The Hunger Tithe

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The sky over Oakhaven was not a sky, but a heavy, woolen blanket of charcoal grey, saturated with the soot of a thousand chimneys. Here, the air tasted of sulfur and desperation. In the center of the town stood the Tabernacle of Grace, a towering edifice of cold granite where Silas, the town’s spiritual and temporal anchor, presided over the remnants of a broken people.

Silas did not speak of greed; he spoke of "The Great Preservation." He stood at the pulpit, his voice a smooth, practiced velvet that masked the iron beneath. "The wildlands are encroaching," he had proclaimed, his eyes sweeping over the hollow-cheeked congregation. "The barbarians gather at our gates, their hunger a tide that will swallow us all. To survive, we must sacrifice. The Survival Quota is not a burden, but a bridge to tomorrow."

The Quota was simple and cruel: forty percent of every household's grain and root must be delivered to the Tabernacle.

Eileen stood in the rain, her fingers numb as she clutched a small, burlap sack. Inside was the last of their winter rye, a meager handful that represented the difference between a slow fade and a sudden stop. Her son, Leo, was five years old, but he looked three. He clung to her skirts, his breathing a shallow, rattling sound that echoed the emptiness of his stomach.

"Please," Eileen whispered as she reached the heavy oak doors of the Tabernacle. She didn't look at the guards; she looked at Silas, who stood on the portico, draped in a cloak of fine black wool that seemed to absorb what little light the day offered. "My son... he cannot last another week. Just a handful. Just a small portion of the quota back, for the child."

Silas looked down at her. His expression was one of profound, practiced pity. "Eileen, your attachment to the flesh is your greatest trial. To grant you a reprieve is to rob the community of its security. Would you risk the lives of every soul in Oakhaven for the whim of one child? That is not love, Eileen. That is selfishness."

He gestured to the guards, and the sack was taken. Eileen watched it vanish into the depths of the Tabernacle, her heart a cold stone in her chest.

That night, the wind howled through the cracks in their hovel, sounding like the screams of the very barbarians Silas warned them about. Eileen lay awake, listening to Leo’s breathing. It had become a fragile thread, stretching thinner with every passing hour. She thought of the Tabernacle, of the vast, silent spaces beneath the granite floor. She had heard rumors—whispers from the few who had been called to clean the lower vaults. They spoke of gold-rimmed plates, of mountains of grain that smelled of summer, of a feast that never ended while the town starved.

The realization didn't come as a shock, but as a slow, freezing tide. The barbarians weren't at the gates. The barbarian was in the pulpit.

By dawn, the rattling had stopped. Eileen didn't scream. She didn't weep. She simply sat by the small, cold bed, holding the boy's hand. The silence was absolute, a heavy, suffocating weight that felt like the charcoal sky had finally descended to crush them.

She walked back to the Tabernacle. She didn't bring a sack this time. She stood before Silas, her eyes devoid of the flicker of hope that had once made her vulnerable.

"The quota is paid," she said, her voice a dead thing.

Silas smiled, a thin, bloodless line. "Faith is its own reward, Eileen."

As she turned away, she saw the other mothers lining up, their faces grey, their eyes vacant, each clutching a piece of their own life to give to the man who fed on their ghosts. Oakhaven was not being protected from the wildlands; it was being harvested. And as the grey snow began to fall, covering the town in a shroud of indifferent white, Eileen realized that the only thing more terrifying than the hunger was the grace that demanded it.

*** OTMES_v2_Code: [M1:10, M4:7, N2:0.9, K1:0.8, V:0.9, I:1.0, C:1.0, S:0.5, R:0.0] Tensor_Coord: (M1, N2, K1) Direction_Angle: 155° Total_Energy: 21.4


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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