Seren Gwyn
Jesse gave a nod of her head as the night went on and she was looking at more of it. Retiring to sleep in the alcoves but there was some more to the fires as the beachhead was much more secured now so you had some sleeping in the sand or even in the cover of the tunnel that they had made. Improvements to it while Guilia and Mugen were checking the kiln that they had been heating up for the night so that it would continue to fire as they were asleep. Jesse went to go and proper herself in the alcove before she went to sleep but was able to really push out and extend the force to sense the camp and then the island itself. Seren was skilled and would be able to do much to help them and they were going to find a way off of here.
TWO WEEKS LATER
The time had not been idled away; Jesse measured that much in the geometry of the place as she walked it. Mugen's waterway no longer read as an experiment but as infrastructure. The channel had been extended with thin metal sheets scavenged and flattened, each one overlapped and pinned into place with clay seams and stone bracing, lengthening the run without compromising grade. Arched segments of timber and rock had been set at intervals to prevent collapse where the soil softened, each arch packed tight with a clay composite that had been fired once and then set again in place. The incline was deliberate, stepped in shallow rises that preserved flow rate while minimizing erosion.
At the upper intake, they had dammed a section of the stream with a temporary barricade, excavated the trench, then cut through and sealed the junction in a single continuous effort. The gate assembly at the end was simple and effective: a clay-blocked aperture, a lever arm anchored into stone, and braided vines under tension to regulate opening and closure. It was not elegant, but it held, and the water obeyed it. THey had been working on clearing out many other parts of it with work. Digging where needed and knocking down some trees further in the jungle but they were also moving them and interweaving them into the trees themselves. A wall of foiliage that they would be able to use.
The kiln's output had begun to show consistency, and that consistency had changed everything downstream. Clay was no longer a gamble; it was a material with predictable behavior. They had driven temperatures high enough to produce hardened segments that resisted saturation, using layered fuel and controlled airflow to keep the heat steady. Sap mixtures, combined with cloth and pulverized leaves, had been used to bind abrasive surfaces into something resembling sandpaper, crude but repeatable. The finishing process took time: smoothing, rinsing, smoothing again, until the interior of the waterway carried a near-polished surface. The flow reflected that work.
Water moved through it with reduced turbulence, a narrow ribbon guided rather than forced. Along the run, small netting systems had been integrated, tied into the arches and tensioned so they could be removed and reset without dismantling the structure. They caught what drifted with the current, fish small enough to slip into the system and amphibians that followed the moisture line, adding a passive yield to the design. The fish and other things that they caught were moved where needed with some of them yes used forr food or snacks.. or bait. There was something good and they had managed to take out one of those large beasts by the river.
She had seen the outer tunnel as she approached from the beach side, its shape continuous and deliberate, a wrapped corridor that followed the curve of the camp. It was enclosed above with layered materials, timber ribs, packed leaves, and clay seals that shed rain and obscured the interior from above. Mugen had partitioned it into functional segments without breaking its continuity. At one end, the waterway terminated in a basin that served as a controlled intake point for the camp, a place where containers could be filled without stepping into the open. A bath and shower combination room that they were able to use to get cleaned while also being able to have protection.
Adjacent to it, the workshop had taken form, a compact space organized around tools that had evolved from necessity: shark-tooth saws mounted into handles, cutting edges set in resin and reinforced with bindings. Beyond that, a drying room where airflow was managed through narrow vents, and a smoking chamber where preserved meats hung in controlled exposure to heat and smoke. Each section had a purpose, and each purpose had been defined by constraint. Mugen's book was many things but she had to admit that he had taken to remembering it and what to do in this situation better then most would have been able to do.
The addition that had drawn her attention was set into a side chamber off the tunnel, a modification to the waterway that redirected a controlled portion of the flow. A smaller plug had been installed upstream, allowing water to be diverted into a vertical drop that fed a sunken basin. The basin itself had been lined with smoothed clay, fired and sealed to resist seepage, its surface uniform enough to prevent accumulation in corners. When Jesse had asked about it, Mugen had answered with demonstration rather than explanation. The basin had been designed with a drainage channel that could be opened to cycle the water out, and beneath and around it, shallow fire pits had been constructed to apply heat indirectly through the clay walls.
It was not a luxury, but it was a system: water could be refreshed, temperature could be raised above ambient, and the environment could be kept inhospitable to what slipped through the upstream filtration. Limestone segments embedded along the waterway had already begun to serve their role, reducing particulates and altering the composition of the flow before it reached this point. Jesse was moving as she saw Guilia moving with the other two and they had found a place to be. Usually taking the raft out to explore the other islands and they came back with supplies, scrrap and information so a married couple spending all of their time wasn't a problem.
The perimeter had changed more than any single structure. Sections of the ship's hull had been cut, dragged, and set into place to form a barrier that followed the crescent of the beach. The larger pieces had required coordinated effort to move, guided through the jungle where the terrain allowed and along the shoreline where it did not. Once positioned, they had been anchored both above and below the waterline. In the shallows, sections had been sunk and stabilized with rock and sand, compacted to resist shifting with the tide. The result was a continuous wall that broke the line of sight and slowed approach from the sea.
