Romantasy
published

Garden of Tethered Stars

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A living garden holds the city's vows in glowing pods, kept steady by a solitary Warden. When a market mender’s touch alters that balance, private closeness blooms into public crisis. Pressure from the Council forces an experimental reweaving of the Garden’s safeguards — one that demands a personal relinquishment and a radical redesign of how promises are kept.

romantasy
garden
craft
duty vs love
community
sacrifice

The Mender and the Warden

Chapter 1Page 1 of 28

Story Content

Elara worked with her hands the way other people prayed. Fingers that had learned to read the small complaints of cloth and copper could coax stubborn threads back into sympathy, could make a tired charm breathe again. Her stall sat under a crooked awning where the market funneled into narrower alleys, the air thick with boiled sweets, roasted root, and the tang of river spray. People left little things on her bench and went home lighter: a child's bell whose song had gone brittle, a pocket talisman dulled by grief, a braided hairband that had split down the middle. She did not pretend to miracles. She listened.

Listening, in Elara’s practice, meant more than quiet attention. It meant placing her palm against a surface and feeling the memory of stress and warmth, tracing the way a stitch had held, finding the particular exhausted seam where a thing gave up. It meant humming a tone that fit and sewing with thread that remembered sunlight. The work was small and precise and made of ordinary mercy.

This morning the bell belonged to a boy who still had mud in the cuticles of his fingers. He watched with wide attention as Elara softened brittle brass with a thumb-warm oil and coaxed the clapper loose from its jam. When the note returned, clear and unexpected, his face rearranged itself into the shape of a laugh. Around them the market moved in little floods of trade and gossip; the city’s life, in the intervals between larger necessities, knitted itself out of these tiny repairs.

People said the city was safe because of the Garden that ringed the central square. People said the Garden kept promises. Elara had seen the glow of its pods at night, had once walked the rim when a ribbon of fog made the lanterns waver and the vines smelled of wet stone. She knew the Warden by sight — a pale man who moved with a deliberate economy that made the rest of the city seem noisy. She had never spoken to him. That would be for other kinds of evenings, when people with fewer calluses and more titles filed to the seats at Council and talked. For Elara, the Garden was an enormous work of craft that somehow held a city together, and that mattered to her in the same way that a mended charm mattered: not for its ceremony but for the practical reality of safety.

She was tying off a fresh stitch when a courier, wrapped in a cloak stamped with the Garden’s emblem, found her. He handed her a small woven note folded around a scrap of fern. The message was brief: a pod near the east gate needed a mender, and the Warden himself requested someone who could coax old things back to life without tearing them open. "If you can come before dusk," the courier said, as if dusk were not the sort of thing that could be scheduled for menders with full days. The note smelled faintly of the Garden: green, like the inside of leaves and clean rain. Elara folded her needle and set aside the bell. Work that reached beyond the market had a different gravity. She wiped her hands on her apron, slid the repaired charm into a small cloth, and left the stall with the same curious weight people carried when they went to stand at the edge of something important and felt themselves tremble with the possibility of being useful.

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