008 - Silver for Peace
Fractureborn
The northern districtâs marketplace thrummed with life under the warmth of early sun. Stalls lined the cobbled street like colors on a painterâs paletteâvivid fruits stacked in wooden crates, meats hanging from iron hooks, fresh fish laid over crushed ice hauled in from the coast. The noise was cheerful, unbothered. Children chased each other between carts. Dogs barked, rolled, and begged for scraps. A mother cradled a sleeping baby on one hip while bartering for carrots. An old man carved a flute in front of his shop, whistling through the holes as he tested the notes. It was, by all means, a peaceful morning.
âOi! Whatâs the order, you two little pipsqueaks?â barked a middle-aged woman from behind a fruit stand. Her cheeks were red from sun and irritation. âJust so you know, I donât fancy handling kids. Last week I caught one running off with three bananas and a pear. Try that stunt with me and youâll be sitting in a cell before your voice even breaks!â
Two kids, maybe eight years old, stood awkwardly at her stallâone boy, one girl. They clutched a few copper coins, faces pinched with indecision.
âUhmm⦠wait, lady,â the boy said cautiously. âWeâre still deciding.â
The girl leaned toward her brother and whispered, âI think I want two oranges. They look yummy.â
âWait,â he muttered back, eyes scanning the other crates. âIâm deciding too.â
Beside the fruit stall, a stocky man at a meat stand called out with a hearty laugh. âOi, you two! Donât go upsetting the Fruit Queen, alright? Sheâll eat ya whole! Doesnât have a sliver of patience for anything that doesnât grow on a tree!â
âHEY!â the fruit vendor snapped, spinning toward him. âMind your own damn pigs, butcher!â
The man just chuckled, wiping his hands on his bloodstained apron. âJust sayinâ the truth.â
On the other side, a younger woman at the fish stall leaned forward with a bright smile. She lifted a clay container sealed with a cloth and string. Inside, fish cuts lay fresh and cold. âHow about some fish meat, little ones? Pulled from the river near the RiverBend village just yesterday! Nice and pink, no scales, and not a single bone sharp enough to poke your teeth.â
The fruit womanâs eyes narrowed. âOi, donât go poaching my customers! Especially not the ones who still have baby teeth!â
âRelax,â the butcher called. âTheyâve got enough coins to split a sardine, let alone fund a war between you three.â
âIâve decided!â the boy announced, puffing his chest.
The fruit woman straightened. âGood. Youâre ready to buy some watermelon, yeah? Best sellers Iâve got. Big, juicy, and the most expensive for a reason!â
âIâm buying fish meat,â the boy said cheerfully. âFor me, my sister, and our parents!â
The girl blinked. âBut⦠brother, I wanted fruitâ¦â
He bent close to her and whispered dramatically, âSis, look at her. Really look. Do you really want to order from someone who might eat kids for breakfast? What if those oranges are made from kids? Think about it.â
The girl squinted suspiciously at the oranges. Her eyes widened. âAhh! Youâre right! I want fish meat instead!â
The butcher let out a booming laugh. âHA! Best decision youâve made all day!â
âPleasure doinâ business,â the fish vendor said as she packed the cuts carefully into a cloth pouch. âThis hereâs silver-scale river fish. The smooth kind, no bones to choke on. Sweet once cooked, even better if roasted with leaf-wrapped herbs. Youâll like this, trust me. Even picky grandmas canât complain.â
The fruit vendor stood there, lips twitching in defeat. ââ¦Rotten little traitors,â she muttered under her breath, watching the kids walk offâhappily swinging their bag of fish.
