Chapter 57: The Crossroads
The wielder led them east for two days.
He moved through the disputed territory like he’d done it a hundred tis. No consulting landmarks, no pausing at intersections.
He turned when the path turned, and stopped when the ground said to stop.
Due walked beside him for most of the first day, asking questions without asking questions.
Due had a way of extracting information through implication rather than interrogation, without ever actually asking anything direct.
By midday, Alistair had learned that the wielder had maintained a section of Caldren’s network for five years before understanding what he was maintaining, and that the process of understanding had taken another two years beyond that.
The ti between understanding and acting had been the longest period of his life.
"The anchor operates from a settlent called Greathearth," said the wielder. They were resting in the shade of a rock formation that jutted from the landscape like a broken tooth.
"Two hours south of where we camped. Not a large settlent, forty people, maybe fifty. The kind of place that exists because the people in it had nowhere else worth going."
"And the anchor chose that location?" Alistair asked.
"The anchor didn’t choose anything." The wielder’s voice was flat. "Caldren placed them there eleven years ago.
They’ve been maintaining the network since, because the contract they signed doesn’t allow them to stop.
Every year the contract renews itself through a chanism built into the Sovereign Debt structure."
He clicked his tongue once.
"The anchor isn’t a willing participant. They’re the most deeply trapped person in the entire system."
Elara, sitting nearby, looked at the ground between her feet.
She hadn’t spoken much since they’d left Harren’s Post.
Alistair could tell she was thinking, assembling sothing, pieces she’d had for years that were only now fitting together.
However, it was Silas who surprised Alistair.
He’d been invisible for most of the journey, scouting ahead through the Dark Interval, reporting back through his stone-and-signal system.
But during the rest stop, he materialized beside the wielder and sat down close enough that their shoulders were separated by a distance you could asure in inches.
The wielder didn’t flinch.
He glanced sideways at Silas with an expression that suggested he’d been expecting the proximity, and had decided to let it happen.
"You said sothing on the road after we left the structure," said Silas. His voice was low enough that Alistair had to focus to hear it. "About registering."
"I said I’ve been thinking about it," the wielder replied.
"Independent and unaffiliated."
"Yes."
Silas looked at the horizon for a long mont before responding.
Alistair watched them from across the formation, keeping his attention on the exchange without intruding on it.
Due was doing the sa from the other side, his hands in their settling motion, reading the threads between the two n with the attention he reserved for things that were still forming.
"That takes courage," Silas said. He said it without inflection, which was how Silas said things that mattered enough to not dress up with emphasis. "Registering ans being known. For soone who’s survived by not being known, that’s not a small thing."
The wielder turned his head and looked at Silas directly. "You would know sothing about that."
"I would."
Following that, neither of them spoke for several minutes. Alistair recognized that kind of silence. He and Due had sat in it enough tis in the early days.
On the second evening, the wielder stopped at a crossroads where the path split north and south.
"Greathearth is four hours south," he said. He pointed down the southern path. "The anchor will be in the settlent’s central building. They maintain the network from there because the communication infrastructure Caldren installed requires physical proximity to operate."
He turned to face all four of them.
"This is where I leave you."
Alistair had expected it.
The wielder had made no commitnt to participate in the operation itself, only to guide them to the location.
The distinction between guidance and action was one that a man who had spent years navigating the edges of systems without belonging to them would understand precisely.
"The settlent is civilian," the wielder continued. "No military presence, no guards with Aspects or Characteristics. The anchor is protected by the contract itself, not by force. Dismantling the network requires understanding how the Sovereign Debt contracts self-reinforce, and your man there,"
He nodded toward Due, "reads obligation structures better than anyone I’ve encountered in seven years of operating in this territory."
Alistair was grateful for the assessnt, and surprised that gratitude was the emotion that arrived rather than sothing more tactical.
Due’s capability was a fact, not a complint.
But, hearing it confird by soone who operated outside the faction reminded Alistair that what they’d built was visible from the outside in ways he sotis forgot to notice from within.
The crossroads sat at the junction of two kinds of nowhere, and the wind coming from the south carried the scent of settlent.
Hearing this, the wielder looked at Silas.
He held the look for a beat that carried the weight of everything they’d said and everything they hadn’t.
"I’m going to register," the wielder said. "Independent, and unaffiliated. I’ve been thinking about it since our first conversation, and I’ve decided."
Silas watched him without responding imdiately. His Absence held steady, which was its own kind of statent. Steadiness in Silas’s Characteristic was not the default.
It was the product of effort, and the effort he was spending to remain visible in this mont was Alistair’s clearest indication of how much the wielder’s decision ant to him.
"That’s going to matter," Due said from beside Alistair. He said it to the air rather than to anyone in particular, the way Due said things that were true regardless of who heard them.
"I know," Silas replied.
The wielder nodded once. He looked at Alistair last, and the assessnt in his gaze was different from the one he’d given at the structure.
Less evaluation, more recognition. Alistair couldn’t read it fully, however, it wasn’t the sa look from before.
Sothing had changed.
The wielder didn’t say goodbye.
He turned and walked north, into the disputed territory, moving with the unhurried pace of a man who had sowhere to be and enough ti to get there without rushing.
Alistair watched him until the path curved and the landscape swallowed him.
’He’ll make it,’ Alistair thought. ’Whatever he registers as, whatever na he gives the Echelon, he’ll survive it. People who’ve survived by being invisible don’t lose that skill when they choose to be seen. They just learn to use it differently.’
He turned south.
"Four hours," said Alistair. "We move now. We reach Greathearth before dawn."
Elara shouldered her pack. Due folded the maps he’d been referencing and tucked them into his coat.
Silas was already ahead, dissolving into the Dark Interval, laying down markers on the southern path.
Before Alistair had taken ten steps down the southern road, a single stone landed at his feet from the dark ahead – one of Silas’s markers, and the pattern on it was one they’d agreed he would only ever use once.
Soone was waiting for them in Greathearth.
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