My Food Stall Serves SSS-Grade Delicacies!-Chapter 242: Homecoming
Lumeria appeared on the horizon after six days of steady travel—the same sprawling city Marron had left months ago, but somehow different now. Or maybe she was the different one.
The Champion walked beside her, unbothered by the increasing traffic as they approached the city gates. She drew stares—her living-bark cloak, her weathered presence, the obvious power of the Verdant Mortar at her hip—but ignored them all with the ease of someone who’d long ago stopped caring what strangers thought.
"You’re nervous," the Champion observed.
"Is it obvious?"
"Your hand keeps moving to your pack. Checking that the tools are still there." The Champion’s expression was amused. "They’re not going anywhere."
"I know. It’s just..." Marron looked at the city walls, the guard towers, the massive gates that controlled entry to Lumeria proper. "Last time I was here, I was nobody. Just a cook with a cart, trying to figure out what I wanted to do with my life."
"And now?"
"Now I’m someone who has to convince a council of scholars not to take away the most important things I’ve ever carried."
"Still sounds like a cook with a cart to me," the Champion said. "Just one who’s learned a few things."
They passed through the gates without incident—the guards barely glanced at their travel papers, too busy managing the usual chaos of merchant caravans and farmer wagons. Inside, Lumeria hit all of Marron’s senses at once: the smell of too many people in too small a space, the sound of hawkers and arguments and street musicians, the press of bodies and buildings and the constant motion of urban life.
Mokko breathed in deeply. "I missed this. The mountain villages were nice, but they were so quiet."
"Too quiet?" Marron asked.
"Nah. Just... differently loud." He grinned. "Come on, let’s find an inn before everything books up for the evening."
They wound through familiar streets—Marron finding her way by instinct more than memory—until they reached the district where she’d started her journey. The Food Cart rolled smoothly behind her, and she could feel it... remembering? Recognizing? Something like coming home, even though it had never been here before she’d found it.
"There," Marron said, pointing to a modest inn with a painted sign showing a steaming bowl. "I stayed here when I first arrived. Owner’s name is Jenny. She’s... she’ll remember me."
And she did. Jenny took one look at Marron through the common room window and came bursting out the front door, arms spread wide.
"Marron! Stars and smoke, look at you!" She pulled Marron into a crushing hug, then held her at arm’s length to study her face. "You look different. Older? No, not older. Steadier."
"I’ve been traveling," Marron said, smiling despite her nerves. "Learning things."
"I can see that." Jenny’s eyes moved to the Food Cart, and her expression shifted to something like recognition. "That’s a Legendary Tool."
Not a question. A statement.
Marron’s hand moved instinctively to her pack. "How did you—"
"I’ve been in this city for forty years, girl. I know what power looks like." Jenny’s gaze moved to the Champion, and she bowed her head slightly—respect between equals. "And you’ve brought interesting company."
"This is the Champion of the Verdant Ring," Marron said. "She’s... helping me with something."
"The hearing." Jenny’s expression darkened. "I heard about that. The Society’s been buzzing about it for weeks—the wandering cook who’s carrying artifacts without authorization. Some people are calling you a hero. Others are calling you a thief." 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚
"What are you calling me?"
Jenny smiled. "A former guest who needs a room. Come inside. I’ll put you in the suite on the third floor—it has space for your cart and actual beds instead of those thin mattresses in the standard rooms."
The "suite" was generous—two bedrooms connected by a common area, with a small balcony overlooking the street. Jenny insisted on reduced rates, waving away Marron’s protests.
"You fed half my regular customers for free when you first arrived," Jenny said. "Consider this returning the favor."
After they’d settled in, Jenny lingered in the doorway. "The hearing is in three days, right?"
"Yes."
"You’ll need character witnesses. People who can testify that you’ve used those tools responsibly."
"I hadn’t thought that far ahead."
"Start thinking. The Society respects testimony from Lumerian citizens more than from outsiders." Jenny paused. "I’ll testify if you need me. And I know others who would too."
Something tight in Marron’s chest loosened slightly. "Thank you."
"Don’t thank me yet. Edmund Erwell is a stubborn bastard when he thinks he’s right. This won’t be easy." Jenny headed for the door, then stopped. "Oh, and Marron? If you’re planning to cook while you’re here—and I know you are, you’ve got that look—my portable grill is in the storage shed out back. You’re welcome to borrow it."
She left before Marron could ask what "that look" meant.
That evening, Marron stood on the balcony watching the sun set over Lumeria and felt the weight of the coming hearing settle over her shoulders. Three days to prepare. Three days to figure out how to convince people who’d spent their lives studying artifacts that she understood the tools better than they did.
The Champion joined her, carrying two cups of tea. "You’re planning something."
"How can you tell?"
"You have the same expression I get when I’m about to do something the mountain will judge me for." The Champion handed her a cup. "What is it?"
Marron took a breath. "I want to cook tomorrow. Before the hearing. Before we start preparing testimony and arguments and all the serious things."
"Why?"
"Because..." Marron struggled to articulate it. "Because I left Lumeria as someone who was afraid to cook anything outside her comfort zone. Someone who stuck to safe, familiar dishes because trying something new felt too risky."
"And now?"
"Now I want to make hot dogs."
The Champion’s eyebrow rose. "That’s your grand rebellion? Street food?"
"It’s not just street food." Marron gripped her tea cup, feeling memories rise. "My mom and I used to eat hot dog sandwiches when the diner was barely scraping by. When we couldn’t afford anything else, when every meal had to be cheap and filling and quick. We’d grill them until they were charred—she always said the char made them taste better, made you forget you were eating poverty food."
The Champion was quiet, listening.
"I’ve always been embarrassed by that," Marron continued. "Thought it made me seem... I don’t know. Unsophisticated. Like I wasn’t a real cook because I grew up eating cheap meat on cheaper bread." She laughed, but it came out bitter. "The tools made me better. Made me capable of cooking things I’d never dreamed of. But they also made me forget that there’s nothing wrong with simple food. With struggle meals. With charred hot dogs that taste like home."
"So you want to cook them here. In Lumeria. Where everyone will see."
"Yes." Marron met the Champion’s eyes. "I want to cook something I’m good at. Something I love. Something that isn’t trying to impress anyone or prove anything—just food that makes people happy because it tastes good and reminds them of simpler times."
The Champion smiled—real and warm and approving. "The tools will love it."
"You think?"
"I know. They’ve spent months trying to make you into something grander than you are. Tomorrow, you’ll remind them that grandeur was never the point."







