BRECK: Dead Delivery Chapter Eleven

Daily writing prompt What’s a book that completely surprised you? View all responses

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Eleven — What You Don’t See Coming

Prompt: What’s a book that completely surprised you? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

The book was called The Weight of Small Things, and Breck had found it wedged between two loose stones in a courier waystation outside Aldenmere three years ago, left by some previous traveler in the wordless tradition of waystations everywhere — the understanding that what you no longer needed might be exactly what the next person required.

He hadn’t expected anything from it. The cover was water-damaged, the spine cracked and reglued badly, the title so deliberately humble it seemed almost designed to discourage reading. He’d picked it up because the rain had pinned him to the waystation for six hours and he’d exhausted his other options.

It had surprised him completely.

Not because it was grand — it wasn’t. It was a small book about a small life: a river-ferry operator in some unnamed valley town who crossed the same water every day for forty years, taking people from one bank to the other, watching the seasons turn and the faces change and the small human dramas of ordinary existence play out on both sides of a thirty-foot stretch of moving water. No wars. No magic. No destiny arriving to transform the ferryman into something larger than himself. Just a man and a rope and a current and forty years of paying attention.

What had surprised Breck was how much it contained.

He thought about that book now, moving through Crestfall’s midday streets with his satchel across his chest and Pell’s map alive in his memory, because the ferryman had understood something that most people spent their lives circling without quite reaching: that the texture of a thing was in its dailiness, not its exceptions. That the thirty-foot crossing was not preparation for some larger crossing that would eventually come and justify the smaller one. The thirty-foot crossing was the thing itself. Done with attention, it was enough.

Done with attention, almost anything was enough.

He found Jorin at the well.

The young man was drawing water in the particular way of someone performing a task they didn’t need to perform — the movements too deliberate, the focus too careful, the whole posture radiating the studied purposefulness of a person who needed to be somewhere with a reason. He was perhaps twenty-two, dark-haired, with a broad open face that had been designed by nature for uncomplicated emotions and had since been required to host considerably more complicated ones than it had been built for.

He heard Breck coming — the size of him announcing itself in advance the way it always did, the particular displacement of air and attention that preceded him into any space — and his hands tightened on the well rope before he made the deliberate choice to release them.

Breck stopped a few paces away. Close enough to speak quietly. Far enough to leave the young man room to breathe.

“Jorin,” he said.

The young man looked at him with eyes that had been doing difficult calculations for some time and hadn’t yet arrived at a sum they could live with.

“I know who you are,” Jorin said. His voice was carefully level. “I know what happened in the alley last night.”

“Word travels.”

“In Crestfall it does.” He looked back at the well, at the rope in his hands, at the cold water moving in the stone depths below. “Pelk is telling people he fell.”

“I know.”

“Nobody believes him.”

“I know that too.”

The midday light was flat and pale, the sun somewhere behind the overcast making its presence felt without committing to visibility. Around the square the ordinary business of Crestfall continued its careful, head-down rhythm — the eleven stalls, the vendors who moved quickly and spoke quietly and packed early, the architecture of a town that had learned to need very little from any given day.

“You were on the west side of the magistrate’s building,” Breck said. “The second watch. The gap in the coverage runs from the eighth bell to the ninth.”

Jorin said nothing. His jaw was tight.

“You’ve been moving the patrol point,” Breck continued, his voice carrying no judgment, no accusation — simply the flat, accurate quality of a man reading a map he hadn’t drawn. “Not far. Not enough to be noticed. Just enough that the gap is there consistently.”

The silence that followed had a specific texture — the texture of a person standing at the edge of something they had been approaching for a long time and were only now close enough to feel the drop.

“I didn’t know what it would be for,” Jorin said finally. The words came out compressed, as though they’d been held under pressure and he’d only opened a small valve. “When I started. I just — I couldn’t be the reason someone got hurt. So I moved the point. Just in case.” He looked at Breck with the eyes of a man confessing something he’d never expected to say aloud. “I’ve been doing it for four months.”

Four months of small daily choices. Four months of moving a patrol point eight feet west and hoping it mattered to someone, someday, without knowing who or how or whether anything would ever come of it.

The ferryman, Breck thought, crossing the same water every day.

“The miller,” Breck said. “Aldric Moss.”

Jorin’s face changed. Something cracked open in it — not dramatically, the way things cracked open in stories, but the way they cracked open in real life, quietly and with considerable effort, the way a stone cracked when the frost got into it and worked its patient seasonal arithmetic.

“I didn’t know they were going to — ” He stopped. Started again. “I was told it was a property dispute. That he’d be questioned and released.” His hands had found the well rope again and were gripping it the way a man gripped the thing nearest to him when the ground shifted. “By the time I understood what had actually happened, I was already — I’d already — “

“You were already in,” Breck said.

“Yes.”

A sparrow landed on the well’s stone rim between them, regarded the situation with the frank indifference of a creature with no stake in it, and departed.

Breck looked at the young man — at the broad open face carrying its freight of accumulated wrong turns, at the hands that had been moving a patrol point eight feet west for four months on the slim, unspoken hope that it might someday matter. He thought about a book found in a waystation that had no reason to be extraordinary and had been extraordinary anyway. He thought about small things and the weight they carried without announcing it.

“What I’m going to do tonight,” he said, “requires that gap to be there.”

Jorin looked at him. His breathing was shallow, his eyes moving across Breck’s face with the rapid, desperate attention of a man trying to read the full terms of a document he hadn’t expected to be offered.

“And afterward?” he said.

“Afterward you’ll need to not be in Crestfall for a while.” Breck paused, considering the honest version of what came next. “Maybe a long while. You have family south of here?”

“My mother. In Brackfen. Two days’ walk.”

“Go to Brackfen.” He reached into the satchel’s secondary pouch — not the oilskin packet, something else, the money pouch, which was lighter than he preferred but held enough. He set two silver coins on the well’s stone rim beside the sparrow’s abandoned spot. “Tonight, after the eighth bell. Don’t take the main road.”

Jorin looked at the coins. Looked at Breck. Something moved through his expression — the complex, reluctant movement of a young man accepting that the story he was in had reached a point where small choices were no longer available and only large ones remained.

He picked up the coins.

“The gap will be there,” he said.

Breck nodded once. Picked up his satchel. Adjusted the strap across his chest in the habitual, unconscious way, his thumb brushing the bracelet as it passed — not checking it exactly, just acknowledging it, the way a man acknowledged the weight of a thing he’d decided to carry without putting it down.

He walked back across the square toward the inn.

Behind him, Jorin stood at the well with his rope and his water and his two silver coins and the specific quality of relief that came not from a burden being lifted but from finally understanding what the burden had always been preparing you for.

The water in the well moved in its cold stone dark, indifferent and continuous, going nowhere and arriving everywhere, the way water always did.

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BRECK: Dead Delivery: Chapter Eight

Daily writing prompt Who are some underrated people in history? View all responses

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Eight — The Forgotten Ones

Prompt: Who are some underrated people in history? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

He found the collection happening behind the granary.

