I Was Marked By The System's Arbiter
Chapter 61: The Seamstress of Faces
The silence that followed Luo Shiye’s departure was not a peaceful one. It was a heavy, suffocating thing that clung to the players like wet wool.
As they began the long trek toward the distant, shimmering silhouette of the Reflection Tower, the group moved in a loose, fractured formation.
Nobody spoke about Luo Shiye.
They’d tried, in the first few minutes after the intersection released them onto the road toward Reflection Tower, Tang Xin opening his mouth twice, getting as far as
"So that guy—" before his own voice seemed to embarrass him into silence. After that, nobody tried again. There was a difference between not wanting to talk about something and not having the architecture left to talk about it, and Lin Yue suspected, watching the set of everyone’s shoulders, that they’d landed somewhere closer to the second. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
Fang Jie walked near the middle of the group, which was where he always walked now. Not at the front, where Tang Xin’s nervous energy used to carry him. Not at the back, where Mu Cheng’s paranoia had once stationed him to watch everyone’s backs. Equidistant from everyone, like a man who had stopped having a reason to be closer to one person than another.
"You doing okay?" Shen Rui asked him, for what had to be the fourth time in twenty minutes.
"I’m fine," Fang Jie said. Pleasant. Even. The exact same three words, the exact same warm half-smile, every single time.
Shen Rui glanced at Lin Yue. Lin Yue said nothing, because there was nothing useful to say yet, only things that were true and unhelpful; he wasn’t lying. That’s the problem; he genuinely believes it, and Lin Yue had learned, somewhere across two instances now, that true and unhelpful things were better filed than spoken.
He’s not stronger, Lin Yue thought, watching Fang Jie reach down without thinking and brush dust off the locket riding in his jacket pocket, the same locket he’d nearly died refusing to release, now handled with the absent ease of a man checking his phone was still in his pocket. He’s lighter. And there’s a difference. A weight you carry shapes you over time, builds calluses in specific places, and teaches your spine a particular way of standing. Take the weight away cleanly enough, and the person who’s left isn’t relieved.
They’re just unfinished.
"He thanked me for checking on him," Shen Rui said quietly, falling into step beside Lin Yue while the others trailed a few paces back. "Three times now. Same tone every time. It’s like talking to a recording of someone grateful."
"Because it is, in a sense," Lin Yue said. "Gratitude used to come from somewhere in him. Luo Shiye didn’t erase the gesture. He erased the place the gesture came from. What’s left is just... motion. Correct motion, performed on schedule, with nothing underneath driving it."
"That’s worse than if he’d broken down."
"Yes," Lin Yue agreed. "I think that’s the point."
The city had been changing for the last half hour, and not subtly.
It started small, a storefront sign that read GLASS & SILVER MERCANTILE when Tang Xin glanced at it, and read something else entirely, something none of them could quite agree on afterward, the moment he looked away and looked back. Then the mannequins in a shattered display window stopped wearing clothes on their featureless foam bodies and started wearing faces instead, not masks, not paint, actual faces, stretched taut over the mannequin’s blank head like fabric pulled over a frame, eyes closed, mouths slack, undeniably, horribly real.
"Nobody look directly at those," Mu Cheng said, already steering wide around the window. "Nobody. Just... keep walking."
Nobody argued with him.
The streets thinned further the deeper they walked, the silence taking on a texture none of them had words for, not the dead hush of an empty city, but something closer to the silence of a room where everyone is holding their breath on purpose, waiting for someone else to move first.
Then they found the shop.
It was wedged so tightly between two buildings that didn’t seem to belong to the same architectural century, one squat and brick, one impossibly tall and curved like something poured rather than built, that it looked less like it had been constructed there and more like it had been inserted, the way a key gets forced into a lock that was never quite shaped for it. The sign above the door had faded to the point of near-illegibility, gold lettering gone the color of old teeth, but the words were still readable if you stood close enough and let your eyes do the work patiently.
THE SEAMSTRESS OF FACES.
"Absolutely not," Tang Xin said immediately. "No. We’re not; there has to be another way around."
"There isn’t," Wei Ning said. She’d already turned in a slow circle, scanning the alley behind them, the dead-end walls on either side, the singular door ahead of them. "This is the only road forward. The buildings on both sides don’t have doors. I checked."
"Convenient," Mu Cheng muttered.
"The city isn’t convenient," Lin Yue said. "It’s deliberate. There’s a difference."
