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Chapter 342: Chapter 337: Every Avenue

Location:Off-World — Beastkin World (Capital

Sacred Grove)

Date/Ti:Mid Emberwane, 9939 AZI (Days 8-9)

Realm:Nexus Mission

They tried reason first.

The trade cover bought them a second private audience — Eden had identified three herb specins with genuine pharmacological value, enough to justify a follow-up eting. The Mother received them in the sa working chamber. Sa desk. Sa production sheets. The golden standard, catching the torchlight.

Jayde had planned the approach with the precision of an operation — not a confrontation but a conversation. Testing. Probing. Looking for the crack that Eden said didn’t exist, because the Commander didn’t take a doctor’s diagnosis on faith. The Commander verified.

"The outer settlents are struggling," Jayde said. Carefully. Framing it as a trader’s concern, not an accusation. "The harvest quota increase is pushing families beyond their capacity. We’ve seen malnutrition in the workforce — the kind that reduces output within months. Workers who can’t eat can’t produce."

She’d chosen her language deliberately. Not PEOPLE are suffering. WORKERS can’t PRODUCE. Speaking the Mother’s language. Framing human suffering as inefficiency — the one concept the Mother understood.

The Mother listened. Processed. Her expression didn’t change.

"Short-term deficit in exchange for long-term gain," she said. "The harvest surplus is allocated to infrastructure investnt. The road extension to the northern settlents will increase trade capacity by thirty percent within two cycles. The current workforce reduction is within acceptable paraters."

"Acceptable paraters," Jayde repeated. "The pregnant woman in the construction detail collapsed. The replacent cost—"

"Was factored in. Pregnant workers have a sixty percent attrition rate in physical labour roles. The scheduling model accounts for replacent."

Jayde held her expression steady. Inside:

(She built ATTRITION into the model. She calculated how many pregnant won would collapse and pre-scheduled their replacents.)

Confirm: reasoning through efficiency trics is not reaching her. She’s already optimised for the numbers we’re citing. Change approach.

"The children in the mining detail," Jayde said. "The narrow seam work. The dust exposure—"

"Produces the highest yield per unit of labour invested. Children’s hands access seams that adult hands cannot. The output differential justifies the allocation." The Mother looked at Jayde with genuine confusion. "You’re a trader. You understand resource optimisation. Why are you arguing against efficiency?"

"Because the resources are people."

The words ca out before the Commander could filter them. Not the trade cover’s vocabulary. Not the efficiency-frad language. Just the truth, spoken by a woman who had watched a nine-year-old boy get sent to the mines for chasing a beetle.

The Mother blinked. The pink eyes focusing on Jayde with a new attention — not suspicion, not threat assessnt. Puzzlent. The genuine, uncomprehending puzzlent of a being who had heard a category error and was trying to parse it.

"People ARE resources," she said. Slowly. As if explaining sothing obvious to soone who should already understand it. "That’s what people are. Labour. Output. Function. What else would they be?"

The question wasn’t rhetorical. She was actually asking.

Jayde shifted approach. "Before you — before the Mother’s reforms. The Beastkin had festivals. Celebrations after harvest. Children played in the streets. Families gathered in the evenings to share food and stories. The settlents were alive with—"

"Waste." The Mother’s voice carried no contempt. Just factual classification. "I reviewed the historical records. The pre-reform society allocated approximately thirty percent of productive hours to non-essential activity. Festivals. Singing. Storytelling. Religious observances that produced no asurable output." She gestured at her production sheets. "Thirty percent. Can you imagine? A third of the available labour force doing NOTHING of value for days at a ti. Of course, they hadn’t built roads. They were too busy singing about the Beast Lord."

"The singing was the point."

"The singing was the problem. They were happy because they didn’t know what they were missing. I showed them what was possible when you stop wasting ti on feelings and start building."

Jayde heard the words. Processed them. Filed them in the place where intelligence went when it was too important to react to in the mont. The Mother had just described thirty thousand years of culture — festivals, songs, stories, the communal gatherings that had held a civilisation together across millennia — as waste. Not evil. Not threatening. WASTE. The sa way you described spoiled food or broken tools. Things that used up resources without producing returns.

And she ant it. That was the part that settled into Jayde’s chest like cold stone. The Mother wasn’t performing indifference. She wasn’t posturing. She genuinely could not comprehend why a society would allocate thirty percent of its productive capacity to singing.

"Are they happy now?"

The Mother looked at Jayde. The expression on the white face was the closest thing to genuine confusion she’d shown — the particular bewildernt of soone encountering a variable they hadn’t included in their model because they didn’t know it existed.