Not in the square, where someone might witness and remember. Not at the gate, where merchants came and went with their paperwork and their careful faces. Behind the granary, in the narrow service alley where the grain dust gathered in pale drifts along the base of the stone wall and the only light came from a single torch jammed into an iron bracket above the rear door. Private work. The kind of work that needed walls on three sides and only one way out.

Pelk was running it.

Breck had heard him before he’d seen him — a voice carrying the particular easy confidence of a man who had never once been made to answer for the volume of it. He stood with his back to the granary wall and his thumbs hooked in his belt and two men flanking him with the studied casualness of people trying to look incidental, and in front of him stood a grain merchant Breck had seen setting up his stall that morning — a compact, gray-haired man in his fifties who held his receipt ledger against his chest the way a person held something they expected to have taken from them.

The merchant’s name, Breck had learned from Pell’s careful accounting, was Holt. He had worked the Crestfall grain market for twenty-three years. His father had worked it before him. His son helped him on Thursdays.

He was one of perhaps thirty men and women in this town whose daily labor had built the prosperity that Voss had spent three years quietly dismantling — the actual architecture of the place, the people whose hands and knowledge and stubborn daily presence were the reason Crestfall had sound buildings and a full granary and roads worth maintaining. None of them had statues. None of them had their names on the magistrate’s seal. They had calluses and ledgers and the specific dignity of people who showed up regardless of what the day cost them.

Breck stepped into the alley.

Pelk saw him immediately — hard not to, at Breck’s scale in a confined space — and the easy confidence didn’t waver. If anything it broadened. He was a big man himself, Pelk, running to heaviness through the middle in the way of men who had been strong once and had since found easier ways to apply it. He had the face of someone who had learned early that size was a conversation-ender and had never needed to learn anything beyond that lesson.

“Courier,” he said. It wasn’t a greeting. It was a categorization.

“Evening,” Breck said. He looked at Holt. The merchant’s eyes moved to him once — a brief, careful flicker — and moved away. Saying nothing. Asking nothing. Having learned, over three years of Thursday evening collections, that asking things made them worse.

“Private business,” Pelk said. “Road’s back the way you came.”

“I know where the road is.” Breck didn’t move. He stood with his hands loose at his sides and his weight settled and his eyes moving across the alley with the unhurried thoroughness of a man taking inventory. Pelk. Two others — one on the left against the wall, one near the door. Holt between them and Breck. One exit. Torch height casting the near wall in amber and leaving the far corners in useful shadow.

He filed it all away. Took perhaps three seconds.

“You deaf?” Pelk said. The easy confidence had acquired an edge. He straightened off the wall, and the two men on either side of him shifted their weight in the instinctive, practiced way of people who had done this particular choreography before. “I said move on.”

“Holt,” Breck said, without looking at the merchant. “You can go.”

The alley went very still.

Holt didn’t move. He was frozen between the instruction and twenty-three years of learned behavior that said staying small was how you survived Thursday evenings in Crestfall, and the two pieces of knowledge were not resolving quickly.

“He’s not going anywhere,” Pelk said. “He owes a collection fee.”

“He paid his tariff at the gate. I’ve seen the receipts.” Breck looked at Pelk directly for the first time. “There is no collection fee.”

Something moved across Pelk’s face — not fear, not yet, something closer to the recalibration a man did when a situation turned out to weigh more than he’d estimated. He looked at Breck the way people looked at things they were trying to find the correct category for and failing.

Then he made the decision that men like Pelk always made, because it was the only decision their entire history had ever equipped them for.

He came off the wall and closed the distance fast, his right hand coming up in a wide swing built for spectacle rather than precision — the kind of blow designed to end conversations with people who didn’t know how to respond to it.

Breck was not one of those people.

He moved inside the arc of the swing before it had fully committed, a single step forward and left that made the fist pass close enough to disturb the air beside his ear. His right hand caught Pelk’s extended arm at the wrist, redirecting its momentum rather than stopping it — using the man’s own considerable mass as the instrument — and his left palm drove hard into Pelk’s elbow from underneath.

The sound was brief and conclusive.

Pelk’s forward motion carried him past Breck and into the granary wall face-first, his useless arm trailing, and the sound he made when he hit the stone was the sound of a large object being suddenly and completely convinced of something.

The man on the left had been moving since the swing had started — Breck had tracked him in his peripheral vision the whole time, the way you tracked the secondary threat when the primary one was still resolving. He was younger than Pelk, quicker, and he had a short cudgel that he’d produced from somewhere and was bringing around in a low horizontal sweep aimed at Breck’s legs.

Breck stepped over it.

Not dramatically — just a single economical elevation of his right foot, the cudgel passing beneath it, and then his right boot came back down on the man’s leading knee with the full and deliberate application of two hundred and eighty-five pounds of moving weight. The man went down and stayed down, making the quiet, concentrated sounds of someone devoting all available resources to a single overwhelming problem.

The third man — the one near the door — had not moved. He was standing exactly where he’d been standing when Breck had entered the alley, his hands slightly away from his body in the universal posture of a person communicating that they had made a decision and the decision was this.

Breck looked at him for a moment.

“Smart,” he said.

The man said nothing. His hands stayed where they were.

Pelk was on his knees against the granary wall, cradling his arm, his face having undergone a comprehensive revision of the worldview it had held four seconds ago. He was breathing in the loud, ragged way of someone whose body was working very hard at several things simultaneously.

Breck crouched in front of him.

“The collection fee,” he said. His voice was the same as it had been at the start of the conversation. Level. Not unkind. “Where does it go.”

Pelk looked at him with the wide, recalibrated eyes of a man holding a new and unwelcome understanding.

“Voss,” he said. It came out smaller than anything else he’d said in the alley.

“All of it.”

“All of it.”

Breck nodded once. Stood. Looked at Holt, who had not moved throughout any of this — who was standing precisely where he’d been standing when Breck had entered, holding his ledger against his chest with both hands, his face carrying the careful blankness of a man waiting to determine whether this was better or worse than what had come before.

“Go home,” Breck said. “Tell your son supper will be late.”

Holt looked at him for a long moment. Then he looked at Pelk on the ground, and at the man holding his knee, and at the third man standing very still by the door.

He nodded once — a small motion, more breath than movement — and walked out of the alley without looking back.

Breck watched him go. Then he looked at the torch burning in its bracket above the door, casting its amber light across the grain-dust drifts and the walls that held no names and would hold none.

Twenty-three years, he thought. Holt had shown up for twenty-three years.

He picked up the satchel from where he’d set it against the wall before any of this had started — he always set it down before anything physical, because it was the job and the job didn’t get damaged — settled the strap across his chest, and touched the bracelet once.

Then he walked out of the alley and back into Crestfall’s quiet evening streets, and behind him Pelk was still making the sounds of a man with a new and permanent education.

