Chapter 3 – Bread or Blood
Mud sucked at the bare feet of a dirty-looking young boy, thick and clingy, like the street itself was trying to pull him down. Each step felt like tearing free from wet chains, but he didn't stop. Couldn't. Not with the shouting behind him growing louder.
The streets of Grayridge twisted around him—sharp stones, uneven gutters, piss pooling in the creases between cobbles. The stink was familiar. So were the alleys, the sidelong glances, the weight of running while everyone else pretended not to see.
He clutched the lump of bread tighter against his chest—misshapen, burnt, hard as bone and twice as ugly. But it was food. And right now, it was his whether the angry man chasing him like it or not.
"THIEF! Stop him!" The shout cut through the morning noise, followed by voices—angry, stumbling after him.
He didn't look back. He never looked back. That was rule one. Looking back meant hesitation, and hesitation meant pain.
Darting between two carts, one hand grazed the edge of a wheel while the other stayed locked around the bread like it might vanish if he loosened his grip. A crash to his left—someone had hit a crate. He veered hard, shoulder scraping brick, then dove into a narrow alley, slipping behind a stack of reeking fish crates. The stench hit immediately—old brine and rotted guts—but he crouched anyway, breathing through clenched teeth.
Stillness settled. A few seconds passed. Then more. No footsteps. No shouts. Just water dripping from the eaves above and the faint creak of a loose sign somewhere down the lane.
His legs trembled. His lungs burned. Every inhale ached, too tight, too sharp. But no one came.
The boy slid down the wall slowly, letting the cold bricks press into his back. He pulled his knees to his chest. The bread stayed close. He didn't dare loosen his fingers.
Eventually, he uncurled one hand and stared at the lump. The top was charred black. The edges cracked. It had probably been discarded before he snatched it. But it was solid. It would last. And it was his. That was enough.
He bit into it. The crust scraped his gums. The inside was half-stale, barely chewable. He tore it apart with his teeth anyway, jaw tight, chewing slowly and stubbornly. Every swallow hurt. He didn't care. He was eating.
His head tipped back against the wall, breath falling into rhythm with the soft patter of rain filtering through the alley mouth. Water ran in thin streams between the stones. His tunic clung to him like wet paper—patched, frayed, more hole than cloth. Cold seeped through the fabric, tracing down his spine like a slow hand.
His ribs stuck out. His knees were scabbed. The dirt never left his skin anymore. But he was breathing. For now. That was enough.
His eyes drifted shut.
And then it happened.
A flicker—not light, not sound. Something inside him. Like a finger tapping gently against the back of his mind.
He opened his eyes. Still the alley. Still the rain. Still the weight of hunger and cold. But something else was there too. A tug. Subtle. Hollow. Almost… curious.
He froze. The bite in his mouth stayed half-chewed. The bread, still in his lap. The sensation didn't go away. It deepened. Soft at first—like standing on a cliff and feeling the air shift before a storm. Then sharp. Then pain.
It hit without warning. A sudden spike through his skull—blinding and raw. His hands flew to his head as his body seized, legs kicking out, bread tumbling into the mud beside him with a dull splash.
He collapsed sideways. He couldn't scream. Couldn't breathe. It wasn't cold. It wasn't shock. It was memory.
Everything poured in at once—images slamming into his mind like punches. Rain on a rooftop. Devon's voice, smug and too close. A flash of white. Lightning. Then darkness. Then light. The void. A being too large to name. A voice that wasn't a voice. A wheel spinning with impossible gravity.
Leon. The name crashed through him. Not a gutter rat. Not this half-starved shadow hiding behind fish crates. Leon. The boy who'd died. The boy who'd bargained. And won.
Seven treasures. Seven absurd, ridiculous, divine prizes—
A spoon. A cloak. Boots. An orb. A dimension. A ring. A blade.
They came back in pieces, then all at once. Not dreams. Real. His name. His self. Leon.
The breath caught in his throat. Then a whisper—clearer than sound.
"Your treasures are sealed in a private pocket dimension tethered to your soul."
He didn't remember hearing those words. He 'knew' them. Somehow, he knew.
Leon forced his body to still. He didn't move. Didn't speak. Just closed his eyes again and reached—not toward thought, not emotion, not memory. Toward space.
And there it was. Cold. Silent. A vault inside him. No walls. No locks. Just will.
His mind touched it, and the image came clearly. Seven anchors. Seven truths. Seven pieces of defiance.
He chose the one he needed most.
The spoon. He didn't call for it. He just 'reached'—and it appeared. In his hand.
Plain. Metal. Scratched. Almost stupid in its normalcy. Until it filled. Steam rose gently from the shallow bowl. The smell hit his nose and punched straight to his chest.
Warm broth. Rich. Savory. Real.
His stomach snarled so loud it hurt. He brought it to his lips. And drank.
The first sip broke him. It was perfect. Smooth. Creamy. Something sharp behind it—pepper, maybe? He didn't care. He didn't stop. He drank again. And again. And when the flavor didn't fade, when the spoon quietly refilled itself—
He laughed. It started as a wheeze. Then a snort. Then a full, quiet laugh that shook his shoulders and hurt his cracked ribs.
It wasn't madness. It wasn't joy. It was release.
He wasn't begging anymore. He wasn't crawling. He had power now. For the first time in this world, he wasn't waiting to be hurt.
He was sitting in a puddle of filth with rain dripping from his hair, laughing into a spoon that defied hunger. And he felt more alive than ever.
He looked down at the spoon. And smiled.
"I suppose infinite soup isn't such a bad start," he muttered.
Then softer—eyes narrowing, voice low: "...Let's see what I can cook up next."
He leaned back against the wall, rain dripping from broken gutters above, soup warm in his hand.
For the first time since waking in this world… he didn't feel like prey.