Location: Freehold Estate Slave Pits, Arvia Province
Time: Winter's heart, Year 2852 of the Lower Realm
The cough had been getting worse for weeks now.
Jade pressed her ear against the cold stone wall between their cells, listening to that wet, rattling sound that spoke of lungs drowning in their own fluid. Old Man Zhek was dying. They both knew it—had known it since the first specks of blood appeared in his spit bucket three months back.
Ten years old, and she'd already learned to read death's approach like... well, like a familiar book. The hollow wheeze of breath struggling through damaged tissue. That sweet-sick smell clinging to the dying like perfume gone wrong. The way their eyes grew distant, already looking toward whatever waited beyond these pits.
(He can't die. Not Uncle Zhek. He's all I have left.)
Advanced pneumonia with complications, the inner voice assessed with clinical detachment. Fluid buildup in lungs, probable secondary infection. Without proper medical intervention, the mortality rate approaches one hundred percent.
(I don't understand half those words, but they sound bad.)
"Little one," Zhek whispered through the stone, his voice barely audible above the constant drip, drip, drip of moisture seeping through cracks. "You listening?"
"Always," she replied, pressing closer to the wall. Five years in adjacent cells had taught them to communicate in whispers that wouldn't carry to the guards. Five years of shared hunger, shared hope, shared survival.
Another coughing fit seized him—harsh, violent spasms that echoed off stone walls like some dying animal. When it passed, she could hear him spitting into that bucket again. More blood, probably. Always more blood these days.
"Not much time left," he said when he could speak again. Voice getting weaker with each passing hour. "Need to tell you things. Important things."
Correct assessment, the voice agreed grimly. Lung tissue degradation suggests days, possibly hours remaining. Listen carefully to what he shares.
The voice had grown clearer over the years—offering medical diagnoses, tactical advice, and strategic assessments that felt disturbingly professional. But Jade was ten years old. What could she possibly know about combat medicine or military strategy?
Still... the diagnoses were always accurate.
"I'm listening, Uncle Zhek," she said, using the title that marked him as chosen family in her heart. Blood didn't make family down here. Loyalty did. Protection did. Love did.
"Been thinking about your future," he wheezed, each word costing him obvious effort. "About what happens when I'm gone. You got skills now—reading people, moving quiet, organizing the others. But you need more."
Over the past year, since Henrik's Network collapsed in blood and betrayal, Jade had built something new. Not a grand organization like Henrik's revolutionary dream, but a careful web of individual connections. Slaves who passed information. Who shared resources when possible. Who looked out for each other in small, sustainable ways.
Survival-focused rather than revolution-minded. More... practical. Harder to betray when there wasn't really an organization to sell out.
"The upper levels," Zhek continued, breathing growing more labored. "Need to get you assigned there permanent-like. Kitchen work, maybe. Library duty if you're lucky. Somewhere you can learn to read proper, get access to real information."
Information was power in the slave pits. Knowing which guards could be bribed with what. Which family members had which weaknesses. Which escape routes were monitored, and which had been forgotten over the years.
"Can't read much now," Jade admitted, shame coloring her whisper. "Just basic symbols. Guard schedules. Food rotation charts."
"Exactly why you need proper learning." His voice carried that stubborn determination she'd come to love. "Can't fight what you don't understand, little one. The world's bigger than these pits. Bigger than the estate, bigger than Arvia Province even. Someday you're gonna need to know about that bigger world."
Intelligence gathering requires contextual understanding, the voice agreed. Local tactical knowledge is insufficient for long-term strategic planning. Need broader political and geographical awareness.
Another oddly specific assessment. The voice talked like someone with extensive intelligence training—someone who'd planned operations on a regional, maybe even a grander scale.
But that was impossible. Jade was ten years old. She'd never been anywhere but the Freehold estate.
Had she?
"Got something for you," Zhek whispered, his words interrupted by wet coughing. "Hid it years ago. Been saving for when you were ready."
She heard scuffling sounds through the wall—the old man moving with obvious pain, disturbing whatever hiding place he'd maintained. After several long minutes, something small clinked against stone.
"Loose rock near the floor," he explained breathlessly. "Can you reach it?"
