting. Lucy glowed softly in her jar, providing gentle light. The tools settled into sothing that felt less like despair and more like quiet determination.
They would grieve. They would miss their siblings. They would carry the loss of that broken purpose for however long they existed.
But they would also teach. Would share knowledge. Would partner with soone who saw them as more than powerful objects to be collected.
Maybe that was enough.
Maybe that could be a new kind of completion.
[The Next Morning]
Marron t Aldric at the south gate as planned. He carried a travel pack and a notebook—already playing his role as observer and recorder.
"Ready?" he asked.
"Almost." Marron turned back to look at Luria—the city where she’d started this journey, where she’d found her first tool, where she’d just fought to keep them all.
The city that also held the sixth tool. The Ferntation Crock, sitting unknown in Marcus Vell’s collection, waiting for soone to recognize what it was.
She couldn’t pursue it. Had promised she wouldn’t.
But maybe soday—if she proved herself, if she earned enough trust, if the Council changed their minds—she could return. Could ask permission. Could do things the right way.
Until then, she had work to do.
Four tools to truly understand. Skills to rebuild from their foundations. A partnership to deepen from surface convenience into real collaboration.
"I’m ready," Marron said.
They headed south, leaving Luria behind. The Food Cart rolled smoothly, no longer angry or resentful, just... present. A companion on a journey that had changed direction but not purpose.
In her pack, the tools humd quietly. Still grieving. But also curious about what ca next.
What it ant to be known instead of just used.
What partnership could beco when both sides actually tried to understand each other.
Marron didn’t know all the answers yet.
But for the first ti since the Verdant Ring, she felt like she was asking the right questions.
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