Nisam_te_ponizio

"You're taking the last thing my father left me," Damir whispered, his voice cracking. He looked around the tavern, feeling the eyes of the other villagers. To lose the mill was to lose his status as a provider, his history, and his face in the community. "You’ve made me a beggar in my own home. You've humiliated me, Marko."

Damir’s hands shook as he pushed the paper across the table. For months, he had fought the drought, the rising costs, and the quiet decay of the wooden wheels. Marko, a man who had left the village twenty years ago and returned with a suitcase full of city money, was now the owner. nisam_te_ponizio

"I haven't humiliated you ( Nisam te ponizio )," Marko said firmly. "You're taking the last thing my father left

Here is a story exploring that theme of pride, consequence, and a bridge left unburnt. The Debt of the Old Mill "You’ve made me a beggar in my own home

"Now sit down," Marko said with a ghost of a smile. "You’ve got work to do in the morning."

The tavern went silent. Marko didn't look at the deed. He took a slow sip of his plum brandy and looked Damir directly in the eye.

Marko stood as well, but his posture wasn't one of a victor. He reached into his coat and pulled out a second document, placing it on top of the deed. It was a contract of employment, naming Damir as the lifetime Master Miller with a salary triple what the mill had ever earned.