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    Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -u... May 2026

    The man set his satchel down, fingertips tapping a quiet rat-tat. "If Mistress Alden is present," he said, then hesitated as if to add an honorific but thought better of it, "we will arrange a hearing."

    The immediate consequence was a clampdown on open routes to Lornis. The Coalition placed advisories. The Silver Strand tightened manifests and demanded escorts. The Fishermen's Collective complained of increased inspections that slowed their boats and cut profits. New Iros, balanced precariously between competing interests, found itself in the center of a wheel that might spin dangerously.

    At the outer gate, where the old stone met the new ironwork and a bronze plaque listed the names of the founders, three figures stood watching the tide of people move into the market. They wore no uniforms, though two bore the compact marks of service: weathered belts, knives kept in scabbards polished not for display but for routine work; a chipped shoulder pauldron on one that had once held brass insignia. The third was younger, lean and quick-eyed, and the cut of her coat was modern—practical lines, many pockets stitched inside for things a woman in the market might need and no one else would ask about. Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -U...

    Mara, who had seen too many men buy security and sell their consciences, said it plainly one evening as they watched the last light leave the harbor. "They want to make the city beg for guards and then sell them those guards at a price." She spat the words as if they were sour wine. "They want the Coalition to expand."

    The fog came in again the next morning, soft as memory. Lysa stood at the edge of the pier, a coin in her pocket, and watched a gull wheel over the harbor. The gull dipped and lifted, tireless. She turned the coin over: two wings folded over an eye. She thought of the man with the cloaked smile and of the ledger's thin lines. She thought of choices—compromises—made in a hall that smelled of salt and old ink. The man set his satchel down, fingertips tapping

    Back in the Hall of Ties, the chest lay under watchful eyes. The Coalition demanded custody and custody they got—locked rooms, sealed wax, ledgers initialed. Yet the letter's existence was known. Factions whispered; some traders counted the ways the Assembly might exploit markets. At night, in the back alleys, men bartered favors for a glance at the Coalition's minutes.

    They negotiated for days, scribbling clauses about custody and observation. In the end, an agreement formed that was both simple and delicate: the Coalition, the Assembly, the Harbormaster, and representatives of parties with real interest would meet to examine the letter together; no single body would hold it alone. They would appoint a neutral custodian—a woman named Vero, who had been a bookseller for twenty years and who smelled of paper and ink. She would keep the chest sealed save for the examination. The Silver Strand tightened manifests and demanded escorts

    "Those who hold influence there," Halvar said. "Whoever profits from chaos."

    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."

    Mara shrugged, folding her arms like a shield. "We did what was necessary. Don't call us saints."