The first thing Marron saw was rubble.
Not the peaceful settlent she’d imagined. Not the thriving community Alexander’s letters had described.
Rubble.
Stone foundations half-built. Wood fras standing skeletal against the sky. Ash stains on the ground where fires had burned—controlled fires, cooking fires, but the sight of ash still made her chest tighten.
It looked like adowbrook Commons had looked in those first terrible days after the dungeon break. Before people had started rebuilding. When everything was just... broken.
Her cart stopped moving. She hadn’t consciously decided to stop—her hands just froze on the handle.
"Marron?" Mokko’s voice was gentle. "You okay?"
"I—" She swallowed hard. "It looks like ho. After the break. Before we fixed things."
Millie’s ears flattened slightly, sympathetic. "They’re rebuilding. Look—those fras are new construction, not destruction. This isn’t aftermath. It’s beginning."
Marron forced herself to look more carefully.
Millie was right.
The rubble wasn’t random—it was organized. Piles of sorted stone, stacks of lumber, cleared areas marked with stakes and string showing where new buildings would go. This wasn’t the chaos of disaster. This was the organized chaos of construction.
And there were people working.
No—not people.
Mimics.
Marron had seen them in the dungeon, of course. Had served them soup, had watched them eat with cautious wonder. But seeing them here, in daylight, going about daily life—it was different.
Most of them looked human. Almost human.
They wore simple work clothes—tunics, trousers, sturdy boots. They carried tools, moved lumber, mixed mortar. From a distance, you might not notice anything wrong.
But up close...
Their forms flickered occasionally. Just for a mont. A hand would have too many joints before snapping back to normal human configuration. Teeth would be slightly too long when they spoke, then correct themselves. Eyes would be the wrong color for just a heartbeat before stabilizing.
It wasn’t constant—these mimics had much better control than the ones in the dungeon. But it was there. A reminder of what they really were beneath the human shapes they wore.
One of the mimics—a woman-shaped form with dark hair and a carpenter’s apron—looked up from where she was asuring timber. Her eyes widened.
"It’s Miss Louvel," she said, her voice carrying across the construction site. The words ca out reverent, almost awed. "Soone get Alexander. Tell him she’s here."
Work stopped.
All across the clearing, mimics set down their tools and turned to look.
Marron felt suddenly very exposed. Very human. Very aware that she was standing in a settlent of creatures that could, theoretically, kill her and take her shape if they wanted to.
But the looks on their faces weren’t threatening.
They were... hopeful. Grateful. Almost shy.
"You ca back," one of them said—a mimic whose form looked like a young man, though his proportions were slightly off, arms a bit too long. "We didn’t think—we hoped, but we didn’t think you’d actually co back."
"Of course she ca back," another mimic said—this one maintaining an elderly woman’s shape with remarkable stability. "She’s the soup lady. She keeps her word."
The soup lady. Marron almost laughed despite her nervousness. After everything—earning her Guild certification, finding Legendary Tools, traveling across Savoria—to these mimics, she was still just "the soup lady."
Sohow, that made her feel better.
"I’m looking for Alexander," she said, her voice steadier than she felt. "Lieutenant Alexander. He wrote to about—"
"I’m here."
The crowd parted.
Alexander walked through, and Marron felt a jolt of recognition mixed with surprise.
He looked... better. More solid. In the dungeon, his human form had been rough around the edges—face a little too smooth, movents slightly uncanny. Now, he looked almost completely human. His features were defined and consistent. His movents were natural. His eyes—warm brown instead of the flat black of a mimic’s true form—showed genuine emotion.
He’d grown. Evolved. Whatever the mimics called it when they beca more stable, more themselves—Alexander had done it.
"Marron," he said, and smiled. A real smile, with proper human teeth and everything. "You actually ca."
"You asked to." She managed a smile back. "And you said there might be a Legendary Tool. I’m not going to ignore that."
"Fair enough." Alexander’s gaze moved to Millie, Mokko, and Lucy. "And you brought companions. Good."
"This is Millie," Marron said, gesturing. "Certified chef from Luria. And you rember Mokko and Lucy."
"I do." Alexander nodded respectfully to each of them. "Welco to New Brookvale. It’s not much yet, but—" He gestured to the construction around them. "—we’re building. Slowly."
"What happened?" Marron asked, looking at the rubble, the half-finished structures. "Your letters said things were going well."
"They are. This is progress." Alexander’s voice was firm but tired. "What you’re seeing isn’t destruction—it’s construction. We arrived here six weeks ago with nothing but the clothes on our backs and whatever we could carry. Everything you see—every foundation, every fra, every cleared space—that’s us building from nothing."
