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Chapter 124: Chapter 119: Wealth Beyond Dreams

Location: Tardide Village - Elder Ryunzo’s Ho

Ti: Day 560 | Telia: Day 50

Realm: Telia (Mission World)

The gold sat in Elder Ryunzo’s study, stacked in neat rows that caught lamplight and threw warm reflections across stone walls. Not all of it—most remained secured in the village’s new treasury building—but enough to make the eting feel real. Tangible. Transformative.

One hundred eight thousand gold coins. More wealth than Tardide had seen in its entire three-hundred-year history combined.

Jayde sat quietly in the corner, watching village elders assemble around Ryunzo’s large table. Master Whitestone, still slling of forge smoke. Master Rainer, looking more alert and purposeful than when she’d first t him. Mrs. Ryunzo, practical as always, with ledgers and careful notes. Sergeant Kelm representing the veterans. A few other respected community mbers whose judgnt mattered.

And in the center, Elder Ryunzo himself, looking at the gold with an expression sowhere between awe and overwhelming responsibility.

"We need to be wise," he began without preamble. "This wealth could transform Tardide into sothing great, or destroy us through greed and poor planning. History is full of communities that got sudden wealth and tore themselves apart fighting over it."

Resource managent: Critical decision point. Distribution model determines long-term social cohesion. Recomnd: Balanced approach prioritizing equity, sustainability, and community investnt.

"How much exactly?" Master Whitestone asked, though everyone knew the number. Needed to hear it again. Make it real.

"One hundred eight thousand gold after the rchants’ Guild’s cut," Mrs. Ryunzo said, consulting her ledger. "Plus ninety thousand in advance deposits for next year’s harvest—but that’s earmarked for operational costs. The hundred eight is ours to distribute."

Silence as everyone processed numbers beyond comprehension.

"I’ve seen kingdoms operate on less," Sergeant Kelm said quietly. "This is nation-building wealth. We could buy our independence, hire professional military, and beco a power in the region."

"Or," Mrs. Ryunzo countered gently, "we could stay a village. A prosperous village with happy people, but still a village. Not everything needs to beco an empire."

"Agreed," Elder Ryunzo said firmly. "Tardide’s strength is community, not conquest. So the question becos—how do we distribute this fairly while maintaining what makes us special?"

The debate began in earnest.

Master Rainer proposed education-focused spending—expand the school, hire more teachers, and create scholarships for promising students. Master Whitestone wanted infrastructure—better roads, larger workshops, defensive walls. Sergeant Kelm advocated for security investnts—professional guards, weapons, and training facilities.

All valid. All necessary. All impossible to fully fund simultaneously.

"What about the people?" Mrs. Ryunzo asked, cutting through the planning. "The families who worked the harvest, who believed in this gamble when we were desperate? Don’t they deserve direct compensation?"

"Of course," Elder Ryunzo said. "That’s not even a question. The question is how much."

They debated for an hour, voices rising and falling, passion balanced against pragmatism. Jayde listened without contributing, watching the process unfold. These were good people trying to make good decisions. They didn’t need her input—they needed to find their own path.

Finally, a proposal erged.

"The original villagers," Elder Ryunzo said slowly, working through the math aloud. "Three hundred people, now organized into roughly eighty family units through adoption and marriage. What if we gave each family unit five hundred gold?"

Silence as everyone calculated.

"That’s forty thousand gold," Mrs. Ryunzo said. "Leaving sixty-eight thousand."

"For a family of four or five," Master Rainer murmured, "five hundred gold is... that’s five to ten years of comfortable living. Enough to repair hos, start businesses, and ensure futures. Life-changing but not absurd."

"And the new arrivals?" Sergeant Kelm asked. "The orphans and veterans?"

"Fifty gold each," Elder Ryunzo proposed. "Three hundred fifty people tis fifty is seventeen thousand, five hundred gold. Still substantial—enough for tools, education, and starting capital. Combined with their wages and adopted families’ shares, every child will have a genuine opportunity."

More silence. More calculation.

"That leaves fifty thousand, five hundred for village coffers," Mrs. Ryunzo said, writing numbers carefully. "Infrastructure, education, dical services, defense, ergency reserves..."

"Is it fair?" Master Whitestone asked. "Original villagers getting ten tis what new arrivals get?"

"Original villagers took the risk," Sergeant Kelm said firmly. "When this village was desperate, when planting herbs was a gamble that could have failed, they committed everything. New arrivals ca after safety was established. Different risk, different reward."

"But not so different that anyone’s excluded," Mrs. Ryunzo added. "Everyone who contributed gets compensated. Just proportionally."

Elder Ryunzo looked around the table. "All in favor?"

Every hand rose.

"Then it’s decided." He stood, moving to the window overlooking the village square where hundreds of people waited nervously. "Let’s tell them their futures just changed."