He looked at the door for a long moment before reaching for it. Something about the shop’s stillness bothered him in a way the rest of the city’s wrongness hadn’t quite managed. Mirrorhaven, for all its horror, had always felt hungry, reaching, predatory in the way it studied them. This place felt like it was waiting for them to arrive, patient in a way that implied someone inside already knew their names.
The door opened without resistance.
The inside of the shop was wrong before anyone had taken a single step past the threshold.
From the alley, the building had looked cramped, maybe twelve feet wide at most, wedged into a gap that shouldn’t have fit a closet comfortably. Inside, the space stretched away from them in every direction, the ceiling lost somewhere above in soft amber gloom, the walls running back farther than any exterior wall could possibly have allowed.
And on every wall, hanging in rows that climbed into the dark and ran back into a distance that didn’t resolve, no matter how far Lin Yue’s eyes tried to follow it, were faces.
Not masks. Tang Xin’s first hopeful, desperate assumption, masks, just masks, theatrical masks, that’s fine, that’s normal, collapsed the instant he got close enough to one to see the pores in the skin, the faint, individual stubble along a jawline, the slight asymmetry that real human faces always carried and masks never quite managed to fake.
Pinned to velvet backing like collected butterflies. Eyes closed on most of them. A few with eyes open, and those were worse, because the eyes moved, slow and unhurried, tracking the newcomers across the room the way a person follows movement in their peripheral vision without fully turning their head.
"Oh," Tang Xin said, and then made a small, strangled sound and pressed the back of his hand hard against his mouth.
Mu Cheng’s knife was already out, gripped white-knuckled, pointed at nothing because there was nothing yet to point it at, just thousands of faces, pinned and waiting, stretching back into a darkness that swallowed any sense of how large this room actually was.
"There have to be thousands of them," Wei Ning said, voice carefully, deliberately flat, the tone of someone holding herself together through sheer force of cataloging. "Different ages. Different, Lin Yue, some of these are children."
"I see them," Lin Yue said quietly.
Shen Rui had moved without seeming to decide to, putting himself a half-step closer to Lin Yue’s shoulder, the way he’d started doing automatically since the funeral hall, since before either of them had ever named what that instinct meant. "Tell me this is a hallucination," he said. "Tell me there’s a trick to this, something we’re not seeing."
"There’s always a trick," Lin Yue said. "That doesn’t mean it isn’t also real."
He stepped closer to the nearest wall, ignoring the way every nerve in his body insisted this was a poor decision, and studied the row of faces at eye level. They weren’t dead — that was the detail that kept catching, refusing to settle into something he could file and move past. Dead things had a stillness to them, a final quality, the particular silence of something that had finished happening. These faces had the stillness of paused things. A held breath. A sentence cut off mid-word.
They’re not displayed, he thought. They’re stored.
"They’re waiting," he said aloud.
"Waiting for what?" Mu Cheng demanded, knife still raised, eyes flicking from face to face like he expected one of them to lunge off the wall.
A voice answered him. Pleasant. Light. Coming from everywhere in the room and nowhere specific, the way sound moved through water.
"For someone, of course."
Qin Luo did not walk into the room. They became present in it, the way Luo Shiye had, except where Luo Shiye’s arrival had been a void filling with administrative silence, Qin Luo’s arrival felt like a held note finally resolving into music.
Androgynous in the way certain art was androgynous, deliberately, beautifully so, long limbed, sharp cheekbones, hair the color of tarnished silver pulled into a knot that several strands had escaped from on purpose, the kind of careful disarray that took more effort than perfect order. Their clothing looked, the longer Lin Yue studied it, less like fabric and more like reflections sewn together at the seams, panels of light that shifted faintly with movement, catching glimpses of faces that weren’t quite the wearer’s own.
Their smile arrived first and stayed the longest. Warm. Genuinely delighted. The smile of a shopkeeper greeting regulars.
"Oh, good," Qin Luo said, clasping their hands together with audible delight. "Real people. Do you have any idea how difficult those are to find these days?"
"Stay back," Mu Cheng warned, knife still leveled, though his voice had lost some of its earlier conviction.
Qin Luo glanced at the blade with the mild, faintly amused tolerance of someone watching a child brandish a butter knife. "Oh, put that away, darling, you’ll hurt yourself before you hurt me, and that would simply be embarrassing for everyone." They turned in a slow circle, surveying the group with open, frank curiosity, the way a tailor might assess a room of clients waiting to be measured. "Nine of you came in. I count seven walking and one—" their gaze flicked to Han Yu, absent, not present in this scene at all, then corrected — "ah. Eight. One missing, presumed converted. How tidy. Most groups arrive far messier than this."