The butcher wiped sweat from his brow and leaned on his counter, grinning wide. âTold you, Marna. You gotta stop scaring 'em off with all that 'go to jail' talk.â
Marna, arms crossed, scowled. âI warn them because I care. Better they hear it from me than from some cranky patrol knight with a stick up hisââ
âLanguage,â the fish vendor chimed in playfully, packaging another order. âKids still within hearing distance.â
âThey should hear it,â Marna shot back. âToughen them up. The world ainât just sunshine and candied peaches.â
The butcher yawned loudly and stretched his arms over his head. âCouldâve fooled me today. Feels like a festival with how peaceful it is.â
âYeah, too peaceful,â Marna muttered, eyeing the patrols passing through the crowd with unusually stiff posture. âThe last time I saw this many knights in one district was before the grain riots. You think somethingâs up?â
The fish vendor shrugged, but her tone lowered. âSome of the soldiers looked like they werenât even supposed to be on shift. Could be something brewing in the south again. That old temple districtâs always causing headaches.â
âYou think itâs about the princess?â the butcher said in a hush, leaning in. âHeard sheâs been sending groups out lately. Scouts, runners, even a few of those Fractureborn folks.â
Marna waved it off. âPfft. Gossip. Youâre always getting jumpy whenever the guards sneeze.â
The trio turned to see Alexia approaching, casually weaving through the crowd with her cloak draped over one arm, sword at her hip. Her dark armor caught the sunlight in thin streaks. Her hair was slightly windswept, and her expression unreadable.
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Marna squinted as Alexia emerged from the crowd.
âWell, well, well. That woman warrior again.â
The butcher gave her a subtle elbow. âShh. Donât talk like that. Theyâve probably already got it rough, being a Fractureborn. Most folks are already looking at them like theyâre cursed.â
âYou canât stop me,â Marna muttered, arms crossed. âLook at her. She walks like she could use that fracture for no good any time of the day.â
A few stalls down, the young woman tending the fish stand muttered under her breath as she glanced up, catching the figure walking closer. âThat woman, she almost looks like a knight. Alexia? Ahh, that Fractureborn.â
Alexiaâs sharp eyes flicked toward her stand. She changed her course.
The butcher and Marna fell quiet, watching.
Alexia stopped in front of the fish stall. Her voice was flat, but not unfriendly. âThese tuna, fresh?â
The young woman straightened a little. âYes, just pulled from the river by Riverbend. Fresh as yesterday.â
âHow much?â
âFive silver coins each,â the vendor said, a little more cautiously now.
Alexia nodded slowly. âAlright. Hold on. Still deciding.â
âTake your time,â the vendor said, trying to keep her voice neutral. âLet me know when youâre ready.â
Too many people in every direction. If I used my fracture here, even for a second, Iâd have ten swords at my head. Ugh⦠stupid stomach.
The vendor hesitated before speaking again.
âI heard youâre a Fractureborn. Alexia, right? Youâre pretty well-known in this district.â
Alexiaâs body stiffened, her posture shifting just slightly, but the tension was obvious. She didnât like this topic.
âYeah? What about it?â
The vendorâs words tripped over themselves. âUhh, nothing. Forget it. I, uhh, forgot what I was going to say.â
She looked down, fiddling with the edge of a cloth. Alexia remained silent, still scanning the selection.
Thenâshouts.
Boots thundered past as a group of knights ran down the main road, heading south. The crowd paused. Vendors looked up. Children stopped mid-play. Even the wind seemed to still for a moment.
Alexiaâs eyes tracked the movement, brows narrowing. She muttered, âI need to know what theyâre up to. What Princess Ismene is pulling this time.â
The fish vendorâs eyes followed the patrols, too. âYou donât know anything about that? Theyâve been patrolling since morning. Twice already.â
âNo. Not at all,â Alexia said, voice distant but guarded.
The vendor exhaled.
âYou know, I donât think youâre like what people say about Fractureborn. Just a feeling. But it seems unfair. That you all have to carry everyoneâs fear like that.â
Alexiaâs eyes shifted. That comment made something twist in her chest. She stared at the vendor for a long second.
âSo you think saying something kind will make me spare you my skepticism? Everyone loves to act warm until they think they can benefit from us.â
âNo,â the vendor said, voice calm. âNot exactly. But Iâm not one of those who despise people without evidence.â
The word echoed in Alexiaâs headâevidenceâand with it came the memory of slammed doors, tense stares, and whispered curses in alleys.
But this⦠wasnât that.
Maybe today⦠it wouldnât hurt to actually spend some of the coins I earned. Like a normal person.
âFine,â Alexia said at last. âIâll take the tuna.â
âRaw or cooked?â
âCooked. Weâre adventurers. Most of us barely know how to boil water, let alone cook fish.â
The vendor laughed, more genuine this time. âHa! Okay, cooked it is. Thatâll be five silver coins.â
She handed over a neatly wrapped container. âHere.â
Alexia shifted the cloak to her other arm and took the package. âThanks. Uh, do you know where the laundry place is again? I forgot the name.â
âYou mean the washerhouse? Itâs just a bit past the Cradle Tavern,â the vendor smiled. âYouâll see a line of bedsheets flapping like banners.â
Alexia gave a small nod. âRight. Thanks again.â
As she turned to walk away, cloak swinging at her side, her eyes followed the path the knights had taken toward the southern district.