***

The announcent happened in the communal hall, every seat filled, and people standing against walls, pressed together in anticipation. Children sat on parents’ shoulders. Veterans clustered together. Orphans who’d been adopted held hands with new siblings.

Elder Ryunzo stood at the front, and the hall fell silent.

"Two months ago," he began, voice steady and strong, "we were a poor village. Desperate. Hoping just to survive another winter. So of you rember eating once a day. Rember choosing between heating your ho or feeding your children. Rember feeling forgotten by the world."

Murmurs of agreent, painful mories surfacing.

"Today, we’re wealthy. Not just comfortable—wealthy. The Afeaso harvest sold for one hundred eight thousand gold. After careful discussion, the village council has decided on distribution."

You could hear breathing. Nothing else.

"Original village families—those who believed in this gamble when we had nothing—will receive five hundred gold per family unit."

The hall erupted. Crying, shouting, people embracing. An old widow in the front row collapsed, sobbing, while neighbors held her. A young couple clutched each other, tears streaming. Five hundred gold. More than they’d earn in a decade of farming.

Emotional response: Overwhelming relief. Economic anxiety: Eliminated. Long-term security: Established. Social cohesion: Strengthened through shared success.

"New arrivals," Elder Ryunzo continued when the noise subsided, "will receive fifty gold each. Combined with your wages, your adopted families’ shares, and the opportunities now available, you have genuine futures ahead."

The orphans and veterans cheered, understanding that fifty gold was the starting capital most poor people never got. Enough for tools, education, and business investnt. Combined with hos and families, it ant real possibilities.

"Village coffers will retain fifty thousand, five hundred gold for infrastructure, education, dical services, and defense. We’re building sothing that lasts, not spending everything at once."

More applause, understanding that planning mattered.

"And finally—" Elder Ryunzo’s voice grew thick with emotion. "We have one person to thank above all others. Lady Jayde, who taught us to build plows and plant herbs, who showed us that prosperity was possible, who gave us tools and wisdom when we had nothing."

Every eye turned to Jayde, sitting quietly in the back with Reiko.

(Oh no. Please don’t make this about .)

"The council voted unanimously," Elder Ryunzo continued. "We want to give you half the gold. Fifty-four thousand. You earned it more than anyone."

Silence. Absolute silence as everyone waited for her response.

Jayde stood slowly, feeling the weight of expectation crushing down.

"No," she said simply.

Confusion rippled through the crowd.

"You worked the fields," she continued, voice carrying. "You planted the seeds, tended the plants, harvested carefully, and transported safely. You took risks when you had nothing. I just gave you information—techniques anyone with agricultural knowledge could have provided."

"But—" Elder Ryunzo started.

"I don’t want your gold." Firm. Absolute. "I have everything I need. What I want—" She paused, looking at the assembly. "What I want is to see you thrive. To watch children grow up safe. To know veterans have dignity and orphans have futures. That’s worth more than any amount of gold."

Tactical assessnt: Refusing paynt strengthens social bonds, eliminates potential resentnt, reinforces teaching versus taking philosophy. Optimal choice for mission objectives.

Mrs. Ryunzo wiped her eyes. "There has to be sothing we can give you. Sothing you need."

Jayde considered, then smiled slightly. "The ladies who bake those fruit tarts Reiko loves? Could they make him so? Maybe a lot of them?"

[Tarts!] Reiko’s ntal voice exploded with excitent. [Tarts tarts tarts!]

Laughter rolled through the hall—genuine, relieved laughter at the absurdity of refusing fifty thousand gold but requesting pastries.

"We’ll make him a hundred tarts," soone shouted.

[A HUNDRED!] Reiko was vibrating with joy.

"But," Elder Ryunzo said firmly, walking down from the stage with a determined expression, "you will accept sothing for practical purposes. You’ll leave eventually—return to your holand, continue your journey. You’ll need funds."

He gestured, and two people brought forward heavy wooden barrels, setting them at Jayde’s feet with solid thuds.

"Five thousand gold," Ryunzo said. "For travel, ergencies, whatever you need. Not paynt—gift between friends. And—" He nodded to Master Rainer, who produced five large burlap sacks. "Five sacks of Afeaso. Premium quality. Trade goods for wherever your path leads."

Jayde looked at the barrels, the herbs, the Elder’s determined face.

(I will need money on Doha. Academy expenses, equipnt, and living costs. And Afeaso could be valuable for interdinsional trade through Nexus.)

Practical assessnt: Accept. Resources required for mission continuation. Refusal serves no strategic purpose and insults genuine generosity.

"Thank you," she said quietly. "I’ll use them well."

Elder Ryunzo pulled her into a hug—quick, paternal, full of gratitude he couldn’t express with words. "You changed our world. Never forget that."

The hall erupted in applause. Not for wealth distribution—for the girl who’d refused fortune because seeing them thrive mattered more.

Individual reactions unfolded over the following hours as families received their shares.

