Chapter 938 - 936-The Ledger and the Arrow
Chapter 938: Chapter 936-The Ledger and the Arrow
The mood changed when I slid the envelope across the tablel. They could feel it — the thing I’d given to Nihil and Elysia earlier wasn’t idle. It had its own reasons.
Tron was first to break the silence. "You gave them what?" he asked, voice tight with curiosity. Tron’s intelligence network runs like an insect swarm — if he wanted to know how the thing worked, he would tear it apart and understand its smell. That made him dangerous in two different ways.
I let his question hang. I didn’t like giving away my chessboard’s moves, but this one needed covering. If I didn’t explain the reason I handed them the document earlier, someone would ask it later and then every loose thought of mine would litter the corridors as a hole.
"Before the attacks started—before anyone smashed anything—I gave Nihil and Elysia a thing to do," I said, slow and cold. "A document and a task. Not because of whim. Because I had a feeling." I saw Alex’s jaw tighten. He likes tidy plans. I prefer living ones.
Nihil shifted in his seat, all tension and burned edges. He had that look. Elysia’s fingers toyed with the hem of her sleeve, small and anxious, but watching. Both of them had been quiet that day when I handed it to them. I trusted them in ways I never explained. They trusted me in ways they never voiced, not to mention I promised a date to Elysia for doing it.
"Show it," Tron said, the smallest order.
I opened the envelope and pulled out the sheet. In the low light, it looked just like a ledger — inked lines, numbers, names that could pass for anything. But the page was more a theatre prop than accountancy: a forged run of names that connected certain healers to payments from a broker called Velvet Hand. Side notes showed transfers to two ritual houses and one supply route that belonged to the Moonshard Pact. Old school paper. Real-seeming handwriting. A list that screamed scandal if anyone read it and decided to shout, these were things the other faction was doing for points and growth and power, before they revealed themselves.
"You made them a fake ledger?" Rina barked because blunt spades are all she understands. "That’s it? You gave them a piece of paper?"
"It’s not just a ledger," I said. "It’s bait. But to be bait, it needs to be believable. It needs provenance. It needs a way into a safe place that their kind trusts. That’s why I gave it to Nihil and Elysia. Because they have the standard to do it."
Nihil’s jaw tightened, then he picked up the paper and ran his fingers across the ink. "You knew the Moonshard Pact and Velvet Hand would sniff something like this," he said quietly. Nihil always cuts a direct path to truth. He’d followed my breadcrumb trail earlier and found more than I’d intended him to.
"I suspected it," I admitted. "They rely on secrets. Their business is the exchange of whispers. If you feed them a whisper that smells real, they will go to the theatre to verify. In doing so, they show their hands. They send spies. They talk to their own, and when you plant evidence in the crowd — in the right places — they unmask each other for everyone to see."
Elysia leaned forward, voice small. "You wanted us to plant it?" Her lips barely moved. She’s gentle, but she’s cunning in small, clever ways.
"Yes," I said. "But not how you think. I didn’t tell you to break into a faction’s hall or force the money chest. I wanted a different kind of planting. I wanted you two to use what you are — the archery connections, the vantage points, the whisper routes for points — and do something they’d never expect."
The room exchanged looks. Lanora’s hand paused on the strings in her mind. Sonia’s smile folded into a calculated frown. Even Mark looked like he was reading the first paragraph of a book he didn’t like but couldn’t stop.
"Explain it," Tron snapped.
So I told them. "Borin Keld and the terrain boys think battlefield control is about anchors and stones. Moonshard and Velvet Hand think secrets need physical proof: ledgers, seals, the smell of coin. So I made us a ledger that says exactly what they want to see — Velvet Hand bribing healers, Moonshard buying favours, gave them all fake powers and held the truth away from them."
A low murmur. Sana’s fingers played with a blade under the table, and she hummed like a cat. "Okay, classic bait," she said. "Plant a fake, watch them scramble. Where do Nihil and Elysia come in?"
"Because you can’t just drop a ledger in a street and expect the Moonshard to show. That paper needs to look like it came from inside Velvet Hand’s trusted members for power. It needs their seal or something very like it. Which is where Nihil’s trick comes into play." I watched his face flip from calm to sharp.
