Chapter 8
Liza and Mabel Book 2: Tiefenburg
Steam hung low in the air, thick with meat and vinegar.
The counter stretched across the room like a church altarâscarred, stained, eternal.
Sunlight slanted in from a grimy skylight, catching the drift of heat rising from the kitchen vents.
The counter was warm from the sun that slanted through the high windowâdust catching in the beam, slow and soft.
The girls stood at the counter like they'd been poured into placeâLiza hunched low, Mabel listing forward with her chin resting on the wood.
Mabel had to do the talkingâLiza was too busy keeping the whole machine from collapsing.
Behind the counter, Estes Kelpie was already in motion.
The knife sank into the first pie with a clean crunchâgolden crust flaking as Estes split it wide.
Steam surged up, thick with the smell of slow-cooked beef and marrow-rich gravy.
She cupped the tin, flipped it one-handed, and let the minced beef pie drop with a soft thud onto the plate.
A scoop of mash followedâsilky, ridged from the spoon.
Then came the liquor: pale green, parsley-sharp, glossy enough to catch the candlelight as it spilled in a lazy spiral across the mash. Mabelâs plate.
Next, the lamb.
Estes turned, broke the crust openâminted steam rising like a breath from the earth.
The filling glistened, dark and tender. She plated it clean, centered with a second scoop of mash.
A tangle of buttered cabbage joined the sideâleaves wilted just right, glossy, peppered.
The trays landed with a practiced thumpâpie, mash, cabbage, all piping hot and properly spaced.
Two stoneware cups followed, set down with just enough force to clink against the woodâfrothy, dark, and cold.
Estes grinned, sleeves still dusted with flour.
âThe usual for the sweet oneâ "
She was already halfway back to the stove.
"and a lamb and mint pie with buttered cabbage for her sister! Enjoy!â
The mash hit firstâhot, starchy, sharp with parsley.
Then the vinegar, bright enough to cut through fog.
Liza blinked. Once. Then again.
Her spine straightened a little. Hands unclenched.
The smell had reached her.
And some primal part of her remembered she was alive.
âForginâ gold, Estes! Yeah, this is exactly what I was hoping for. Thanks, Estes.â
Liza started patting down her apron, fingers hunting for her stamp and card.
Estes didnât even flinch.
âYouâre trying to what, now?â
She leaned in slightly, eyes gleaming.
âLiza, you do realize your friend paid for months of meals in advance, right?
Stop making the maths difficult and eat up.
Itâs all over your faceâyou need it.â
Liza looked over at Mabel, one brow raisedâhalf questioning, half resigned.
Mabel didnât even blink. Just nodded once.
Both parts were true.
Mabel took her tray, Liza right behind.
The room buzzed with low voices, clinks, the scrape of cutlery on laminate.
They crossed between benches and settled near the end of a half-filled tableâspace enough to breathe, noise enough to stay background.
Both of them sat a little straighter now.
They both took a bite at the same time.
Liza made a sound halfway between a sigh and a laughâeyes half-lidded, shoulders finally dropping.
Mabel just let her head tilt back, chewing like the world had finally remembered how to be kind.
They ate without hurryâquiet, steady, content in the way only good food could allow.
The table chatter blurred into background hum.
For a few minutes, it was exactly what they needed to be: nobody special, just two girls eating something hot.
Then a shadow leaned in over the table, warm and solid albeit a bit short.
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âLiza! Mabel! I havenât seen you girls in days! How are ya?â
Albrecht, smiling like heâd been waiting around just waiting to bump into them.
Mabel perked up mid-bite, eyes lighting as she spotted him.
She hurried to swallow, wiping at the corner of her mouth with the back of her hand.
âOh! Miner Schmidt! Sorry, we had a long weekend and itâs now⦠what?â
She glanced at Liza, then back.
âAlby, what day is it actually?â
Albrechtâs smile faltered a little. He sat across from them without asking.
âLass. Itâs Wassdi. All I know is what your creepy friend told us at the pub this weekend, but I canât make sense of the past few days.â
He took a bite of his mashâslow, like chewing gave him time to line up the words.
âBrutus doesnât count the same anymore, and the Gildland contract vanished.â
He looked between them.
âDid you two have anything to do with it?â
Mabel leaned forward, eyes bright.
