Chapter 939 - 937-They Were All Dead From The Beginning.
Chapter 939: Chapter 937-They Were All Dead From The Beginning.
"Plant at a club’s festival dawn," I said. "The clubs have practice that morning — plenty of cover for couriers. Elysia does the launch at the east cistern during the signal volley. The ledger will be discovered by a Velvet Hand runner who counts seals and trusts his route. He will carry it for a day before showing it to a Moonshard contact. Once it’s in motion, Tron’s spiders will follow the trail. We schedule the Council three days after. Enough time for chaos."
Tron’s lips curved. "Perfect. The ledger will act like a lit fuse."
"And Nihil?" Sonia asked. "Your signature trick—how precise do you need it? Do we risk the thaumic counter-forensics people?"
Nihil shrugged, mask-like steel. "It won’t be exact, a wrongness small enough that Velvet Hand’s own scribes will nod before questioning. If anyone with proper tools searches, they’ll find our thumbprints. But the whole point is to make them rush. The rush makes mistakes."
Rina’s grin split the dark. "I like mistakes." She always did.
"Good," I said. "This is not a small play. It’s the opening act. When Moonshard and Velvet Hand run to each other, they’ll pull in healers, merchants, and ritualists. They’ll burn bridges in the open. The Council will be the theatre where everything comes together."
Clara’s voice was steady but hushed. "And I—what do I do in the Council? Sit and heal?"
"Sit, heal, and don’t shout," I said. "We’ll have Sonia and Tron plant the right questions in the press. We’ll orchestrate the inquiries. You give a patient simple, visible care. Let the students see motion and not words. People remember a healthy healed longer than an argument on parchment."
Lanora hummed something low, pleased. "We’ll make the crowd forget their anger and remember the cure. Music does that."
Sana’s knife-hand twitched, but she nodded. "I’ll prune the lines if anyone tries to plant a counter-attack in the Council. No sudden deaths. Just removed witnesses."
Mark grunted, satisfied enough with that. "So we make them expose themselves, then hit the ones still standing."
"Exactly," I said. "We make them rip themselves apart. We don’t start the fire; we drop a candle in a room full of dry curtains and then, quietly, watch the smoke."
"God damn, you basically poisoned everything before they revealed themselves. They don’t know it, but they are playing to our tunes like pieces on a board, pull everything, and it will be total chaos."
Alex said with a shout, then his eyes met mine, and I could see the fear flash through his face. They tried to harm my love, then I will bury them so deep, they will never be able to crawl out from it, from the very beginning, ever since I detected the several crawling in, I had made my moves, the connections and actions.
The thing about outsiders is that when they want to establish themselves, in one way or another, they will need inside help. Sure, Isabella was pulled in, but that wasn’t enough. They needed more. Each faction needed to settle its powers, build connections, earn points, and more, and they needed help.
’And help they got.’
My smile was only making Alex tremble where he sat, and so did Tron.
.....
I wanted Amon to speak; the demon had been silent for too long, brooding. Jack had been training in the yard, moving trees like they were twigs; his strength was obvious but brains make brute useful. Zora the kept to corners. Mika and Rika—twin edges in different hands—were good at making people like them before they slashed them.
They filed in, one by one, like a pack. Some smiled; some scowled. All of them knew what "cultural poisoning" meant in practice but not yet in tactics. That’s why the room was mine.
I opened with the simple sentence I like: "Long game tonight. We don’t just take heads. We rot them from the inside."
Amon laughed—half a sound, more a bark. He’d lost a wing once, and part of the demon never forgave the world for that. "Rot crowns? I prefer smashing them. Slow rotting smells like cowardice."
"You smash a crown," I said, "the head on it always comes loose and the rest scramble to fill the hole. Quick chaos. But rot? It makes them eat their own. They don’t notice until their empire is termites." I watched the corner of his mouth twitch.
Jack cracked his knuckles like thunder. "So we teach people to not be kings? You sound like a talker, Austin. Where do children come in?"
"Schools," I said. "Not a harsh keep or secrets. Practical arts. Archery-backed tinkers. Humane beastkeeping. Things that make mouths and hands useful. We seed them with our faction." I liked saying it loud.
Zora moved closer, fingers cold as moonlight. "And you plan to teach them instead of letting the Cartographers and Pilgrims keep the academy’s brains? That will draw fire. They will call it rebellion."
"That’s the point," I said. "We don’t call it rebellion. We call it ’competence.’ We make the lectures smell like pay and promise, like opportunity. We make it practical." I smiled at the image—an academy full of hands problems and issues.
’Sorry, Mira’
Mika and Rika exchanged a little look. They were matched in silence, then Mika raised her voice, soft. "Who runs these so-called ’schools’? If we pull this, we need teachers who are more than talk. They should be like us—sharp, loyal, but that can show mercy when needed."
"Good," Rina said, grinning like a blade. "We can’t put obvious faces. Put the sleeves on new blood. Build a network of modest men and women who teach, who recruit, who are paid quietly, using the students teaching program. We give them a chance—fake donors, students who want influence but think they’re safe. Velvet Hand and the merchants will love that. They fund ’education’ as a means to control and take more students under them."
"That’s the kicker," Jack said, slow but thinking. "We get their points to buy our people and call it charity."