"Who are you?" Tang Xin managed, voice thin.
"Qin Luo." A small, theatrical bow, performed with evident enjoyment. "Seamstress. Tailor. Restorer of the gently worn." Their eyes swept the group again, lingering a half-second longer on each face, cataloging. "And you’ve come at exactly the right time, because—" the smile widened, delighted, conspiratorial— "I think several of you could use a little work."
"What does that mean?" Wei Ning said.
Qin Luo gestured, almost lazily, toward the endless walls of pinned faces stretching into the dark.
"Would anyone like a better face?" they asked, voice dropping into something warmer, more intimate, almost gentle. "One that doesn’t look so... tired. So empty. I have so many to choose from. Younger. Calmer. Faces that have never had to learn what fear feels like." Their gaze settled, with what felt like genuine sympathy, on Tang Xin’s pale, sweat-damp expression. "You, for instance. You’ve been wearing that same frightened face for days now. Wouldn’t you like to set it down for a while?"
"That’s the most disgusting thing anyone’s said to me in this entire city," Tang Xin said, "and I watched a man’s reflection eat him."
Qin Luo blinked, genuinely startled, then laughed — a real laugh, bright and unbothered, utterly without malice, which was somehow more unsettling than if they’d been offended.
"How dramatic," they said. "I’m offering a kindness."
"You’re offering to steal our faces," Mu Cheng said.
"I’m offering to improve them," Qin Luo corrected, with the patient, faintly wounded tone of an artist being accused of vandalism. "There’s a difference, though I notice nobody in this city ever wants to hear it. Faces wear out. They crack under pressure, same as anything handled too roughly for too long. Some become unsuitable for the person carrying them. Some simply need — " they made a small, elegant gesture, fingers spreading like a hand smoothing fabric— "adjustment."
"You don’t see us as people," Lin Yue said. It wasn’t a question.
Qin Luo’s attention moved to him for the first time, and something in their expression sharpened, interest visibly kindling.
"I see you as material," Qin Luo said, without a trace of shame in it. "Beautiful material, in most cases. Is that so terrible? A tailor doesn’t insult silk by calling it silk."
"Material gets cut," Lin Yue said. "Material gets discarded when it doesn’t fit. That’s not a metaphor you should want applied to a roomful of living faces."
The smile on Qin Luo’s lips faltered for exactly one beat — not offense, Lin Yue noted, but something closer to surprise, the expression of someone who’d expected a familiar script and received an unfamiliar line instead.
"You’re a sharp one," Qin Luo murmured, circling a slow half-step closer, eyes narrowing with open curiosity. "Most of them just scream. You’re analyzing me. How refreshing."
While Qin Luo talked — and Qin Luo, it became swiftly apparent, loved to talk, loved an audience even one half-frozen in horror — Lin Yue let his eyes drift back to the walls, deliberately disengaging from the conversation in the way that had become a familiar tool across two instances now. Let the others hold the Seamstress’s attention. Let himself become a part of the group that watched instead of speaking.
The faces weren’t merely pinned. The longer he studied them, the more he noticed the detail he’d missed on first horror-soaked glance — faint lines at the edges of each face, where skin met velvet, lines too fine and too deliberate to be the ragged edge of something torn away. They were seam. Stitched. Not with thread, not with anything his eyes could resolve into a physical material, but the pattern was unmistakably the pattern of needlework — small, even, patient stitches holding each face’s edges closed against the backing, the same way a tailor closed a hem.
Identity isn’t being removed here, he thought slowly, the realization settling into place with the cold, clean inevitability he associated with this entire city. It’s being constructed. Assembled. Someone is sewing these together piece by piece — and that means somewhere, there’s a pattern. A template, these are all cut from.
His eyes moved further down the row, and his analytical calm — the thing that had carried him through every horror this instance had offered without flinching — caught, for one genuine moment, on something that didn’t sit easily even in his carefully filed mind.
A face near the end of the row. Familiar in a way that took a full second to place, because the context was so wrong it refused to resolve immediately.
Yu Qing.
Not a copy. Not similar. Hers — the same faint scar above her left eyebrow she’d mentioned once, from a childhood fall she’d laughed about while treating Fang Jie’s panic attacks like patients instead of fellow survivors. Eyes closed. Expression peaceful in a way Yu Qing had never once looked peaceful in life, not in the handful of days Lin Yue had known her before the Mirror River took her.