Old Widow Marta, who’d been eating once a day to save food for winter, held her five hundred gold and wept. "I can repair my roof. Buy warm clothes. Live comfortably until I die. Gods, I can live instead of just surviving."

Young couple Berric and Sella, who’d been saving for a wedding they couldn’t afford, received their five hundred gold and imdiately started planning. "We can marry properly. Open the bakery we dread about. Have children without fear they’ll starve."

War Veteran Joren, missing his right leg and both his dignity, accepted his fifty gold with shaking hands. "I can support myself. Don’t need charity anymore. Can buy tools, maybe apprentice with Master Whitestone. Have purpose again."

Orphan siblings—three children who’d watched their parents die in a raid—received their fifty gold each and imdiately started planning. "We can buy carpenter tools. Open a shop together. Be sothing more than just survivors."

Jayde watched it all from the sidelines, Reiko pressed against her leg, both witnessing transformation happen in real-ti. Not just economic transformation—psychological. These people were shedding poverty mindset, replacing survival thinking with planning thinking.

Social reconstruction: Successful. Economic foundation: Established. Psychological shift: Confidence replacing desperation. Federation developnt model: Validated.

"You’re smiling," Mrs. Ryunzo said, appearing with tea.

"They’re going to be okay. Really okay."

"Because of you."

"Because of themselves. I just gave them tools."

Mrs. Ryunzo laughed softly. "You gave them hope. That’s worth more than tools."

***

That evening, Elder Ryunzo made another announcent—formal celebration starting the day after tomorrow. Three days of feast, music, dancing, and joy. First real security in generations deserved proper recognition.

"Invite everyone," he instructed the planning committee. "Every village within a day’s travel. Show them what’s possible when communities work together. Maybe inspire them to try similar things."

Master Rainer was already planning educational demonstrations—show visiting villages how magical education could be ethical, how power could serve people instead of oppressing them.

Master Whitestone volunteered to demonstrate plow construction, share techniques freely, and prove that prosperity wasn’t zero-sum.

The ssage was clear: Tardide’s success wasn’t exclusive. Anyone could replicate it with proper knowledge and willingness to work together.

(Federation developnt principle: Share knowledge freely. Rising tide lifts all boats. Prosperity spreads through teaching, not hoarding.)

Jayde found herself volunteered to give talks about agricultural techniques, Sparkcasting precision, and ethical power use. She tried to refuse—public speaking terrified her more than direwolf packs—but the village wouldn’t hear it.

"You changed our world," Elder Ryunzo said firmly. "The least you can do is explain how, so others can change theirs."

Fair point.

Late that night, Jayde visited the cave with Reiko, both carrying gifts. Two huge baskets of tarts for Reiko, fresh at for the dragons, and news about the celebration.

The wyrmlings sward them imdiately. Tianxin demonstrating aerial loops while breathing fire. Shenxin showing off how he could hover in place now without wobbling. Huaxin rolling in adow grass and demanding Jayde join her.

[The village celebrates?] Yinxin asked, massive silver head erging from the mountain lair.

"Three days of feast. Life-changing wealth distributed fairly. Everyone secure for the first ti in living mory."

[You refused paynt?]

"How did you—" Jayde stopped. "Dragons have excellent hearing, don’t they?"

[And the wyrmlings fly over the village sotis. Tianxin eavesdrops shalessly.]

The little silver dragon chirped unrepentantly from Jayde’s shoulder.

"I didn’t need gold. They did."

***

They spent the evening together—Jayde telling stories about the village transformation, the wyrmlings playing, Reiko stealing tarts when he thought nobody was watching, Yinxin listening with ancient patience.

Family. Strange, impossible family. But family nonetheless.

Jayde returned to the village near midnight, exhausted but content. Tomorrow would bring celebration planning, visiting villages arriving, and speeches she didn’t want to give.

But tonight, wealth had been distributed fairly. Futures had been secured. And a village that had been dying two months ago now thrived with genuine hope.

She climbed to her rooftop perch one last ti, Reiko joining her as always.

Below, Tardide glowed with lamplight. Shops still open despite the hour. People walking streets without fear. Children playing evening gas. Music drifting from the communal hall where so families celebrated privately.

"We did it," she murmured. "Actually did it."

[You did it,] Reiko corrected. [They just followed your plan.]

"Our plan. And they executed it. That’s what matters."

Five thousand gold sat in her room, secured in barrels. Five sacks of Afeaso waited beside them. Resources for the next phase—returning to Doha, attending the academy, continuing cultivation, eventually becoming strong enough to investigate the mysteries of her past.

But that was tomorrow’s worry.

Tonight, six hundred fifty people slept soundly, wealth secured, futures bright. Twelve gifted children dread of becoming ethical mages. Veterans rested with dignity restored. Orphans felt safe for the first ti in living mory.

Not bad for two months’ work.

Not bad at all.

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