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Chapter 22 - The Gilded Veins

​The Low-Spires were a jagged contrast to the rot below. Here, the walls weren't rusted iron; they were white-veined marble and polished brass, humming with the steady, arrogant pulse of filtered mana. The air was too clean—it tasted of mountain ozone and expensive perfumes, a sharp sting in lungs used to soot and sulfur.

​But Elara was no longer clean. She was a sun.

​The blue light leaking from her porcelain seams cast long, distorted shadows against the sterile walls. Every step she took left a faint, scorched footprint on the marble.

​"She's peaking!" Cora hissed, grabbing Elara's shoulder. "Kaelen, if she doesn't vent that purge, she's going to melt from the inside out."

​"I... I can hold it," Elara gasped, her silver diaphragm vibrating so fast it sounded like a hornet's nest. Her sapphire eyes were almost white, the pupils drowned in a sea of stolen energy. "The... the resonance... it's trying to find a... ground."

​"The Resistance cell is three levels up," Cora said, her eyes darting to a nearby security-crystal that was beginning to glow a warning red. "The Clock-Tower District. There's an old relay station there that feeds the city's broadcast-horns. If we can get her to the terminal, she can dump the energy into the speakers."

​"And wake up the whole damn city?" I asked, my right hand hovering over my blade. My left arm was throbbing in sympathy with her light, the violet and blue energies clashing like a storm in my marrow.

​"Better than turning into a crater," Cora snapped.

​We sprinted.

​The Low-Spires weren't empty. We passed "Service-Thralls"—men and women with vacant eyes and silver collars—who didn't even look up as we blurred past. To them, we were just ghosts in the machine.

​But the Guardian-Constructs weren't so indifferent.

​CLANG-CLANG-CLANG.

​The alarm bells of the Low-Spires were melodic, like a funeral chime. From the vaulted ceiling, four Silver-Sentinels descended on silk-steel cables. They were tall, slender mannikins made of polished mercury-glass, wielding twin-bladed rapiers that hummed with high-frequency magic.

​"Go!" Cora roared.

​She skidded to a halt, leveling her double-barreled crossbow. THWIP-THWIP. Two heavy iron bolts hammered into the chest of the lead Sentinel, shattering the glass casing and sending a spray of liquid mana across the floor.

​"Kaelen, take the girl! I'll hold the hallway!"

​"Cora, don't be a martyr!" I yelled, reaching for her.

​"I'm not a martyr, I'm an investor!" she grinned, her green eyes wild as she reloaded with a practiced flick of her wrist. "And you still owe me five silver! Move!"

​I grabbed Elara's hand. Her porcelain was searing—hot enough to blister my palm—but I didn't let go. I dragged her toward the central lift-shaft, the father stumbling behind us, his breath a series of high-pitched whines.

​We burst into the Clock-Tower Plaza.

​It was a massive, open-air platform overlooking the Sinks. Above us, the Great Clock—the mechanical heart of Oakhaven—ticked with a heavy, grinding rhythm. The brass gears were the size of houses, rotating in a complex dance of time and power.

​"The... the terminal," Elara whispered, pointing toward a glass-enclosed booth at the base of the clock's main pendulum.

​But standing in front of the booth was someone I hadn't expected to see.

​He wore the white-and-gold robes of a High-Inquisitor. His face was youthful, almost beautiful, but his eyes were ancient and cold—the eyes of a man who had lived for a century on stolen life.

​"Ferryman," he said, his voice soft, cutting through the roar of the gears. "You've brought the Key right to the lock. I should thank you for saving us the trouble of a hunt."

​"The hunt isn't over, Inquisitor," I said, drawing my notched blade. The violet light of my fracture flared, connecting with Elara's blue aura. Together, we were a jagged, screaming spectrum of broken magic.

​"Oh, it is," the Inquisitor smiled. He raised a hand, and the very air around us began to solidify into translucent, golden chains of Static-Law. "You are a 'Burnout.' A glitch in the system. And glitches are meant to be... deleted."

​Elara let out a scream—a sound of pure, unadulterated frequency. She didn't wait for him to strike. She let the blue light go.

​The explosion wasn't fire. It was Information.

​A wave of raw, unfiltered mana-purge slammed into the Inquisitor's golden chains, shattering them like glass. The shockwave hit the Great Clock, the gears skipping a beat, a sound like a mountain cracking in half.

​I lunged through the chaos, my blade aimed at the Inquisitor's heart.

​He didn't move. He simply stepped into the shadow of a rotating gear and vanished, his laughter echoing in the cold air. "The Key is turning, Ferryman! But do you know what lies behind the door?"

​I didn't answer. I caught Elara as she collapsed, the blue light finally fading, leaving her porcelain skin dull and grey.

​"The terminal," she gasped, her sapphire eyes flickering. "Kaelen... the terminal... now."

​I looked at the glass booth. The father was already there, his hands shaking as he punched in the codes the Resistance had given him.

​"It's open!" he screamed.

​I carried Elara into the booth. The terminal was a forest of brass levers and glowing crystals.

​"What do I do?" I asked, looking at the girl.

​"Give... give me... your hand," she whispered. "The fracture... we need... both poles."

​I placed my scarred, blackened hand on the central crystal. Elara placed her cracked, porcelain hand over mine.

​The violet and the gold met.

​The Great Clock of Oakhaven didn't just chime. It spoke.

​Across the entire city—from the highest Spire to the deepest Sink—the broadcast-horns erupted. Not with music, and not with news.

​They erupted with the sound of a child's heartbeat.

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