Marron woke the next morning and imdiately started getting dressed to return to The Silver Cleaver.
Then she stopped, one arm in her jacket sleeve, and really thought about it.
Petra had said tomorrow. But showing up exactly twenty-four hours after their first awkward encounter felt... desperate. Pushy. Like she was hovering, waiting to pounce the mont Petra was willing to engage.
Build trust before revealing too much, Jenny had said.
Hard to build trust when you were being aggressively eager.
Marron finished putting on her jacket, then took it off again. She wasn’t going to The Silver Cleaver today. Not yet. Give Petra space. Give her ti to think without feeling pressured. Give Marron herself ti to figure out a better approach than showing up at dawn like an obsessive collector.
"Smart choice," Mokko said from his corner. He’d been watching her internal debate with patient amusent.
"I’m spiraling," Marron admitted. "Getting too focused on one thing. I need to... reset. Think about sothing else for a while."
"Like what?"
Marron looked around her apartnt—at the Legendary Tools carefully arranged, at her Guild certification hanging on the wall, at the evidence of the life she’d built in Luria over the past few months.
When was the last ti I just cooked sothing just because?
She found herself missing those days back in adowbrook when she experinted with food, trying to decide what to sell in Whetvale. There was no hard-pressed deadline or lesson on the horizon, just...fun.
Marron thought about her food cart and felt guilty. She hadn’t thought about it like a business in...months. It was just a tool she happened to own.
"I haven’t worked the cart in weeks," Marron realized. "Haven’t made money. Haven’t thought about what to sell or how to improve my offerings. I’ve been so focused on decree crises and Edmund Erwell and finding Legendary Tools that I forgot I’m supposed to be a chef running a business."
"You’ve been busy," Mokko pointed out.
"I’ve been distracted," Marron corrected. "And my coin purse is getting light. I need to think about actual cooking again. About what people want to eat. About what I want to make." She stood decisively. "I’m going shopping. For inspiration. For ingredients. For whatever catches my attention and makes want to cook."
"Just like that?"
"Just like that." Marron grabbed her shopping basket. "Co on. Let’s go see what Luria has to offer when I’m not in crisis mode."
The mid-district comrcial street was busy with mid-morning traffic—people shopping for household needs, running errands, grabbing quick als between work shifts. Marron walked slowly, letting herself notice things she usually rushed past.
A bakery with golden-brown loaves in the window. A fabric shop with bolts of dyed cloth in jewel tones. A tea house where people sat in comfortable chairs, reading and talking. A bookshop with hand-lettered signs advertising new releases.
Normal life. Regular comrce. The kind of everyday existence she’d been too busy to appreciate lately.
Halfway down the street, tucked between a cobbler and a stationer, was a shop Marron had never noticed before. The sign above the door read "KIVA’S COMFORT HOUSE" in cheerful letters, and through the window she could see shelves packed with colorful packages.
Snacks. It was a snack shop.
Marron’s curiosity piqued. She’d bought ingredients from markets and grocers, eaten at restaurants and food carts, but she’d never really explored what Savorians ate for casual snacking. What did people here grab when they wanted sothing quick and satisfying between als?
"I’m going in," she announced to Mokko.
"I assud," he said, following her through the door.
The interior of Kiva’s Comfort House was exactly what the na promised—warm, inviting, packed with foods designed for comfort and convenience. Shelves lined the walls, organized by type, each section carefully labeled.
SWEET BITES - candies, dried fruits, honeyed nuts
SAVORY CRUNCH - crackers, chips, spiced seeds
SOFT COMFORTS - cakes, pastries, filled buns
TRAVELER’S RATIONS - preserved foods, energy bars, dried ats
A woman behind the counter—presumably Kiva—looked up from where she was restocking a shelf. She was maybe fifty, with laugh lines and flour permanently embedded under her fingernails.
"Welco! Looking for anything specific, or just browsing?"
"Browsing," Marron said. "And looking for inspiration. I run a food cart, and I’m trying to figure out what to offer next."
"Oh, a fellow food person!" Kiva’s whole deanor brightened. "Then you definitely need the full tour. Co on, let show you what sells."
She led Marron through the shop with the enthusiasm of soone who genuinely loved what she sold.
"Sweet bites are always popular," Kiva said, gesturing at a shelf packed with options. "See these?" She held up a small package of what looked like caralized nuts. "Honey-roasted sunseeds with warmroot spice. They’re addictive—people buy them by the pound. And these—" She grabbed another package. "Dried moonberries dusted with sugar. They’re tart, then sweet, then tart again. Kids love them."
Marron examined the packages. The presentation was simple but appealing—clear wrapping so you could see the product, hand-tied with ribbon, small labels listing ingredients. Nothing fancy, but trustworthy.
"What about savory?" Marron asked.
"Oh, savory is where it gets interesting." Kiva moved to the next section. "This is my best-seller—" She held up a bag of sothing that looked like thick, irregular chips. "Rootknot crisps. You slice rootknots paper-thin, fry them until they’re crispy, season with salt and whatever else strikes your fancy. These are salt and vinegar, but I also do smokesalt, herb blend, and spicy pepper."
"Potato chips," Marron said without thinking.
"Potato what now?"
"Nothing. Sorry. They just remind of sothing from... far away." Marron took the bag, examining it. The crisps were golden-brown, thin enough to be nearly translucent, curled at the edges from frying. They looked perfect.
"Try one," Kiva offered. "I can’t sell food without people tasting first. That’s just bad business."
Marron opened the bag and tried a crisp. It shattered beautifully between her teeth—crispy, salty, with that distinctive vinegar tang that made you imdiately want another one. Exactly like salt and vinegar potato chips from Earth, but made with Savoria’s rootknot vegetable.
"These are incredible," Marron said honestly.
"I know," Kiva said with a grin. "I’ve been making them for fifteen years. Started just selling to neighbors, now I’ve got regular custors from three districts. The key is slicing them thin enough and frying at the right temperature. Too hot and they burn, too cool and they’re greasy."
Marron made a ntal note. Rootknot crisps. Simple, crowd-pleasing, profitable if done right. She could make those from her cart with a portable fryer setup.
"What else?" she asked.
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