Nihil looked at me, his eyes knowing.
"Signature," I said. "Not the same, but a mimic that has its rhythm. Velvet Hand has a signature that’s not just ink — it leaves a tiny void-echo in the field because of their thaumic binding, a mark of their faction. I knew we couldn’t mimic that with ink. But you? You can nudge it. It’s minor, right? A whisper as ’right.’ Make the paper faintly like their stamp, and their own people will accept it as plausible."
Nihil exhaled, a thin sound. "That’s risky. Playing in the thaumic signatures is—" He didn’t finish, but everyone read the rest.
"You’re right," I said. "If we were clumsy, we’d be the ones burned. That’s why Elysia is involved." I turned to her and saw her colour climb, small and steady. "You can move through their hidden routes. You’re soft, unassuming, and you can be in places their guards don’t expect a hand to reach. Their trust vaults rely on trusted messengers, the archery tower’s low-visibility couriers, and timed beacons. You can slip an arrow that doesn’t carry steel."
Elysia’s eyes widened just a little. "An arrow?"
"Yes." I smiled coldly. "Not just any arrow. A courier arrow — a thing that nicks a window latch, drops a folded paper into a chamber someone believes is closed to them. The archery tower’s signal routes are a network; they pass messages under the pretence of drills and training. I gave you the map — routes, timings, blind corners. You and Nihil were to make this paper look like it travelled the way our enemies travel. That would give it history. No one will assume the ledger was made yesterday and tossed in. They’ll think it came from inside, which means they would open up all their secret transactions to us."
Tron’s eyes went sharp. "So the ledger’s provenance is the story, not the paper. The paper is bait."
"Exactly." I pushed the ledger back to Nihil. "You make it theirs. Elysia launches it in a place only a trusted courier would touch. The Moonshard man notices it, the Velvet Hand man notices it, and they whisper. Spies run. They show evidence to each other. The moment they produce proof or point fingers in the open, we have them on record."
Rina ripped a laugh that sounded like a rusted hinge. "You’re beautiful when you do ugly things."
Mark rubbed his jaw, still not entirely comfortable. "And the Council of Care? The healer forum? How does this piece of paper play into that?"
I liked that question. Good mind. "The ledger mentions healers on specific lists, donations, and secret payments. If Velvet Hand’s fingerprints get mentioned near healers, the public will demand answers. That’s the forum. We create a neutral space called the Council of Care — press, patients, healers. Then we play the ledger to the press. The healers accused are forced to defend. Some will be bribe-takers and will trip. The false healers who took Velvet Hand money will have to explain why they’re on that list. They scramble. They bring in their own proofs — and in doing so, often implicate others. Meanwhile, Clara sits calmly, tends to someone in the room, and the crowd remembers who actually heals."
Lanora’s fingers moved as if plucking an invisible lute. "You’ll use the ledger to force confessions," she said. "Create situations where the accused tear each other apart."
Sonia nodded, pleased. "Make the accused argue in public. Watch them point at one another and reveal their own dirty secrets."
Nathalia tapped the desk, thinking in solid thumps. "So the ledger forces a chain reaction. One name, one accusation, and then the web is exposed."
"Exactly." I liked the way her mind worked — practical, like gears meshing. She always surprised me. Too many people assume dwarves only make things.
Sana’s lips thinned. "And if they suspect the ledger is a plant? If the Moonshard says, ’this is fake’ and burns it?"
"Then they burn it and show their fear," I said. "We get to show that they reacted because they feared exposure. That fear is evidence."
Nihil’s eyes flicked to mine. "What if an innocent healer is on that ledger by mistake? You can’t have that blowback."
I shrugged, not prettying the edges. "A ledger like that will always have noise. That’s why Clara must be ready to pull out the real cures quietly. The first week will be messy. We’ll take the rubble in the street. But we don’t want to kill everyone. We want the rotten fruit to fall in public." I saw Clara nod, nails white on the chair. She understood the cost.
Alex folded his arms, thinking of the spectacle. "Timing, then. When do we plant it? When do we call the Council?"
I watched the faces around the table. People hungry for noise and the ones afraid of ink. I liked that balance. Control was always in the wait.