The kitchen hub in the Free Zone had never been this loud. Tables stretched across the open square, covered with whatever mismatched plates and bowls people could find. A big wooden sign hung crooked over the main counter:
**The mory Cookbook – Bring Your Before.**
Atlas stood near the back, arms crossed, watching the chaos unfold. After the stories from the new arrivals about normal lives—takeout nights, family dinners, even bad office potlucks—the Reasonables decided culture needed a physical form.
Not rules. Just recipes. Sothing people could share without it being forced down their throats.
Skritch had taken charge imdiately. The little goblin-like creature wore a paper hat that read "Tax Inspector of Flavor" and carried a small notepad.
"Ten percent deliciousness tithe!" he shouted at a woman stirring a pot. "Pay up or I declare this soup illegal!"
The woman laughed and flicked a spoonful at him. Skritch caught it mid-air and slurped it. His eyes widened. "Honesty effect detected. Strong batch."
Anyone who ate that soup started speaking their mind. Really speaking it. A burly ex-Holdout guard took one bite and imdiately told his wife that her singing voice sounded like a dying engine. She dumped the rest of the bowl on his head. The crowd roared.
Raphael approached next, carrying a massive pot of gray sludge. "This is my contribution," he said stiffly. "Nutritional gruel. Perfectly balanced. Used it for decades in the Order to maintain focus."
He ladled so onto a plate. The gruel imdiately ford neat little rows, like tiny soldiers. Then it started marching in formation toward the edge of the plate.
"Consu at 0800 hours," it seed to command in a faint, collective voice. "Digestion scheduled for 0930. No deviations."
Raphael stared at it, horrified. "This wasn’t supposed to happen."
Elara walked by, took one look, and snorted. "Even your food wants to control people, Raphael. Impressive."
She set down her own dish—stealth stew, she called it. Dark purple broth with floating herbs. "It’s supposed to be subtle. Assassin’s recipe. You eat it and no one notices you for an hour."
Three people tried it. Within minutes they were all dramatically whispering their secrets loud enough for the entire square to hear.
"I stole the last clean socks from the supply tent!" one man hissed theatrically, hands over his heart.
"I actually kind of like Skritch’s taxes!" another blurted.
Elara’s face went pale when a third person—herself, after she took a testing spoonful—turned straight to Atlas and whispered loudly,
"I keep thinking about that ti we almost kissed during the bridge collapse and I regret not doing it more than I regret anything."
The square went quiet for two seconds, then exploded with whoops and laughter. Elara looked like she wanted the ground to swallow her. Atlas felt heat crawl up his neck but couldn’t stop grinning.
"Stealth failed," he said.
Then Atlas brought out his contribution. Cheap ran. The kind from Earth, the stuff he’d survived on during late study nights and bad breakups.
He didn’t have the real thing, but the Amrit shards near the kitchen made it real enough. The noodles appeared steaming in cheap plastic bowls, slling exactly like mory.
People lined up fast.
A woman from the new arrivals took a bite and started laughing through sudden tears. "God, this tastes like my shitty apartnt after my divorce. I miss it so much."
An ex-Holdout guard ate so and suddenly sang a few lines of an old pop song in a terrible voice. "Never gonna give you up..." The words physically floated out of his mouth in little glowing notes before popping like bubbles.
Laughter spread. Real laughter. Not the nervous kind that ca after battles.
For twenty minutes, the square felt like sothing normal. Ex-Holdout people trading stories with locals about terrible fast food and worse cooking experints.
Soone started humming. Soone else joined in. Coherence in the hub ticked up a few points just from the shared ss.
Then the mory Amrit storm hit.
It started small. One bowl of pasta lifted off the table and flung itself at Skritch. He dodged, yelling, "Unauthorized flavor attack! This is a tithe violation!"
Aggressive puddings rolled across tables like gelatinous invaders. A three-layer cake in the center grew tiny frosting arms and proposed marriage to anyone who got close. "You complete ! Marry or I’ll crumble!"
Sir Baaington, the massive battle sheep, took one look at the situation and charged. He headbutted the cake, eating half of it in one bite. The cake kept proposing even while being chewed.
"Will you marry— glrk— eee—"
The food civil war lasted twelve glorious minutes. Flying noodles, marching gruel, whispering stew that revealed everyone’s embarrassing habits. Atlas grabbed a ladle and tried to direct traffic.
Elara threw bread rolls like grenades. Raphael attempted to organize the chaos with military precision and got a face full of rebellious pudding for his trouble.
