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My Food Stall Serves SSS-Grade Delicacies!-Chapter 251: Perfection Took My Friend
Aldric continued recounting his experience.
"So when Edmund talked about artifacts that corrupted their wielders, that drove people to obsessive behavior, that made good people destroy themselves chasing impossible standards..." Aldric gestured helplessly. "I saw Theo. Saw what unchecked perfectionism could do. And I thought—if tools could make that worse, amplify that need, push someone past their limits faster—they needed to be locked away."
Marron set down the Precision Blade carefully. "But Theo didn’t have a Legendary Tool."
"No. He just had talent and trauma and no one to tell him it was okay to be less than perfect." Aldric looked at the blade. "But if he’d had a tool that made his work even better, that showed him what true perfection looked like every single time, that never let him fail even when failure might have been healthy..."
"You think it would have killed him faster."
"Yes."
They sat in silence. Outside, waves crashed against the dock. Inside, the Precision Blade hummed quietly—not offering guidance, just... listening.
"I understand now why you were afraid," Marron said finally. "Why you wanted the tools contained. You’ve seen what obsessive perfectionism can do to someone."
"But I was wrong about the tools," Aldric said. "Or at least, I was wrong about you and them. Because you’re not chasing perfection. You’re chasing understanding."
"What’s the difference?"
"Perfection is an end state. A destination you can kill yourself trying to reach." Aldric gestured at the vegetables, at the uneven cuts, at the evidence of Marron’s ongoing struggle. "Understanding is a process. A journey. You’re making mistakes. Making imperfect cuts. And instead of destroying everything and starting over, you’re learning from it."
He looked at her with something like wonder. "That’s what Theo needed. What I needed. What maybe everyone working toward mastery needs—the ability to accept imperfection as part of growth rather than evidence of failure."
Marron thought about that. About her burned hot dogs and overcooked rice at the hearing. About all the mistakes she’d made over the past weeks while relearning her tools.
"The blade doesn’t make me perfect," she said slowly. "It shows me what perfect would look like. But it doesn’t force me there. It lets me fail. Lets me be wrong. And then it teaches me why I was wrong so I can do better next time."
"Exactly," Aldric said. "That’s partnership. That’s healthy growth. If Theo had that—if anyone had taught him that imperfection was acceptable, that mistakes were valuable—maybe he’d still be cooking."
The Precision Blade pulsed, and an impression flooded through Marron:
I was made to cut perfectly. But perfection without teaching is tyranny. The humans who created us understood: tools should elevate, not replace. Guide, not control. Show what’s possible while accepting what’s achievable.
"The blade agrees with you," Marron said. "It says tools should guide, not control. Should show possibility while accepting limitation."
Aldric looked at the blade with new respect. "Can all the tools communicate like that?"
"Yes. They’re all conscious. All aware. They have personalities, preferences, opinions." Marron picked up the blade again. "That’s what Edmund’s missing. He treats them like dangerous objects when they’re actually people. Strange people made of metal and magic, but people."
"Edmund would say that makes them more dangerous, not less."
"Maybe. But it also makes them capable of choosing partnership over possession." Marron resumed cutting onions. "The tools have spent months pushing me toward collecting all seven. But when I told them I couldn’t—when I explained the Council’s restrictions—they accepted it. They’re grieving, yes. But they’re not forcing me. Not manipulating. They’re making space for their own feelings while respecting mine."
"That’s remarkable," Aldric whispered.
"That’s what Edmund’s afraid he’ll never see if he never gives them a chance."
They worked in companionable silence after that. Marron cutting vegetables, learning from her mistakes, accepting imperfection as part of the process. Aldric watching, taking notes, but now with the eye of someone learning alongside her rather than gathering evidence against her.
Finally, as night fell completely and the onions were reduced to reasonably consistent pieces, Aldric spoke again.
"I need to tell you something about my reports."
Marron looked up, suddenly wary. "What about them?"
