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  1. BRECK: Dead Delivery: Chapter Eight

    Daily writing prompt Who are some underrated people in history? View all responses

    BRECK: Dead Delivery

    Chapter Eight — The Forgotten Ones

    Prompt: Who are some underrated people in history? Tags: dailyprompt | Breck | Crestfall | Dead Delivery | Lumenvale

    He found the collection happening behind the granary.

    Not in the square, where someone might witness and remember. Not at the gate, where merchants came and went with their paperwork and their careful faces. Behind the granary, in the narrow service alley where the grain dust gathered in pale drifts along the base of the stone wall and the only light came from a single torch jammed into an iron bracket above the rear door. Private work. The kind of work that needed walls on three sides and only one way out.

    Pelk was running it.

    Breck had heard him before he’d seen him — a voice carrying the particular easy confidence of a man who had never once been made to answer for the volume of it. He stood with his back to the granary wall and his thumbs hooked in his belt and two men flanking him with the studied casualness of people trying to look incidental, and in front of him stood a grain merchant Breck had seen setting up his stall that morning — a compact, gray-haired man in his fifties who held his receipt ledger against his chest the way a person held something they expected to have taken from them.

    The merchant’s name, Breck had learned from Pell’s careful accounting, was Holt. He had worked the Crestfall grain market for twenty-three years. His father had worked it before him. His son helped him on Thursdays.

    He was one of perhaps thirty men and women in this town whose daily labor had built the prosperity that Voss had spent three years quietly dismantling — the actual architecture of the place, the people whose hands and knowledge and stubborn daily presence were the reason Crestfall had sound buildings and a full granary and roads worth maintaining. None of them had statues. None of them had their names on the magistrate’s seal. They had calluses and ledgers and the specific dignity of people who showed up regardless of what the day cost them.

    Breck stepped into the alley.

    Pelk saw him immediately — hard not to, at Breck’s scale in a confined space — and the easy confidence didn’t waver. If anything it broadened. He was a big man himself, Pelk, running to heaviness through the middle in the way of men who had been strong once and had since found easier ways to apply it. He had the face of someone who had learned early that size was a conversation-ender and had never needed to learn anything beyond that lesson.

    “Courier,” he said. It wasn’t a greeting. It was a categorization.

    “Evening,” Breck said. He looked at Holt. The merchant’s eyes moved to him once — a brief, careful flicker — and moved away. Saying nothing. Asking nothing. Having learned, over three years of Thursday evening collections, that asking things made them worse.

    “Private business,” Pelk said. “Road’s back the way you came.”

    “I know where the road is.” Breck didn’t move. He stood with his hands loose at his sides and his weight settled and his eyes moving across the alley with the unhurried thoroughness of a man taking inventory. Pelk. Two others — one on the left against the wall, one near the door. Holt between them and Breck. One exit. Torch height casting the near wall in amber and leaving the far corners in useful shadow.

    He filed it all away. Took perhaps three seconds.

    “You deaf?” Pelk said. The easy confidence had acquired an edge. He straightened off the wall, and the two men on either side of him shifted their weight in the instinctive, practiced way of people who had done this particular choreography before. “I said move on.”

    “Holt,” Breck said, without looking at the merchant. “You can go.”

    The alley went very still.

    Holt didn’t move. He was frozen between the instruction and twenty-three years of learned behavior that said staying small was how you survived Thursday evenings in Crestfall, and the two pieces of knowledge were not resolving quickly.

    “He’s not going anywhere,” Pelk said. “He owes a collection fee.”

    “He paid his tariff at the gate. I’ve seen the receipts.” Breck looked at Pelk directly for the first time. “There is no collection fee.”

    Something moved across Pelk’s face — not fear, not yet, something closer to the recalibration a man did when a situation turned out to weigh more than he’d estimated. He looked at Breck the way people looked at things they were trying to find the correct category for and failing.

    Then he made the decision that men like Pelk always made, because it was the only decision their entire history had ever equipped them for.

    He came off the wall and closed the distance fast, his right hand coming up in a wide swing built for spectacle rather than precision — the kind of blow designed to end conversations with people who didn’t know how to respond to it.

    Breck was not one of those people.

    He moved inside the arc of the swing before it had fully committed, a single step forward and left that made the fist pass close enough to disturb the air beside his ear. His right hand caught Pelk’s extended arm at the wrist, redirecting its momentum rather than stopping it — using the man’s own considerable mass as the instrument — and his left palm drove hard into Pelk’s elbow from underneath.

    The sound was brief and conclusive.

