The room seemed to shrink—not physically, obviously, because the laws of architecture don't just spontaneously change based on dramatic tension no matter how much writers want them to—but perceptually, psychologically, like all the empty space around us had been compressed into something denser and more immediate.
Lord Aldric leaned forward still, that wicked smile painting his face in shades of conspiracy and dangerous opportunity, his crimson eyes gleaming with the particular light that suggested he was about to propose something absolutely insane and would somehow make it sound reasonable through sheer force of charisma.
Then he leaned back, unfolding his massive frame from the cross-legged position with surprising grace, standing to his full imposing height and clasping his hands behind his back as he began pacing around the stage with measured steps that made his robes swish dramatically with each movement.
"By now," he began, his voice carrying that same booming quality but tempered slightly for closer conversation, "you're likely aware of the current state of the Pantheon and the rather inconvenient fact that a position amongst them hasn't opened up in nearly a decade." His boots clicked against the wooden stage in rhythm with his words, creating a percussive accompaniment to his speech. "Ten brothels, five aligned with my Crimson Court faction, five with the Ivory Gambit, all locked in a stalemate that's proven remarkably stable despite everyone involved desperately wanting to tip the balance in their favor."
I nodded along, because yes, I was extremely aware of this situation having spent considerable time studying the political landscape and realizing that breaking into the Pantheon through conventional means was essentially impossible without someone dying or being forcibly removed, neither of which happened with any regularity given how heavily invested everyone was in maintaining their positions.
Lord Aldric continued, his pacing taking him in a wide circle around me like a professor delivering a lecture to a particularly promising but slightly concerning student.
"In order to offer you even a chance at a position, one of the existing brothels would need to be taken down first and foremost. Destroyed, discredited, removed from the board entirely so that their spot becomes vacant and available for new occupants."
I raised my brow, my mind already racing ahead to the obvious conclusion and not liking where this was going even as my opportunistic instincts perked up with interest.
"But taking down an established brothel in the Pantheon would risk war," I said slowly, the words feeling heavy as they left my mouth. "Direct sabotage or violence against one faction by the other would shatter whatever fragile peace currently exists and turn the city into an active warzone."
I paused then, my train of thought derailing as memory slammed into me with the force of a physical blow—the assassin on the rooftop, the one who'd attacked during my encounter with Lord Erwin and Lady Priscilla, the violence that had erupted seemingly from nowhere.
My eyes went wide, pupils dilating as connections formed, and I whipped my gaze up to Lord Aldric with sudden accusation sharp in my voice.
"You sent that assassin," I said, not quite a question, more an accusation wrapped in barely restrained anger. "The one who tried to kill Lord Erwin and his daughter while I was meeting with them. That was you, wasn't it?"
Lord Aldric's face morphed into genuine shock—not the performative kind he'd been deploying throughout our conversation, but actual surprise that made his theatrical persona crack slightly.
"What?" he said, his booming voice dropping into something quieter, sharper. "This is the first I'm hearing of any such assassin. When did this happen? Who was targeted?"
I felt confusion slam into me like cold water, because his reaction seemed genuine, and I'd gotten pretty good at reading people through necessity and survival.
"A few days ago, an assassin appeared out of nowhere and tried to kill Lord Erwin and Lady Priscilla." I watched his expression carefully, searching for tells. "You're saying your faction had nothing to do with that?"
"I'm saying I personally knew nothing about it," Lord Aldric said with careful precision, "and I speak for the vast majority of my faction when I say we wouldn't authorize such a clumsy, traceable attack." His expression turned contemplative, almost worried. "If someone within my ranks acted independently... or if there's a third party trying to accelerate tensions..." He trailed off, clearly running through implications I couldn't fully see.
Questions swarmed my thoughts like angry wasps, each one spawning three more—who sent the assassin if not the Crimson Court, why target the Ivory Gambit's leadership specifically, what did they hope to gain by potentially triggering war, and how the fuck was I supposed to navigate this mess if I couldn't even trust basic assumptions about who was doing what to whom?
Lord Aldric shook himself slightly, refocusing on our conversation with visible effort. "Regardless of that particular mystery—which I will be investigating thoroughly, I assure you—the fundamental point remains. You're absolutely right that any direct confrontation or sabotage poses the threat of war."
He resumed his pacing, hands still clasped behind his back. "However, and this is crucial, war between our factions is an inevitability now. Not a possibility, not a risk—an inevitability. The tensions between the Crimson Court and the Ivory Gambit have been building for years, layering grievance upon grievance, insult upon insult, small victories and defeats accumulating until the weight of it all approaches critical mass."
He paused at the edge of the stage, staring out at the empty theater as if he could see something I couldn't. "Both sides have been preparing, stockpiling resources, forging alliances, positioning pieces on the board for the moment when the dam finally breaks and everything descends into open conflict. The question isn't if war comes—it's when, and more importantly, who strikes first with enough force to gain a decisive early advantage."
I nodded slowly, my mind flashing back to my conversation with Lord Erwin during that rooftop meeting, how he'd mentioned rising tensions and the sense that something was building toward catastrophic release. This was confirmation he hadn't been lying or exaggerating, that the situation was exactly as dire and complex as he'd suggested.
"The Ivory Gambit," Lord Aldric continued, turning back to face me, "aims to take a passive approach. Waiting patiently, building defenses, preparing to react to whatever catastrophe unfolds rather than initiating it themselves. Very conservative, very risk-averse, very much in character for Lord Erwin's methodical nature." His smile returned, sharp and predatory. "My faction, however, wishes to make the most aggressive moves early in the game. Strike first, strike hard, establish dominance before the other side can properly mobilize their resources. Seize the initiative and never relinquish it."
