Marron woke before dawn out of habit, not obligation.
For a brief second she expected to feel that old tension—the need to prepare for scrutiny, to anticipate requests before they were spoken—but it never arrived. The room was quiet. The apple tree outside brushed softly against the windowpane in the early breeze.
She lay there for a mont, listening.
Downstairs, faint movent. Soone stoking embers. A pot lid lifted and replaced.
The inn was waking at its own pace.
Marron rose, washed quickly, and tied her hair back. Lucy pulsed gently in her jar as if stretching. Mokko shifted and rolled onto his side with a low rumble.
"Kitchen?" he asked sleepily.
"Kitchen," she confird.
The air downstairs was cool but already fragrant. Ciel stood at the stove, sleeves rolled up as always, but without the tight focus of dinner service. She glanced at Marron.
"You're early."
"I like early," Marron replied.
Ciel nodded once toward a basket on the counter. "Then start with those. Breakfast bread."
The dough had already been mixed—dense, slightly sweet, studded with seeds. Marron divided it carefully into even portions and began shaping them into small rounds.
There was no rush.
No shouted orders.
Just the steady rhythm of hands working dough, the faint crackle of fire, and the slow brightening of morning through the windows.
As the bread baked, Marron found herself noticing small things she would have overlooked before. The way Ciel tested doneness by tapping the underside of a loaf and listening rather than relying solely on color. The way she rotated trays halfway through baking—not because the oven was faulty, but because heat moved unevenly and deserved attention.
Learning at a slow pace was nice.
It felt less like conquest and more like conversation.
Breakfast service was gentle compared to dinner. Farrs ca in pairs. An elderly couple shared a single loaf and tea. A traveling rchant ordered seconds of stew without embarrassnt.
Marron plated, refilled, adjusted seasoning. No one examined her food for magical resonance. No one whispered about legendary craftsmanship.
They just ate.
And smiled.
After the morning rush faded, Madam Lou appeared at the kitchen entrance.
"You are free for an hour," she said to Ciel. Then her amber eyes shifted to Marron. "Walk with ."
Marron wiped her hands and followed.
They stepped out the back door of the inn into a small courtyard she hadn't noticed before. It was enclosed by low stone walls and shaded by another apple tree, smaller than the one out front. A wooden table sat in the center, baskets resting upon it.
One basket held small, pale golden berries.
They were delicate—almost translucent, like drops of honey solidified into fruit.
"What are these?" Marron asked.
"Cloudberries," Madam Lou replied.
She picked one up and held it between two fingers. "Savoria grows them only in certain climates. They are temperantal. Difficult. Worth it."
Marron accepted one carefully and placed it on her tongue.
The flavor blood instantly.
Bright and tart at first, then softening into sothing sweet and airy. It reminded her of blueberry ringue—light yet indulgent, sweet without heaviness. The texture dissolved almost too quickly, leaving a lingering perfu that teased the edges of her senses.
Her eyes widened.
"Oh."
Madam Lou smiled faintly. "Yes."
"They taste like… dessert already."
"Indeed. Which is why they cause small wars when harvest is poor."
Marron laughed softly.
"I would like you to learn our signature cloudberry compote," Madam Lou continued. "It is simple. And not simple."
"That's my favorite kind," Marron said.
They carried the basket back into the kitchen. Ciel raised an eyebrow but said nothing, stepping aside to give them space.
Madam Lou placed a wide, shallow pot on the stove.
"Low heat," she instructed. "Cloudberries do not appreciate aggression."
Marron nodded and adjusted the fla carefully.
They added the berries gently to the pot. No crushing. No force.
A small asure of sugar followed—not much.
"A compote must respect the fruit," Madam Lou said. "Not bury it."
Marron stirred slowly as the berries began to soften. They released juice gradually, turning the mixture a glowing amber-purple.
The scent was intoxicating.
Not overpowering.
Just enough to draw you closer.
"Too much heat," Madam Lou warned softly as Marron adjusted the fla. "You'll lose the brightness."
Marron lowered it again.
They stood together, watching the transformation.
It felt different from dungeon cooking.
There was no invisible lesson looming. No trial hidden in the process.
Just fruit, heat, and patience.
After several minutes, the compote thickened naturally. The berries had broken down partially but not entirely. Small pockets of whole fruit remained suspended in glossy syrup.
Madam Lou dipped a spoon and held it out.
Marron tasted.
The sweetness had deepened, but the tart edge remained sharp enough to keep it lively. The ringue-like lightness lingered at the back of her tongue, almost teasing.
"I see why people go crazy for this," she said quietly.
Madam Lou nodded.
Ciel, who had been pretending not to watch, stepped forward and reached for a ladle.
"Pancakes," she said simply.
Within minutes, batter was mixed. Thin rounds poured onto a flat griddle. The scent of browning edges filled the room.
Marron spread a spoonful of cloudberry compote onto one pancake, then placed another on top, sandwiching the filling between them.
The result looked familiar.
"Like dorayaki," she murmured.
Ciel tilted her head. "What?"
"An Earth thing," Marron said. "Sweet bean paste between pancakes."
Madam Lou's eyes glinted faintly. "All worlds arrive at comfort eventually."
Marron cut one in half.
The compote oozed slightly, catching the light.
She took a bite.
The pancake was soft and slightly chewy, the compote bright and luxurious. Together, they balanced perfectly—the warmth of the batter tempering the sharp sweetness of the fruit.
She closed her eyes briefly.
"Okay," she admitted. "I understand the wars."
Ciel snorted.
Madam Lou allowed herself a quiet chuckle.
They made several more, setting them aside for the afternoon guests.
As Marron cleaned the pot, she felt sothing settle inside her—not heavy, not urgent.
Just content.
"I used to think growth ant constant challenge," she said after a while.
Madam Lou glanced at her. "And now?"
Marron wiped her hands dry.
"Now I think growth can also an repetition. Refinent. Learning the sa thing until it becos part of you."
Madam Lou nodded slowly.
"Fast lessons carve deep lines," she said. "Slow lessons fill them in."
Marron smiled at that.
The rest of the day unfolded gently.
A few travelers stopped by specifically for the cloudberry pancakes. Marron watched their expressions as they took their first bite—eyes widening, shoulders relaxing.
Comfort didn't need spectacle.
That evening, when the inn quieted again, Marron stepped outside and sat beneath the large apple tree.
Lucy rested in her jar beside her. Mokko leaned against the trunk.
She looked up through the branches at the fading sky.
Learning at a slow pace was nice.
It felt less like survival.
More like living.
And as the scent of cloudberries lingered faintly on her fingertips, Marron realized Savoria still had so many flavors she hadn't tasted yet.
For once, she wasn't racing toward them.
She was willing to arrive slowly.
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