Openings had been left at controlled intervals, fitted with pods that functioned as gates. These could be closed with reinforced tree trunks, stripped, sanded, and set into stone sockets with mud and clay acting as both adhesive and filler. When dried, the assembly held with enough rigidity to resist casual force. The storms thankfully were smacking against the other islands away from them which broke up their force. THey were securing a campsite against well as Jesse saw it anything that might be coming after or against them. Jesse was able to see the drrying room for meats and the sap sealed bags that they would be able to use.
Within that perimeter, intake had been organized. A pod had been refitted with hooks and internal bracing, creating a controlled entry point for materials. They had three such pods now, each adapted for a different type of intake. One was configured for general salvage, where items could be brought in, stripped, and redistributed. Another had been cleared and reinforced to handle living cargo. Guilia and Seren had used it to contain the smaller creatures they had managed to capture, juveniles taken after a hunt that had not been planned but had been executed when the opportunity presented itself.
The containment was basic but functional, with barriers that prevented escape and allowed feeding. Waste from the enclosure was not discarded; it had been redirected to the developing gardens as a nutrient source, integrated into a cycle that reduced loss and increased yield. THey wouldn't know how much it was working for now but therre was a chance and they served well enough being alert to anything in the jungles that might be coming close to their little camp. Perrimiter sensors were set up in a way. The droid heads that Guilia and Seren had found were set up in areas aand they would go off but their power supplies internally were incompatible with most of what they needed.
Elevation had been added as a second layer of control. Once the walls and primary roofs were in place, they had begun to build upward. The first elevated level used the existing roof structures as a base, creating a platform above the beach that allowed movement without crossing open ground. From there, additional beams had been set, secured into both natural rock and constructed supports, extending the platform into a second tier. These beams were not decorative; they were load-bearing, selected and placed to distribute weight and resist flex. The elevated pathways provided visibility over the wall and reduced transit time across the camp.
Over sections of the waterway, coverings had been added, interwoven from branches, leaves, and stone, both to conceal the system and to protect it from intrusion. The effect was a layered space, with movement possible at ground level and above, each path serving a different purpose. They had served to make other smaller pathways as the pods were used. With one in the different directions, each loaded with equipment aand supplies that they were making. Shells that they were able to recoverr being brought in and ground down into powder that they would be able to use in drying the sweat from theirr haands. Guiliaa used it to climb the rocky outcroppings.
The basalt outcrop that had served as their initial point of refuge had not been abandoned. If anything, it had been refined into a central node. The pod anchored there had become a hub, its immediate surroundings structured with alcoves carved and reinforced to serve as sleeping areas. Stone had been moved and reset to define boundaries, creating separations that did not require additional materials. Within this zone, two fisheries had been established. The first was designed to contain larger, more aggressive species that had been drawn in by the activity of the camp. Eel-like creatures had attempted to use the rocks as cover; in response, a metal barrier had been installed to restrict movement and prevent escape.
Above this enclosure, beams connected the rock face to the outer wall, creating positions from which they could strike downward with spears. The second fishery was more conventional, a contained area for smaller fish, managed for steady harvest rather than opportunistic capture. The small areas for food had been set up where they were looking. The firepits were dug out in one area and extended with some of the creatures that they haad seen roasting above. Ginger was working on it while she did a lot more. The smile on her face though in the morning as it had been cooking all night over the fire as a slow roast but now could be cut forr juicy pieces.
The presence of the fisheries had altered the behavior of the surrounding water. Larger predators had been drawn closer, testing the boundaries. Over the past week, several had been engaged and killed, the results processed with an efficiency that suggested routine rather than reaction. Meat was preserved through drying and smoking, blubber rendered for fuel, and skin and scales repurposed into protective clothing. The workshop had expanded its function accordingly, with Mugen adapting tools and processes to handle the materials. Mari's work had shifted alongside his, translating raw inputs into wearable forms that provided both protection and durability.
Parallel to this, Mugen's attempt to assemble a functional transponder from salvaged components continued. The limitation was not design but energy. Without a stable power source, the system could not be sustained. His solution had been to aim for storage rather than generation, a rudimentary capacitor built from available materials, with the waterway itself envisioned as part of the charging mechanism. Jesse had seen some of his other plans though and he was improving many more aspects of it.. he was exceptionally trying to get it going well enough here. The workshop filled with other gadgets and tools that they would be able to use as well as supplies that could come in handy.
Mari's secondary efforts had not been neglected. The gardens, initially small and uncertain, had stabilized. Plots set into the sand had been reinforced and enriched, their inputs managed to support growth despite the limitations of the environment. The kiln had been repurposed intermittently to produce small sheets of glass, each one a controlled success that expanded their capability. From these, simple goggles had been assembled, allowing for extended underwater activity. Guilia had made use of them despite her reluctance, using a spear to harvest clams and urchins from below the surface. These were stored in submerged containers and transferred to controlled pools within the camp, creating a buffer between collection and consumption.
The system reduced risk and increased efficiency, turning a variable resource into a managed one. As Jesse moved through the camp, the morning light exposed the structure for what it had become: not temporary shelter, but a working design, each element tied to the next, each function accounted for. She was more impressed with what it is that they were doing here in some places.. the continued improvement while they were waiting for the more advanced elements needed to surrvive. THough she didn't deny there was a cetain enjoyment to being able to lay in the sand for an hour at least and just relax now that most of their injuries had healed.