I tilted my head, playing devil's advocate even as my opportunistic instincts started calculating possibilities. "So what's stopping you?" I asked with deliberate casualness. "You've got resources, manpower, connections—why haven't you already started dismantling their operations if war is inevitable anyway?"
Lord Aldric's expression shifted into something darker, frustration bleeding through his theatrical confidence. "Because sending anyone directly from my faction would mean the action could be traced back to us," he explained with careful emphasis on each word. "And while war between factions might be inevitable, triggering it through obvious sabotage would bring down the wrath of Director Thalen, who is actively working to suppress this coming conflict for as long as possible."
He began pacing again, faster this time, his robes swirling around his legs. "The Director's influence poses a far greater threat than the opposing faction ever could. He controls the Velvet Chambers, commands loyalty from forces we can only dream of accessing, and has demonstrated repeatedly that he will crush anyone who threatens the stability of his operations. If we make a move that's clearly attributable to the Crimson Court, he'll come down on us like divine judgment made manifest, and all our careful planning becomes worthless."
I paused, understanding slamming into me with crystalline clarity as all the pieces clicked into place with an almost audible finality.
"Oh," I said slowly, a grin spreading across my face despite the dangerous implications. "Oh, you clever, manipulative bastard."
Lord Aldric stopped pacing and turned to face me fully, his own smile widening to match mine. "You see it now, don't you? The beautiful position you and your brothel occupy?"
"We're still technically neutral," I said, working through the logic aloud. "Not aligned with either faction, not officially part of any political structure within the Pantheon. Which means if we start making moves against the Ivory Gambit's holdings, the Spire won't be able to trace those actions back to the Crimson Court." I laughed—sharp, bright, and slightly unhinged. "You're basically asking us to act as your deniable weapon for sabotage, and if we fail or get caught, all the blame gets thrown directly onto us while you maintain plausible deniability and avoid the Director's wrath."
"Precisely!" Lord Aldric boomed, clapping his hands together with an enthusiasm that made me jump slightly. "Though I would frame it slightly more charitably—we're offering you an opportunity to strike at established power while we provide resources, information, and political cover to the extent we can without revealing our involvement."
I shook my head with grudging admiration. "It's actually brilliant in a deeply cynical way. Maximum reward for you, maximum risk for us."
"That," Lord Aldric acknowledged with a slight bow, "is what makes it so risky for you, yes. I won't pretend otherwise—this proposal could very well end with your entire operation destroyed and your crew scattered or dead. The stakes are genuinely that high."
I crossed my arms, studying him with narrowed eyes. "So why us? There are other neutral brothels in the city, other upstart operations you could recruit for this suicide mission. What makes us so special that you're willing to risk a personal visit and extend this offer?"
Lord Aldric laughed—loudly, brightly, the sound filling the theater with genuine mirth. "Oh Loona, you're underselling yourself spectacularly!" He strode toward me with long steps, his presence overwhelming in its intensity. "You and your brothel are becoming immensely powerful at a rate that defies all conventional wisdom about how these things work! Your genius in taking down Oberen, executing Elvina's complete destruction, establishing this theater with its death-match spectacle—these aren't the actions of some desperate survivor scrambling for scraps!"
He gestured at me with both hands like I was a prize he was presenting to an invisible audience. "Powerful people like you are rare in a city like this. Most who possess your combination of intelligence, ruthlessness, and creative audacity either get crushed early or get absorbed into existing power structures. But you? You've not only survived—you've thrived, built something from nothing, accumulated allies and resources faster than anyone predicted."
He paused, his expression turning more serious. "You're perfect for this job. You have the capability, the motivation, the sheer balls-to-the-wall insanity required to pull off what I'm proposing. And more than that—" his voice dropped slightly, taking on almost confessional quality, "—you have potential. The kind that makes old powers nervous because they can see the future coming for them in your eyes."
I felt heat creep into my cheeks at the praise, and had to look away briefly because getting flustered during serious political negotiations was not the impression I wanted to project.
Lord Aldric continued, seeming to sense my discomfort and graciously moving past it. "I took great measures to arrive here unnoticed tonight. Used intermediaries, coordinated with Silas to ensure no eyes were watching when I entered your establishment." He gestured vaguely at the theater around us. "This meeting carries significant risk for me as well—if the Director discovers I'm courting neutral parties for faction warfare, the consequences would be... severe."
"You're bold," I said, recovering my composure and injecting playful criticism into my tone. "And slightly stupid for taking such risks. What if I just turn you in, use this information as leverage with the Director or the Ivory Gambit?"
Lord Aldric's smile turned knowing, almost tender. "Because you won't. I understand that you're a skeptical person, Loona—one not easily swayed by pretty words or grand promises. You don't trust easily, and you shouldn't, not in this city where trust is a weapon used against the foolish." He stepped closer, close enough that I had to tilt my head back to maintain eye contact. "That's precisely why I needed to come here in person, to look you in the eyes and explain why this benefits you, why aligning with my faction—even secretly—serves your goals better than any alternative. Words in a letter or delivered through intermediaries wouldn't carry the same weight. You needed to see me, to read my intentions directly."
I thought internally about how it was certainly working—his presence, his words, the sheer force of personality he projected all combining to create this effect where trust was building despite my better judgment screaming caution.
There was something about the way he spoke, the conviction behind his theatrical delivery, that made believing him feel natural even though I knew I was probably being manipulated on some level.
"Alright," I said finally, settling back into my cross-legged position on the stage. "I'm interested—genuinely, dangerously interested. But I need details. Specific, actionable details about what exactly you're asking us to do, what support you're offering, what the success conditions look like." I fixed him with my most serious expression. "Sell me on this properly, Lord Aldric. Make me believe the risk is worth the reward."
His grin widened impossibly further, his smile filled with the satisfaction of someone who'd just won the first round of negotiations.
"With pleasure."