Jade felt along the wall with careful fingers until she found the gap—a space between stones where ancient mortar had worn away over the years. Inside, wrapped in cloth that crumbled at her touch like old skin, was something hard and metallic.
She pulled it into her cell carefully, unwrapping the object by feel in the perpetual darkness. Heavy. Well-made. Some kind of ring with an intricate design carved deep into its surface.
"Family signet," Zhek explained, pride warming his failing voice. "From before. Before I was property, before everything went to hell. Worth maybe a year's food on the black market, but that ain't why I'm giving it to you."
Jade turned the ring over in her small hands, tracing the carved symbols with her fingertips. Even in darkness, she could feel the craftsmanship—this had been made by someone who cared about their work. Who took pride in creating something beautiful.
The design was complex. A great tree with spreading branches, its roots intertwining with what felt like mountain peaks. Around the outer edge, smaller symbols that might've been letters or maybe magical runes. In the center, raised higher than the rest, the unmistakable shape of a wolf's head with ruby chips for eyes.
"Symbol of House Drakmoor," he continued with something like his old storytelling voice. "Northern border province, up near the Demon Realm frontier. A ring like that opens doors, gets you treated as minor nobility instead of an escaped slave. If you ever make it out of here..."
If. Such a small word to carry so much desperate hope.
"I can't take this," Jade protested, though her fingers closed protectively around the ring. "It's all you have left of your family. Of who you used to be."
"Family's dead," Zhek said simply. Matter-of-fact, like stating the weather. "Been dead twenty years now. Ring, don't bring them back, don't change what happened to them. But it might keep you alive someday. That's what family does—protects each other, even after death."
The ring was too large for her thin fingers, but she slipped it onto her thumb, where it stayed secure. Metal still warm from his touch, carrying the weight of his trust and twenty years of hidden hope.
"Thank you," she whispered, throat tight with emotions she didn't have words for.
"Don't thank me yet," he replied with something like his old humor. "Got more lessons to give before I'm done. Gonna make sure you're ready for whatever comes next."
Over the next three days, as winter storms lashed the estate above and Zhek fought his final battle against the lung rot, he shared everything he knew about survival beyond the pits.
How to identify safe houses and resistance sympathizers by subtle signs. How to forge basic travel documents using techniques he'd learned during his own failed escape attempt. How to read political situations by watching body language and listening to what people didn't say.
Most importantly, how to distinguish between people who could truly be trusted and those who'd sell you for a copper coin and a pat on the head.
"Trust is a luxury," he explained during one of their whispered midnight conversations. "But you can't survive completely alone either—humans ain't built for it. Key is learning to read people. Their motivations, their breaking points, their prices."
Sound tactical philosophy, the voice approved. Everyone has leverage points. The objective is ensuring your value exceeds your threat level to potential allies.
Again with the professional assessment. The voice consistently talked like someone who'd run intelligence networks, managed assets, and calculated loyalty in terms of risk and reward ratios.
But that didn't make any sense. Jade was ten years old.
Wasn't she?
"One more thing," Zhek said on what would be his last night. His breathing had become increasingly labored, punctuated by coughing fits that left him weak and shaking. "About that voice in your head."
Jade went very still. She'd never mentioned the voice to anyone—had assumed it was just her imagination creating helpful advice to cope with impossible situations.
"Don't look so shocked," he wheezed with faint amusement. "Been watching you for five years, remember? Seen you react to things before they happen. Make tactical decisions no ten-year-old should know how to make. You got someone else riding along in there, little one."
Her mouth felt dry as desert sand. "You think I'm going mad?"
"Think you're special," he replied without hesitation. "Don't know what kind of special, don't need to know the details. But that voice—listen to it. Whoever they are, they know things. Important things. Probably the main reason you're still breathing."
Perceptive man, the voice observed with something like respect. Wish we could tell him the truth about the situation.
We. There it was again—that casual assumption that there were two distinct people sharing the same skull.
"What if the voice is wrong?" Jade asked, voicing a fear she'd carried for months. "What if listening to it gets me killed?"
"Then you die smart instead of stupid," Zhek said simply. "In a place like this, that's about the best anyone can hope for. Besides..." His voice grew softer, almost philosophical. "Death ain't the worst thing that can happen to a person. Living without hope, without purpose, without fighting back—that's worse than dying."
