The sun climbed higher, but the line didn't shrink. If anything, it grew.
Sol was no longer just a cook; he was an arbitrageur in a primitive world, running the most profitable exchange rate in history. He was trading water, heat, and "trash" ingredients for... more "trash" ingredients. To the tribe, it was a miracle trade. To Sol, it was an infinite loop of almost zero-cost production.
Veyra was drowning in success.
"Another rib cage!" she shouted over the din, tossing the bloody bones onto the growing mountain behind the stall. "Two stomachs! A sack of liver!"
The pile of raw materials was getting obscene. They had started with a basket; now they had enough offal and bone to fill two, even three. Sol calculated rapidly: he could keep this pot running for days, just adding water and fresh scraps, the flavor deepening into something legendary.
But Sol wasn't just harvesting bones. He was harvesting them.
He worked the ladle with a hypnotic rhythm, but his focus was on the women standing on the other side of the stone table. He activated the Ash Gray energy in his chest… not a focused beam like he used earlier, but a low, passive pulse, that only he could see. It didn't have any logic writing effects as before, instead, it only made him appear more attractive, hotter, irresistible, and you know attractive people can get away with anything, same logic here.
A young mother stepped up, holding out a handful of bitter herbs. She was pretty, with sweat glistening on her collarbone, and a stray lock of hair sticking to her cheek.
"For the broth," she said shyly.
"A fair trade," Sol purred, his voice dropping to that intimate register he reserved for his "customers."
He ladled the soup, ensuring a generous piece of fat floated on top. He handed her the bowl, but he didn't let go immediately.
His fingers lingered on hers.
He brushed his thumb against her palm in a slow, deliberate caress—a touch that lasted three seconds too long to be accidental. Under normal circumstances, she might have pulled away, offended by the boldness or wary of a strange man touching her.
But under the influence of the Ash Gray mist, her logic twisted. She didn't recoil.
She flushed darker, her breath hitching audibly. She looked at his hand, then up at his eyes. She didn't see a lecher trying to cop a feel; she saw a benevolent provider sharing his warmth. The touch felt safe. It felt... right. It felt like she belonged in his grip.
"Thank you, Sol," she whispered, her voice trembling slightly, her eyes dilating.
Sol leaned in across the table, invading her personal space just enough to let her smell the musk of his own exertion.
"Come back again," he said, his voice silky, his eyes dropping to her waist as she turned. "I'll save the best portion for you."
Sol leaned in across the table, invading her personal space just enough to let her smell the musk of his own exertion.
He did it again and again. A brush of his hand against a waist as he leaned over the table to inspect a basket. A thumb tracing the pulse point of a wrist as he accepted a bone. A lingering gaze that made knees weak.
They blushed. They giggled. They leaned into his touch, starved for the kind of attention that wasn't just a grunt and a grab in the dark. Sol was seducing the entire female population of the tribe, one touch at a time, and they were thanking him for it.
"Sol!"
A familiar, breathless voice broke his concentration. Sol looked up to see Taru… pushing through the crowd, his eyes wide as saucers.
"What... by the Spirits, Sol, what is this?" Taru gaped, looking at the line, the steam, the pile of meat. "I heard people talking about 'liquid fire' all the way at the river. Is this you?"
"Taru," Sol grinned, genuinely happy to see his only male ally. "Welcome to the future."
"You're trading soup for... garbage?" Taru asked, looking at the bone pile.
"I'm trading flavor for wealth," Sol corrected.
He dipped the ladle deep, scraping the bottom for a massive chunk of the badger meat and a generous amount of the precious fat. He filled a bowl to the brim… double the usual portion… and shoved it into Taru's hands.
"On the house," Sol said loudly, so others could hear. "For my brother."
Taru took the bowl, looking at Sol with gratitude that bordered on hero-worship. He took a sip, and his knees actually buckled.
"Oh..." Taru groaned, wiping his mouth. "Sol... if you need anything... anything at all... you just ask. I'll fight a Thornmaw for this."
"Just enjoy it," Sol winked. "Stick around. It's already enough."
Taru nodded vigorously, moving to the side to guard the flank, slurping noisily. Loyalty: secured.
As the pot dwindled to the last few servings, the atmosphere in the square shifted. The chaotic joy dampend slightly, a cold kinife cutting through the heat.
Sol felt a prickle on the back of his neck. His predator instincts, honed by the Ash Gray energy, flared.
He looked up slowly.
Standing at the very edge of the square, half-hidden by the shadow of a warrior's hut, was someone, oh isn't it Vurok.
The bully wasn't moving. He stood like a statue carved from hate. His arms were crossed over a chest thick with muscle, his knuckles white with the force of his grip.
He was watching the women of the tribe… women he usually intimidated, ignored, or took for granted... fawning over the waste. He watched them drinking the soup with flushed faces. He watched them looking at Sol with adoring eyes. He saw the mountain of meat scraps that should have been trash, now transformed into Sol's treasure.
It was humiliation. Pure and simple. The "waste" of the tribe was becoming its star, and Vurok, the son of a hunter, was standing in the shadows, forgotten.
Sol paused, the ladle hovering over the pot.
He looked directly at Vurok across the crowd. He didn't smile. He didn't gloat. He simply tilted the ladle, pouring a stream of golden broth back into the cauldron… a visual representation of the wealth flowing through his hands.
Their eyes locked.
Sol slowly, deliberately, winked.
It was a small gesture, but it hit harder than a punch.
Vurok's jaw clenched so hard Sol could see the muscle pop from thirty feet away. He spat on the ground, a glob of saliva hitting the dust. He turned on his heel and stormed off into the maze of huts, shoving a young boy out of his path with unnecessary violence.
"He's going to be a problem," Arelia whispered, stepping up beside Sol. She was refilling the water bucket, her face pale. "Torak won't like this either. You're disrupting the order. You're making them look small."
"Let them come," Sol said softly, scraping the bottom of the cauldron for the last customer. "By the time they realize what's happening, who knows who will be the one to… he didn't continue."
Instead, he served the final bowl.
"That's it!" Sol announced, raising his empty hands to the groans of the crowd. "The pot is dry!"
He jumped onto the stone platform, looking out at the sea of flushed, satisfied faces.
"But fear not!" Sol shouted. "My family and I will return at dusk! Bring your bones! Bring your scraps! The Ancestors provide for those who trade!"
He pointed to the mountain of raw ingredients Veyra was guarding.
"Tonight's batch," he promised, his eyes gleaming, "will be even stronger."
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