The chains groaned as the tower doors opened.
Not swung—uncoiled.
Massive links slid aside with a grinding resonance that vibrated through Ryon’s bones, each movent deliberate, ceremonial. The entrance revealed a descending spiral ramp carved from the sa black stone as the city above, its surface etched with dense layers of runes—older, tighter, more absolute.
Cold poured out from within.
Not the biting cold of the plains, but sothing deeper. Accounting cold. The kind that stripped warmth not from flesh, but from intent.
Lysara stepped inside without hesitation.
"Try not to touch anything," she said lightly over her shoulder. "So of the debts bite."
Elara muttered, "Comforting."
Ryon followed, the mark on his chest pulsing in slow, irritated beats. Each step downward made the pressure heavier, as though gravity itself were being renegotiated.
The system spoke in a low, controlled tone.
"Structural analysis ongoing. This environnt functions as a containnt-and-evaluation nexus."
"So," Ryon said quietly, "a courtroom."
"Yes," the system replied. "With execution authority."
Aerin’s light dimd as they descended, compressed by layers of warding that peeled away her influence bit by bit. She did not slow, but Ryon could feel the strain she hid behind her calm.
"This place predates you," Aerin said to Lysara. "It predates the current Cycle."
Lysara smiled without turning. "Of course it does. We wouldn’t trust sothing young with eternal bookkeeping."
They reached the bottom of the ramp and erged into a vast circular chamber.
The ceiling arched impossibly high, disappearing into darkness threaded with faint constellations of light—records suspended like frozen stars. Along the walls, massive stone panels hovered in slow rotation, each covered in shifting sigils and faintly glowing script.
Nas.
Not spoken—imprinted.
Ryon felt it imdiately. His chest tightened, breath catching as sothing brushed against his awareness.
"Don’t read them," Lysara warned casually. "Most people don’t enjoy learning how they die."
Elara stiffened. "People die in here?"
Lysara glanced back, eyebrow raised. "Everyone dies sowhere."
At the chamber’s center stood a table.
Not stone.
Not tal.
Sothing in between—smooth, reflective, dark enough to mirror Ryon’s silhouette imperfectly, as if it couldn’t quite agree on his outline.
Lysara gestured. "Sit."
Ryon didn’t move.
"What exactly are we negotiating?" he asked.
Lysara’s smile returned, sharp and professional. "Ownership."
The word landed heavily.
Elara’s hand went to her dagger. "He’s not for sale."
Lysara t her gaze coolly. "Everything is for sale. The question is who pays—and how."
Aerin stepped forward, silver light flaring despite the suppression. "You will not claim him."
"I don’t need to," Lysara replied. "The Cycle already has."
The system pulsed uneasily.
"Clarification required."
Lysara tilted her head, studying Ryon intently. "Your system knows the chanics," she said. "It simply avoids the implications."
Ryon’s jaw tightened. "Spell it out."
She tapped the table once.
The air above it rippled.
A projection unfolded—lines of light weaving into symbols, numbers, and sothing else. Not math. Weight.
Ryon felt it press into him, translating instinctively.
Battles survived.
Corrections resisted.
Executors engaged.
Inheritance rejected.
Accumulation nodes disrupted.
At the center, one figure dominated the display.
Ryon.
The value beside his na pulsed steadily upward.
Elara stared. "That’s... growing."
"Yes," Lysara said pleasantly. "Compound debt."
The system spoke carefully.
"Debt is a taphor."
Lysara smiled at nothing. "So is balance."
Aerin’s voice hardened. "What do you want?"
Lysara’s gaze flicked to her. "Not you."
Then back to Ryon.
"You are walking forward while refusing resolution," she said. "That creates strain. Strain demands compensation."
Ryon folded his arms. "So I pay."
"Yes."
"With what?"
Lysara’s eyes glead. "Ti. Action. Direction."
The table shifted, projection changing.
Three sigils ford.
One burned crimson.
One glowed pale gold.
One was black—empty, waiting.
"The South bleeds," Lysara said. "The North fractures. The Cycle weakens."
She pointed to the crimson sigil. "You serve as an enforcer. We point. You burn. Debt stabilizes through violence."
Ryon’s expression darkened. "No."
She shrugged, unbothered. "Expected."
Her finger moved to the pale gold sigil. "You anchor. You stop moving. You beco a fixed point. A warning. A monunt."
Elara’s breath hitched. "You’re talking about imprisonnt."
"Containnt," Lysara corrected.
Ryon didn’t hesitate. "Also no."
Lysara’s finger hovered over the black sigil.
"This," she said softly, "is the interesting one."
The sigil pulsed faintly, reacting to Ryon’s presence.
"You continue," she said. "But not blindly. You move where the debt is worst. You intervene where accumulation threatens collapse."
Aerin stiffened. "You’d turn him into a regulator."
"Into a collector," Lysara replied calmly. "He already attracts imbalance. We simply formalize the path."
The system reacted instantly.
"Proposal introduces external directive layer. Risk: autonomy degradation."
Ryon exhaled slowly. "In plain terms."
Lysara t his eyes. "You keep your will. Your choices. Your companions."
Elara’s jaw tightened at that.
"But," Lysara continued, "you accept assignnts. Refuse too many—and Avaris collects the difference."
Ryon’s chest burned.
"And if I refuse all of it?"
The chamber dimd slightly.
Lysara’s smile vanished.
"Then," she said quietly, "the Executors stop observing."
Elara went pale. "You’d sic them on him."
"No," Lysara said. "We’d stop slowing them down."
Silence stretched.
Ryon closed his eyes.
He thought of the silhouette in the ice.
Of the accumulation node.
Of the city above, built not to repel invaders, but to contain consequences.
He opened his eyes.
"If I do this," he said, "I set the terms too."
Lysara’s smile returned, sharp with interest. "Of course you do. That’s how debt negotiations work."
Ryon leaned forward, placing his palm flat against the table. The surface was cold—and then warm, reacting to his touch.
"I don’t hunt for you," he said evenly. "I don’t kill for balance sheets. I choose where I go."
Lysara studied him carefully.
"You choose," she agreed. "But when you act... it counts."
Elara grabbed his wrist. "Ryon—"
He looked at her, eyes steady. "I won’t stop," he said softly. "This just keeps the world from collapsing behind ."
She searched his face, then nodded once. "Then I’m still with you."
Aerin watched silently, expression unreadable.
Lysara stepped back. "Very well."
She snapped her fingers.
The black sigil flared.
The chains embedded in the chamber walls rattled, then settled. A pressure lifted—subtle, but unmistakable.
The system spoke, altered.
"External directive layer integrated. Paraters flexible. Balance debt... amortized."
Ryon winced. "I hate that word."
Lysara chuckled. "You’ll learn to love it."
The projection faded.
Lysara inclined her head. "Welco to Avaris’ books, Ryon of the South."
The mark on his chest pulsed once—then cooled.
But far above, deep beneath the city’s foundations, sothing ancient shifted.
The ledger had accepted him.
Now it would watch.
And the debt—
—would expect paynt.
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