Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -u... -

A pattern formed: little events—an inspection gone wrong, a promissory note suddenly called in, a ship delayed by "mechanical reasons"—all threading back to Lornis. People began to listen for the name in different tones: the traders worried, the fishermen cursed, the Peacekeepers prepared. The Assembly urged caution and sought backdoors into shadows. It became clear that the chest and the letter were the tip of a long and patient plan.

The dive into wreckage is neither cinematic nor silent. It is a stew of sound and pressure: the sea closes around you with a coppery taste, your body aligned with a slow clock as you hold breath and reach. The wreck of the Teynora sat on the seabed like a sleeping animal. Its ribs were canted up through sand and saltweed, and gullies of silt hid treasures and dead men's boots. Divers moved like ghosts, fingers exploring dark hollows. Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -U...

He moved like someone who had practiced modesty until it became second nature. Up close, his face was ordinary in a way that sometimes revealed the sharpest edges: a narrow mouth, a nose that might have been broken once and set well enough, and eyes that seemed to shift color with the light. He carried a satchel—the sort that said he expected to be asked for documents and to produce them. A pattern formed: little events—an inspection gone wrong,

Night fell like velvet, swallowing the market's last calls. In the quiet that followed, when the lamps burned low and the sound of boots faded, a new figure moved along the harbor walls. He wore a cloak that drank the light, and when he stepped beneath the lean shadow of a warehouse, he reached inside his coat and extracted a small, glinting object. It was a coin, not silver nor gold but something older, with a raised sigil: two wings folded over an eye. It became clear that the chest and the