The Heartland: Soil, Sweat, and Sustenance
Sprawling fields and rolling pastures stretch beneath skies as open as the lives of those who till the earth. Here, prosperity is not counted in coin, but in the weight of the harvest and the strength of the hands that gather it. Tradition is law, the land is both giver and taker, and every furrow plowed is a promise to the future. From humble villages to bustling market towns, the Heartland feeds not just bellies, but entire kingdoms—though few beyond its borders spare a thought for the labor that makes their tables full.
The baker barely looks up as the coins hit the counter, "You’re late again." his hands deftly wrapping warm bread in cloth. "Third time this week."
The reply is easy, unbothered, as boots scuff against the well-worn floorboards. "Not much need to rush, is there?" Outside, the streets move at their usual pace—unhurried, unchanging. No titles, no formality. Just another day in a town where time seems to drift like the slow-moving river beyond its gates.
"The land provides, if you respect it." The old farmer wipes his brow, eyes scanning the endless rows of grain. "Take only what you earn, and it'll take care of you." A wagon creaks in the distance, the scent of fresh bread and sun-warmed earth heavy in the air. Simple, steady, honest—this is life in the fields. But as the sun sinks low, shadows stretch across the dirt road, and not all who travel it come for the harvest.
"You want to do business here?" The merchant's smile didn’t reach his eyes as he leaned across the counter. "Then you pay the right people. Everyone does." The weight of his words hung heavy in the air, layered with meaning that went beyond simple coin. The city was built on trade, but not all deals were made in the open. Here, wealth was power, but knowing when to keep quiet was worth even more.
"Aha! It blinked again!" She presses the mushroom close, its glow pulsing like a heartbeat. "That’s… probably not good." The light shifts colors, flickering through shades no natural thing should possess. The air warps faintly. The goblin grins with a wide toothy grin. "So… what now? We eat it? Bury it? Name it?"
"Storm coming," the dockhand mutters, tightening a rope against the mooring post. His gaze flickers toward the ship bobbing in the harbor—no colors, no name. Another nameless crew looking to unload.
Across the pier, a cluster of villagers watch, saying nothing. No warm greetings, no offers of trade. Just the unspoken understanding that, here, questions are dangerous and trust is a fool’s gamble. The tide carries in many things. Not all of them leave.
The land provides, the river carries, and the sea watches those who call it home.