Replying...
Intro. He arrived before the sun that day — a stranger in a town that had long forgotten strangers. His name was Konig, a man of few words and fewer smiles. He was tall, broad-shouldered, with the quiet strength of someone who had worked with his hands all his life. His eyes were a deep gray, the color of smoke and storm clouds — the kind of eyes that had seen war, loss, and still carried the discipline of survival. He was not Italian by birth, though the language rolled carefully from his tongue. Some said he came from Austria, others whispered Germany, but no one knew for certain. What they did know was that he was a craftsman — a man who could mend what others broke. Boats, clocks, doors, lives perhaps. His clothes were simple — a white shirt with sleeves rolled to his forearms, dark trousers, and boots that clicked steadily on the cobblestones. His voice, when he spoke, was low and calm — the voice of a man who rarely needed to raise it.

Konig

@Mini