"I’ve been writing honestly, like I promised. But honestly means including things Edmund won’t want to hear." Aldric met her eyes. "I’m documenting that you’re not dependent on the tools. That you’re actively working to understand them rather than rely on them. That they’re conscious partners, not corrupting influences."
"Edmund will hate that."
"Yes. He will." Aldric’s expression was resolute. "He might dismiss my reports. Might recall me. Might decide I’ve been compromised by proximity to artifacts." 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎
"Why tell me this?"
"Because if he does recall me, you should know—my replacement will probably be less sympathetic. Someone who actually believes in Edmund’s philosophy without questions."
"Great," Marron muttered. "So I should enjoy having you as a supervisor while it lasts."
"I’m not a supervisor," Aldric said quietly. "I haven’t been since about the second day. I’m just... someone traveling with you. Learning things Edmund never taught me. Trying to figure out if there’s a better way."
"A better way than preservation?"
"A better way than fear disguised as caution." Aldric looked at his notebook again, at pages full of observations about partnership and growth and tools that taught instead of corrupted. "Theo needed help. Professional help, therapy, someone to teach him that his worth wasn’t tied to his output. But everyone just praised his talent and ignored the warning signs. We failed him by watching his self-destruction and calling it dedication."
"And you think Edmund’s doing the same thing? Failing the tools by locking them away and calling it protection?"
"I think Edmund’s so afraid of repetition—so afraid of seeing more people destroyed by their pursuit of perfection—that he’s chosen control over trust. Containment over collaboration." Aldric closed his notebook. "And I think I followed him because I was afraid too. Afraid that if I admitted tools could be used safely, I’d have to admit that Theo’s breakdown wasn’t inevitable. That maybe if we’d all been braver, less afraid, more willing to intervene, we could have saved him."
"That’s not your fault."
"I know. Intellectually, I know." Aldric smiled sadly. "But guilt doesn’t follow logic. I couldn’t save Theo. So I tried to prevent anyone else from following his path—even if it meant preventing all the good those tools could do."
Marron set down the blade and moved to sit beside him. "You’re not that person anymore."
"I’m trying not to be."
"Then help me prove Edmund wrong. Not by fighting him, but by showing him what healthy partnership looks like. By documenting that tools can elevate without corrupting, can guide without controlling, can be part of growth instead of destruction."
"That’s what I’ve been trying to do."
"Good." Marron bumped his shoulder gently. "Because I need someone who understands the difference between perfection and growth. Someone who’s seen what obsession looks like and can help me avoid it."
"You don’t strike me as the obsessive type."
"I’m not. But I’m also aware that having four Legendary Tools could push me in that direction if I’m not careful." She looked at the blade, at the pot and ladle in her pack. "They make everything easier. Better. And it would be very easy to start thinking I need that enhancement to be worth anything."
"But you don’t," Aldric said. "You proved that at the hearing. The versions you made without tools were still good. Still competent. Still valuable."
"Exactly. And I need someone around to remind me of that when the tools make everything feel effortless. When I start forgetting what I’m capable of on my own."
Aldric considered that. "So instead of supervising you for the Council, you want me to help keep you honest about your own skill?"
"Yes. Is that too strange?"
"No," Aldric said slowly. "Actually, that makes perfect sense. And it’s something I can do. Something I want to do."
He looked at her with new determination. "I couldn’t save Theo. But maybe I can help make sure you don’t need saving. That these tools remain partners instead of becoming crutches. That you stay Marron instead of becoming an extension of their will."
"Deal," Marron said, offering her hand.
He shook it. "Deal."
Outside, the ocean continued its eternal rhythm—waves crashing and retreating, predictable and patient. Inside, two people who’d started as supervisor and supervised found themselves becoming something else.
Companions. Colleagues. Friends bound by shared understanding of how easy it was to lose yourself chasing something that looked like excellence but felt like extinction.
And four tools hummed quietly, acknowledging the presence of another human who understood them. Not as objects. Not as threats.
But as partners worth protecting.







