The Peacekeepers -u... | Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 -
The immediate consequence was a clampdown on open routes to Lornis. The Coalition placed advisories. The Silver Strand tightened manifests and demanded escorts. The Fishermen's Collective complained of increased inspections that slowed their boats and cut profits. New Iros, balanced precariously between competing interests, found itself in the center of a wheel that might spin dangerously.
The answer came not from a ledger but from a face. A man in a dark room, pulled aside by a friend who owed a favor, admitted that he had been paid by a house that answered to a single name: House Kestrel. House Kestrel was not in the public registries. It operated out of a set of warehouses that had once belonged to a line of couriers. The name suggested speed; the reality suggested logistics—men who could make something disappear quickly and effectively. Henteria Chronicles Ch. 3 - The Peacekeepers -U...
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. The immediate consequence was a clampdown on open
Beside her, Halvar folded a gloved hand over the rail. He had a permanent way of making his shoulders look like a parked ship: always braced, always ready for a storm. "Rumors are a kind of order, then," he said. "They tell you where to stand and what to watch. Today's rumor says the Peacekeepers are coming." A man in a dark room, pulled aside