His coughing fit that night was the worst yet. Violent spasms that sounded like drowning, like something vital inside him, tearing apart beyond any possibility of repair. When it finally stopped, the silence that followed felt somehow worse than the noise.
"Zhek?" she whispered.
No answer.
"Uncle Zhek?"
Still nothing.
Jade pressed her ear to the wall, listening desperately for any sound of movement from the adjacent cell. But there was only the constant drip of moisture and the distant sounds of other prisoners moving restlessly in their sleep.
The old man was gone.
She sat in the darkness of her cell, holding his ring in both hands, feeling the weight of sudden, complete abandonment. For five years, Zhek had been her anchor in a world designed to destroy hope. He'd taught her to survive, to resist, to remain human in a place that systematically tried to turn children into broken things.
Now she was alone again. Truly alone.
(The pits took him. Just like they took Mama. Just like they take everyone eventually.)
No, the voice said gently but firmly. You're not alone. I'm still here. And you're not the same scared five-year-old who arrived in these pits. You're stronger now. Smarter. Ready to carry on without a guardian.
"I don't feel ready," she whispered to the darkness.
Nobody ever does. But ready or not, the world keeps moving forward. Question is whether you move with it or get crushed underneath.
The truth of it settled in her chest like a stone. Ready or not, Zhek was dead. Ready or not, she'd have to survive whatever came next without his guidance.
Through the remainder of that long night, Jade sat with her grief and her memories. Zhek teaching her to read guard rotation patterns by counting footsteps. Zhek showing her which corners of the pit stayed driest during the seasonal floods. Zhek sharing his meager food rations when she was too sick to work, too weak to stand.
Zhek dying alone in a stone box, surrounded by enemies, forgotten by the world above ground.
When morning came and the guards discovered his body during their routine check, they showed the same professional disinterest they reserved for all slave deaths. Just another number for their ledgers, another cell freed up for new property.
"About damn time," Guard Captain Thorne muttered, prodding the corpse with his boot. "Took him long enough to die. Clean out his effects and burn anything that might carry disease."
But there were no effects to clean out. Slaves owned nothing but their lives, and even those belonged to the clan. Zhek's cell was empty except for moldy straw and twenty years of accumulated despair.
The ring was hidden deep in Jade's mattress, wrapped in strips torn from her own threadbare clothes. His legacy. His trust. His final gift to the child he'd tried so hard to protect.
That night, alone in the suffocating darkness, she made herself a promise. She would survive whatever came next. She would escape these pits eventually, no matter how long it took or what she had to sacrifice. And when she did, she would carry forward everything Zhek had taught her.
His kindness in the face of cruelty. His wisdom earned through suffering. His stubborn refusal to let brutality win completely.
But as she tried to cry for the only family she had left, nothing came. Her eyes burned with the need for tears, the desperate ache of grief demanding release, but no moisture would fall.
(I can't even cry for him. What's wrong with me?)
The pits burned away your tears years ago, the voice said with quiet understanding. Another thing the Freeholds owe you—the ability to grieve properly for those you've lost.
The realization hit like a physical blow. They'd stolen her tears along with everything else. Her childhood, her family, her name, her dignity—and now even her ability to mourn the dead. The Freeholds had taken everything that made her human and left her... what?
(Empty. Broken. Wrong.)
No, the voice corrected firmly. Forged. Tempered. Prepared for what's coming.
Good, the voice continued after a moment of respectful silence. Now we begin the next phase. No more guardians, no more protection from others. From here on, we rely on ourselves.
We. The voice kept using that word like there really were two people planning the same future.
Maybe there were.
In her dreams that night, she saw vast ships sailing between distant stars and a woman with emerald eyes who carried the memory of everyone who'd died for freedom. Teachers and mentors, friends and lovers, all living on in the choices she made and the battles she fought.
She wouldn't remember the dreams when she woke—never did. But they'd leave their mark anyway.
They always did.
Old Man Zhek was dead. But his lessons lived on in the girl he'd helped forge from raw desperation and stubborn hope. The pits had tried to break her by taking away her guardian.
Instead, they'd taught her to become her own guardian.
That was a lesson they'd regret.