Chapter 307: Food Conquest
Chapter 307: Food Conquest
Ah.
The broth was the color of old ivory, pale gold deepening to amber where it caught the light of the hearth. It moved in the bowl like something alive, thick and slow, carrying the hours spent simmering.
You could tell time had been spent, not passed or whiled away, but invested, compound interest accruing in liquid form.
Ah.
Bones that had been roasted until they cracked, marrow that had melted into something that was not quite liquid and not quite solid, existing in that liminal state where physics shrugged and let alchemy take the wheel.
Cecilia lifted the spoon. Steam rose from its surface, carrying with it the scent of ginger and garlic, of scallions that had been added at the very end, because heat is a bully and scallions are delicate, of sesame oil that Oathran had drizzled over the top in a pattern that was almost art.
Or possibly a sigil. With dragons, you never knew.
Ah.
The spoon touched her lips. The broth was hot, almost too hot, that threshold where pleasure and pain negotiate a temporary truce. It coated her tongue, her throat, a liquid architecture of flavor.
She could taste the bones, the richness of marrow. She could taste the meat that had clung to them, the cartilage that had dissolved along with it, surrendering its structural integrity to the greater good.
She closed her eyes.
Ah.
The flavor bloomed. The ginger was sharp and bright, cutting through the richness like light through clouds. Garlic, roasted until it was soft, until it had lost its bite and become something almost sweet.
Onions that had been caramelized until they were the color of amber, until they had given up their sharpness for something deeper, something mellow.
And underneath it all, the broth itself. The umami, the smoothness of it, even the texture of the liquid itself, which somehow managed to be both substantial and ethereal.
She opened her eyes. Oathran was watching her, his grey eyes fixed on her face, his hands still, his whole body still, posed in that suspension of a predator who has forgotten he’s a predator, or perhaps a student awaiting grades.
"It’s so good," she said.
What she had just tasted was something that had been made for her, and for her alone. Not "could theoretically be consumed by anyone with working taste buds"—for her.
The specificity of it was intimate and slightly embarrassing for everyone else in the room. Though, there was no one else in the room. The embarrassment was theoretical.
Oathran’s face shifted, loosened. He had not known he needed this.
"The bones," he said. "I roasted them first. Until they cracked. Then I simmered them for—" He stopped. "Bessa said to simmer them until the marrow was gone."
Huh? Gone? Not "incorporated" or "rendered"? As if the marrow had achieved enlightenment and transcended its bony prison? Cecilia made a mental note to ask Bessa about her theological framework for soup. Or... perhaps she avoided fancy words so this dragon who never used a kitchen would understand?
Cecilia lifted the spoon again. The broth was cooler now, warm enough to drink and to let her taste the layers that Oathran had built into it. It worked, her teachings.
"Bessa is a good teacher," she said.
Ah.
Oathran’s hand moved. It felt like now, he was allowed to actually... hold it. This feeling of being useful other than what he was destined for. Other than sacrificing himself for the world. He truly was not sure he was allowed to want this.
Cecilia drank. The broth was warm in her chest, warm in her belly.
Ah.
"This is just... perfect."
Oathran’s hand was on hers. His thumb traced the back of her hand, the shape of her knuckles, the spaces between her fingers.
When she finished, Oathran started to calm himself by intentionally hyperventilating. "Huu." His chest rose and fell. "Alright. Next dish. Next dish. Next dish."
Hyperventilation as reset button. Cecilia giggled, filed this under this particular dragon lord’s coping mechanisms, culinary subdivision.
But still, she noticed how he had come a long way. In just the short time she had spent with Arkai, this man had learned to cook.
Not the cooking of survival or necessity by a man who had spent centuries eating whatever would keep him alive, like orcs, but the cooking of someone who wanted to make a treat. Something delicious. Something that served no strategic purpose beyond the production of joy.
"Next is meat pie!" Oathran’s voice rose, fierce, almost a roar. He had conquered everything that could be conquered, yet now, somehow, more proud of this. "And we will end it with dessert. Later. Smoothies."
Smoothies. The word was exotic and slightly absurd, a linguistic immigrant from another world entirely. So, he said it like he was narrating a plot twist from heroic literature. All deep and serious.
Cecilia laughed. The sound filled the kitchen and the cold stone aerie. "Meat pie!" She raised her fist, roaring with him. "Smoothies!"
"When I described smoothies to Bessa," Oathran let out the little anecdote, "she said it would be hard to blend and smooth and crush fruits into that texture. But that was when I remembered."
He was moving around the kitchen now, gathering toppings, his hands sure, his movements precise. "That other world had something called a blender. You put a magic crystal under it, as its battery. I made one for us."
He was pulling things from cupboards, from shelves, from the spaces where he had been storing his experiments. "Three nights in my lab, constructing a functional artifact. A little rotor, little blades and make them spin."
Cecilia leaned forward, her elbows on the table and her chin in her hands. "Ooooohhhh."
Yes, this was the appropriate response to dragon engineering. Monosyllabic wonder.
"But then." Oathran stopped. "The temperature was wrong." He looked at her, somehow acting out the wonder he was narrating. "So, apparently, we need to freeze the fruits first."
Cecilia’s eyes went wide. "Ooooohhhh," she breathed again.
Apparently. Now he sounded like someone who had learned through catastrophe. She imagined him, three nights in his lab, rotor spinning, blades whirring, producing room-temperature fruit soup and growing increasingly desperate.
"To make it perfect, I put milk in it. But not just regular milk—" He stopped. "Wait. Meat pie first. The oven!" He turned to the oven, his hands finding the handle.
The oven held its contents in thermal stasis while they discussed frozen fruit. Cecilia watched him pivot and thought, this is what progress looks like. Not destruction or sacrifice. A man, an oven, and the urge to serve meat pie before dessert.
Perfect.
But suddenly, something popped up in her peripheral view.
[Arkai: They announced a prophecy.]
Cecilia and Oathran froze.
Finally.
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