Chapter 341: Chapter 336: Efficient
Location:Off-World — Beastkin World (Capital Settlent)
Date/Ti:Mid Emberwane, 9939 AZI (Days 5-7)
Realm:Nexus Mission
They gained the audience on the fifth day.
The trade cover worked — two unblessed travellers from the outer settlents, carrying samples of herbs and formation-adjacent plants that Eden had gathered from the sacred grove. dicinal specins. The kind of offering that a ruler who valued efficiency would find useful enough to grant thirty minutes of her ti.
The Mother received them in a side chamber off the great hall. Smaller than the throne room. A working space — a desk covered in tablets and counting sheets, the walls lined with shelves holding the kind of organised records that Jayde associated with military quartermasters. Production figures. Population counts. Resource allocations. Everything numbered, categorised, ASURED. The room of soone who ran a civilisation the way a logistics officer ran a supply chain.
She sat behind the desk. White fur. Pink eyes. The headdress covering her ears. Long sleeves. The tail invisible beneath her robes. Up close, the Ivory One was younger than Jayde had expected — the host body perhaps twenty-five, the feline features carrying the particular sharpness of a cat Beastkin in their physical pri. Pretty. Alert. The pink eyes moving between Jayde and Eden with the quick, assessing focus of an intelligence that categorised everything it encountered.
"Herbalists. From the outer settlents." The Mother’s voice was flat. Precise. Not unfriendly — the friendliness simply wasn’t there. The voice of soone addressing a function, not a person. "Show
what you have."
Eden laid out the specins. Identified each one — using Beastkin nas that Isha provided through the bond, the healer’s competence was genuine even if the cover story wasn’t. The Mother listened. Asked questions. Technical questions — alkaloid concentrations, dosage thresholds, interaction profiles. The questions of soone who understood pharmacology at a level that a Beastkin matriarchal society had no frawork for developing.
(She knows chemistry. Not Beastkin herb-craft — chemistry. She’s asking about molecular interactions in a civilisation that hasn’t discovered molecules.)
Eden answered. Carefully. Matching the Mother’s technical level without exceeding what two unblessed herbalists should know — the tightrope walk of cover maintenance under intelligent scrutiny.
The Mother leaned back. Studied them.
"You’re different from the usual traders."
"We’ve travelled far," Jayde said. "The outer settlents have less access to your innovations. We’ve had to learn differently."
"Differently." Her gaze held Jayde’s. Sothing moved behind it — not suspicion, exactly. Curiosity. The particular curiosity of soone who had spent five years surrounded by people she considered beneath her intelligence and was now looking at two who might not be. "Where exactly are you from?"
"The western valleys. Beyond the mountain line."
"I don’t have census data for those settlents."
"They’re small. Remote. The roads haven’t reached us yet."
The Mother’s mouth curved. Not a smile — the shape of a smile worn by a face that had learned the geotry but not the warmth. "The roads will reach everywhere eventually. That’s the point of roads."
She returned her attention to the specins. Discussed trade terms. Efficient. Businesslike. The exchange concluded in twelve minutes. She dismissed them with a nod — not rude, not polite. The nod of soone closing a file.
At the door, Jayde turned back. "The capital is impressive. You’ve built sothing remarkable here."
The Mother looked up. For the first ti, sothing animated crossed her face — not warmth, but engagent. The look of soone whose work had been noticed.
"You should have seen what it was before." She stood. Walked to the window. The capital spread below — the grid streets, the numbered buildings, the gold-capped gates. "Mud paths. Thatched huts. People carrying water on their HEADS when there’s a river right there that could be channelled with basic irrigation. Thirty thousand years of living on this land, and they hadn’t figured out how to pipe water two hundred feet."
She turned back. Her expression holding genuine bewildernt.
"They had everything. Resources. Labour. Land. More than enough. And they just... SAT in it. Like animals grazing in a field, never thinking to build a fence. Never thinking to build ANYTHING. I gave them roads. Bridges. Irrigation. Sanitation. Systems." The word carried reverence — the specific reverence of a mind that worshipped efficiency the way the Beastkin worshipped the Beast Lord. "I gave them a civilisation."
(They already HAD a civilisation. Thirty thousand years of it. You just didn’t recognise it.)
Hold. Listen. Gather intelligence.
"The resistance at first was — well. They didn’t understand. Change is frightening for simple people. But they adapted. They always do, once they see the results." She smiled. The geotry of a smile without its warmth. "Production is up four hundred percent. Infant mortality is down. Disease rates have halved. By every asurable standard, this world is BETTER than it was when I found it."