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BRECK Dead Delivery: Chapter Seven

Daily writing prompt What are the biggest benefits of minimalist living? View all responses

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Seven — The Weight of Less

Prompt: What are the biggest benefits of minimalist living? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

He inventoried his possessions the way he did every few weeks — not from anxiety, but from discipline, the same discipline that had kept him breathing through four years of war and a decade of roads that didn’t care whether he made it to the next town or didn’t.

He did it on the floor of the inn room, the satchel open between his knees, each item removed and placed on the rough plank boards with the deliberate care of a man who understood that what you carried was a decision, not an accident.

The sealed reply document, his legitimate reason for being in Crestfall one day longer than planned. The oilskin packet against his chest — he’d moved that to the floor beside his knee, keeping it in his peripheral vision the way he kept everything important. A compass, worn smooth on the brass casing where his thumb had rested against it for ten years. A folding straight-edge. The stub of mapping chalk, slightly shorter now after Pell’s work on the riverside boulder. A money pouch, lighter than he preferred. A short-bladed knife, more tool than weapon, its edge maintained to a standard that would have satisfied his old commanding officer and would have baffled everyone else in the inn.

Flint. A length of waxed cord. A small tin of salve for the blister on his right heel that had been threatening to become a real problem since the hill road north of Millfield.

That was everything.

He looked at it arranged on the floor around him — the totality of what he owned and carried, spread across perhaps four square feet of plank boarding in a room that smelled of tallow and old timber. Another man might have found that inventory depressing. Breck had long since arrived at a different conclusion.

Everything on that floor was there because it had earned its place. Every item had been evaluated, found useful, kept — or found wanting and left behind in some previous inn room or roadside camp or post station along one of the hundred routes he’d run in the years since the war ended. The compass had replaced two inferior compasses. The knife had replaced a longer blade he’d carried for three years before acknowledging, with some difficulty, that its weight wasn’t justified by its use. The salve was new, added three weeks ago after the blister incident, because ignoring a blister until it became an infection was the kind of decision that got couriers killed in wet weather on long roads.

Nothing decorative. Nothing sentimental.

Except the bracelet, which wasn’t either of those things — or was both, in a way that didn’t fit any category he’d found for it.

He picked it up from the satchel strap where it rested and turned it in his fingers. Pale cord, woven tight by small hands from whatever had been available — grain stalks, roof grass, the kind of material a child in an occupied valley used because it was there and because the making of it was the point, not the material. It weighed almost nothing. It occupied almost no space.

It was the heaviest thing he owned.

He set it back on the strap. Began repacking.

The benefit of carrying little, he had learned, was not what most people assumed. They thought it was about freedom — the lightness of movement, the ease of departure, the romantic simplicity of a man with nothing to lose. There was some truth in that, but it was the surface truth, the part that looked clean from a distance.

The deeper benefit was clarity.

When everything you owned fit in a single satchel, you knew exactly what you had. You knew exactly what you could lose. You knew exactly what decisions were available to you at any given moment, because your resources were fully visible and fully accounted for — no hidden reserves, no forgotten assets, no comfortable surplus that let you avoid doing the difficult arithmetic.

It was the same quality he’d valued in Aldric Moss, without ever having met the man. A miller who kept careful records in a hand so neat it looked like architecture — who had known exactly what he had, exactly what was owed, exactly where the difference lived between the official number and the true one. That was not the habit of a man who avoided difficult arithmetic. That was the habit of a man who understood that clarity, however uncomfortable, was better than comfortable confusion.

Voss lived in comfortable confusion. Or rather — he created it deliberately, in everyone around him, because confusion was profitable and clarity was dangerous. The gap between what merchants paid at the gate and what the official ledger recorded existed in the space of that confusion, fed by it, protected by it. Men like Voss understood instinctively that a town which couldn’t see its own numbers couldn’t resist what was being done with them.

Breck cinched the satchel closed. Stood.

The room was as he’d found it — bed, chair, table, the cold hearth that he hadn’t bothered to light because a man who was leaving in the morning had no use for a fire laid the night before. He’d slept in his cloak, which was efficient, and eaten the bread and cold meat the innkeeper had left on his table without asking, which had been kind of her.

He owed her for that. He’d added it to the accounting.

Dawn came gray and thin through the single window, barely distinguishable from the night it was replacing, the sky the color of old pewter above Crestfall’s wet rooftops. The town was already moving — the sounds of it filtering up through the floorboards, the low voices of the innkeeper and her morning staff, the distant iron ring of a cart on cobblestone, the particular quality of silence from the direction of the magistrate’s office that meant nothing was happening there yet.

The third bell had rung twice since midnight. Regular as a heartbeat. Efficient as a threat.

He went to the window and looked out at the square below. Eleven stalls setting up in the gray morning light, the same eleven, the vendors working with their heads down and their hands quick, operating with the spare economy of people who had stripped their days down to the essential and left everything else — complaint, conversation, the small indulgences of ordinary life — somewhere behind the threshold of survival. They hadn’t chosen that economy. It had been imposed on them from outside, methodically, over three years of climbing tariffs and disappearing neighbors and bells that rang on schedule to remind everyone what was at stake.

The benefit of carrying little, he had said to himself once, is that you know exactly what you have.

The benefit of taking everything from people, he understood now, was the same thing seen from the other side of the ledger. Strip a town down far enough and it lost track of what it had been before the stripping — lost the muscle memory of prosperity, the instinct for resistance, the simple knowledge that things had once been different and could be different again.

Voss hadn’t just taken money. He’d taken inventory.

Breck picked up his satchel. Settled the strap across his chest. Touched the bracelet once, the old reflex, the checking without naming.

He needed three things this morning. His reply document from the magistrate’s office. A conversation with the innkeeper about what she was willing to risk. And another look at Pell’s map, which he’d memorized but wanted to walk in daylight before he committed to anything that couldn’t be undone.

He went downstairs.

The innkeeper was at the hearth, the fire built up properly now, the common room filling slowly with the smell of bread and the sound of the morning’s first customers settling into their chairs with the careful movements of people who had learned not to make themselves conspicuous. She looked up when he came down. Read his face the way she’d been reading faces across that bar for twenty years.

She poured him a cup without being asked and set it on the end of the bar where he preferred to stand.

“You’re still here,” she said.

“Thought I’d stay another day.” He picked up the cup. “If the room’s available.”

She held his gaze for a moment. Something moved through her expression — not surprise, not quite relief, but the particular stillness of a person absorbing news they had told themselves not to hope for.

“It’s available,” she said.

Breck drank his tea and watched the gray morning deepen toward day, and thought about what it cost to carry nothing you didn’t need — and what it meant to stay anyway.

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BRECK: Dead Delivery: Chapter Six

Daily writing prompt What’s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid? View all responses

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Six — What Boys Are Made Of

Prompt: What’s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

The boy found him at the river.