In the end, they didn’t ban the weird recipes. They added a new section to the cookbook titled "Optional Weirdness."
People wrote down the rules for living dishes, arguing effects, and temporary physics changes. Skritch declared the entire event a taxable success.
Later that night, Atlas sat on a bench with the finished cookbook—a thick, ssy book with stained pages. So of his fractured mories didn’t feel quite as heavy. They could be gifts. Not just burdens.
Elara sat beside him. "So. About that confession."
"We don’t have to talk about it," Atlas said quickly.
"Good. Because I still regret it." She paused. "Mostly."
They didn’t say more. The quiet felt comfortable.
---
Three days later, reports ca in about the spaghetti pockets—radical freedom zones where logic had completely given up. One had stabilized into an actual city.
The Sideways City. The Free Zone got invited as neutral observers for diplomatic talks. Atlas, Elara, Raphael, and Skritch were chosen. Sir Baaington ca because no one could stop him.
They crossed via an unstable Amrit bridge. Halfway across, the roles started swapping.
Atlas suddenly felt crippling anxiety about every decision. "Are we sure this is the right path? What if we offend the buildings?"
Elara turned into the sarcastic bureaucrat. "Oh wonderful. Another eting about etings. My favorite."
Raphael beca pure chaos, throwing random suggestions. "We should declare war on gravity! Or maybe invent a new tax system based on dreams!"
Skritch, sohow the voice of reason, kept trying to calm everyone. "Let’s file the proper forms first. Please."
Sir Baaington trotted along unaffected, giving them all disappointed sheep looks.
The Sideways City was exactly as weird as advertised. Buildings argued with their architects on street corners. "You put upside down on purpose!" one tower yelled at a confused-looking man.
Gravity required daily votes. That morning, down was mostly left. People walked on what used to be walls. A marketplace sold "used futures" in little glass jars and "slightly regretted decisions" by the pound.
The ambassador t them in a room where the floor was also the ceiling. She looked like Veil, but wrong. A splinter version who had gone fully native. Her eyes sparkled with pure absurdity.
"Atlas," she said warmly. "Heard about your Narrative Anchor. Impressive tool. I have sothing for you."
She offered a small glowing shard. "This will edit your story. Remove the painful Earth mories. Smooth out the soul fractures. No more carrying dead tilines."
Atlas stared at it. The offer was tempting. Really tempting.
"The catch?" he asked.
"You beco narratively boring," she said cheerfully. "Everyone around you will lose interest. Your life becos background noise. Clean, but forgettable."
Raphael got stuck in a ti loop during the eting. He kept trying to recreate minor Order protocols—perfect posture, precise wording—and failing in increasingly slapstick ways.
He slipped on the sa banana peel seven tis. Each failure taught him sothing. By the seventh loop he just sat down and laughed.
Skritch discovered "taxes paid in advance from next week" and nearly crashed the local economy by collecting future revenue that technically didn’t exist yet.
Elara spent ten minutes arguing with her future self, who had apparently already confessed everything to Atlas and looked annoyingly smug about it.
The climax ca when a rival radical freedom pocket tried to invade. Everything started turning into rubber ducks. People. Furniture. The concept of Tuesday. For twenty-four hours straight.
Atlas didn’t use the Narrative Anchor to force order. He used it to help people listen.
He anchored monts where conflicting selves could actually hear each other. Past, present, and sideways versions found small points of agreent.
The invasion turned into the weirdest peace talks ever held, with everyone quacking mid-sentence.
The Sideways City agreed to loose diplomatic ties with the Free Zone. No heavy rules. Just communication when possible.
Atlas handed the editing shard back. "ssy growth is still growth."
The ambassador smiled. "Good choice. Boring protagonists are the worst."
On the way back across the bridge, roles returned to normal. Atlas and Elara walked a little closer than necessary. Their hands brushed once. Neither pulled away imdiately.
"Still thinking about that almost-kiss?" Atlas asked quietly.
"Shut up," Elara said, but she was smiling.
Back at the hub, coherence had edged up to 76%. The world map now showed more wild pockets forming. Spaghetti zones spreading. Freedom wasn’t neat or controlled. It was spreading anyway.
Atlas looked at the mory Cookbook sitting on a shelf next to new reports from the Sideways City. Recipes and sideways deals. Both felt like steps forward.
Sir Baaington walked past, chewing on what looked like leftover proposal cake.
"Baah," the sheep said wisely.
"Yeah," Atlas agreed. "Exactly."
Reviews
All reviews (0)