Building a Kingdom as a Kobold
Chapter 70: We Feed Each Other, That’s What We Do

Chapter 70: We Feed Each Other, That’s What We Do

The fire was already going when I opened my eyes.

Which was strange. Because the fire didn’t just light itself. And none of the young kobolds moved faster than Relay. Except maybe Flick, but he didn’t do things like build fire. He did things like hide everyone’s boots.

So that left only one possible explanation.

Cinders.

Sure enough, she was crouched beside the pot, spoon in one hand, the other gently testing the steam. Her tail flicked once when I approached. Not in surprise. Just acknowledgment.

"I thought we weren’t doing sacred soup anymore," I said.

"Breakfast," she replied.

"Early."

"I like it quiet."

No one else was up.

I sat down across the fire, close enough to feel the heat.

"What’s on the menu?"

"Rehydrated grain paste, softened trailroot, pinch of bitterleaf."

She paused, then added, "I’m soaking the paste longer this time. It keeps the texture from congealing."

"Sounds like science."

"It’s food."

She didn’t look tired. Just... grounded.

That was new.

Usually, Cinders cooked like the flame might bite her if she let it get bored. Now she moved with the certainty of someone who knew exactly when to stir, when to let the broth hiss, and when to scold it for being difficult.

"Did you sleep at all?" I asked.

"Four hours."

"That’s more than usual."

She shrugged.

The spoon she was using was the same one. The old, chipped one. Still cleaned and wrapped between uses. I saw a new patch of cloth tied near the grip—moss-dyed green this time, probably from the elf camp.

"You keeping it together?"

"I’m cooking, aren’t I?"

"Not the same thing."

"No," she said. "But close enough."

The system pinged right then.

Not loud. Not flashing.

Just a low flicker across my vision as she stirred.

[Class Confirmed: Ashring Cook]

[Trait Locked: Flame Discipline]

I didn’t say anything.

She didn’t either.

But I noticed the way she exhaled through her nose. Like a tension had been loosened without her permission.

"You’re not mad about the title?" I asked, watching the steam.

"It’s a job," she said. "I do it. It fits."

"No evolution name, no ’blessed fire-soul shepherd.’"

"Good."

"Just Ashring Cook."

"Just mine."

When the others finally started to crawl out of their tents, breakfast was already portioned and lined up.

Cinders didn’t announce it. Didn’t ring a bowl. Just set them out like always.

One extra, as usual, on the stone closest to the fire. No garnish. No seasoning. Just a bowl. Full.

I looked at her.

"Still saving one?"

She didn’t answer.

But I noticed the way she stood as she ladled the rest. Balanced. Precise. Steady.

She didn’t say who it was for.

And I didn’t ask.

Because that bowl wasn’t for a person.

It was for an absence.

And sometimes that’s enough.

Relay sat down with a pleased sigh.

"This is actually better than last week’s ration stew," he said between bites.

Cinders, from her seat near the pot, said, "That’s because last week, I let Glare cut the root and he boiled it whole."

"I thought it was supposed to infuse the spirit of the plant," Glare muttered.

"It infused the taste of dirt."

Flick tried to sneak a second portion and got swatted with the flat of the spoon.

"Try again and I cook you," she said.

He grinned like that was a fair trade.

They kept eating.

Cinders didn’t. Not yet.

She sat there, watching the pot like it might try something.

I moved closer.

"You’re going to eat, right?"

"I always eat last."

"You always say that."

"Because it’s always true."

"Doesn’t mean it has to stay true."

She didn’t reply.

But she did set her spoon down for a moment. Stretched her arms. Exhaled.

Then picked it up again.

This time, just to eat.

Later, after the others had scattered—Relay running message drills, Glare off in his dramatic sulking perch, Flick probably hiding under someone’s bedroll—Cinders stayed near the coals. The pot was clean. Her own bowl scraped. The extra one still half-full.

I saw her crouch next to it and whisper something again. Nothing fancy. Just a word, maybe a name. Maybe not.

I didn’t interrupt.

Not this time.

She caught up to me when I was heading toward the edge of the grove to check a mana drift reading. Quiet footfalls. Spoon tucked away. She matched my pace without saying anything.

After a few beats, she spoke.

"Flick asked if I was a food priest."

I snorted.

"You going to start blessing grain slabs?"

"I told him to eat a cold root and think about his life."

"Fair."

She kicked a stone. Watched it skip across the moss.

"I don’t want to be... important," she said.

"You’re not. You’re needed."

"That’s worse."

"Not always."

She stopped walking and looked up.

"It’s just soup," she said. "Always was."

I tilted my head. "And yet."

"I know."

We sat on a low ledge near the base of a burned tree. The bark had been half-melted by one of Tinker’s forge accidents, but the heat had driven out the rot and made it a warm sitting spot.

"Mentor used to say," Cinders started, "that cooking is just making something live twice."

I blinked.

She kept going, quietly.

"It was alive once. As plant, or beast. Or scrap. You turn it into something else. Give it a reason to be eaten. Something warm. That’s the second life. That’s what makes it worth it."

"That sounds... a little mythic."

"She hated myths."

I laughed.

"Sounds like she’d fit in."

"She used to throw spice dust at Embergleam during lectures."

"...Absolutely fits in."

Cinders pulled out her spoon. Turned it over in her claws. Ran one nail along the heat-scorch pattern down the side.

"I don’t know if she’d be proud," she said.

"She gave you the spoon."

"She gave me the job."

"And?"

"And I kept cooking."

"That’s all it takes sometimes."

The system pinged again. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just background sync.

[Profession Path Established – Cultural Anchor: Ashring Cook]

[System Behavior Adjusted – Recipes will no longer be flagged for anomaly testing.]

[Node Memory Tag Applied – User-defined item: "Mentor’s Spoon"]

Cinders glanced at the message. Didn’t flinch.

"Finally," she muttered. "Took them long enough to leave it alone."

"Officially blessed?"

"No. Officially mine."

That night, as the fire cracked and the squad settled around their usual spots, Cinders didn’t say anything.

She just ladled out portions.

Set a bowl to the side.

Not for anyone.

Just there.

A placeholder.

A promise.

Someone missing.

Someone yet to come.

Someone who mattered.

She sat by the pot as the others talked. Her spoon tapped against the side of her bowl in slow, thoughtful rhythm. She didn’t seem in a rush. Didn’t even look tired.

Just steady.

Just present.

Just Cinders.

Doing the thing that needed doing.

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