Breck had come down to the bank after collecting his document — the reply sealed and tucked into the satchel, his official reason for being in Crestfall now fully discharged — and he’d stood at the water’s edge for a while, watching the Calwick move. Rivers were good for thinking. They didn’t require anything from you. They just kept going, which was occasionally the most useful thing in the world to watch.

He heard the footsteps before he saw the boy — light and quick on the gravel bank, the particular rhythm of someone trying to look like they hadn’t been following him for three streets. He didn’t turn around. He waited until the footsteps stopped a careful distance behind him, and then he waited a little longer, because patience was instructive.

“You were at the miller’s house,” the boy said finally.

“I was.”

“I saw you go in.” A pause. “I see most things.”

Breck turned then. The boy was twelve, maybe thirteen — the same one from the cooperage step, brown-haired and serious-faced, with river mud on his boots and the look of someone who had appointed himself to a task without being asked. He stood with his hands in his coat pockets and his chin slightly forward, projecting a confidence his eyes hadn’t quite caught up to yet.

“What’s your name,” Breck said.

“Pell.”

“Your father runs the cooperage.”

Something moved across the boy’s face — brief, controlled, gone quickly. “Ran it.”

Breck turned back to the river. After a moment he sat down on a flat boulder at the bank’s edge, which brought him closer to the boy’s eye level, and he watched the current move around a submerged stone in the middle of the channel, the water dividing and reforming downstream as though the interruption had never happened.

Pell came and stood beside him, not sitting, still maintaining the posture of someone who hadn’t decided yet whether this was a conversation or a surveillance operation.

“What do you want to know,” Breck said.

“What she gave you. In the house.” The boy’s voice was careful and direct. “Sela. What she gave you.”

“Something that belonged to her husband.”

“The records.”

Breck looked at him sidelong. The boy met his gaze without flinching, the way he’d done in the square — that old patience, that stillness that didn’t belong on a young face. Up close, it was even more apparent. Whatever had made Pell serious had made him serious all the way through, not just on the surface.

“You knew about them,” Breck said.

“Aldric told me.” A beat. “Before. He said if anything happened to him, the records were behind the fireback. He said I should tell someone useful eventually.” The boy’s jaw tightened slightly. “I’ve been waiting fourteen months for someone useful.”

The river moved between them and the far bank. A heron stood motionless in the shallows downstream, one leg raised, a creature built entirely around the discipline of waiting.

“How did you know your father’s cooperage figures into this,” Breck said.

Pell was quiet for a moment. When he spoke, his voice had lost some of its careful construction — not broken, just worn thinner, the way a path wore thin where feet passed most often.

“Papa used to make barrels for the merchants coming off the river. Good barrels, tight seams, the kind that lasted. He had more work than he could handle.” He paused. “Then Voss changed the tariffs on river goods. Merchants started moving their routes inland, away from Crestfall’s landing. Less river traffic meant less cargo meant less need for barrels.” He said it with the flat precision of a child who had listened to adults explain something terrible to each other enough times that he’d memorized the shape of it. “Half days since spring. By summer it’ll be no days.”

“And your father.”

“He doesn’t say much anymore.” Pell picked up a flat stone from the bank and turned it in his fingers without throwing it. “He sits mostly.”

The heron struck — a motion so fast and certain it seemed to happen between moments, there and then not there, the surface of the water barely disturbed. It stood again with something silver in its beak, tilted its head back, and was still once more.

Breck watched it. Thought about a grain farm on the Lumenvale outskirts. About a boy of perhaps ten who had developed a consuming obsession with the way rivers moved — specifically with the way water found paths around obstacles, the patient, indifferent geometry of it, how it never forced and never stopped and always arrived eventually at the same place. He’d spent entire summer afternoons at the creek behind his family’s property, building small dams from stone and mud and watching the water work around them. His mother had called it a waste of time. His father had called it useful thinking and left him to it.

He hadn’t thought about that creek in years.

“What were you obsessed with,” Pell said, unexpectedly. “When you were my age.”

Breck glanced at him. The boy was watching the heron with the same focused attention he brought to everything, but the question had been genuine — curious in the way children were curious when they’d decided to trust someone, testing the texture of a person through small revelations.

“Rivers,” Breck said. “How they moved around things.”

Pell considered this. “That’s an odd thing to be obsessed with.”

“What were you?”

The boy almost smiled — a flicker, quickly suppressed, the way smiles went when you’d been serious for a long time and weren’t sure they were still allowed. “Maps. I used to draw maps of everywhere I’d been. Roads, buildings, which houses had dogs, where you could move without being seen.” He paused. “Crestfall mostly, since I haven’t been anywhere else. But I know every way in and out of this town. Every alley. Every back gate.” He set the stone down without throwing it. “Every time the magistrate’s men change their route.”

Breck was quiet for a moment.

He looked at the boy — at the serious face and the mud-caked boots and the hands that had been drawing maps of this town for years, cataloguing it the way Breck had catalogued the river, the way the heart catalogued the things it needed to survive. Twelve years old, his father’s cooperage dying, his town hollowed out from the inside, and he’d spent fourteen months waiting for someone useful to arrive.

Breck reached into the satchel. Not for the oilskin packet — he kept that against his ribs, close and warm. For the secondary pouch near the bottom, where he kept the tools of his trade: a compass, a folding straight-edge, a stub of mapping chalk he used for marking routes on stone when ink was unavailable.

He held out the chalk.

Pell looked at it for a long moment, then at Breck’s face.

“The magistrate’s men,” Breck said. “Their evening route. Every detail you know. I want it drawn.”

The boy took the chalk.

He drew without hesitation — the square, the side streets, the rear alley behind the magistrate’s office, the stable yard where the horses were kept, the two positions he’d identified where guards stood after the third bell, the gap in the pattern on the west side of the building where the coverage went thin between the second and third watches. He drew with the focused pleasure of someone deploying a skill they’d been waiting to use, the map emerging from the flat stone’s surface in clean, sure lines.

When he was done he looked up. The almost-smile came back, and this time it stayed a moment longer before retreating.

“You’re going to fix it,” Pell said. It was not quite a question.

Breck looked at the map. Then at the river, still moving with its patient, indifferent certainty around everything in its path.

“I’m going to try,” he said.

He adjusted the satchel strap across his chest. The bracelet caught a pale slip of winter light, small and faded, saying nothing.

He stood.

Enjoyed this story? Writing Lumenvale is how I pay my bills. If these stories are worth something to you, a $1 Ko-fi keeps the forge burning — and tells me this world is worth continuing. 👉 Buy Chadwick a coffee

#books #Breck #Crestfall #dailyprompt #dailyprompt2758 #DarkFantasy #DeadDelivery #EpicFantasy #fantasy #FantasyFiction #fiction #Free #FreeFantasyFiction #freeFantasyFictionOnline #FreeStory #Lumenvale #shortStory #writing

BRECK: Dead Delivery: Chapter Five

Daily writing prompt What’s the most interesting local custom you’ve encountered? View all responses

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Five — The Burning of the Ledger

Prompt: What’s the most interesting local custom you’ve encountered? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale | ← Chapter Four

He found the miller’s wife by following the smell of bread.

