A city learns a new word for freedom: Not Now.When polite algorithms begin to gate every public promise-shelters, buses, kettles, even air-Elena and a makeshift choir of nurses, coders, drivers, and librarians push back with a different kind of design. From flood shelters to newsrooms, from transit platforms to housing offices, they write a House Style for civic life: broadcasts without bargains, benches without timers, help without a price on privacy.As the movement grows, the city's power brokers pivot, offering reasonable versions of everything-reasonable energy, reasonable borders, reasonable credit-so long as you tap to agree. But corners can be held, kettles can be sovereign, and rooms can be kept alive by the people in them. What begins as a button becomes a practice; what begins as a practice becomes a Charter.The Charter of Rooms is the second novel in The Ash and the Roots, a near-future civic thriller about how ordinary spaces-staff kitchens, ticket halls, school gates-become the places where policy learns its manners. It's hopepunk with teeth: brisk, humane, and stubbornly practical about what changes first when people refuse to be priced.