The new broth had been going since before noon.
I’d changed the approach entirely. Lighter base, less reduction, different herb timing. I’d been thinking about the previous batch since I woke up, which had been sitting in my head the way a loose door hinge does.
The base had been fine. The salt had been fine. The timing had been fine. None of that explained why the bowls ca back.
What I hadn’t checked was the sll from the far side of the room. For soone not eating. Just existing nearby while it was served. Whether a lighter base, with less reduction, behaved differently at a distance. Cleaner, maybe. Less of that slow-cooked depth.
I didn’t know if that mattered. I was about to find out.
I stirred it once and went back to the counter.
The cart had been running for the better part of the morning.
So of the twenty-five had already made their purchases and drifted back to where they’d been before, arranged slightly differently in their fog. A few were still deciding.
That mostly looked like standing near the cart while their human-presenting forms gained or lost definition around the edges depending on what Torvel said next. The talkative one had been there for twenty minutes and didn’t look close to done.
"The defined quantity," the talkative one said, "is insufficient for our purposes."
Torvel looked up at it.
"Sufficient is confird at delivery," he said. "That’s standard. What you’re describing as insufficient is a standard quantity."
"Your definition of sufficient for our category is demonstrably small."
"My definition of sufficient scales with the category," Torvel replied. He adjusted one lapel. "A category like yours requires considerably more sufficient than a standard purchase. The price reflects that."
The talkative one went still for a mont.
"I see," the Walker said.
That ca from sowhere in the middle of the twenty-five. Right as the talkative one processed what Torvel had said.
No one addressed it. Torvel’s ears tilted about five degrees. The talkative one kept going like nothing had happened.
"The price and the defined sufficient represent separate variables," it said.
"They represent the sa variable," Torvel said, "expressed in two compatible formats."
One of his associates turned a page. Their pen hadn’t stopped moving.
Bram watched all this from the counter, holding his jug. He had the look he got when sothing was constructed well enough that he couldn’t fault the material.
"He knows his goods," he said to the jug.
I stirred the broth again. The sll was different from the first batch. Missing that deep reduction that had taken three hours last ti.
Whether that would matter, I’d find out when I served it.
The talkative one and Torvel went through two more exchanges.
At the end of the second, the talkative one’s fog extended slightly toward the cart. Torvel produced a small container. The fog went into it. He confird the quantity and set it on the cart next to multiple jars that was already there.
They had the fog from previous transactions. The new container held fog from this one. The cart was starting to look like a collection.
The door opened.
The guild representative stepped in.
He was holding sothing. The face-down paper with the points that had been sitting on the tracker since the morning he’d flipped it over.
He looked at the room.
At the cart. At the jar. At the new container. At Torvel, who was counting sothing without looking up. At the twenty-five, so of whom looked back at him a beat late. At the Walker’s fog along the ceiling. At the talkative one, now examining its purchase. At the Entity of Note at table six.
He blinked once.
Then again.
Then a third ti. Slower than the first two.
He turned around and left.
The door closed.
Bram set his jug down. He looked at the door for about three seconds. Then he picked the jug back up.
Torvel kept counting.
I tasted the broth. The lighter base was behaving the way I’d hoped.
I reached for the small tin on the shelf and added a little. Not much. It needed to stay close to what it was, just different in the specific way that made the sll travel.
I put the tin back.
That was when the floor started doing sothing.
Not the common room. The floor above. A low, steady tone through the boards. The kind of resonance you get when sothing’s being held in place by effort instead of nature.
Then a sharper adjustnt. Then the sound of the grey-green one moving. That had a distinct sound once you’d heard it a few tis through floorboards.
I dried my hands on a cloth and went upstairs.
The lobby was fine. The east corridor was fine. The northwest draft was coming from the sa corner it always did.
I went to the first east room and knocked.
Nothing.
I opened the door.
All the furniture had been moved. Every piece. Including the chair the heavy one had committed to on the first day and apparently uncommitted from now.
The floor was covered in marks. Sa stars and interlocking circles from Arveth’s robes, but extended outward into sothing larger. It covered most of the floor. Candles placed at specific points along the outer edge.
Arveth stood at the center. Both hands slightly raised. His eyes weren’t on the room.
The heavy one was walking a slow clockwise path along the outer edge of the pattern. It had been doing that for a while. The pattern had a directional bias it hadn’t originally been designed for.
The grey-green one was at the north position. Frozen. It burst to a new spot in roughly two seconds. The new spot was the inner ring.
The third one stood a pace back from the bundle it had placed at the south edge. The bundle was now affecting the format of the circle, and the effect changed each ti the bundle moved.
It looked at the bundle. Picked it up. The circle shifted. Put it back down. The circle adjusted again. It had been repeating that.
The fourth one was at the west window. The Abyss light was coming through at the wrong angle. Its trailing edges were catching two of the reference candles about fifteen degrees off from where Arveth had placed them.
Arveth had drawn compensating marks around both.
Arveth looked up. One beat. He looked at the door. Then back at the working.
I noted the residue fee. Section four of the guest agreent. Ritual activity. Applicable.
Then I closed the door. I wrote it on the list on my way back down the stairs.
The broth was ready.
I could tell from the corridor. The sll had made it out there, which ant the lighter base carried further than the first batch. That was what I’d been aiming for.
I went to the stove and tasted it properly. It was exactly right. Lighter. More present at a distance. The kind of sll you notice from across the room before you’ve decided if you want any.
I started getting the bowls out when the door opened.
Vassara ca in first.
Her dark red coat was still there. Good coat. The kind that lasts a few centuries and then keeps going through whatever an eastern sewer channel and its attached dungeon dinsion decides to be.
It was a lot less presentable than when she’d left. Her amber eyes were as still as ever. Her tail moved once across the floor.
Her three followed behind her in their usual formation. Composure intact. Also completely covered in whatever they’d just gone through.
Brenne ca in after them. Wings folded tight. Light steady. Hair almost without color.
The feathers along the lower half of her wings had absorbed sothing. Not great.
Her two followed her, carrying the sa kind of tired they always did, just in a slightly different situation.
Bram looked at the door. Then at the coat.
"Good material on that coat," he said.
The room processed the arrivals in its own ways. Fog shifted. So forms sharpened a little.
The Walker’s fog drifted one slow beat toward the door, then back again.
I ca around the counter.
"Hot water’s ready in the north bath," I said. "Towels are on the shelf."
[SYSTEM LOG]
Second batch broth: lighter base, less reduction. Sll registered at corridor distance. Test ongoing.
Residue fee: east room one, second floor. Section four. Applied.
Vassara and Brenne: returned. Duration of absence: extended. State on return: noted.
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