ACT IX — The Baited Blade
The morning after the feast arrived cloaked in mist and cold intention.
Bait had been laid with care,threaded neatly into the rigid predictability of his routine. An open invitation to ruin or death.
Whether he took it or not, Chion suspected the outcome would be much the same.
He walked the shifting rows of obsidian halls and monuments — testaments to the arrogance that followed ascension.
Many stood empty now. Some retained by the Council as rewards for loyal hounds. Others sold or granted to members of the Thirty-Eighth during their rise. And a rare few — very few — already passed down to the golden prospects of the Thirty-Ninth.
Each structure told a story.
One written in blood.
Or arrogance.
The obsidian beneath his boots gleamed faintly with reflected firelight. Runes etched into the stone flickered like the watching eyes of ancient ghosts. His cloak whispered behind him. His stride never faltered.
Steady.
As always, he was heading toward the White Lotus Training Hall.
It lay at the far eastern edge of the Inner Veil, near enough to the towering walls of the Third Wing confinement to see its silhouette beyond the mist.
The hall had always been a ghost corner. Too far for mantled nobles to bother walking. Too forgotten for servants to maintain. Too irrelevant for knights to notice twice.
Not today. Someone was waiting.
Three vassal knights stood beneath the archway. They were not guards nor trainers. Their attire was too fine for their station, their posture too carefully arranged in imitation of indifference. There were no bows. No salutes.
Only insolence, thinly veiled beneath the mask of protocol.
The tragedy of it all, Chion reflected, was that for all their wisdom, power, and instruments of control —
The Elders still preferred games of shallow pride.
Perfect.
By the time they reconsidered their strategy, he would already have found new ways to spite them.
"This ground is reserved, boy."
The tallest vassal spoke first. His voice was too smooth. Too loud. A performance rather than authority.
"By command of the House of Iron Veil."
Chion did not slow.
His gaze lifted slightly, silver eyes catching the dim light like drawn steel beneath the haze.
"Move."
They didn't.
The lead vassal stepped forward, smile pulled tight across his face. One hand hovered near his sword hilt.
"We mean no disrespect," he said. "But your name isn't on the rota this morning. Surely you wouldn't have us defy standing orders?"
Chion stopped one pace from them.
The false courtesy. The carefully measured insolence. Their very presence.
Too clean. Too deliberate.
A trap.
He tilted his head slightly, letting the shadows fall across the hard lines of his face.
"Are you certain," he asked quietly, "that this is the line you wish to die for?"
A chill ran through the vassal despite himself.
He knew the rumors.
Everyone did.
But orders were not opinions in this clan.
His sneer deepened.
"I won't repeat myself, boy. This hall falls under Mantle XVIII of the Thirty-Eighth. Find somewhere else to be."
There it was.
Viren's name, dropped like a blade across the stone.
Chion's fingers flexed slowly.
"Good," he murmured.
"That makes the report easier to write."
What followed was not a duel.
Not even a warning.
A flash of silver — and a body collapsing.
The vassal's throat opened in a clean, glowing line. No cry escaped him. The only sound was the wet impact of his body striking the floor and the slow pooling of blood across the black stone.
The other two froze. Hands halfway to their weapons. Their eyes moved from Chion to the corpse and back again.
"Run," Chion said softly.
"Or I finish the signature."
They ran. Steel clattered uselessly to the floor as they fled into the mist, boots hammering against stone like distant war drums.
Silence returned.
He looked down at the body. His expression revealed nothing. He offered the corpse nothing in return.
Then he stepped over the cooling corpse and entered the training hall.
He did not draw his blade again. He offered no explanation to the empty air. He simply waited.
