Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -u... Review
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."
"House 27 is...?" Halvar began.
Negotiations again unfolded like the careful repair of sails. The Coalition proposed increased authority to inspect and to sanction. The Assembly demanded joint oversight. New Iros's council resisted in theory and capitulated in others: a joint tribunal would be formed to oversee shipments to Lornis for six months. The Peacekeepers would serve as arbiters in the tribunal—but only with Assembly monitors at their side. It was a compromise, neither victory nor defeat but a settlement that left the city breathing. Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -U...
Lornis was a city across the gulf, a place of sharp stones and sharper merchants. An escalation there meant more than a riot; it meant the rearrangement of power across trade lines. The message suggested an orchestration at scale—someone trying to move not goods but influence. Lysa found the chest where Daern had said


