The morning of the Council’s arrival was cold and clear. Marron stood in the center of Marcus Vell’s kitchen, her back to the Wanderer’s Food Cart. The tools inside were quiet, but she could feel their focused energy—a low hum of readiness. Lucy, in her jar on the counter, glowed a steady, attentive blue.
Aldric sat at a small table, a fresh page open in his ledger. "They’ll be here at noon," he said, not looking up from his pen. "Three mbers. They want to see everything. The cooking, the records, the Crock’s autonomy clause in action."
"I know," Marron said. She ran a hand over the cool marble of the counter. The stakes were simple: pass this evaluation, keep her tools. Fail, lose everything.
Marcus entered, carrying a wooden crate. "The ingredients you requested. Fresh river sli, wild chanterelles, and the sea-salt from the eastern dunes." He set the crate down. "The Council respects results. Show them the tools as partners, not just power."
Marron nodded. That was the plan. She opened the crate. The sli within was a translucent green, quivering gently. Lucy’s glow brightened at the sight of it, a flicker of recognition for a creature of her own kind, destined for a different purpose.
Course One: Mushroom Consommé
Goal: Demonstrate temperature control and portion precision.
Marron filled the Eternal Copper Pot with water and placed it on the heat. As the water began to warm, she felt the Pot’s familiar pulse—an offer to take over the temperature completely.
She hesitated, her hand on the rim. Four months ago, she would have accepted imdiately. Now she knew better.
"Not yet," she murmured. She watched the water herself, judging the mont when the first tiny bubbles ford at the bottom. Only then did she accept the Pot’s help, letting it stabilize at exactly 92°C.
It wasn’t that she needed to prove she could do it alone. It was that the Pot wanted to be *invited* to help, not expected to perform.
The difference was subtle. The Council mbers might not even notice. But the Pot humd with a warmth that felt like gratitude.
The result was a clear and aromatic consommé. Each cup was at the sa temperature and volu. Marron recorded the data in the ledger: Copper Pot – stable at 92°C. Ladle – precise 120ml portions.
Course Two: Fernted Sli-Pâté
Goal: Activate the Ferntation Crock and demonstrate Tool Autonomy.
Marron placed the river sli into the Ferntation Crock. She added Marcus’s salt and a pinch of lavender. The Crock’s amber glaze brightened, and a deep, warm pulse thrumd through the ceramic. The process began, the transformation happening seamlessly beneath the lid.
She didn’t have to worry about ti or temperature. She only had to observe. Again, that quiet trust took over. Her job wasn’t to force the outco, but to be present for it.
As Marron reached for the lid, the glow shifted. A distinct red pulse ran around the Crock’s rim.
The kitchen went cold. The other tools fell silent—no hum from the Cart, no warmth from the Pot. Even Lucy stopped glowing.
Marron’s heart hamred. A refusal. In front of the Council. Edmund Erwell’s pen was already moving across his notebook.
She forced herself to breathe, to *listen* instead of panic. The red pulse wasn’t angry—it was firm. Protective.
She looked at Lucy, pressed against the glass of her jar, tendrils reaching toward the Crock. Of course.
"It won’t process the sli while Lucy is this close," Marron said, her voice steadier than she felt. "It recognizes her as a companion. Clause Four is working exactly as intended."
She carefully moved Lucy’s jar to the far shelf. The blue sli’s glow dimd with what looked like disappointnt, but also... understanding?
The Crock’s red pulse faded. The amber glow returned. The other tools resud their quiet hum.
Edmund Erwell’s pen paused. Then continued writing. Marron couldn’t read his expression.
Result: Pâté successfully made. Crock exercised autonomy. Marron recorded the event, noting the simplicity of the non-verbal communication.
Course Three: Caral Tart
Goal: Showcase the Precision Blade’s control.
Marron lted sugar in the Copper Pot for the caral. The pot held the heat at the perfect stage, the sugar turning a deep amber without a mont of hesitation or risk of burning. She poured it into pre-baked tart shells, her movents economical and sure.
Marron unsheathed the Precision Blade. With the safety latch engaged, she placed the candied orange on the board.
The Blade wanted to cut. She could feel its eagerness, the way it pulled toward perfect uniformity. The sa drive that had broken Theo, that had killed the Perfection Slicer’s wielders centuries ago.
Her hand tightened on the handle. "Not like that," she whispered.
The Blade stilled. Then, carefully—almost questioningly—it suggested a different angle. Not perfect uniformity. Just a clean cut that served the dish.
She agreed. The blade moved through the orange in a single, fluid motion.
As the cut completed, scarlet light flashed along the edge—brighter than before. For half a heartbeat, Marron felt sothing watching from the flash: cold, patient, interested.
Then the Blade’s handle ward in her grip, a fierce reassurance. *I am not my sibling. I choose differently.*
The scarlet faded. Marron’s hands were shaking slightly as she sheathed the Blade.
Edmund Erwell was staring at her. "That light," he said. "The red. I’ve seen it in the records. That’s—"
"Resonance," Marron said. "From the seventh tool. We note it every ti. It doesn’t control the Blade. The Blade chooses to resist it."
"Every ti?" Edmund’s voice was sharp. "How often does this happen?"
Aldric turned pages in the ledger, showing weeks of entries. "Seventeen tis in four months. Always brief. Always controlled. The Blade has never wavered."
Edmund’s jaw tightened. He wrote for a long ti.
Result: A perfectly sliced garnish, demonstrating precision without obsessive uniformity. The scarlet glint was noted in the ledger as an "observed resonance, safely controlled."
The Council mbers arrived precisely at noon: Edmund Erwell, stern and observant; Lady Mirabelle Harrow, who recorded everything; and Sir Caldus Grieve, who watched with open curiosity.
They tasted the consommé. Lady Mirabelle noted the perfect temperature. They ate the pâté. Sir Caldus praised the flavor and the clear demonstration of the Crock’s autonomy. They finished with the tart. Edmund’s eyes lingered on the Precision Blade, but he made no comnt beyond a note in his book.
After the al, Aldric presented the ledger. "Full docuntation of every step," he said. "The tools perford within all agreed paraters."
Edmund closed his notebook. The silence stretched.
"You have shown control," he said finally. "And the tools... they are not wielding you. Not yet."
*Not yet.* The words hung in the air like smoke.
"The Council grants a six-month extension," Edmund continued. "But I am adding additional conditions. The Ferntation Crock may only be accessed during scheduled sessions. You must report any increase in the frequency or intensity of the scarlet resonance. And—" he looked at Marcus Vell, "—you will sign an agreent that if the tools show signs of corruption, you will surrender ownership of the Crock imdiately."
Marcus’s hand tightened on his cane. "Agreed."
Edmund turned back to Marron. "The line between partnership and possession is thin. The tools may respect you now. But I have seen respect turn to obsession. I have seen wielders believe they were in control until the mont they weren’t."
He stood, gathering his papers. "Do not seek other tools. Do not let your guard down. And rember: seventeen docunted cases of corruption. You would be the eighteenth."
As the Council left, Marron felt the Cart settle against her back. Its weight was heavier than before—not in rebellion, but in shared burden.
They had passed. But barely.
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