Behind her, the butcher leaned over to Marna.
âHey. That Fractureborn, sheâs kind of, kind, ainât she?â
Marna scoffed, folding her arms tighter. âPfft. Thatâll fool you just like all those gossip rags. You always fall for that soft-hearted nonsense.â
The young woman overheard them, eyes lingering on Alexiaâs back as she disappeared into the crowd.
Quietly, she murmured to herself.
âI hope you Fractureborns find the treatment you deserve. Someday.â
The marketplace sounds thinned behind her as Alexia stepped into the side road leading to The Cradle, the district's oldest tavern. The scent of stewed onions and old ale started to mix with the cool morning air.
ThenâA voice. Loud, overly familiar, and unmistakably him.
âComing through! Coming through! Just a handsome man walking past through!â
Alexia paused mid-step.
She turned her headâand there he was.
Lysandros, in all his clumsy glory, came bounding down the path in a new white tunic, practically glowing against the dust of the street. A shovel was strapped across his back like it was a greatsword. He waved as if he hadnât already drawn half the streetâs attention.
âOH! Alexia! WAIT!â
He skidded to a stop beside her, panting, hands on his knees.
âPhew, thank the stars. Good thing you havenât bought me a tunic and shovel yetâbecause! Get thisâI found this amazing seller just across the street from the laundry line, and he was like âThis is the last one, I swear!â so I bought it, right then and there! Spent most of my spare gold, but it was worth it. Look, no holes, and the shovel doesnât even squeak when I swing it! Well, unless I swing it too hard!â
Alexia blinked. Flatly, âItâs your first day in this kingdom and you already got scammed.â
Lysandros froze mid-gesture. âWait, what? Tunics and shovels donât cost that much here?â
âNo,â she said, completely deadpan. âNot even close.â
He slumped, defeated. ââ¦Well. At least⦠at least I worked hard and still have some coins in my purse.â
He patted it. It jingled with the sound of exactly one coin.
Alexiaâs eyes flicked to his neck. âProbably that tattoo of yours. Outsider ink like thatâs rare here. They saw you coming from a mile away.â
Lysandros scratched his neck. âDang. Shouldâve worn a scarf of mystery.â
They began walking side-by-side, the kind of mismatched duo that made heads turn but somehow felt natural.
âWait,â Lysandros said, eyes squinting in thought, âwhere were we going again? T-tuh⦠tuh-tackle? Table? TâTartle?â
âTavern,â Alexia said. âThe Cradle. But first, washerhouse.â
âOh yeah! Why even clean that though?â Lysandros motioned at the cloak she held. âYouâre an adventurer-warrior-mystery-lady. Youâll just roll around in dirt and gore again. You probably smell great by now. Like roasted wolf.â
She shot him a look.
âAnd also I remember youâre not even paying for the inn,â he added cheerfully. âEven though you clearly have coins from all your heroic quests.â
âShut it,â she muttered.
Lysandros peered at the container in her hand. âHey, whatâs that? Is that fish? Ohâwaitâis that TUNA?!â
Alexia didnât respond, just scanned the street ahead until her eyes landed on a line of white sheets fluttering like flags.
âThere,â she pointed. âThe washerhouse.â
Without a word, she handed him the cloak, along with a few silver coins.
âClean this. Use those coins for the labor.â
Lysandros took it like a soldier accepting a holy quest. âNo questions asked! Mission: Clean the Stinky Cloakâaccepted!â
He started running toward the washerhouse, calling over his shoulder.
âSave me a bite of that tuna! I swear Iâll die without it!â
Alexia let out a small laugh through her nose. âGosh. So noisy.â
But as she turned and faced the tavern door, the humor faded. The Cradle loomed quiet but alert. Just ahead, a knight passed by briskly, heading southward.
Alexiaâs grip tightened on the fish package.
That man⦠the one in the cloak⦠I wonder if he's connected to the missing Fractureborns this yearâ¦
She stepped forward.
âTime to gather information. If Princess Ismeneâs involved, I need to know why.â