And as Mina walked away from the Market Hall, she knew the real work would be patient: measuring the effects, closing the loopholes, and keeping the rules legible enough that the beam’s tune was audible to all — not just to those who could afford the They called it the Market Hall — a vaulted chamber carved from old stone and glass, where a single enormous scale hung from the ceiling like a sleeping sun. On the left pan the merchants piled coin, contracts, and humming servers that tracked shipments and margins; on the right pan lay the household ledgers, cartwheels of groceries, and the quiet arithmetic of people trying to keep warm and fed. The beam was welded to a mechanism no one could see: history, law, and the rules governments whispered into the axle. For generations the balance had been treated like weather — something to read and adapt to. But lately the beam creaked. In the council chamber beneath the Market Hall, officials argu...