The next morning ca too fast.
Marron woke to sunlight the color of ripe peaches streaming through the enchanted windows. Her hands were stiff from sketching half the night, and her notebook lay open on the floor, pages covered in bowl shapes and plating ideas.
She’d dread about soup. Not the anxious kind of dream where everything went wrong—but the kind where she was making it for soone who mattered. Her mother, maybe. Or herself.
Mokko was already awake, doing stretches by the window. "Big day," he said. "You ready?"
Was she? Marron wasn’t sure. But she was more ready than yesterday, and that felt like progress.
"Ready enough," she said.
By the ti she arrived at the Culinary Guild, the whole building buzzed like a hive about to swarm.
Banners unfurled over the marble entrance in shimring script: "Guild Exhibition: Pair Challenge – A Fusion of Heart and Presentation."
Inside, the atrium had been transford. Rows of golden counters glead under enchanted chandeliers. Holo-screens projected live feeds of kitchens, spices, and faces. The sll of roasted at and caralized sugar hung thick in the air.
Marron felt her pulse quicken. Not with fear—or not only fear. With sothing else. Anticipation, maybe. The feeling of standing at the edge of sothing that mattered.
Tessa t her at the doorway, hair tied up with a strip of violet silk and eyes gleaming with excitent. "You’re late," they said, thrusting a white apron into her hands. "We got paired. Officially."
"Paired?" Marron blinked. "You an—"
"The Team Challenge. Every new entrant gets matched with a trainee to test adaptability." Tessa’s grin widened. "Guess soone up there wants to see if rustic and modern can play nice."
Marron groaned softly. "You’re the modern part, aren’t you?"
Tessa winked. "And you’re the heart. Let’s make sothing they’ll rember."
As they walked to their station, Marron noticed the other competitors. They moved with the confidence of people who’d been performing their whole lives—knives spinning, ingredients floating, every gesture calculated for effect.
Her stomach tightened. These weren’t people who’d forgotten how to care. These were people who’d never stopped.
"Hey," Tessa said quietly, catching her expression. "Don’t do that. Don’t compare yourself to them."
"Hard not to."
"Well, try. Because they’re good at spectacle, sure. But you’re good at sothing they’ve never learned."
"What’s that?"
"Cooking like it matters."
The words settled in Marron’s chest, warm and unexpected. She looked at Tessa, then nodded. "Okay. Let’s do this."
Their station stood near the edge of the exhibition hall—a long marble table frad by crystalline burners. Above them, a translucent display shimred to life:
The: Local Flair, Foreign Heart.
Ti: 90 minutes.
Audience Voting: Enabled.
The crowd lining the upper balconies cheered as the clock started counting down.
Marron exhaled slowly, rolling her shoulders. "Okay. Lurian ingredients, Whetvale soul. What do we have?"
Tessa scanned the ingredient cart with a flick of their wrist, glyphs lighting up each item. "City-grown pearl rice—grains like little moons. Sun-crusted tomatoes, smoked shellfish still in their shells, and..." They paused, lifting a small sh bag. "Imported Whetvale shallots."
Marron’s breath caught. She took the bag, feeling the weight of the bulbs inside. Their papery skins were still dusted with the red soil of ho—the sa soil that had stained her mother’s apron, her own hands, every cutting board in the diner.
For a mont, she wasn’t in Luria. She was twelve years old, learning to dice shallots at the kitchen counter while her mother humd old songs. The sll of them caralizing in butter. The way they turned sweet and golden if you just had patience.
"Marron?" Tessa’s voice was gentle. "You good?"
She blinked, coming back to herself. "Yeah. Sorry. I just..." She set the bag down carefully. "We’ll make a bisque. Rich, layered. Sothing that tastes like comfort but looks like a celebration."
Tessa smiled. "Now you’re talking like a Guild chef."
They divided the work naturally. Marron started with the shallots, peeling them with the ease of muscle mory. The first slice released that sharp-sweet sll, and she felt sothing in her chest unlock. This wasn’t just cooking. This was coming ho to herself.
She chopped slowly, deliberately. Not because she had to, but because she wanted to. Because every piece mattered.
Tessa, anwhile, prepped the shellfish—removing them from their shells with quick, practiced movents. "Tell about Whetvale," they said as they worked. "What’s it like?"
"Small," Marron said. "Quiet. The kind of place where everyone knows everyone, and nothing changes much year to year."
"Sounds boring."
"It was." Marron paused, considering. "But it was also... safe. You knew what to expect. You knew where you stood."
"Do you miss it?"
Did she? Marron had spent so long trying not to miss anything—not the diner, not her mother’s steady hands, not the version of herself who used to care about things. Missing hurt. So she’d stopped.