It came from a narrow side street behind the grain merchant’s yard — not the inn’s bread, which was the practical, dense kind built for travelers, but something lighter and more deliberate, the smell of a person who baked the way some people prayed, with careful hands and full attention. The house was small, stone to the eaves, with a kitchen window cracked despite the cold and a garden that had been put to bed for the season with the particular thoroughness of someone who intended to use it again in spring.

He knocked. Waited.

The woman who opened the door was perhaps thirty-five, with flour on her forearms and the kind of eyes that had been doing hard arithmetic for a long time and had arrived at a sum they didn’t like. She looked at him the way the whole town looked at him — taking his measure, calculating what category of problem he represented — and then she looked past him at the empty street in both directions, and something in her face shifted.

“You’re the courier,” she said.

“Breck.”

She stepped back from the door without exactly inviting him in, which he understood as the invitation it was.

Her name was Sela. She gave him tea he didn’t ask for and sat across the kitchen table with her hands flat on the wood, and she told him about her husband with the directness of a woman who had rehearsed this conversation in her own head so many times that the emotion had worn smooth, like a stone turned over and over in a river until all its sharp edges were gone and only the shape of it remained.

Aldric Moss had been the miller in Crestfall for eleven years. Good work, honest work, the kind that put him at the center of the town’s daily life — grain came to him from every farm within a half-day’s ride and went back out as flour and meal and the particular satisfaction of a thing transformed. He had known everyone. Everyone had known him.

“He started keeping records,” Sela said. Her hands were still on the table. “When the tariffs went up the second time, he started writing things down. What the merchants paid officially. What they paid at the gate.” She paused. “The difference.”

“Where are the records.”

“Gone. They took them when they took him.” Her jaw tightened slightly, the first crack in the smooth surface of her telling. “Along with everything else from his office.”

“Everything else.”

“His ledgers. His correspondence. A deed to a plot of river land his father left him.” Her eyes moved to the window, to the pale morning light on the wet kitchen garden. “All of it.”

Breck turned his cup in his hands. “What happened to him. Specifically.”

“Three men came in the night. Drav and two others.” She said the name the same way the innkeeper had — flat, stripped, the way you said the name of a weather event. “Aldric went with them. He didn’t — ” she stopped. Started again. “He was a reasonable man. He understood that fighting three men in the dark was not reasonable. He told me to stay inside and he went.” She folded her hands together on the table. “I haven’t seen him since.”

The kitchen was very quiet. Outside, a sparrow landed on the garden wall, regarded the dormant beds with apparent disappointment, and left.

“That was fourteen months ago,” Breck said.

“Fourteen months and nine days.”

He nodded once and didn’t say anything else for a moment, because there was nothing useful to say and the space deserved to exist without someone filling it with words that would only make it smaller.

He asked her about the custom because she’d mentioned it while describing Aldric — a detail she’d offered without seeming to realize she’d offered it, the way people dropped the most important information sideways into conversations when they were thinking about something else.

“The burning,” she said. “On the last night of the harvest season.” She looked faintly surprised that he’d caught it. “It’s old. Older than the town, older than the magistrate’s office, older than anyone alive can account for. Every household brings their oldest unpaid debt — a written record, a marker, a tally stick — and they burn it in the square.” She paused. “Not to cancel the debt. Just to — acknowledge it. To say: this is what we owe each other. This is the weight we carry together. And then you burn the record and the debt remains and you all know it, and somehow knowing it together makes it lighter.”

“Aldric liked it,” Breck said. It wasn’t a question.

“He said it was the most honest thing Crestfall did.” Her voice softened for the first time, the arithmetic behind her eyes giving way briefly to something that had existed before the arithmetic had been necessary. “He said that most towns pretended the ledger didn’t exist. That Crestfall at least had the decency to stand around it once a year and look at it together.”

“When’s the last time it happened.”

She met his eyes. “Three years ago. The year before Voss tightened the tariffs the second time.” A beat. “He banned it. Said it was a fire hazard.”

Breck set his cup down on the table. Outside, the second bell was beginning its climb across the Crestfall rooftops — the magistrate’s office would be open, his document waiting, the north road only an hour away in the flat morning light.

He thought about a town that had once stood in a square together and looked at what it owed each other and then burned the paper and kept the knowledge. The particular honesty of that. The particular loss of its absence.

He thought about Aldric Moss, reasonable man, who had kept his own ledger of what was owed and had gone quietly into the dark rather than fight three men he couldn’t beat, because he was the kind of man who understood odds and played them honestly.

He thought about the fact that Drav had been the one to come for him.

“The ledger he kept,” Breck said. “His records of the tariff differences.” He looked at Sela steadily. “He was careful enough to keep them. Was he careful enough to make a copy?”

The kitchen went very still.

Sela looked at him for a long time — the full weight of fourteen months and nine days in her eyes, the arithmetic running fast and complicated behind them, calculating risk and cost and the distance between hope and foolishness with the precision of a woman who had been doing exactly that kind of calculation every single day since her husband walked out the door and didn’t come back.

Then she stood, and went to the hearth, and moved aside a loose stone at the base of the fireback that only revealed itself when you knew exactly where to press.

She handed him a small oilskin packet. It was warm from the stone’s stored heat.

“He was careful,” she said.

Breck walked back through Crestfall with the packet against his chest, inside his shirt, between the satchel strap and his ribs. The morning market was setting up — the same eleven stalls, the same efficient, head-down preparation, no eye contact, no conversation beyond the necessary. The boy from the cooperage step was there again, in a different spot but the same posture, watching the road.

He watched Breck cross the square.

Breck didn’t look at the magistrate’s office as he passed it, though he was aware of it the way he was aware of everything — peripherally, precisely, without turning his head. Fresh mortar. Town seal. A building that had been fed while everything around it went lean.

He went to the inn first, not the magistrate’s office. He ate a proper breakfast, because he didn’t know when the next meal would be, and because you didn’t make clear decisions on an empty stomach. He ate slowly, methodically, the way he did most things, and he read the oilskin packet’s contents twice, and then he folded it back and returned it to its place against his ribs.

Aldric Moss had been thorough. Fourteen months of tariff records, cross-referenced against the official town ledger, with dates and merchant names and amounts in a hand so neat and careful it looked like a man who had known exactly what he was building and had built it to last.

It was not a fire hazard.

It was a case.

Breck settled his cloak across his shoulders, adjusted the satchel strap, checked the bracelet without thinking about it, and stood.

Time to collect his document.

