Gao Ren didn't sleep the night we returned.
I know because I didn't either. I spent the hours after midnight behind the house with the spirit stone unwrapped on a cloth in front of me, studying it with my qi awareness the way I'd study a map of unfamiliar terrain.
The stone hummed. Even through the cloth, I could feel it pushing against my senses. Dense, coherent energy packed into a fist-sized rock, radiating outward in slow pulses that synced with nothing I could identify.
I'd wrapped it in four layers of cloth and stored it inside a ceramic jar underneath the floorboards of the house. The qi signature bled through everything I put around it, which meant anyone with sufficient sensing ability could feel it from a distance. Xu had felt it from two hundred meters through trees and ore packs. If anyone with comparable awareness passed within a li of Hekou, the stone would announce itself.
A problem for later. Right now, I needed to understand what I was dealing with before I did anything with it.
I ran through what I knew from the novels. Spirit stones in xianxia fiction served three primary functions. Cultivation acceleration, where practitioners meditated with the stone to absorb its energy and speed their advancement. Energy storage, where the stone acted as a battery that could be drawn from during combat or healing. And trade currency, where stones of known quality served as the universal medium of exchange in cultivation economies.
None of that told me how it actually worked in this world. I had no teacher, no manual, and no frame of reference beyond guesswork.
So I did what I'd done with every other unknown since transmigrating. I observed, I documented, and I kept my hands to myself until I understood the mechanics.
I wrote three pages of notes by candlelight. Qi density estimates. Radiation patterns. The resonance effect I'd observed in the cave chamber, where the stone's output had transformed the surrounding rock.
Questions I couldn't answer yet: could the energy be drawn out in controlled amounts? Was the stone a finite resource that depleted with use, or did it regenerate? What happened to a cultivator who absorbed energy from it without sufficient meridian development to handle the volume?
That last question was why I wasn't touching it.
Hao could probably withstand the influx. I couldn't. Not yet. And using it on Hao without understanding the risks was exactly the kind of reckless power-chasing that destroyed cultivators in every novel I'd ever read.
The stone went back in the jar.
The jar went back under the floor.
The notes went under my sleeping mat with everything else.
Patience.
That was the hardest principle to practice.
The forge lit at dawn.
Half the village came to watch. Gao Ren had rebuilt it overnight, pulling the stored components from the covered pit where he'd hidden them during the tax collector's visit and reassembling the structure with the focused intensity of a man reunited with something essential. The charcoal kiln was already producing. The bellows, a simple leather-and-wood contraption he'd built during the first weeks, stood ready. And the ore sat in a sorted pile beside the forge base, graded by quality, the best pieces set aside for the first melt.
Gao Ren stood in front of the forge with his sleeves rolled and his bad knee braced against the stone base and looked at the crowd that had gathered.
"This isn't a show," he said. "If you're here to watch, stand back. If you're here to work, step forward."
Three men stepped forward. The Wei brothers' eldest and two of the Tongshan refugees who'd done labor work before the war. Gao Ren assigned them stations without ceremony. One on the bellows, one feeding charcoal, one managing the ore feed. He took the hammer and tongs himself.
The first heat took an hour. The bellows pumped, the charcoal caught, and the temperature climbed until the air around the forge shimmered. I stood far enough back to avoid the heat and close enough to watch Gao Ren work.
He fed the first ore chunks into the crucible and waited. The magnetite resisted at first, sitting dark and stubborn in the heat, and then it began to change. The surface sweated, beaded, and ran. Liquid metal pooled at the bottom of the crucible, separating from the slag with a clarity that made Gao Ren's expression shift.
"Clean," he said. "Barely any impurity. This ore is better than what the campaign forges were getting from the same caves." He looked at me. "Whatever section of that cave you mined, mark it for next time."
The first pour was small. Enough molten iron to fill a single mold, which Gao Ren had shaped from river clay the night before. The metal flowed bright and orange into the form, hissing against the damp clay, settling into the shape of a spearhead.
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The village watched it cool. Nobody spoke. The transition from glowing liquid to solid metal happened over minutes, the color shifting from orange to red to dark grey, and when Gao Ren cracked the mold and lifted the spearhead free, the sound that came from the militia volunteers was something between a cheer and a prayer.
The edges needed grinding and the balance was off. But it was iron. Real iron, forged in Hekou from ore that Hekou's people had carried out of the hills on their own backs.
Gao Ren held it up to the light and turned it. Then he looked at Duan, who was standing with the militia at the edge of the crowd.
"Get me a shaft," Gao Ren said.
Duan produced a stripped pine pole. Gao Ren fitted the spearhead, secured it with wire, and handed the assembled weapon to the nearest militia volunteer. A Tongshan man named Hu, mid-thirties, thick hands, who'd been drilling with a wooden pole for weeks.
"One down," Gao Ren said. He turned back to the forge. "Fifty-nine to go."
The forge ran for three days straight.
