Chapter 46: Weight of the Gaze
Alistair went to the Sunborne directly.
He didn’t go to fight, and he didn’t go to negotiate in any conventional sense.
He went to speak to whoever was arguing against Caldren’s offer, intent on saying sothing that couldn’t be transmitted through interdiaries or dispatches.
Due mapped every possible consequence before they left.
He sat at the table with his hands working through obligation threads for an hour.
His collar adjusted at intervals that Alistair had learned to read as the severity of his findings. Frequent adjustnts ant the consequences were significant.
Due adjusted his collar eleven tis during the mapping, which was more than Alistair had ever counted.
"All significant," Due said eventually. "None impossible to survive." He looked at Alistair with a worried expression.
"The obligations that form when you walk into their territory will be real. They’ll attach to everything you say and everything you promise. Breaking them will cost sothing significant."
"I know," said Alistair.
"I’m coming with you," Due added.
"I’m aware of that too, Due," said Alistair.
"You don’t seem concerned enough," said Due.
Alistair looked at him. "I am concerned. I’m just not showing it the way you want
to."
Due clicked his tongue. It was the most Alistair-like gesture Due had ever made, and neither of them comnted on it.
Silas ca without being asked. Elara stayed at the base.
She didn’t explain why, and Alistair didn’t ask, but he understood: her Characteristic running inside Sunborne territory would create complications that had nothing to do with diplomacy.
She understood it, too.
She watched them leave from the territory’s edge, her arms at her sides, her posture carrying that composed straightness she’d developed since renouncing the Vance na.
***
The approach took three hours.
Sunborne soldiers tracked them from a distance the entire way. They did not attempt to hide it.
Alistair’s scan picked up four, then six, then eight signatures pacing them on parallel routes. They maintained their distance, never approaching.
They let Sun Harvest arrive, a decision that told Alistair sothing before he’d spoken a single word.
’They’re watching to see what we do. Not preparing to stop us. They are watching. That ans the internal disagreent is real, and the side that doesn’t want Caldren’s offer is curious about what we have to say.’
However, the reception was asured. A mid-ranking representative t them at the edge of the Sunbornes’ formal territory.
She was tall, armored lightly, and she assessed all three of them with the professional attention of soone whose job was to gauge threats.
She decided they weren’t one, not yet.
Alistair stated what he wanted simply. He wanted to speak to whoever was arguing against Caldren’s offer.
The representative’s expression didn’t change. She didn’t say yes, and she didn’t say no.
She looked at them for a long mont, which Alistair recognized as soone consulting instructions they’d already been given.
Due’s settling gestures were working at a careful pace.
His collar adjusted once. Whatever obligations were forming around this interaction, they were different from the ones he usually mapped.
They were institutional, weighted with the specific gravity of a faction that had been operating for generations.
"Wait here," the representative said. She turned and walked into the compound without looking back.
After waiting, Alistair’s scan ran over the compound’s structures, reading signatures and mapping positions.
The Sunborne were organized the way rational people organized everything: efficiently, predictably, with contingencies built into the layout.
He counted fourteen Characteristic signatures inside the compound, ranging from suppressed to fully active.
’They could end this conversation before it starts. Fourteen wielders against three of us in their territory. They’re choosing not to.’
Then he appeared... Osren appeared.
He was leaning against a wall at the edge of the compound, his white hair catching what light there was, the grain on his ear visible even from a distance.
He had the relaxed attention of soone who had been waiting for this specific conversation and had positioned himself to be found exactly when he wanted to be.
"The person you want to speak to will see you," Osren said.
He said it with a slight smile that Alistair was beginning to understand was how Osren communicated.
Seeing this, Due’s settling gestures paused. His collar adjusted once.
Then Osren looked at Silas. He held the look.
Silas, who should have been functionally invisible to soone who didn’t know him, who should have registered as barely present even to people standing next to him.
Silas, whose entire Characteristic depended on not being seen clearly.
Osren saw him clearly. He said nothing about it, but the look lasted long enough that Silas noticed being seen and went very still for a while.
Alistair watched the exchange. His scan was running over Osren’s Characteristic signature:
Radiance, the light that reveals things as they actually are.
Osren’s power didn’t just illuminate; it showed the truth of what it touched.
And it was touching Silas, finding him there, present and real and visible, despite everything Absence was doing to prevent exactly that.
Alistair was genuinely fascinated. Two Characteristics eting and producing a result neither wielder had expected.
Silas’s jaw tightened slightly. He didn’t speak, and neither did Osren. The mont passed.
Following that, Osren led them deeper into the Sunborne’s position.
The compound opened into a series of connected structures, well-maintained and organized with the rational efficiency that characterized everything Elysium built.
Soldiers moved through corridors with purpose.
Alistair’s scan ran its circuit over the buildings, reading signatures and mapping the layout automatically.
Then, his scan caught sothing that made him stop walking.
It was a Characteristic reading inside the structure ahead.
It wasn’t just a single signature, but a thread that connected to multiple situations simultaneously: Caldren’s civilian operation and Sunborne’s internal disagreent.
It was the sa presence woven through both. The sa person.
Due felt it, too. His hands went completely still.
His collar didn’t adjust. When Due’s collar didn’t adjust, it ant he was processing sothing significant enough that his body forgot its habits.
However, it was Silas who reacted most visibly.
He stopped walking and turned his head slightly, the way he did when Absence picked up sothing his eyes couldn’t see.
Whatever he was sensing, it aligned with what Alistair’s scan and Due’s threads were telling them.
Alistair looked at Osren. Osren’s slight smile hadn’t changed, which ant he already knew exactly what they were about to find. He’d led them here on purpose.
Whatever disagreent was happening inside the Sunborne, Osren had decided which side he was on, and he was bringing Sun Harvest to the door of the person who agreed with him.
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