Enjoyed this story? Writing Lumenvale is how I pay my bills. If these stories are worth something to you, a $1 Ko-fi keeps the forge burning — and tells me this world is worth continuing. 👉 Buy Chadwick a coffee

#books #Breck #courier #dailyprompt #dailyprompt2757 #DarkFantasy #DeadDelivery #EpicFantasy #fantasy #FantasyFiction #fiction #FreeFantasyFiction #freeFantasyFictionOnline #FreeStory #Lumenvale #mystery #serialFiction #writing

BRECK: Dead Delivery: Chapter Four

Daily writing prompt If you had to describe your ideal life, what would it look like? View all responses

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Four — What a Good Life Looks Like

Prompt: If you had to describe your ideal life, what would it look like? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

He was up before the inn.

That was how Breck preferred it — the hour before a building woke, when the timbers were still and the fire had burned to orange coal and the only sound was the river moving somewhere behind the rear yards, steady and indifferent to everything that happened on its banks. He dressed in the gray dark, moved the bracelet from his wrist back to the satchel strap, and went downstairs to the empty common room.

The innkeeper was already there.

She was rebuilding the hearth fire alone, kneeling with the same focused economy she brought to everything, feeding kindling into the coal-bed with practiced hands. She looked up when his boot hit the bottom stair — not startled, just acknowledging — and went back to her work.

“Early,” she said.

“Habit.”

She nodded as though that explained everything, which for her it probably did. She had the look of a woman who had stopped requiring explanations from people a long time ago and found life simpler for it. Breck respected that. He pulled a stool to the far end of the hearth and sat, and they shared the silence companionably while the fire took hold.

She brought him bread and hard cheese without being asked. He ate slowly, watching the flames establish themselves, and after a while she refilled his cup and sat across from him with her own, and the morning came in gray and quiet through the front window.

“Been here long?” he asked eventually.

“Born here.” She wrapped both hands around her cup. “My mother ran this place before me. Her mother before that.” A pause. “Three generations of women keeping travelers fed and dry. There are worse things to be.”

“Is it what you would have chosen?”

She considered this with the seriousness it deserved. “I used to think about that when I was young. What I’d have chosen if I could have chosen anything.” The fire popped, and she watched the spark die on the hearthstone. “I’d have wanted something quieter, maybe. Smaller. A house with a good kitchen garden and enough custom to keep me busy but not so much it wore me down.” She smiled, brief and private. “Then my mother got sick and I took over the inn and twenty years went past and now I can’t imagine anything else.”

“That’s an answer,” Breck said.

“What about you.” She said it without expectation, the way people asked questions they didn’t necessarily need answered.

Breck turned his cup in his hands. The fire had established itself fully now, filling the hearth with steady warmth and the smell of clean wood smoke, and outside the window the sky was beginning to separate itself from the darkness by degrees.

He thought about it honestly, the way he rarely did — usually he kept that particular door shut, not out of anguish but out of pragmatism. An ideal life was a pleasant thing to want and a useless thing to carry on the road.

“A house,” he said finally. “Nothing large. Stone, if I could manage it, so it stayed warm in winter. South-facing, for the light.” He paused. “A kitchen with a proper hearth. A table big enough to work at. A room for guests, if anyone came.” Another pause, longer. “A dog, probably. Something big and useless and glad to see me when I came in.”

The innkeeper smiled properly this time. “That’s a quiet life for a man your size.”

“Quiet suits me.”

“Where?”

“Somewhere the roads aren’t too close. Close enough to walk to a market, far enough that you can’t hear the cart traffic in the morning.” He set the cup down. “Somewhere I hadn’t been before. So there was nothing I already knew about it.”

She studied him across the fire. The quality of her attention had changed — not sharper exactly, but deeper, the way a person listened when they recognized something they’d heard before in a different voice.

“And the work?” she asked. “In this quiet house. What would you do?”

Breck was quiet for a moment. Through the window, the first real light was touching the rooftops of Crestfall, turning the wet slate from black to the color of old pewter. Somewhere in the building above them, the first guests were beginning to stir — the creak of a floorboard, the sound of water poured from a pitcher.

“Something that stayed finished,” he said. “Whatever I made in the morning, I’d want it to still be made in the evening.” He turned the cup once more. “Courier work — you deliver and it’s delivered and tomorrow there’s another delivery. There’s no accumulation. Nothing you can stand back from and see.” He paused. “I’d want to make something that lasted.”

“Like what?”

“I don’t know yet.” He said it plainly, without apology. “I know what I’m good at. I don’t know what I’d be good at if I stopped doing that.”

The innkeeper nodded slowly, as though this was among the more honest things she’d heard in some time. She rose to stir the fire, and the coals shifted and breathed orange, and the warmth in the room increased by a degree.

“The man who was here last night,” Breck said. “Corner table. Left side door.”

Her stirring slowed. Didn’t stop.

“Drav,” she said. The name came out flat, stripped of everything that wasn’t pure fact. “He’s been in Crestfall six months. Came with two others in the first week of autumn.”

“He work for the magistrate.”

“He works for whoever pays him.” She set the poker down carefully. “The magistrate pays him.”

“What does he do.”

“Whatever needs doing.” She turned back to face him. The warmth in her expression hadn’t gone exactly, but something had moved behind it — the way a fire looks when a cloud passes over the sun. “He’s not like the others. The others are loud. They drink and they push and you know exactly what you’re dealing with.” She paused. “Drav just — appears. When there’s a problem that needs to stop being a problem.”

“Like the miller.”

The fire crackled between them. Outside, the first cart of the morning was rolling down the main road, its iron-rimmed wheels loud on the wet cobblestone, and then it passed and the quiet came back.

“Like the miller,” she said.

Breck stood. He was a full head taller than her, maybe more, and in the low-ceilinged common room he filled the space above the hearthlight in a way that should have felt threatening and somehow didn’t — the stillness of him absorbing his own scale, the way large water absorbs weather.

“My document,” he said. “The clerk said morning.”

“The magistrate’s office opens at the second bell.” She looked at him steadily. “You could be on the north road before the third.”

“I could.”

She held his gaze for a moment. Then she turned back to the fire, and her hands resumed their work, and the subject was closed in the way that subjects closed between people who understood each other without requiring confirmation.

Breck put on his cloak, settled the satchel across his chest, and moved the bracelet once, the way he always did — checking it without knowing he was checking it, the old reflex, the one that lived below thought. It was pale in the firelight. Small against the worn leather of the strap.

He walked to the door and opened it onto the cold morning air, and Crestfall lay before him under its pewter sky, quiet and watchful and waiting to see what he would do.

He stood in the doorway for a moment, the fire at his back and the empty square ahead.

A quiet life. A stone house. South-facing. A dog.

Something that stayed finished.

He stepped out into the cold and pulled the door shut behind him.

Not toward the north road.

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Four — What a Good Life Looks Like

Prompt: If you had to describe your ideal life, what would it look like? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

He was up before the inn.

That was how Breck preferred it — the hour before a building woke, when the timbers were still and the fire had burned to orange coal and the only sound was the river moving somewhere behind the rear yards, steady and indifferent to everything that happened on its banks. He dressed in the gray dark, moved the bracelet from his wrist back to the satchel strap, and went downstairs to the empty common room.

