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“No more standing on doors, please,” she said. “We broke more than glass last week.”
Master Elowen waited at the long table—she had the knotted hands and carved jaw of a woman who had watched too many winters. Her hair was threaded with silver, and beneath her sternness there was an angle of grief that made her look younger than the years allowed. She did not rise when he entered. City of Broken Dreamers -v1.15.0 Ch. 15-
He had not meant to be awake at dawn. He had not meant to be anything but small—one more crooked thing among the city’s broken things—but the letter had come the night before, pressed between yellowing maps and folded with a hand he knew by memory. The words had been short: Kestrel, come to the Lanternmakers' Hall. Midnight. Bring nothing that cannot be repaired. “No more standing on doors, please,” she said
Kestrel closed his door and, for the first time in a long while, sat at the table and took up a lantern to mend it properly—no false latches, no powder, only the slow work of fitting glass to frame. He felt the old, honest rhythm of it return: seam, thread, press. Outside, the city breathed and breathed and learned how to keep its own lights alive. She did not rise when he entered
Above him, a lantern blinked in the rain, steady as a heartbeat. Somewhere, someone had the old habit of naming light the way others named children. The city would continue to break and be mended, to have moments stolen and stolen back. The Lanternmakers had not won; they had bought time. In this city, time had a cost. They would pay it in sleepless nights, in careful locks, in tiny rebellions, and in the slow, patient art of repair.
It did not end in one night. In the days that followed there were hearings called by the Council—formal affairs held in rooms smelling of citrus and paper. A man named Lyram, a Council liaison with a voice made to smooth dissent into consent, spoke of public safety and efficiency. “Uniform light,” he said, “is a public good.” He spread diagrams and numbers like a doctor displaying an autopsy.
They had argued for two nights. A table of coffers, a ledger of risks. Master Ried, who believed the guild could weather anything, had argued to accept the contract. He liked money and the idea of a guild stabilized. Jessamyn, who mended lanterns by night and loved the crooked lanes in which stories collected, had argued to refuse. The apprentices had split into smaller cliques; someone had painted graffiti on the Hall’s back wall—a small lamp with a hand striking it out.