Chapter 2: Voices in the Rust

The morning sun clawed its way through the haze over Old Brass, casting a dull glow across the city's jagged skyline. Kente trudged along a narrow alley, his sack slung over his shoulder, the faint clink of yesterday's haul—six cedis' worth of gear and wire—echoing with each step. The air was thick with the tang of rust and sweat, the murmur of merchants and scavengers threading through the din like a pulse. He kept his head low, his patched tunic blending into the grime of the streets, just another shadow among the forgotten.

His fingers brushed the metal tag in his pocket, its weight a quiet itch he couldn't shake. It had hummed again last night, faint but insistent, syncing with the bead on his forehead until he'd shoved it under his mat to sleep. He didn't know what it was—didn't want to know, maybe—but it clung to him like the nightmares, a piece of something he couldn't outrun.

The alley opened into a cluttered market square, stalls of warped wood and canvas sagging under the sun. Vendors barked over each other, hawking wilted vegetables, dented pots, and scraps of cloth. A group of kids darted past, their laughter sharp against the grind of the city. Kente paused, watching them vanish into the dust. He'd been like that once—quick, careless—before the fire burned it out of him.

"Oi, Kente!" A gravelly voice cut through his thoughts. He turned to see Rashid lumbering toward him, his burly frame parting the crowd like a ship through waves. The scrapyard owner's beard was flecked with ash, his eyes glinting with a mix of amusement and suspicion.

"Thought you'd be back sniffing around my piles," Rashid said, planting himself in Kente's path. "What'd you scrounge today?"

Kente shrugged, adjusting the sack. "Not much yet. Still early."

Rashid grunted, crossing his arms. "Early's for fools who think the good stuff waits. Saw a Sturmguard patrol heading west—means the market's gonna dry up fast. They shake down anyone with half a cedi to their name."

Kente's jaw tightened. "They're getting bold."

"Bold?" Rashid spat into the dirt. "They're vultures. Capital's bleeding us dry, and those tin soldiers act like they own the dust we walk on. Old Brass don't bend, though—not yet."

Kente nodded, his gaze drifting to the edge of the square. Two Sturmguards stood there, their armor gleaming faintly with juju light, spears propped against their shoulders. One laughed, a harsh bark, while the other scanned the crowd with cold eyes. The air around them felt heavy, like a storm held back by a thread.

"Keep your head down," Rashid muttered, clapping Kente's shoulder. "Ain't worth tangling with 'em over scraps."

"Yeah," Kente said, but his hand lingered on the tag in his pocket, its warmth prickling his skin.

The day stretched long and slow, the sun climbing higher, baking the city in a dull heat. Kente moved through the outskirts, picking through heaps of refuse—a cracked jug here, a coil of wire there. His sack grew heavier, but his mind wandered, circling back to the tag, the bead, the fire. Always the fire.

He stopped at a crumbling wall, its surface scarred with graffiti—curses against the capital, jagged symbols he didn't recognize. One caught his eye: a swirl, like the tag's design, scratched deep into the stone. His breath hitched, fingers tracing it absently. The bead pulsed, faint but sharp, and for a moment, he thought he heard something—a whisper, too soft to catch.

"You lost, scavenger?"

The voice jolted him back. Kente turned, hand dropping from the wall, to find a girl leaning against a rusted barrel nearby. She was maybe fourteen, her dark skin streaked with dirt, her silver eyes glinting like polished coins. A necklace hung around her neck—a thin chain with a pendant shaped like a crescent moon, its edges worn but gleaming. She tilted her head, studying him with a mix of curiosity and wariness.

"Not lost," Kente said, keeping his tone even. "Just looking."

She smirked, pushing off the barrel. "Looking's all anyone does out here. Name's Zaria. You're the one with the weird mark, right? Heard the kids talking."

Kente's hand twitched toward his forehead, but he stopped himself. "It's nothing."

"Sure it is." Zaria stepped closer, her silver eyes narrowing. "Nothing don't hum like that. I felt it—from over there." She pointed vaguely behind her, then tapped her necklace. "This does too, sometimes. Old stuff knows old stuff."

He frowned, pulling the tag from his pocket. "You mean this?"

Her eyes widened, just a flicker, before she masked it with a shrug. "Maybe. Where'd you find it?"

"Rashid's yard," he said, turning it over in his hand. "You know what it is?"

Zaria hesitated, then shook her head. "Not sure. Looks like something from the old stories—before the Sturmguards, before the capital got fat on our bones. My gran used to say there's power in junk, if you know where to look."

Kente studied her, the bead warming again. "And you don't?"

She grinned, sharp and quick. "Not yet. But I'm better at finding than most." She nodded at his sack. "You're not bad yourself. Wanna team up? Split whatever we dig up?"

He considered it, weighing the risk. Old Brass didn't reward trust, but her eyes—those silver eyes—felt honest, or as close as anything got here. "Maybe," he said finally. "One day. Not today."

"Fair enough." Zaria stepped back, her necklace glinting as she turned. "Watch your back, Kente. Stuff like that—" she gestured at the tag "—brings trouble."

She melted into the alley, leaving him alone with the wall and the whispers he couldn't quite hear.

Dusk settled over Old Brass, the sky bruising purple as the city's noise softened into a low hum. Kente sat on a broken crate near his shack, the tag in one hand, a stale loaf of bread in the other. He'd traded half his haul for it—two cedis gone, but his stomach didn't care about pride. He chewed slowly, the dry crust crumbling against his tongue, his eyes fixed on the tag's swirling symbol.

The bead pulsed again, warmer now, and the air felt heavier, like it was holding its breath. He squinted at the horizon—clouds, faint and creeping, gathering where they shouldn't. A chill ran down his spine, unbidden, and the tag's hum grew louder, a faint vibration in his palm.

"Stop it," he muttered, shoving it back into his pocket. But the bead didn't stop. Neither did the feeling—something watching, waiting, buried deep where the fire had left its mark.

Somewhere in the distance, a Sturmguard's spear clinked against stone, and the city held its secrets close.