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Golden Boule
This was the type of morning that seemed to have made people in the city smile.At four-thirty the bakery already was noisy (Lila humming at an inappropriate pitch, Runa quarrelling with the novice apprentice over whether cinnamon was to be included in olive bread, the ovens purring like contented cats).Then the first loaf rose.Not on the common dawdling style.It rose straight up.One ideal, golden boule shot off the proofing board, and suspended three feet in the air, and commenced to sing.Not metaphorically.Sing actually (in the clear and sweet voice of the six-year-old Mira Vale, impossible).Thank you for keeping me warm.All the loaves in the bakery had followed (hundreds of them, whole wheat and half-baked and even the ones Kade swore she could make every solstice that his ghost insisted on making). Very slowly and gracefully they swirled upwards in a spiral, filling the room with the odor of
The Morning the Sky Touched the Ground
It happened on the first day of the 150th year after the walls fell.Runa was twenty now (tall, ink-stained, coat blazing with so many living constellations it hurt to look at directly). She woke before dawn with the taste of starlight on her tongue and the certainty that something vast was leaning close enough to kiss the city.She ran barefoot through streets still silver with dew, past sleeping houses and early bread deliveries, until she reached the riverbank.The sky was already there.Not above.On the ground.The great spiral of lights (four hundred and forty-five children plus every guardian who had ever carried their names) had descended in the night. It hovered a handspan above the grass like a second, brighter river, pulsing gently with the rhythm of a lullaby no one had sung aloud in decades.Runa’s breath caught.Every star was the size of a heart.And every heart was beating.She reached out (h
The Girl Who Was Born After the End
Her name was Runa.She was born on the hundred-and-twentieth anniversary of the morning the walls fell, in the back room of the bakery while Old Thunder roared and the river sang its oldest lullaby.The midwife swore the baby opened her eyes the moment the first cry left her lungs and looked straight at the circle of eight stars painted on the ceiling (the ones Solace had drawn the week she died, now faded to gentle gold).Runa’s first word wasn’t “mama” or “milk.”It was “bread.”She said it at six months old, clear as dawn, while reaching for the crust Arin’s great-great-grandniece was tearing apart for the birds.Everyone laughed, because of course she did.But the System (no longer a voice, no longer separate, simply the quiet hum that lived in every light and every loaf) flickered once in the bakery windows, like it recognized something.Runa grew up with flour in her blood and stories in her bones.She learned to walk by pulling herself up on the legs of strangers who had come t
The bakery was never sold once more
The bakery was not supposed to be that of Lila.It was already long before she had a name to them other than the people who feed everyone.At the age of five, the revolution was so young that the city was still smelling of paint and smoke. She stayed in the eastern dorms along with thirty other war-orphans, elbows and hunger and nightmares, which all made the night monitors three times as frequent. One day a clumsy cargo drone crashed through the roof of the dorm and the hundreds of still-warm loaves of bread spilled onto the floor like a miracle that no one had ordered.Lila (little, violent as she was already fancied to have nothing to claim of the world) took the loaf of bread she could find at hand, broke it in two, and gave her half to the wailing boy at her elbow.And it was the first laugh she had ever heard Arin give.He was standing in the rubble, flour in his hair, atte
Storytelling Time
They started reading the names at nightfall on the first day of spring.Not in the square. Not in the storytelling hall.On the riverbank, where the water had become taught of human hearts.Four hundred and thirty-seven little lanterns were waiting in tidy rows on the mud (those of plain paper that children make at school). They had all a candle and a piece of rice paper, no larger than a thumb.Hale arrived first.She had slept not since Calder crumbled. Her eyes had sunk and her hands were steady as she dropped on her knees and started to write.It required her three attempts to get the first name.Mira Vale, age 6Where tears fell on the paper the ink was bleeding.She had written the second name more quickly.Tomas Wren, age 8She was no
Nobody on the riverbank said much.
They started reading the names at nightfall on the first day of spring.Not in the square. Not in the storytelling hall.On the riverbank, where the water had become taught of human hearts.Four hundred and thirty-seven little lanterns were waiting in tidy rows on the mud (those of plain paper that children make at school). They had all a candle and a piece of rice paper, no larger than a thumb.Hale arrived first.She had slept not since Calder crumbled. Her eyes had sunk and her hands were steady as she dropped on her knees and started to write.It required her three attempts to get the first name.Mira Vale, age 6Where tears fell on the paper the ink was bleeding.She had written the second name more quickly.Tomas Wren, age 8She was no longer trembling by the tenth.She was whispering them by the hundred, and her voice was raw, as though it should be listened to harder by saying.Reven had been silent, working beside her, and shaving curls of cedar in each lantern, to make the
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