"Happy," she repeated. The word sitting in her mouth like a foreign coin. "Happiness isn’t a tric. It can’t be asured. It can’t be optimised. It doesn’t appear on any chart I’ve ever seen." She turned back to her production sheets. "Output. Yield. Mortality rates. Infrastructure coverage. These are trics. These tell you whether a civilisation is working. And by every tric that EXISTS, this one is working better than it ever has."

She wasn’t lying. She wasn’t deflecting. She was describing the limits of her perception with absolute accuracy — the walls of a room she couldn’t see because she’d never known the room had walls.

"The old woman in the western quarter," Jayde tried. One more. "The hawk Beastkin elder. Her daughter was relocated. She’s alone. She’s eighty years old and she’s alone because your resource allocation separated her from her family."

"The daughter’s labour was needed in the eastern settlent. The elder’s consumption-to-output ratio is negative — she produces less than she consus. In a properly optimised system, she would be—" The Mother stopped. So residual instinct in the stolen body telling her that the sentence she was about to finish would cross a line. "She would be relocated to a care facility."

"There are no care facilities."

"Not yet. It’s on the developnt schedule. Third phase."

Third phase. The eighty-year-old hawk Beastkin, whose daughter had been taken and whose grandchildren she’d never see again, was a line item on a developnt schedule. A problem to be solved in Phase Three. A negative consumption-to-output ratio to be warehoused when the infrastructure was ready.

"Thank you for the herbs," the Mother said. The conversation had reached a boundary she couldn’t see but could feel — the edge of a map she hadn’t drawn. She returned to her production sheets. Dismissed them with a nod.

In the corridor outside, Eden said nothing. She didn’t need to.

(You were right.)

Confird. Reasoning through her frawork fails because the frawork doesn’t include the variable that matters. She processes efficiency. She cannot process humanity. And she described the absence of happiness as though the concept itself was foreign — not suppressed, not denied. Foreign.

***

That evening. The grove.

Jayde sat before the Heartstone. Not touching it — sitting near it, the dim pulse washing over her like warmth from a dying fire. Isha’s presence through the bond — stretched thin, but there, the parent Nexus listening through the child.

"Isha. Is there a way to remove a soul from a body it doesn’t belong in?"

The question she’d been building toward since the first day. The option that would solve everything without killing anyone — extract the transmigrator’s soul, return it to wherever it ca from, let the Ivory One’s body die or recover or whatever bodies did when the occupying soul was evicted.

Isha was quiet for a long ti. The Heartstone pulsed. Once. Twice.

[The soul-body bond is not like a tenant in a house. It’s more like roots in soil. The longer the soul occupies the body, the more entangled the systems beco. After five years, the transmigrator’s soul IS the body’s soul for all functional purposes. Extraction would require severing connections that have grown into every system — nervous, essence, spiritual. The process would destroy the body.]

"So extraction kills the host regardless."

[Yes. The original soul — the Ivory One’s — is gone. Displaced when the transmigrator arrived. There’s no one to return the body to. And the extraction process itself would be violent. Not painless. Not clean.]

"Could the extracted soul be sent back to its origin?"

[I don’t know where it ca from. The dinsional signature of its origin isn’t readable through the Heartstone — the transit was one-way, unanchored, chaotic. Not a Nexus transit. Not a Heartstone pathway. Sothing else. Wherever this soul originated, there’s no return address. No path back. I could extract the soul and have nowhere to PUT it.]

Dead end. Extraction killed the body and had nowhere to send the soul.

"Exile," Jayde said. "We take her off this world. Deposit her on an uninhabited dinsion. She lives. The Beastkin are free."

[Transit through the Heartstone requires the caretaker’s bond. Rael’s bond is severed. I could open a transit from this side — but only back to the Pavilion. I cannot send her to an arbitrary dinsion without a Heartstone anchor on the other end. And even if I could — she would need to cooperate. She would need to walk through willingly. Can you imagine her cooperating with her own exile?]

(No. She’d fight. And if she fought, we’d have to force her. And forcing a transmigrator through a dinsional transit against her will — what does that look like to the Beastkin? Their god being kidnapped by outsiders.)

"Containnt," Jayde said. "We remove her from power. The Beastkin imprison her."

[With what authority? The Beastkin believe she’s the Ivory One — the Beast Lord’s vessel. Imprisoning her would be imprisoning their god. The population would fracture. The factions who still believe — and there will be many, because faith doesn’t die when the evidence arrives — would fight the factions who don’t. Civil war on a world that has never known war.]

"We tell them the truth."