    Pelk’s forward motion carried him past Breck and into the granary wall face-first, his useless arm trailing, and the sound he made when he hit the stone was the sound of a large object being suddenly and completely convinced of something.

    The man on the left had been moving since the swing had started — Breck had tracked him in his peripheral vision the whole time, the way you tracked the secondary threat when the primary one was still resolving. He was younger than Pelk, quicker, and he had a short cudgel that he’d produced from somewhere and was bringing around in a low horizontal sweep aimed at Breck’s legs.

    Breck stepped over it.

    Not dramatically — just a single economical elevation of his right foot, the cudgel passing beneath it, and then his right boot came back down on the man’s leading knee with the full and deliberate application of two hundred and eighty-five pounds of moving weight. The man went down and stayed down, making the quiet, concentrated sounds of someone devoting all available resources to a single overwhelming problem.

    The third man — the one near the door — had not moved. He was standing exactly where he’d been standing when Breck had entered the alley, his hands slightly away from his body in the universal posture of a person communicating that they had made a decision and the decision was this.

    Breck looked at him for a moment.

    “Smart,” he said.

    The man said nothing. His hands stayed where they were.

    Pelk was on his knees against the granary wall, cradling his arm, his face having undergone a comprehensive revision of the worldview it had held four seconds ago. He was breathing in the loud, ragged way of someone whose body was working very hard at several things simultaneously.

    Breck crouched in front of him.

    “The collection fee,” he said. His voice was the same as it had been at the start of the conversation. Level. Not unkind. “Where does it go.”

    Pelk looked at him with the wide, recalibrated eyes of a man holding a new and unwelcome understanding.

    “Voss,” he said. It came out smaller than anything else he’d said in the alley.

    “All of it.”

    “All of it.”

    Breck nodded once. Stood. Looked at Holt, who had not moved throughout any of this — who was standing precisely where he’d been standing when Breck had entered, holding his ledger against his chest with both hands, his face carrying the careful blankness of a man waiting to determine whether this was better or worse than what had come before.

    “Go home,” Breck said. “Tell your son supper will be late.”

    Holt looked at him for a long moment. Then he looked at Pelk on the ground, and at the man holding his knee, and at the third man standing very still by the door.

    He nodded once — a small motion, more breath than movement — and walked out of the alley without looking back.

    Breck watched him go. Then he looked at the torch burning in its bracket above the door, casting its amber light across the grain-dust drifts and the walls that held no names and would hold none.

    Twenty-three years, he thought. Holt had shown up for twenty-three years.

    He picked up the satchel from where he’d set it against the wall before any of this had started — he always set it down before anything physical, because it was the job and the job didn’t get damaged — settled the strap across his chest, and touched the bracelet once.

    Then he walked out of the alley and back into Crestfall’s quiet evening streets, and behind him Pelk was still making the sounds of a man with a new and permanent education.

    Enjoyed this story? Writing Lumenvale is how I pay my bills. If these stories are worth something to you, a $1 Ko-fi keeps the forge burning — and tells me this world is worth continuing. 👉 Buy Chadwick a coffee

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  2. Educators are most underrated people …

    Daily writing promptWho are some underrated people in history?View all responses When you flip through history books of our nation state, you will agree with me that educators, in general, are the most underrated people in our history about Uganda. Particularly so, such educators, whose body of work is focused on consciously awakening our minds to be active citizens. To think through issues and to speak out. “Okot p'Bitek was a Ugandan poet, who achieved wide international recognition […]

    cparuganda.com/2026/05/13/educ

  3. Underrated Figures in Islamic History

    The content discusses underrated historical figures in Islam, primarily focusing on Fatimah bint Muhammad, Hasan bin Ali, and Khadijah. It highlights their significance and contributions, emphasizing Fatimah's role as the Prophet’s daughter and Khadijah's influence as a successful merchant and the Prophet's first wife. The author expresses a desire for further discussion.

    duroundsanctumstudio.com/2026/

  4. International Dating: Cozy Cultures @internationaldatingcozycultures.com@internationaldatingcozycultures.com ·

    Sojourner Truth

    Daily writing promptWho are some underrated people in history?View all responses Morgan: Sorjourner Truth was a black woman who managed to escape her slave owner James Dumont after he broke his promise to free her and later sued him in 1828 for the return her son making her the first black woman to win a court case against a white man. Later she gave her famous "Ain't I a woman" speech at the Ohio Women's Rights Convention of 1851 challenging the idea that women were too fragile for equal […]

    internationaldatingcozyculture