Luria slled different after the dungeon.
Marron noticed it the mont she crossed the threshold back into the city proper. Wet stone. Cook smoke. Old wood. Life continuing without ceremony. The noise ca back in layers—footsteps, distant voices, a cart rattling over cobbles—but none of it pressed at her the way it once had.
She walked slowly.
Her body felt tired in an honest way. Not drained. Not overextended. Just used.
The Food Cart rolled beside her, its wheels quieter than she rembered. The wood looked duller in daylight, the grain less luminous, but it moved easily, responding to her hands without hesitation.
"You're still you," she murmured, adjusting her grip.
The Cart did not answer. It did not need to.
By the ti she reached the inn, the sky had shifted toward evening. Clouds hung low but dry, the rain finally spent. She guided the Cart into its usual place and secured it, checking the wheels out of habit. Everything held.
Inside, the air was warm.
Aldric wasn't in the common room. That, too, felt right. This wasn't a mont for docuntation or explanation. There would be ti for that later.
Marron climbed the stairs to her room and closed the door behind her.
The quiet inside was different from the dungeon's silence. Softer. Lived-in. Lucy hovered in her jar near the window, glow brightening when Marron entered.
"Hey," Marron said quietly.
Lucy drifted closer, tendrils unfurling, curious but calm.
Marron set her pack down and stood still for a mont, feeling the weight leave her shoulders. Then she turned toward the bathing room.
The tub was already there, as it always was. Simple stone, deep enough to subrge fully. She filled it slowly, listening to the water strike the basin, watching steam begin to rise.
She undressed without hurry.
Every bruise made itself known as the cool air touched her skin. Hips sore from old training falls. Shoulders tight. Hands rough and scraped. She cataloged it without judgnt.
Then she stepped into the water.
Heat closed around her imdiately.
She exhaled, long and slow, and lowered herself until the water reached her shoulders. Her hair floated loose around her. The ache in her joints softened. The low, persistent tension she'd been carrying since the dungeon began finally eased.
She leaned her head back against the stone rim and closed her eyes.
For the first ti in days, nothing was being asked of her.
She washed thodically. Dirt from the dungeon darkened the water slightly. Grain dust. Ash. Sweat. She scrubbed her hands carefully, working grit from beneath her nails, tracing the small cuts that had already begun to heal.
When she washed her arms, she paused.
The absence was noticeable here too.
No quiet sense of alignnt. No subtle correction of motion. Just her hands, her skin, the simple chanics of cleaning.
She smiled faintly.
"That's okay," she said to no one.
She subrged fully, letting the water cover her head, her ears, her thoughts. For a few seconds, the world narrowed to warmth and pressure and breath held.
When she surfaced again, she felt lighter.
Not restored to who she had been before Luria. Not returned to so earlier version of herself.
Reset.
The kind of reset that ca from shedding accumulation rather than erasing mory.
She finished bathing and drained the tub. As the water receded, she felt sothing settle into place—not magic, not system feedback, just internal alignnt.
She dried off and dressed in clean clothes. Simple ones. Soft. She wrapped her hair loosely and sat on the edge of the bed for a mont, grounding herself in the feel of fabric and floor.
Lucy drifted closer, glowing a steady teal.
"I'm okay," Marron told her. "Really."
Lucy pulsed gently, satisfied.
Marron lay back on the bed and stared at the ceiling.
She felt… herself.
Not sharper. Not weaker.
Just Marron.
The dungeon hadn't taken anything essential from her. It had stripped away noise. It had returned responsibility to her hands and attention to her body.
Outside, Luria continued on. Sowhere, people were cooking dinner. Sowhere, tools were being used as tools. Sowhere, Aldric would notice the difference and insist on recording it.
That could wait.
For now, Marron closed her eyes and let the day end.
She slept deeply, without dreams, and when she woke later, the sense of reset remained—quiet, steady, and real.
Marron woke hungry.
Not the hollow, distant hunger of the dungeon, but the familiar kind that settled low in her stomach and asked, plainly, to be fed.
She lay still for a mont, listening to the inn breathe around her. Footsteps below. A door opening and closing. Soone laughing softly, then moving on. Life continuing at a reasonable pace.
Her hands felt steady.
That was new.
She sat up, stretched once, and stood. Lucy hovered nearby, glow brightening as Marron moved. The Food Cart waited outside, but she didn't reach for it yet.
"Later," she murmured. "This one's just for us."