The innkeeper was already there.

She was rebuilding the hearth fire alone, kneeling with the same focused economy she brought to everything, feeding kindling into the coal-bed with practiced hands. She looked up when his boot hit the bottom stair — not startled, just acknowledging — and went back to her work.

“Early,” she said.

“Habit.”

She nodded as though that explained everything, which for her it probably did. She had the look of a woman who had stopped requiring explanations from people a long time ago and found life simpler for it. Breck respected that. He pulled a stool to the far end of the hearth and sat, and they shared the silence companionably while the fire took hold.

She brought him bread and hard cheese without being asked. He ate slowly, watching the flames establish themselves, and after a while she refilled his cup and sat across from him with her own, and the morning came in gray and quiet through the front window.

“Been here long?” he asked eventually.

“Born here.” She wrapped both hands around her cup. “My mother ran this place before me. Her mother before that.” A pause. “Three generations of women keeping travelers fed and dry. There are worse things to be.”

“Is it what you would have chosen?”

She considered this with the seriousness it deserved. “I used to think about that when I was young. What I’d have chosen if I could have chosen anything.” The fire popped, and she watched the spark die on the hearthstone. “I’d have wanted something quieter, maybe. Smaller. A house with a good kitchen garden and enough custom to keep me busy but not so much it wore me down.” She smiled, brief and private. “Then my mother got sick and I took over the inn and twenty years went past and now I can’t imagine anything else.”

“That’s an answer,” Breck said.

“What about you.” She said it without expectation, the way people asked questions they didn’t necessarily need answered.

Breck turned his cup in his hands. The fire had established itself fully now, filling the hearth with steady warmth and the smell of clean wood smoke, and outside the window the sky was beginning to separate itself from the darkness by degrees.

He thought about it honestly, the way he rarely did — usually he kept that particular door shut, not out of anguish but out of pragmatism. An ideal life was a pleasant thing to want and a useless thing to carry on the road.

“A house,” he said finally. “Nothing large. Stone, if I could manage it, so it stayed warm in winter. South-facing, for the light.” He paused. “A kitchen with a proper hearth. A table big enough to work at. A room for guests, if anyone came.” Another pause, longer. “A dog, probably. Something big and useless and glad to see me when I came in.”

The innkeeper smiled properly this time. “That’s a quiet life for a man your size.”

“Quiet suits me.”

“Where?”

“Somewhere the roads aren’t too close. Close enough to walk to a market, far enough that you can’t hear the cart traffic in the morning.” He set the cup down. “Somewhere I hadn’t been before. So there was nothing I already knew about it.”

She studied him across the fire. The quality of her attention had changed — not sharper exactly, but deeper, the way a person listened when they recognized something they’d heard before in a different voice.

“And the work?” she asked. “In this quiet house. What would you do?”

Breck was quiet for a moment. Through the window, the first real light was touching the rooftops of Crestfall, turning the wet slate from black to the color of old pewter. Somewhere in the building above them, the first guests were beginning to stir — the creak of a floorboard, the sound of water poured from a pitcher.

“Something that stayed finished,” he said. “Whatever I made in the morning, I’d want it to still be made in the evening.” He turned the cup once more. “Courier work — you deliver and it’s delivered and tomorrow there’s another delivery. There’s no accumulation. Nothing you can stand back from and see.” He paused. “I’d want to make something that lasted.”

“Like what?”

“I don’t know yet.” He said it plainly, without apology. “I know what I’m good at. I don’t know what I’d be good at if I stopped doing that.”

The innkeeper nodded slowly, as though this was among the more honest things she’d heard in some time. She rose to stir the fire, and the coals shifted and breathed orange, and the warmth in the room increased by a degree.

“The man who was here last night,” Breck said. “Corner table. Left side door.”

Her stirring slowed. Didn’t stop.

“Drav,” she said. The name came out flat, stripped of everything that wasn’t pure fact. “He’s been in Crestfall six months. Came with two others in the first week of autumn.”

“He work for the magistrate.”

“He works for whoever pays him.” She set the poker down carefully. “The magistrate pays him.”

“What does he do.”

“Whatever needs doing.” She turned back to face him. The warmth in her expression hadn’t gone exactly, but something had moved behind it — the way a fire looks when a cloud passes over the sun. “He’s not like the others. The others are loud. They drink and they push and you know exactly what you’re dealing with.” She paused. “Drav just — appears. When there’s a problem that needs to stop being a problem.”

“Like the miller.”

The fire crackled between them. Outside, the first cart of the morning was rolling down the main road, its iron-rimmed wheels loud on the wet cobblestone, and then it passed and the quiet came back.

“Like the miller,” she said.

Breck stood. He was a full head taller than her, maybe more, and in the low-ceilinged common room he filled the space above the hearthlight in a way that should have felt threatening and somehow didn’t — the stillness of him absorbing his own scale, the way large water absorbs weather.

“My document,” he said. “The clerk said morning.”

“The magistrate’s office opens at the second bell.” She looked at him steadily. “You could be on the north road before the third.”

“I could.”

She held his gaze for a moment. Then she turned back to the fire, and her hands resumed their work, and the subject was closed in the way that subjects closed between people who understood each other without requiring confirmation.

Breck put on his cloak, settled the satchel across his chest, and moved the bracelet once, the way he always did — checking it without knowing he was checking it, the old reflex, the one that lived below thought. It was pale in the firelight. Small against the worn leather of the strap.

He walked to the door and opened it onto the cold morning air, and Crestfall lay before him under its pewter sky, quiet and watchful and waiting to see what he would do.

He stood in the doorway for a moment, the fire at his back and the empty square ahead.

A quiet life. A stone house. South-facing. A dog.

Something that stayed finished.

He stepped out into the cold and pulled the door shut behind him.

Not toward the north road.

BRECK: Dead Delivery

Chapter Four — What a Good Life Looks Like

Prompt: If you had to describe your ideal life, what would it look like? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

He was up before the inn.

That was how Breck preferred it — the hour before a building woke, when the timbers were still and the fire had burned to orange coal and the only sound was the river moving somewhere behind the rear yards, steady and indifferent to everything that happened on its banks. He dressed in the gray dark, moved the bracelet from his wrist back to the satchel strap, and went downstairs to the empty common room.

The innkeeper was already there.

She was rebuilding the hearth fire alone, kneeling with the same focused economy she brought to everything, feeding kindling into the coal-bed with practiced hands. She looked up when his boot hit the bottom stair — not startled, just acknowledging — and went back to her work.

“Early,” she said.

“Habit.”

She nodded as though that explained everything, which for her it probably did. She had the look of a woman who had stopped requiring explanations from people a long time ago and found life simpler for it. Breck respected that. He pulled a stool to the far end of the hearth and sat, and they shared the silence companionably while the fire took hold.

She brought him bread and hard cheese without being asked. He ate slowly, watching the flames establish themselves, and after a while she refilled his cup and sat across from him with her own, and the morning came in gray and quiet through the front window.

