"This is a matter of law," Corren of the Silver Strand protested. "Documents and evidence must be handled within Coalition procedures."
Then, one misty morning, a messenger from Lornis arrived in New Iros bearing news that changed calm into a cold design. A convoy had been intercepted en route to Lornis and, among its cargo, an instrument was found—compact, brass, and with moving teeth like a clock. It had no clear purpose to those who tried to define it: mechanics that suggested measurement, reading, and transmission. Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -U...
Daern himself came in like a man who had not expected to be given a chance to speak in such a sober place. He smelled faintly of seaweed and smoke, and his hands were strong and callused like a rope. He brought with him a wooden chest bound with brass and a small, pocket-size ledger that he placed on the table. "Manifest 42-K, sir," he said to the Peacekeeper. "I don't carry contraband. I carry rope, salted meats, and sometimes fine grain. I didn't seize no one else's goods. I found that chest floating near the Teynora's wreck. I took it to sell it and split the coin with the crew. We don't need problems." "This is a matter of law," Corren of
Mara folded the letter into her palm like a talisman that asked to be burned or treasured. "We told ourselves the Coalition would be a neutral force," she said. "But what if neutral means a uniform that hides agendas? If this letter was meant for the Assembly and the Coalition gets it first, the message dies in ink." It had no clear purpose to those who
Lysa found the chest where Daern had said it would be, lodged against a beam and half covered in barnacles. The metalwork, once cleaned, gleamed faintly—an eye caught in the embrace of wings, the pattern older than any merchant stripe. When the chest was pried free and hoisted up, small things fell free: a rusted knife, a scrap of cloth embroidered with a map, a folded letter whose edges had saved ink from the brine. The letter's script was faded but legible. It contained a single line that made the Blood in Lysa's veins hiss cold: "Do not trust the Coalition with the message. It was meant for the Assembly."
Ser Danek's eyes, which had learned to measure the sea's tempers, met hers. "They will always try again. Power wants growth. Men who profit from fear will seek new ways. But so will people who prefer to keep the world peaceful. The work of peacekeeping doesn't end when the battle stops. It begins."
Alden rubbed his forehead and glanced at the clock above the hall's main door. "There is no law against doing both," he observed dryly. "We can authorize a temporary inspection and ask the Harbormaster to oversee. But we must reach a formal agreement on custody after recovery."