She went downstairs to the small kitchen she was allowed to use when it wasn't busy. The space was plain—iron stove, scarred counter, a few mismatched pans hanging from hooks. Nothing humd. Nothing waited.
She gathered what she needed herself.
Rice first. Already cooked from the night before, cooled and slightly dry. Good for frying. She loosened the grains by hand, breaking up clumps gently, feeling their texture.
Eggs next. Fresh. She cracked them cleanly into a bowl, shells set aside without fragnts slipping in. She whisked with a fork, slow and even, until the yolks and whites ca together into a smooth yellow whole.
Onion. Diced fine. She took her ti with the knife—not the Blade, just steel and balance and care. The pieces weren't identical. They didn't need to be.
She heated the pan.
This was the mont she noticed it most.
No quiet assurance. No sense of now. Just heat rising gradually, oil thinning as it ward, the faint shimr that told her it was ready.
She breathed out and trusted herself.
Onion first. The sizzle was imdiate but not violent. She stirred, listening. Adjusted the heat down a fraction when the sound sharpened too quickly. Added rice, spreading it evenly, pressing lightly to let it catch without burning.
She seasoned by sll and instinct. Salt. A touch of sweetness. Ketchup folded in carefully, staining the rice a warm red.
She tasted.
Adjusted.
When she pushed the rice to one side of the pan, she felt her throat tighten unexpectedly.
It was right.
Not because sothing ensured it.
Because she had.
She slid the rice onto a plate and returned the pan to the heat. A little more oil. Swirl. Eggs in.
She tilted the pan, guiding the liquid into a thin, even layer. When the edges began to set, she stirred gently, then stopped. Let it finish softly. No browning. No rushing.
She folded the olet over the rice with care, hands steady, breath held just long enough to keep the shape intact.
It settled perfectly.
She stood there for a mont, spatula hovering uselessly in her hand.
Her vision blurred.
"Oh," she whispered, voice catching. "Oh."
She set the spatula down and pressed her fingers lightly to the counter. Tears welled, hot and sudden, and she laughed under her breath, trying to blink them back.
"Don't," she muttered to herself. "Don't cry all over it. You worked too hard for that."
The kitchen door creaked.
"Marron?" Mokko's deep voice rumbled gently. "I slled sothing good."
She turned, eyes bright and wet, and laughed again, breath hitching. "You did. Co here. Please."
He stepped in carefully, ducking his head, and froze when he saw her face.
"Oh," he said, imdiately alard. "Did sothing go wrong?"
"No," she said quickly, wiping at her eyes with the heel of her hand. "No, it's— it's perfect. That's the problem."
Lucy drifted in behind him, curious, tendrils rippling. She floated closer to the counter, peering at the plate.
Marron plated two more portions. One for Mokko, generous and warm. One smaller, set in a shallow bowl for Lucy, the rice loosened slightly so she could absorb it comfortably.
She carried the plates to the table and set them down.
"It's olet rice," she said. "From Earth. Comfort food."
She swallowed hard. "It's the first thing I've cooked since… since the tools went quiet."
Mokko set his plate down carefully and opened his arms without asking.
Marron stepped into them imdiately.
His hug was warm and solid, careful not to crush, one large paw resting between her shoulder blades. She pressed her face briefly against his chest fur and let the tears co properly this ti.
Lucy drifted closer and wrapped two cool, gentle tendrils around Marron's arm and waist, pulsing softly in concern.
"I did it," Marron said, voice muffled and shaking. "I really did it. It's right. And there was no voice. No correction. No help."
Mokko's grip tightened just a little. "Of course you did," he said simply. "You've always known how. The tools just made it louder."
She laughed weakly. "It doesn't feel louder. It feels… quiet. Like I'm standing on my own feet for the first ti."
"That's because you are," he said.
Lucy pulsed warmly, approving.
They sat together at the table.
Mokko ate slowly, savoring each bite. Lucy absorbed her portion happily, glow brightening with each mouthful. Marron took her own plate last, still sniffing, still smiling through tears.
The olet was soft. The rice balanced. Nothing burned. Nothing spilled.
It wasn't perfect because it was flawless.
It was perfect because it was hers.
She wiped her eyes one last ti and took another bite.
"I think," she said quietly, "I'm going to be okay."
Mokko nodded. Lucy pulsed.
And the food stayed warm as they ate together, the kitchen filled with nothing more extraordinary than care, presence, and a al made by hand.
Reviews
All reviews (0)