She said when I found it. Not when I woke up or when I returned or when the Beast Lord sent
back. When I FOUND it. The phrasing of a discoverer. An explorer. Soone who had arrived sowhere new and claid it.
"Thank you for the herbs," the Mother said. And turned back to her production figures.
***
They returned the next day. And the next.
The trade cover justified repeat visits — the Mother’s compound maintained a pharmacological garden (another anachronism that Eden noted with clinical precision), and Eden’s knowledge made her useful. Useful ant access. Access ant observation.
Three days of watching the Mother work.
The first day, a work crew failed to et the construction quota for the northern wall. Six hundred stone blocks short. The Mother reviewed the numbers, identified the shortfall to a specific team, and reassigned the team’s rest period to additional labour shifts. Not as punishnt — she didn’t fra it as punishnt. She frad it as "schedule adjustnt." The team would work through their rest days until the deficit was cleared. The fact that the team included a woman eight months pregnant and a man with a healing fracture in his leg didn’t enter the calculation. They weren’t a woman and a man. They were units of labour.
The pregnant woman collapsed on the second day of the extended shift. Eden treated her — quietly, privately, in a corner of the compound where the herbalist cover provided access. The baby was alive. The woman’s body was shutting down functions to protect the child. She needed rest. Food. The particular care that a pregnant body demanded from the community around it.
The Mother was inford. Her response: "Replace her with an equivalent unit from the eastern pool."
An equivalent unit. A pregnant woman reduced to a production variable. Replaced the way you replaced a broken tool — find another one the sa size and put it in the gap.
The second day, a dispute between two settlents over water rights escalated into shouting. Not violence — the Beastkin didn’t have violence in them anymore, the conditioning too deep for anger to find a physical outlet. But raised voices. Argunt. The ssy, human reality of people who cared about their hos and their families and their water and couldn’t resolve it quietly because the things at stake were too important for quiet.
The Mother heard about the shouting within an hour. Her response wasn’t diation. Wasn’t investigation. Wasn’t even punishnt in the traditional sense. She dissolved both settlents. Relocated every family in both communities — two hundred people, scattered across four different labour camps. The water source was assigned to a third settlent that hadn’t been involved in the dispute.
Two hundred people lost their hos because their neighbours argued about water. The ssage was surgical: conflict is inefficiency. Inefficiency is eliminated. Not the CAUSE of the conflict. The conflict itself. And everyone who was near it.
The third day was the worst.
A boy. Fox-eared. Perhaps nine years old. He’d been caught playing.
Not in a designated recreation area — there were none. Not during an approved break — there were none. He’d been caught running between buildings during a shift change, chasing a beetle across the cobblestones. A green beetle with iridescent wings that caught the afternoon light and threw it back in fragnts, and the boy had seen it and his body had done what nine-year-old bodies did when they saw sothing beautiful and fast — he’d CHASED it. Thirty seconds of pure, irresistible locomotion. A child rembering, for half a minute, that the world contained things worth running after.
An enforcer caught him by the collar. Dragged him to the great hall. The beetle escaped. The boy didn’t.
He stood before the golden throne. Fox ears trembling. Hands at his sides. Eyes on the floor. Small. The particular smallness of a child trying to occupy negative space — to be less than present, less than visible, to fold himself into a gap between monts and hope the world forgot he existed.
The Mother looked at him. The pink eyes moving over the small body, the way they moved over production charts — assessing function, calculating output, determining allocation.
"How old?"
"Nine years," the enforcer said.
"Assignnt?"
"Textile detail. Thread spinning."
"Output?"
"Seventy-two percent of adult baseline."
The Mother considered. Nine years old. Seventy-two percent of adult baseline. The numbers were the child. The child was the numbers. Nothing else about the boy — his fox ears, his trembling hands, the beetle he’d been chasing, the thirty seconds of childhood that had escaped the system — registered.
"Reassign to the mining detail. The eastern shafts need small hands for the narrow seams. His output there will exceed baseline."
The mining detail. The narrow seams. Where the ceilings were low, and the air was bad, and the Beastkin who worked them ca out grey with dust and coughing blood. Where three workers had died in the Mother’s first gunpowder test. Where small hands were useful because adult hands couldn’t fit.
A nine-year-old boy, sent to the mines for chasing a beetle.