“Been here long?” he asked eventually.

“Born here.” She wrapped both hands around her cup. “My mother ran this place before me. Her mother before that.” A pause. “Three generations of women keeping travelers fed and dry. There are worse things to be.”

“Is it what you would have chosen?”

She considered this with the seriousness it deserved. “I used to think about that when I was young. What I’d have chosen if I could have chosen anything.” The fire popped, and she watched the spark die on the hearthstone. “I’d have wanted something quieter, maybe. Smaller. A house with a good kitchen garden and enough custom to keep me busy but not so much it wore me down.” She smiled, brief and private. “Then my mother got sick and I took over the inn and twenty years went past and now I can’t imagine anything else.”

“That’s an answer,” Breck said.

“What about you.” She said it without expectation, the way people asked questions they didn’t necessarily need answered.

Breck turned his cup in his hands. The fire had established itself fully now, filling the hearth with steady warmth and the smell of clean wood smoke, and outside the window the sky was beginning to separate itself from the darkness by degrees.

He thought about it honestly, the way he rarely did — usually he kept that particular door shut, not out of anguish but out of pragmatism. An ideal life was a pleasant thing to want and a useless thing to carry on the road.

“A house,” he said finally. “Nothing large. Stone, if I could manage it, so it stayed warm in winter. South-facing, for the light.” He paused. “A kitchen with a proper hearth. A table big enough to work at. A room for guests, if anyone came.” Another pause, longer. “A dog, probably. Something big and useless and glad to see me when I came in.”

The innkeeper smiled properly this time. “That’s a quiet life for a man your size.”

“Quiet suits me.”

“Where?”

“Somewhere the roads aren’t too close. Close enough to walk to a market, far enough that you can’t hear the cart traffic in the morning.” He set the cup down. “Somewhere I hadn’t been before. So there was nothing I already knew about it.”

She studied him across the fire. The quality of her attention had changed — not sharper exactly, but deeper, the way a person listened when they recognized something they’d heard before in a different voice.

“And the work?” she asked. “In this quiet house. What would you do?”

Breck was quiet for a moment. Through the window, the first real light was touching the rooftops of Crestfall, turning the wet slate from black to the color of old pewter. Somewhere in the building above them, the first guests were beginning to stir — the creak of a floorboard, the sound of water poured from a pitcher.

“Something that stayed finished,” he said. “Whatever I made in the morning, I’d want it to still be made in the evening.” He turned the cup once more. “Courier work — you deliver and it’s delivered and tomorrow there’s another delivery. There’s no accumulation. Nothing you can stand back from and see.” He paused. “I’d want to make something that lasted.”

“Like what?”

“I don’t know yet.” He said it plainly, without apology. “I know what I’m good at. I don’t know what I’d be good at if I stopped doing that.”

The innkeeper nodded slowly, as though this was among the more honest things she’d heard in some time. She rose to stir the fire, and the coals shifted and breathed orange, and the warmth in the room increased by a degree.

“The man who was here last night,” Breck said. “Corner table. Left side door.”

Her stirring slowed. Didn’t stop.

“Drav,” she said. The name came out flat, stripped of everything that wasn’t pure fact. “He’s been in Crestfall six months. Came with two others in the first week of autumn.”

“He work for the magistrate.”

“He works for whoever pays him.” She set the poker down carefully. “The magistrate pays him.”

“What does he do.”

“Whatever needs doing.” She turned back to face him. The warmth in her expression hadn’t gone exactly, but something had moved behind it — the way a fire looks when a cloud passes over the sun. “He’s not like the others. The others are loud. They drink and they push and you know exactly what you’re dealing with.” She paused. “Drav just — appears. When there’s a problem that needs to stop being a problem.”

“Like the miller.”

The fire crackled between them. Outside, the first cart of the morning was rolling down the main road, its iron-rimmed wheels loud on the wet cobblestone, and then it passed and the quiet came back.

“Like the miller,” she said.

Breck stood. He was a full head taller than her, maybe more, and in the low-ceilinged common room he filled the space above the hearthlight in a way that should have felt threatening and somehow didn’t — the stillness of him absorbing his own scale, the way large water absorbs weather.

“My document,” he said. “The clerk said morning.”

“The magistrate’s office opens at the second bell.” She looked at him steadily. “You could be on the north road before the third.”

“I could.”

She held his gaze for a moment. Then she turned back to the fire, and her hands resumed their work, and the subject was closed in the way that subjects closed between people who understood each other without requiring confirmation.

Breck put on his cloak, settled the satchel across his chest, and moved the bracelet once, the way he always did — checking it without knowing he was checking it, the old reflex, the one that lived below thought. It was pale in the firelight. Small against the worn leather of the strap.

He walked to the door and opened it onto the cold morning air, and Crestfall lay before him under its pewter sky, quiet and watchful and waiting to see what he would do.

He stood in the doorway for a moment, the fire at his back and the empty square ahead.

A quiet life. A stone house. South-facing. A dog.

Something that stayed finished.

He stepped out into the cold and pulled the door shut behind him.

Not toward the north road.

Enjoyed this story? Writing Lumenvale is how I pay my bills. If these stories are worth something to you, a $1 Ko-fi keeps the forge burning — and tells me this world is worth continuing. 👉 Buy Chadwick a coffee

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Discover Latera: The Dark Fantasy World of The Knight’s Last Stand

"Epic and Dark. . . This is a fantasy series starter you won't want to miss." The Knight's Last Stand could be in your hands, words in your head and pages turning in your favorite reading spot TODAY. Vibe check:  ✅if you like lotr depth and high fantasy  ✅if you like battles and action ✅if you like characters with depth and faced with impossible odds ✅ if you like actual good vs actual evil ✅a story that won’t end for minimum of nine books and possible series expansions […]

https://bearpardun.wordpress.com/2026/04/09/discover-latera-the-dark-fantasy-world-of-the-knights-last-stand/

FYI: The Kindle edition of "Mr. Perkins Goes to Hell" is FREE worldwide via Amazon until January 16th. Don't miss this thrilling tale of speculative fiction from The Nod/Wells Timelines, filled with pulse-pounding terror and poignant social commentary.

https://amazon.com/dp/B0FR56Y23B

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The filthiest fucking nativity you ever did read about. Enjoy this delightfully dirty guest story, The Naughtivity: https://carasutra.com/2023/12/christmas-group-sex-erotica-the-naughtivity #GroupErotica #FestiveFiction #FreeStory #freebie
The Naughtivity: Christmas Group Sex Erotica

Christmas group sex erotica as a stranded couple discover a secret stable party: bisexual play, voyeurism and wild festive fun in The Naughtivity.

Cara Sutra

THIS WEEK'S BOOK DEAL: The Kindle edition of "Hostile Takeover" is FREE worldwide via Amazon until Dec. 17!

A dark thriller set in a near-future alternate reality from The Nod/Wells Timelines, it's a great fit for any fan of speculative fiction.

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