Gao Ren worked in shifts, rotating his assistants through the stations while he handled every pour himself. Eight spearheads the first day. Fifteen more by the second. The quality improved with each batch as he adjusted the charcoal ratio and refined the technique.
I kept the logistics moving around him. A second charcoal kiln. Reallocated men for wood processing. Water hauling from the creek for quenching. Solvable problems. The kind I was good at.
On the third evening, Gao Ren laid out his production on a canvas sheet in the commons. Thirty-one spearheads. Twelve arrowheads. Four knives. Two axe heads.
The militia assembled and Duan distributed the weapons. Each man received a spear, properly shafted and balanced, replacing the wooden poles they'd been drilling with. The change was immediate. The formation that Gao Ren and Duan had been drilling for weeks suddenly had weight behind it.
"Again," Duan said. "From the top. First position."
The militia moved. Twenty-two men in a line, spears at the ready. The fence line stood behind them.
Hao stood beside me watching the drill.
"It's different," he said. "With real weapons."
"Different how?"
"They believe it now. The drill, the formations, all of it. When they were holding sticks, it was exercise. Now it's preparation. They can feel the difference." He watched Hu in the front row, the Tongshan man, moving through the stance transitions with a renewed focus. "Gao Ren gave them more than spears. He gave them the feeling that they matter."
I looked at my brother. He was doing it again. Seeing the human architecture underneath the logistics.
"We need to talk to the village about the contract," I said. "The Western Reaches arrangement. The flags on the fence. All of it."
"Tonight?"
"Tomorrow morning. Let them have tonight with the weapons. Let Gao Ren have his moment." I watched the militia run the formation again. "They'll take hard news better after a good day."
"You think it's hard news?"
"I think telling fifty households that the political authority over their lives just changed without their input is going to land differently now," I stated in a matter-of-fact manner.
Hao nodded, the gears in his mind began to turn. "You want them to feel strong before you tell them something that might make them feel small."
"I want them to choose this for themselves. No one wants to feel powerless, even if they truly are," I said.
Hao was quiet for a moment. The militia finished the drill and broke formation. Men were talking, comparing grips, testing the weight of their spears against each other. Gao Ren sat on a stump near the forge with his daughter in his lap, watching his work put to use.
"Tomorrow morning," Hao said. "I'll gather them."
He clapped me on the back and went to help stack the remaining weapons. The forge glowed in the dusk. The flags on the fence line moved in the evening breeze, black and red against the darkening sky.
I should have gone to sleep.
Instead I walked the village perimeter the way I did most nights, checking the fence, checking the gate, checking the things that didn't need checking because the motion kept my mind from settling into the dead bodies I saw on the road or the remnants of a destroyed village....
I heard the spear before I saw her. A rhythmic thud against the practice post near the eastern path. Suyin was drilling alone in the near-dark, running through the stance transitions Duan had taught the militia that morning. Her form was off. She was gripping the shaft too high and her footwork was stiff. But she was out here, past sundown, putting in the work when nobody was watching.
"Can't sleep?" I asked.
She startled and almost dropped the spear. When she saw it was me, she quickly regained her composure and held her spear close to her chest. "I...I wanted to practice while nobody could see how bad I am."
"You're not bad. Your grip is high though. Slide your left hand down a fist-width."
She adjusted and struck the post again.
"Are you scared?" I asked her.
She turned to look at me and put on a brave face for me.
I held out my right hand with my palm up and my fingers spread out.
It was shaking.
A fine tremor that ran from my wrist to my fingertips, visible in the low light. It hadn't stopped since the road. Since the bodies. Since Commander Xu's cultivators had demonstrated what real violence looked like.
"It hasn't stopped," I began. "Since I got back."
Suyin stared at my hand. The brave face cracked. She reached out and held it, her fingers wrapping around mine, and I felt the tremor in her grip too.
Both of us were shaking.
"I can't heal this one," she said quietly, mostly to herself.
"I know. Yours are shaking too."
She didn't pull away.
I gently took the spear from her other hand and thought about the burned village and the three bodies on the road and Gao Ren's voice saying "this wasn't a fight, this was butchering."
"Could you use this?" I asked. "On a person, I mean. On someone walking toward this village who might be a farmer just like your brothers, or someone conscripted into a uniform he didn't choose to wear, carrying a weapon that was handed to him last week."
Suyin stiffened.
"I haven't picked one up yet," I said. "I don't know the answer to that question for myself."
The silence between us was heavy, and I realized that maybe I dragged the mood down a little too much with my musings.
"Get some sleep," I said. I set the spear against the practice post and patted her head the way Hao did when he was reassuring someone.
Suyin stood there with her hand rising to where mine had been. She lingered for a moment, fingers touching her hair, then nodded and walked toward the Wei compound.
I watched her go.
We would all need to be ready to kill.
Every single one of us.
Because the people on the other side of the next fight wouldn't hesitate.
My gaze shifted towards the forge, and the fire popped one last time, sending a single spark into the dark sky.