He started walking, gesturing for them to follow. "Co. I’ll show you around. And then I’ll show you what we found."
They walked through the settlent—if it could be called that yet. It was more like a construction site that happened to have people living in it.
"We have about forty mimics here now," Alexander explained as they walked. "More arrive every week. Refugees from places where they were hunted, or where they were hiding underground and heard there was a safe place to go."
He pointed to a large tent near the center of the clearing. "That’s our communal space. Dining area, eting hall, everything important until we can build proper structures. We eat together every evening—your idea, actually. The communal als. They’ve beco central to our culture here."
Marron felt a unexpected warmth in her chest. "They’re working?"
"Better than I could have imagined. Eating together, sharing food, arguing about seasoning—" Alexander smiled slightly. "—it makes us feel like a community instead of just a group of refugees hiding in the woods."
They passed several mimics who nodded respectfully to Marron as she went by. One—maintaining the form of a young woman with flour on her hands—actually bowed slightly.
"They rember you," Alexander said. "The ones from the dungeon. They talk about you like you’re so kind of saint. ’The human who fed us.’ ’The soup lady who treated us like people.’ It’s beco part of our founding story."
"I just made soup," Marron said, embarrassed.
"You made soup for monsters everyone else wanted to kill. That’s not ’just’ anything."
They reached a partially constructed building—four walls and part of a roof, clearly ant to be soone’s ho eventually. Alexander led them inside, where the space was temporarily set up as a storage area.
"This is where we keep the artifacts from the excavation," he said. "Most of it is mundane—pottery, tools, remnants of whoever lived here before. But there’s one piece—"
He walked to a cloth-covered object in the corner and carefully pulled the fabric away.
There, sitting on a wooden crate, was the ladle.
Marron’s breath caught.
It was exactly as Alexander had described: large, made of silver-white tal that didn’t tarnish. The handle was wrapped in preserved leather that should have rotted centuries ago but looked supple and warm. The bowl was deep and perfectly ford.
And along the interior of the bowl, symbols were etched—strange, flowing script that seed to shift slightly when Marron looked at it, like it couldn’t quite decide what language it wanted to be.
She stepped closer, her hand reaching out almost unconsciously.
"Can I—?"
"Please," Alexander said. "That’s why you’re here."
Marron’s fingers touched the handle.
The ladle was warm.
Not hot—just warm, like it had been sitting in sunshine or held by friendly hands. The leather wrapping felt soft, comfortable, like it had been made specifically for her grip.
She lifted it carefully.
It was lighter than it should be for its size. Perfectly balanced. The weight distributed so naturally that holding it felt effortless.
Marron turned it over, examining the symbols. They were definitely moving now—shifting, flowing, trying to resolve into sothing readable.
But they weren’t quite there yet.
"Can you read them?" Alexander asked.
"Not yet. But—" Marron squinted at the symbols. "—I think they’re trying to tell sothing. Like they want to be read, but I need to... understand sothing first."
She thought about the copper pot. How its inscription had looked like gibberish until she’d proven herself through a week of patient testing.
Maybe this was the sa. Maybe the ladle needed to know she was worthy before it would reveal itself.
"The mimics have stories about this," Alexander said. "Keeper—the one who found it—he’s been telling them every evening. He says it’s called ’the Generous Ladle.’ That it was made by a master craftsperson who believed everyone deserved to eat well, regardless of their station or wealth."
"What’s it supposed to do?"
"According to the stories? It serves the perfect portion for each person’s need. Not what they want—what they actually need. Soone who’s starving gets more. Soone who’s eaten enough gets less. It understands hunger on a deeper level than just physical emptiness."
Marron felt sothing click in her chest.
A ladle that understood need.
A pot that understood patience.
A cart that understood care.
Three tools, three aspects of cooking, three lessons about feeding people properly.
"I need to test it," she said.
"I was hoping you’d say that." Alexander smiled. "Keeper wants to et you. And the rest of the community—they’d love to see you cook again. We have a communal dinner every evening. Maybe tonight, you could—"
"Cook for everyone using the ladle," Marron finished. "Yes. That’s perfect."
She looked at the ladle again, feeling its warmth, its weight, its potential.
Three Legendary Tools, she thought. Or at least, maybe three. I won’t know for sure until I use it.
But sothing in her gut—that sa instinct that had told her the copper pot was special, that had guided her through the mimic dungeon, that had helped her earn her certification—that instinct was saying yes.
This is it. This is what you ca for.
"All right," she said, turning to Alexander with determination. "Let’s et Keeper. Let’s hear the stories. And tonight—" She held up the ladle. "—let’s see what this thing can really do."
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