[Rael told them the truth. In front of three thousand witnesses. They broke his antlers and declared him outcast. The truth was spoken. It wasn’t enough.]

"We’re stronger than Rael. We could—"

[Force the issue? Overpower the Mother and her enforcers? Install the surviving council by military imposition?] Isha’s voice carried sothing that sounded almost gentle. [You could. And it would last exactly as long as you stayed. The mont you leave — and you must leave, Jayde, this is not your world — the power structures she built would reassert themselves. The unblessed enforcers. The quota systems. The machine she built. It would run without its operator because the people ARE the machine now. Five years of conditioning doesn’t break when you remove the conditioner. It breaks slowly, over years, IF there’s an alternative to follow.]

"Depowering. Strip her authority. Dismantle the enforcent—"

[Who dismantles it? The surviving council mbers are scattered, broken. The population is conditioned to obey HER voice — not a system, her PERSONALLY. Remove her without a replacent authority, and the vacuum creates chaos. The Beastkin have no one left to follow. Except—]

"Except Rael."

[Rael is an outcast. His na is unsaid. No Beastkin will acknowledge his existence. The outcast law is older than the Mother’s regi — it predates everything. Even if the Mother were removed tomorrow, the law would remain. Rael cannot lead because Rael does not exist.]

Every door closing. Every option folding into the sa terminus.

Jayde sat in the grove’s dim light. The Heartstone pulsing beside her. Reiko curled at the grove’s edge, silver eyes half-lidded, watching her through the bond with the patience of a beast who could feel his partner’s mind working through a problem that had no good solution.

She went through it again. Systematically. The Commander’s discipline requiring that the list be reviewed a second ti, because the first ti through a list of bad options, you sotis missed the one that was rely terrible instead of catastrophic.

Reasoning. Failed. The frawork doesn’t include humanity.

Extraction. Failed. Kills the host. No return address for the soul.

Exile. Failed. No dinsional anchor. She wouldn’t cooperate. The optics would destroy the Beastkin’s fragile stability.

Containnt. Failed. Imprisoning a god causes civil war. The factions who believe vs the factions who don’t. A world that has never known war, bleeding for the first ti.

Depowering. Failed. No replacent authority. No leader who can fill the vacuum. Rael is an outcast. The council is broken. The conditioning persists with or without the conditioner.

Five options. Five failures. Each one failing for a different reason, but all of them converging on the sa truth: every path that left the Mother alive left the Beastkin dying.

[You already know,] Reiko sent. Quiet. Not pushing. Just present.

(I know.)

[The old she-wolf from the outlying settlent. Grandmother Tova in her logging camp. The fox boy in the mines. The hawk woman who lost her ho. They’re real, Jayde. Every one of them.]

(I know they’re real.)

[Then you know what the only option is. You’ve known since the boy and the beetle.]

She had. The Commander’s mind had computed it days ago — the mont the fox boy walked out of the great hall with his ears flat and his hands at his sides. The calculation was simple, terrible, and complete.

There was one option that didn’t leave the Beastkin dying.

"Eden," Jayde said. Her voice steady. The Commander’s voice — not cold, not cruel, carrying the particular weight of soone about to say sothing that would change who she was. "We need to talk about the last option."

Eden was sitting across the grove. She’d been treating Rael — checking the antler wounds, adjusting the nutrient regin, the doctor’s work continuing because the doctor’s work was the one thing that still had clean answers. She looked up. Her blue eyes eting Jayde’s across the dim light.

She’d known too. Since the beetle boy. Since "replace her with an equivalent unit." Since "happiness isn’t a tric." The doctor who had spent ninety years saving lives had run the sa calculation and arrived at the sa answer, and had been waiting for the Commander to say it first. Because this wasn’t a dical decision. This was a command decision. And command decisions belonged to the Commander.

"Not tonight," Eden said. Quietly. "Tomorrow. We make that decision in daylight. Not in the dark."

Jayde nodded. The wisdom of it — the simple, human wisdom of not making irreversible decisions at night, when the mind was tired, and the grove was dim and the weight of what she’d seen pressed down like gravity on a world that had slightly too much of it.

Tomorrow. In daylight. With clear eyes and steady hands.

The Heartstone pulsed. Takara sat on its surface — white fur catching the faint glow, his ears forward. Whatever he’d assessed across these nine days, whatever conclusion he’d reached — he kept it to himself. But he pressed closer to the stone. And the stone pulsed stronger. And the grove’s ancient trees leaned toward a beast they called Vor’shael and breathed their slow bioluminescent breath and waited for the morning.

The alternatives were exhausted.

The morning would bring the only thing left.

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