Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -u... ❲PRO ⟶❳
Lysa traced a coin without looking down, a small, mindful action. "Names keep power," she murmured. "Even when the men and women vanish, people will still hand their trust to the title. It fills the space like mist."
"A man with a coin," he said. "Two wings and an eye." He looked at Lysa, then away. "He paid in old currency. He wanted the crate moved at a price no one could refuse." Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -U...
They descended to the dock where the city moved again. The sea, indifferent and vast, rolled and remembered. The Peacekeepers—men like Ser Danek—would move on to other ports, other arguments. House 27 was a memory that had found a voice, and House Kestrel was diminished but not gone. The device that had prompted the demonstration lay in a vault, cataloged, and studied under watchful eyes. Lysa traced a coin without looking down, a
Those words—under Coalition authority—had a weight that made some lean forward as if to catch it. The Peacekeepers did not enforce law with soldiers; they enforced it with the moral force of arbitration and the threat of closing chartered ports to those who defied their rulings. Losing the Coalition's favor was a slow death: contracts canceled, trade routes denied, the subtle erosion of credit that ended with a single burned ledger. It fills the space like mist
"It is treasure if it has value," Rulik snapped. "It had carvings. It had things inside. It had a seal like—" He couldn't finish. His voice broke against a memory of men arguing over a single coin.
By midday, the Hall of Ties was full. Its vaulted roof had once been painted with scenes of alliance; time had scoured the colors into a faint memory of saints and oaths. Wooden benches ran in rows like the ribs of a stranded whale. Alden, the council scribe, presided at a narrow table, ink at the ready. He wore a scarf against the draft and a face like wet parchment—thin and expressive in a way that made people trust him. Beside him sat Mara and Halvar, formally invited as neutral parties, and Lysa, who had been waved in because Daern had asked her to stand with him—"so I can look at someone who knows how to listen," he'd joked.
That suggestion put everyone in the boat on edge. For many, the Assembly was not an institution to be called like a capital letter in a ledger—it was a ghost that reappeared when old networks wanted to move. For traders and fishers, an Assembly presence meant that hidden hands were touching matters. For the Coalition, inviting the Assembly meant admitting limits to its own authority.