Sonia flicked her tongue. "We’ll create tastes. You teach a thing that turns a boy into a tinkerer who gets a job with an Iron Cartographer apprentice."
I nodded. "And we saw the archery-backed tinker workshop. Archery students love tinkers because wires and pulleys make better arrows. The archery tower gives cover—training grounds, practice permits—so the workshops look like a convenience. But our teaching would be rumours we spread to get what we want."
Nathalia’s fingers tapped the desktop like a metronome. She’s a dwarf; she builds things with the kind of patience that makes mountains jealous. "I can make the tools they will think are their own. I can make machines that seem crude and honest." Her voice had the pride of a smith.
Amon snorted. "You teach them to be useful and they stop being worshipped."
"They will try to crush us," I said. "Then the second layer of the plan kicks in."
It’s funny how even the loudest of them still wanted the theatre of the thing. They craved spectacle. They wanted a show where they were the main act.
"Assassination theatre," I said. "Not blood on pavement. Not knives in the night. We assassinate character, balance, trust. We kill reputations so slow they think time stole it."
Zora smiled thin. "So we make accidents that reveal hypocrisy. A clockwork pilgrim’s contraption fails during a ritual; a Cartographer’s map shows its patron backdoor; the Menagerie’s beast chokes on a grafted bloom."
"Right," I said. "We stage accidents that are technically possible but unlikely unless someone cut a small thread. Make the Lantern’s glass shard found where no shard should be. Let the Glass Lantern’s own ’accident’ be a demonstration that proves them sloppy. Then make sure their victims are people we don’t like. Students will talk."
Rina’s eyes shone. "We need players who can move behind curtains and not blink. My people can pull a last-minute swap, replace a sigil, or seed a rotten gear. We do it clean, then step back. Let the ritualists’ own paranoia do the rest."
Sana, quiet up to then, nodded. "I’ll make sure the quieter players are removed from the field—professionally. Not dead. Removed. Out of sight. A man left walking with a limp for a month will look like he was punished, unable to get any points."
Jack leaned in, massive and slow like a cat calculating a jump. "And when they’ve been humiliated, who protects them? Who pays?"
"Choke them," I finished. "Economic chokeholds. You starve influence. You take points. In their world, everything runs on points and credits. Take the ledger from the Velvet Hand, and you make them owe debts they can’t afford in public. Freeze their accounts, or make merchants refuse to work with them. Fall comes fast when money stops."
Sonia clapped softly. "Point systems are soft targets. If the Velvet Hand can’t pay for favours, favours die. Their patronage evaporates."
Mika pushed her hair back. "We’ll need to control supply lines, make it such that when everything hits, they will have no choice but to starve."
Nathalia hummed. "I can create alternate supply chains that look independent but are ours. We’ll pass small loans, tiny benefits, and then call in favors. People who think they serve the market will owe us instead."
Amon’s laugh was a low rumble. "And when they owe you, they give you bodies and secrets. That’s the endgame."
"Yeah," I said. "So let’s break it down before we move."
"First," I said, "we open the workshops within the clubs, after all, you all have one where you are the top." I looked at Sonia. "You handle the ’press’ messaging. Make the workshops look like charity but smart charity."
Sonia smiled. "I can do that."
"Second," I said, "we see scholarships. Velvet Hand, merchants, and even some of Girika’s own confused members will fund them because they think it buys loyalty. We’ll take their money and give it to kids who will be loyal to us instead." Alex nodded; he loved the idea of using their points.
"Third," I said, "assassination theatre. Rina and Sana will run the swaps, the staged failures. Zora will seed whispers—witch-stories that make people look twice. Jack will be visible muscle for shows—the one who ’fixes’ the stage publicly, so when a stage collapses under Borin’s pride, the crowd sees us fixing it and thinking, ’who’s competent here?’."
Jack grunted, satisfied. "I’ll be the man who rebuilds the collapsed bridge. Good publicity."
"Fourth," I said, "economic choke. Tron will find pockets we can buy—grain routes, mapping contracts, tinker supply lists. Nathalia will create devices sold under goodwill programs. We will own the things they need and call them out when they try to buy loyalty." Tron’s fingers moved like spiders; he relished it.
"And the Menagerie?" Emma asked. "What about Garr Hal’s beasts? They’ll ruin our shows if they’re angry."
"Then we make them dependent," I said. "It’s already done, their money, charity funds, and everything is already given by us."
Mika and Rika exchanged a look. "We’ll run the social angle," Mika said.
Rina’s grin was slow and hungry. "When the old shows choke on their own arrogance, our humble beasts look kind by comparison. The crowd chooses the kinder cruelty."
We argued then, like always. Amon wanted flames on the stage, to burn their standards into ash. Jack wanted brawn and open fights. Zora wanted secrets spun into legends. Rina and Sana wanted edges and precise scars. I let them shout because in shouting they showed me what they wanted to do—and how to use that want.
"We’ll also need points," Nyla said, her voice low. "If we take their purse-strings, we risk being found out as merchants here. We must hide it under layers—charity ledgers, trade deals, favours. Make their eyes blind with complexity."
Sonia laughed. "Make money look like mercy. Perfect."
Finally, when the plans had teeth and breath, I sat back and let the room smell the soup we’d cook. It was messy. It was human. That’s the only part I liked—the smell of men and women making choices.