But now, with the sll of shallots in the air and the mory of ho in her hands, she let herself feel it. "Yeah," she said quietly. "I do."
Tessa nodded, not pushing. "Well, let’s put that into the bisque. Hosickness in a bowl."
Marron laughed softly. "That’s one way to describe it."
The cooking itself beca a ditation.
Marron heated butter in a wide pan, watching it foam and turn golden. She added the shallots first, stirring them slowly, letting them soften and release their sweetness. The kitchen filled with warmth.
Next ca the shellfish shells—roasted until they turned fragrant and bronze, their sll sharp and oceanic. She deglazed with white wine, the liquid flaring bright before settling into the pan, and then added stock. Slowly. Carefully. Letting each addition integrate before moving to the next.
This was the part she loved. Not the performance, not the presentation. Just the quiet alchemy of heat and ti and attention.
"You look different when you cook," Tessa observed, working on their tomato reduction nearby.
"Different how?"
"Like you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be."
Marron paused, ladle halfway to the pot. "I used to feel like that all the ti. Before..."
"Before what?"
"Before I got tired." She stirred, watching the broth swirl. "Cooking used to be the thing I loved most. And then it beca just... work. Sothing to survive. I stopped letting it an anything."
Tessa was quiet for a mont. Then: "What changed?"
Marron thought about the mimic dungeon. About Mokko’s steady presence. About Lucy’s cheerful bubbling. About the mont she’d decided to care again, even though it was terrifying.
"I rembered that so things are worth the risk," she said.
Tessa smiled. "Good. Because I think you’re about to make sothing really special."
Halfway through the challenge, Marron’s bisque simred—golden, thick, fragrant with the sea and the earth. She tasted it, adjusting the seasoning with a pinch of salt, a whisper of white pepper. Perfect.
Tessa had prepared the pearl rice separately, each grain tender but distinct, and their tomato reduction glowed like liquid sunset. "Okay," they said. "Now we combine. Your bisque as the base, my reduction folded through for color, and the rice to give it body."
They worked together, layering carefully. The bisque went into the bowl first, thick and creamy. Then Tessa drizzled the reduction in a slow spiral, creating a marbled gradient—sunrise captured in coral and cream.
"Now the rice," Marron said, spooning it carefully into the center. The grains caught the light like tiny pearls. She arranged them in a small mound, deliberate but natural.
Tessa stepped back, studying it. "It needs one more thing. The bridge between your world and mine."
They conjured a lattice of fine sugar strands, delicate as spun glass, and suspended it above each bowl. "When the steam rises," they explained, "it’ll lt through and release the scent. Showmanship—but with purpose."
Marron watched the sugar web shimr in the light. A month ago, she would have called this frivolous. A waste. But now she could see what Tessa saw: a way to guide the experience. To make the mont of first scent sothing magical.
"It’s beautiful," she said softly.
And ant it.
They plated six bowls, each one identical. Marron took her ti with the final touches—making sure the sugar lattice sat perfectly, the rice mound was centered, the colors balanced.
This wasn’t just about passing the test anymore. This was about proving to herself that she could care about sothing this much. That she could pour herself into the work and not lose herself in the process.
When the judges approached their station, Marron felt her heart hamring. But underneath the nervousness was sothing else. Pride. She was proud of what they’d made.
The head judge—a broad-shouldered elf with fingers stained in spice and ink—lifted his bowl. Steam rose through the sugar lattice, lting it in gentle streams. The scent of bisque and shellfish blood across the table.
He tasted once. Then again. Then he set down his spoon and looked at them both.
"An unusual balance," he said slowly. "The presentation is theatrical, but earned. The flavor is grounded, but elevated." He paused, studying Marron with sharp eyes. "Chef Louvel. Yesterday you gave us honesty without beauty. Today you’ve shown us that honesty can be beautiful. That’s growth."
Marron felt her throat tighten. "Thank you."
"Don’t thank yet." The judge’s expression turned serious. "You’ll advance to the next round. But understand: what we’re asking of you is not to beco soone else. It’s to beco more fully yourself. Beauty without substance is empty. But substance without beauty is invisible. A true Guild chef masters both."
The bell chid, signaling the end of the event. The crowd applauded, the sound rolling through the atrium like thunder.
Marron felt Tessa’s hand squeeze her shoulder. "We did it," they said, grinning.
"We did." Marron looked at the empty bowls, at the faces in the crowd, at her own hands still dusted with rice flour and spice. And for the first ti in years, she let herself feel the full weight of the accomplishnt.
She’d done sothing that mattered.
And it hadn’t broken her.
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