âOh, the Gildland job? Ohhhh youâd love this oneâLiza, tell him how it started!â
Liza lit up like someone had stomped the bellows.
"So you know that castle up north..."
And just like that, Deadfall had to live through the Graveinsâ exploits again.
Mabel told Albrecht about the farmâhow quiet it was at first, how it exploded into waves of snarling Commons and armored Enforcers.
Three girls.
Thirty Commons.
Five Enforcers.
All cleared in under twenty minutes.
A pair of black and red ears flicked.
The therian looked over, intriguedâthen rose without a word and drifted closer, tray still in hand.
Liza picked up the thread.
She talked about the towerâhow she gutted the base with her fists, and brought it down along with the wall behind it.
How more walls followed.
How the path behind her was all ruined stone and broken bodies.
A young miner from Albrechtâs section drifted over, wide-eyed and shameless.
âYou didnât stake them? You just crushed them!?â
Liza laughed.
âYeah, kiddo. Weâre just three people. Tryinâ to fight an army in the open? Thatâs suicide.
Weâre not like Dad.
Youâll see how we cleaned up later.â
Eleanor let the âkiddoâ comment slide.
She and Liza were close in age, but this story came first.
Mabel took over.
She described the grappling shotâhow she fired clean through the machicolation, and how Gravitas reeled them up like a starving fisherman hauling line.
Thatâs when the goblin showed up.
Edmund drifted over from Albrechtâs table, a few other miners subtly shifting to listen closer.
âPardon. What?â was all he managed.
He could track plentyâbut magic stacked on magic, non-lethal and cooperative, short-circuited every gear in his head.
Albrechtâs eyes tracked Zinaâs shift, then Edmundâs. He didnât say anythingâjust settled deeper into his seat like he knew what came next.
A few miners had stopped eating entirely. One held a fork in midair like it might help him process orbital ascent via magical hardware.
Liza was fully in it nowâtalking with her hands, eyes wide, words coming faster.
âYeah, and when we got to Count Sappy Butterâs roomââ
she didnât even try to correct herselfâ
âhe tried to do the whole menacing slag routine, like âI, Count Sablefieldâââ
She threw up finger quotes, then mimicked a pompous bow.
âI dunno what he was gonna say, but I had Mabel Ventus me into him, and the pilebunker did the rest.â
A ripple of reactions followed. A few gasps. One whistle.
And one confused miner halfway through a forkful of cabbage.
âWait, hold on. Whatâs Ventus?â
Mabel didnât miss a moment.
âOh, itâs just a lot of wind in one spot.
Think like an explosion or a riverâbut no fire, no water. Just air.â
She sipped her drink.
âFast air.â
Even Estes was invested now.
She leaned on the counter, arms dusted in flour, brows lifted.
âShafts above, Mabel. What did the Tradesman Guild pay for a night like that?â
Liza gave a defeated shrug, stabbing the last of her mash.
âThe run itself was just over thirty gold.
We got a little greedy with salvage and came back with a couple thousand.â
She took a sip, then added,
âFive hundred of it went to Eris. Not sure why she didnât take more.â
Estes blinked.
Then just muttered,
ââ¦Gonna have to bake more pies.â
Mabel added helpfully,
âShe didnât take more because goldâs heavy. Like, really heavy.â
Liza nodded, dead serious.
âShe tried to carry all of it in one go.
Didnât want to make a second trip.â
Estes stared.
ââ¦Did it work?â
Liza sighed.
âShe got most of it out the door. Then fell down the stairs.
Twice. I don't want to imagine hiking that boulder all the way to Night Shift in the sun.
Hope that vampire strength pays off.â
The members of Rail Crew 68 shared a look.
Even Zina paused, arms crossed, eyes narrowed like she was recalculating everything.
Only Eleanor found her voice.
She stared at Albrecht, then back at the Graveins.
âThousands of forginâ gold?
Boss⦠what is this?â
Albrecht looked over at the sistersâsurrounded now, half the pub leaning in, trying to pry details loose like treasure from stone.
Liza was animated, Mabel calmly answering questions.
He glanced back at what little of his crew was with him.
Just a few facesâbut all of them watching, listening, weighing.
Albrecht nodded to himself.
âThis is that Gravein spirit,â he said quietly. âAnd we could use it on that Lord hunt weâve been eyeing.â