âThe morning began with steam. Buckets sloshed, soap scummed in troughs, and children lined in rows while Sister Martel barked at them to scrub elbows, ears, and anything a hunterâs eye might frown at. Aurora did as the others didâthough the water slid off her skin as if it didnât know where to stay.
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âBreakfast was bread and broth, bitter with sage. She lifted the spoon, touched it to her lips, and set it down again. Brandon shoved his empty bowl across the table with a grin. âIf you wonât eat it, I will.â He scraped it clean in three swallows and winked at her. She let him; the ache in her chest eased a little just sitting near his warmth.
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âBy midmorning, they were walking in a line behind Martel, the Inner Ring shrinking behind them. The gates opened into the Outer Ring, where stone gave way to wood and hide, to campfire smoke and racks of drying meat. Hunters moved between stalls, their leather armor scarred, their laughter hard. The smell was sharper hereâfur, iron, and blood boiled down into trade.
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ââThis,â Martel declared, âis the work that keeps the walls standing.â
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âA hunter met them at the pathâs end, a man with an easy stride and scars that traced his jaw like careless handwriting. He carried a boarâs tusk on his belt and a pack that looked heavier than it was. âNameâs Garrow,â he said. âIâll show you what we do.â
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âHe led them through the camp. Beasts were skinned on racks, tusks polished for sale, organs packed in salt. Garrow pointed to each station: âMeat goes to the kitchens, hides to the tanners, claws and teeth to the smiths. Nothing wasted. Even the bile sells, if you know which apothecaryâs buying.â
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âChildren wrinkled their noses. Some whispered âdisgusting,â others âamazing.â Aurora said nothing. She was listeningânot to the hunterâs voice, but to the silence between his words. The pulse of his intent was steady, but she felt a hitch when they passed a row of skulls. His warmth dimmed for a breath.
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âShe raised her hand. âWhat about the ones you donât know? The beasts no oneâs seen before?â
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âGarrow cocked his head. âThatâs when the real work starts. You watch, you listen, you come back alive and tell the rest. Every new beast leaves a mark somewhere. The trickâs knowing how to read it.â
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âAuroraâs voice was flat, but the words quickened, as if she were chasing a shape only she could see. âWhat if it has no mark? What if it only takes, and leaves nothing?â
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âThe hunter frowned. âThen itâs not a beast I know.â He tried to laugh it off, but his intent shifted againâthin, wary. âWhy dâyou ask?â
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âAuroraâs eyes did not blink. âBecause it took my mother.â
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âThe line of children went stiff. Martel stepped closer, her hand light on Auroraâs shoulder, firm enough to guide her silence. âThatâs enough questions for today.â
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âThey moved on to the harvest section. Tools were handed outâhooks, knives dulled for training, brushes for cleaning hides. Brandon attacked his task with stubborn strength; Zara tested each stroke against her slate-scribbled notes. Aurora worked beside them, slower, but her hands steady. She traced the cut of a tendon like it was a letter she meant to memorize forever.
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âWhen the day ended, Garrow dismissed them with a wave. âYouâve seen the best of it,â he said. âRemember it that way.â
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âThe children trudged back through the gates, smoke trailing on their clothes, blood-smell clinging to their fingers. Most were chattering, laughing too loud, eager to shake off what theyâd seen.
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âAurora walked in silence, her eyes on the stone walls rising ahead, her hunger tight in her chest. She had asked a question and heard no answerâbut the silence was an answer of its own.
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