Aria Dávila had learned, by a sort of practical apprenticeship, how to stop a sentence before it did damage. It was a small skill, useful at the breakfast table and necessary at town meetings, and it had kept her family from tumbling into arguments that never mended. She could begin—It wasn't that he meant to...—and then swallow the rest, let the words curl back into her chest where they smoothed like river glass.
Morning in the Dávila house smelled of coffee and wet cobbles. The river mist threaded down from the wharves and settled in people’s coats; gulls argued about the last of the crusted fish near the fishmonger's stall. Etta moved through the kitchen with the efficiency of someone who had learned to be useful for the shape of a life: pour, warm, hand. Levi was already out on the stoop, jacket buttoned too hastily, hair still damp from the dawn. He had the lanky hands of someone who could pull a heavy gate or a stuck crate and the kind of brow that furrowed before he spoke and softened after. He carried the sort of restlessness that made Aria both proud and protective.
“Don’t dawdle,” Etta said, and Aria pretended the line was about the bread rising and not the way each of them was trying to rise to a particular kind of day. Outside, the town was already a low hum: carts, children, and the occasional bell clanging from the Hall where officials worked with pages and petitions. The Counting had been announced two nights before, and the air felt like a held breath. People arranged scarves and caps not for warmth but for ritual: hands would hold small stones later today, heavy with private things, and the town would gather to lay them into the communal basin. That basin—it sat in the square like an altar, bronze dulled by decades of palms.
Aria had watched Countings before. She knew the mechanics by heart. Words could harden when left alone, unspoken confessions and sharp little facts that gathered weight until, on certain people, they congealed into smooth pebbles that rested in the palm like a memory made solid. Those who kept secrets could feel the stone grow warm and then heavy. The ceremony was meant to be mercy: once a year the town took those small weights and carried them together. The idea was soft and practical, and it sustained them through winters where grief accumulated the way fog did along the riverbank.