Author's Note: Chapter has been edited as of 12/21/2025. I've listened to your comments and tried to make the pace a bit slower, and build the world a bit more.
---
Day seven began like the others.
Marron woke to sunlight filtering through the cart's canvas awning, the smell of morning dew on grass, and Mokko already awake and stretching near the cart.
"Good morning," she called, climbing down to splash water on her face from the basin they kept outside.
"Morning." Mokko adjusted his glasses. "We're low on vegetables. I'll forage after the morning rush."
"Morning rush." Marron smiled at the phrase. Six days ago, she'd had one customer. Now, she could expect five or six before noon. It wasn't much, but it was hers.
She climbed into the cart and started her routine. Light the stove—easier now, her heat control improving daily. Check the storage—the cart had helpfully organized everything overnight. Prep the cutting board—her knife work still needed practice, but her cuts were cleaner than they'd been.
She felt... content.
Not happy in the explosive, champagne-celebration way. Just quietly satisfied. This was a life she could see herself living. Simple food, honest work, people leaving fuller than they'd arrived.
Maybe this is enough, she thought, echoing her words from the night before.
The cart's interior warmed slightly, as if agreeing.
"First customer," Mokko called.
Marron looked up and saw an elderly man approaching—one of her regulars now, a farmer who traded eggs for rice porridge. She waved, already reaching for the rice.
The morning passed in its new familiar rhythm. The farmer. A young mother with two children. A traveling tinker who paid in copper wire that Mokko assured her was valuable for repairs.
By midday, Marron was cleaning up, humming one of the pit cooking songs Mokko had taught her, when his ears suddenly perked up.
"Someone's coming," he said quietly.
"Another customer?"
"No." His voice had changed. Alert. Almost wary. "Not a customer."
Marron moved to the serving window and looked where Mokko was staring.
A figure emerged from the overgrown path at the edge of Meadowbrook Commons. Moving with a fluid grace that was almost unsettling. Each step deliberate, silent, like water flowing over stone.
Gray fur. Tall and lean. Golden eyes that caught the sunlight.
Wolfkin.
"Mokko?" Marron's voice was barely a whisper.
"I see him." The bear hadn't moved, but his posture had shifted. Not threatening, but ready. "That's Kael."
"The one from—"
"The thornboar, yes." Mokko glanced at her. "He's been watching you all week. I've caught his scent at the edge of the market every evening at sunset."
"Watching me?" Marron's stomach tightened. "Why?"
"Deciding something, probably." Mokko's tone was neutral. "Whatever he's about to do, stay calm. Kael doesn't speak unless he means it."
The wolfkin approached the cart with that same unsettling grace. He wore simple traveling clothes in earth tones, a hunting knife at his belt, and carried something wrapped in dark cloth under one arm.
When he reached the serving window, he stopped and looked at Marron with those golden eyes. Studying her. Measuring.
She fought the urge to fidget.
"You're still here," he said finally. His voice was low, with a roughness that made Common Tongue sound like something he'd learned but didn't speak often.
"Where else would I be?"
"Most give up after the first week. Go back to easier places." His ears flicked. "You're still cooking."
"I like cooking."
"You're still serving simple food."
Marron bristled slightly. "G-rank food. That's what I can make."
"Hmm." He set the cloth-wrapped bundle on her counter. It landed with a heavy thud that made the wood creak.
Whatever was inside, it was dense. Heavy.
"What's that?" Marron asked.
Kael unwrapped the cloth slowly, methodically. When he pulled the fabric away, Marron's breath caught.
Meat.
But not like any meat she'd seen before.
It was almost black—a deep purple so dark it looked like it had been carved from shadow. The texture was dense, the muscle fibers visible in the harsh afternoon light. It had a faint shimmer, like oil on water, and when the sun hit it directly, she could swear it seemed to absorb the light rather than reflect it.
"What... is this?" she whispered.
"Duskbeast." Kael's voice was flat. Matter-of-fact. "Can you cook it?"
Marron reached out hesitantly and touched the meat. It was cold. Heavy. The texture was like stone under her fingertips, and something about it made her skin prickle.
A window appeared in her vision.
[INGREDIENT IDENTIFIED: DUSKBEAST MEAT]
[RANK: B]
[WARNING: This ingredient is above your current skill level]
[DANGER: Improper preparation may cause paralysis in consumers]
[RECOMMENDATION: Decline this ingredient]
Her heart started to race. "Kael, I—I'm G-rank. This is B-rank. I can't—"
Kael's expression didn't change, but something flickered in his golden eyes. Not quite dismissal. Not quite pity. Something harder.
"Rank." He said the word like it tasted strange. "That number your invisible guide gives you."
Marron blinked. "The System, yes. And it's telling me this is way above what I—"
"It means nothing to me."
The words were simple. Final.
"But—"
"In Whisperwind, we do not measure skill with numbers." His voice remained level, but there was weight behind it now. "We do not care about levels." He said it like a foreign concept he'd encountered but didn't understand. "I have met chefs like you before. Summoned ones. They had these... Systems. Invisible voices that told them what they could and could not do."
He tapped the meat with one claw. "This voice told them they were 'not ready.' That ingredients had 'requirements.' That they needed to reach certain numbers before they could touch certain foods."
"That's how it works—"
"That is how it works. Not how we work." Kael's gaze was steady, unwavering. "In Whisperwind, a pup who can bring down a duskbeast is a hunter. An elder who cannot is not. Skill matters. Results matter. Not time served. Not ranks earned."