Jayde watched from the back of the hall. Her disguised brown eyes steady. Her hands at her sides. Inside:
(He’s NINE.)
I see him.
(He was chasing a BEETLE.)
I see him.
(She’s sending him to the MINES.)
I see him. And I am filing every detail of this mont into a record that will not be forgotten.
The boy walked out. Fox ears flat. Hands at his sides. He didn’t cry. He’d learned not to. Nine years old and he’d already learned that crying was a luxury the system didn’t allocate.
Eden was beside Jayde. Her hands — the surgeon’s hands, steady through every crisis, every operation, every battlefield triage — were trembling. The first ti Jayde had seen Eden’s hands shake since they’d arrived on this world.
"She can’t be reached," Eden said. Very quietly. The diagnosis arriving with clinical finality. "I’ve been watching for three days. There’s no crack. No hesitation. No mont where she sees a person instead of a number. She’s not suppressing empathy — she doesn’t HAVE it. It’s not there. The capacity doesn’t exist."
(Maybe she just needs—)
"She doesn’t need anything from us." Eden’s voice was still quiet. Still clinical. "She needs us to not be here. She’s perfectly content. She’s running her simulation. The numbers are improving. The roads are straight. The quotas are t. By every tric she values, this world is THRIVING."
"And by every tric that matters?"
"It’s dying. And she can’t see it. Because the trics that matter — happiness, connection, dignity, a nine-year-old chasing a beetle — aren’t things she knows how to asure."
***
That night. The grove.
Rael was sitting up. Eating on his own. The antler stumps were healing — not regrowing, never regrowing, but the infection beaten back and the wounds closing with the slow determination of a body that had decided, against all evidence, to survive. Reiko lay beside him. The stag’s hand resting on the beast’s flank — the first physical contact Rael had had with another living being in nearly two years, and neither of them seed inclined to move.
Jayde told him what they’d seen. The boy. The mines. The pregnant woman. The dissolved settlents.
Rael listened. His dark eyes showing nothing that hadn’t already been shown by five years of living under the Mother’s rule.
"I know," he said. Not dismissively. With the exhausted familiarity of a man for whom these details were not news but daily life. "The children are the worst. She doesn’t understand what children ARE. She sees small workers. Undersized units that will grow into standard-sized units if you allocate resources correctly. The concept of childhood — of play, of growth, of the sacred chaos of a mind that hasn’t learned to be still yet — she can’t process it. It doesn’t compute."
He was quiet. The Heartstone pulsed. Reiko’s breathing slow and steady beneath his hand.
"The fox boy," Rael said. "Did you see his face? When they told him the mines?"
"He didn’t cry."
"No. They don’t cry anymore. The first generation of children under the Mother — the ones who were babies when she took power — they’ve never known anything else. They don’t cry because they’ve never learned that crying brings comfort. In our world, before, a child who cried was held. Was sung to. Was told that the Beast Lord heard their tears and sent the rain to wash them clean." He looked at the canopy. "These children cry into silence. So they stop."
Eden was repacking her dical kit. Her movents slower than usual. The precision was still there, but the speed diminished — the hands taking longer because the mind behind them was carrying sothing heavy.
"We tried to reach her," Jayde said. "Talked to her. Watched her. Looked for a way in."
"And?"
"She thinks she’s saved them. Production up four hundred percent. Infant mortality down. Disease rates halved. She recited the numbers like a prayer."
"Numbers." Rael’s voice was very quiet. "She counts everything. asures everything. The one thing she can’t asure is the thing she’s destroying. And she’ll never know, because she doesn’t have the instrunt."
Jayde didn’t answer. She looked at the Heartstone. At its dim pulse. At the sacred grove that had sheltered a broken caretaker for two years because the artifact couldn’t do anything else — couldn’t fight, couldn’t intervene, could only hold on and scream into the void and hope that soone heard.
"We need to talk," she said. To Eden. "About what cos next."
Eden nodded. Her blue eyes steady. Her hands still.
Tomorrow. They would talk. About options. About what was possible and what wasn’t. About a transmigrator on a throne and a world that was dying one number at a ti.
But tonight, Rael’s hand rested on Reiko’s flank. The Heartstone pulsed. Takara sat on the stone, his white fur glowing faintly. And sowhere in the capital, a nine-year-old boy with fox ears was being marched to the mining detail because he’d chased a beetle for thirty seconds.
Jayde carried the image of his flat ears, his still hands, and his eyes on the floor.
She would carry it for a long ti.
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