Mokko shifted beside the cart. "He's not wrong, Marron. Beastkin culture doesn't have hierarchies like that. They value what you can do."
"But I've only been cooking for a week—"
"You cooked thornboar and listened to what it needed." Kael's voice softened slightly. "You did not hide it. You did not smother it. You honored it. That is skill."
"That was C-rank! This is B-rank!"
"Letters. Numbers." He waved a paw dismissively. "These things your System uses to measure you. They do not measure what I saw when you cooked. They do not measure intent."
He pushed the meat toward her. The serving counter groaned under its weight.
"Your System says you cannot do this. I say you can. Which of us do you believe?"
Marron looked at the duskbeast meat. At the System warning still blinking in her vision. At Kael's unwavering golden stare.
Her mouth was dry. "What happens if I fail?"
"You learn." He said it simply. "In Whisperwind, failure is not shameful. Refusing to try is."
"And if I poison someone?"
"Then you will know what not to do next time." His ears flicked forward. "Do you think I succeeded my first duskbeast hunt? I have scars from three failures before I finally killed one."
He touched his shoulder, and Marron could now see a jagged line through his gray fur where the hair grew back differently.
"This is from the first time I tried and ran. This—" he indicated his forearm, another scar, "—is from the second time, when I fought but was too slow. And this—" his chest, a deeper mark hidden partly by his shirt, "—is from the third time, when I wounded it but did not respect how dangerous a wounded predator is."
Marron stared at the scars. Real wounds. Real failures.
"But you kept trying."
"Because in Whisperwind, we are built on the backs of those who tried. Not those who waited for permission." His expression hardened again. "Your System is a guide. A tool. But if you let it tell you what you cannot do, you will never grow beyond what it expects."
He turned to leave.
Marron's voice caught him before he'd taken three steps. "Wait."
He looked back.
"How long did it take you? To hunt this?"
"Three days." His voice was quieter now. "Its mate is still hunting me. I nearly died twice."
He looked at her, and for the first time, she saw something other than that hard, measuring gaze. Something almost... hopeful.
"I did not risk that so you could tell me a number says you are not ready."
He walked away.
Marron stood there, frozen, the warning still blinking in her vision.
[ESTIMATED SUCCESS RATE: 15%]
[RECOMMENDATION: Decline this ingredient]
[This ingredient is DANGEROUS]
Her hands were shaking. She looked down at the duskbeast meat—dark, heavy, impossible.
"Marron." Mokko's voice was gentle. "You don't have to do this."
"He nearly died hunting this."
"I know."
"He risked his life for three days."
"I know."
"And he brought it to me because he thinks I can cook it."
Mokko was quiet for a moment. "He brought it to you because he wants to believe you can. There's a difference."
Marron looked at the meat. At the System's warnings. At the path where Kael had disappeared into the trees.
She thought about the thornboar. How the System had probably warned her about that too, and she'd cooked it anyway. How Kael had tasted it and said one word: "Listened."
She thought about her old life. How she'd let Derek and Mildred and everyone else tell her what she couldn't do. Where she wasn't ready to be. What she wasn't good enough for.
She thought about her mother's kitchen. The way her mom had handed her that first piece of fried chicken with flour in her hair and a tired smile. "Good?"
"It's perfect, Mom."
Marron picked up the duskbeast meat. It was heavy. Cold. Alien.
"That means nothing to me," she whispered, echoing Kael's words about her rank.
Then she looked at the System's warning and pressed [YES].
[WARNING ACKNOWLEDGED]
[ESTIMATED SUCCESS RATE: 15%]
[PROCEEDING WITH B-RANK INGREDIENT AT G-RANK]
[REQUESTING DETAILED ANALYSIS...]
[ANALYSIS AVAILABLE]
A new window appeared.
[DUSKBEAST MEAT PREPARATION REQUIREMENTS:]
Long, slow cooking (6-8 hours minimum)
Low, steady heat (no fluctuations)
Acidic marinade to break down toxins
Aromatic herbs to balance predatory essence
Calm, focused intent throughout cooking process
[DANGER POINTS:]
Too high heat = burns, becomes inedible
Too low heat = toxins remain active
Interrupted cooking = dangerous partial preparation
Emotional state affects outcome (meat is magically reactive)
[YOUR CURRENT SKILL LEVEL: INSUFFICIENT]
[RECOMMENDATION: Study ingredient for 24 hours before attempting]
Marron read it twice. Then a third time.
"Okay," she said quietly. "Okay. I can do this."
Mokko climbed into the cart beside her. "You're really going to try."
"He hunted for three days." She looked at the bear. "How can I do less?"
"You could poison someone. Including yourself."
"Then I'll learn what not to do." She smiled weakly. "Isn't that what you've been teaching me? That failure is just part of learning?"
Mokko was quiet for a long moment. Then he nodded slowly. "Your mother would be proud of you."
Marron felt her eyes sting. "Maybe. Or she'd say I'm an idiot for attempting B-rank meals at G-rank."
If she understood at all, Marron thought. She wasn't that good with video games, so she might not understand it's too dangerous to try.
"She'd probably say both." Mokko adjusted his glasses. "What do you need?"
"Time. Focus. And probably a miracle."
"I can help with the first two. The third is up to you and that meat."
Marron set the duskbeast meat on her prep counter and stared at it.
"Alright," she whispered. "Let's see if you'll talk to me like the thornboar did."
The meat sat there, dark, silent, and impossible.
And Marron got to work.