Beside it — further down, half-shadowed — another face. Older. Unfamiliar to Lin Yue personally, but something about its particular weariness, the specific way its mouth had settled into a frown, suggested it belonged to someone from a context none of them had ever shared. An instance before this one. A survivor — or a victim — from a cycle of the Flow none of the current group had witnessed.
Nothing here is wasted, Lin Yue thought, and the thought arrived with a chill that had nothing to do with the room’s temperature. The dead don’t simply disappear from this place. They get filed. Stored. Recycled into material for whoever comes next.
"You’ve found something," Qin Luo said, suddenly far closer than they’d been a moment ago, voice pitched soft and curious directly behind his shoulder.
Lin Yue didn’t startle. He turned, unhurried, and met their gaze evenly.
"You recognize faces that belong to people who are dead," he said. "Not duplicates. Theirs. That means the False Core isn’t just creating Reflection Walkers from the living. It’s drawing material from everyone the city has ever consumed."
Something flickered across Qin Luo’s expression — delight, unmistakably, sharp and immediate, the look of an artist whose work had just been correctly read by a stranger for the first time in longer than they could remember.
"Clever," Qin Luo breathed. "Oh, you are clever. Most of them never even ask where the material comes from. They’re too busy screaming about whose face is missing to wonder whose face they’re looking at instead."
"Where does it come from?" Lin Yue asked.
Qin Luo’s smile turned coy, performative, a curtain dropping at exactly the moment the audience leaned in. "That," they said, "would spoil the fun."
"Enough," Mu Cheng said, voice cracking with strain he’d clearly been suppressing through the entire exchange. "Just tell us how to get out of here. What do you want from us?"
Qin Luo turned back to the group with the bright, satisfied air of a host finally getting to the evening’s main event.
"It’s terribly simple," they said. "Somewhere in this room, each of you has a face. Your original. The one you walked in wearing, before the city had any chance to touch it." They gestured, expansive, toward the endless rows stretching into darkness. "Find it. Put it on. Walk out the door. Truly, it’s the easiest game I offer."
"And if we can’t find it?" Wei Ning asked.
"Then you’ll have to choose one of the others," Qin Luo said, almost gently, as if delivering disappointing but unavoidable news. "And whichever one you choose will choose you back. Permanently."
"That’s not a riddle," Tang Xin said. "That’s just — there are thousands of them. They probably all look exactly the same."
"They do," Qin Luo agreed, delighted, as if this were the cleverest part of the design rather than its cruelty. "Down to the eyelash, in most cases. I’m quite proud of the craftsmanship."
The group split toward the walls almost despite themselves, the horror of the room giving way, slowly, to a more practical horror — the kind with a clock attached to it, the kind that demanded action instead of paralysis. Tang Xin moved along a row, leaning close to face after nearly-identical face, visibly searching for some difference his eyes simply weren’t built to find. Mu Cheng did the same several rows down, jaw clenched, knife finally lowered because there was nothing here a blade could solve.
Minutes passed. Nobody found anything.
"This is impossible," Mu Cheng said, dragging a hand down his face. "They’re identical. Every single one. There’s no way to—"
"You keep looking with your eyes," Qin Luo said, perched now on the edge of a velvet display table, swinging one leg with the unhurried amusement of someone watching a play they’d already memorized the ending to. "That’s the mistake everyone makes. Faces are terrible at recognizing themselves. Ask any person who’s ever hated their own photograph."
"Then how are we supposed to find it?" Shen Rui demanded.
"Stop looking," Qin Luo said, simply, and offered nothing further; the answer dropped like a single thread for them to follow or ignore at their own peril.
Lin Yue stood before his own row and did not look at the faces at all.
He closed his eyes instead — an act that felt, in this room, almost dangerously vulnerable, and did it anyway, because the logic of the puzzle had clicked into place the moment Qin Luo said stop looking, the same cold, clean inevitability of every mechanic this city had thrown at them so far.
Identity isn’t appearance. It never was. It’s the thing underneath appearance that appearance is only ever an imperfect translation of.
He let his hand drift along the row, not searching for a particular jawline or set of eyes, but simply feeling — the way Shen Rui’s compass had felt different in his palm than any ordinary compass should have, the way the smooth stone he’d surrendered at the intersection had carried a weight that had nothing to do with its mass. Most of the faces beneath his fingers felt like nothing. Smooth. Inert. Material, exactly as Qin Luo had named it — beautiful, certainly, but empty of anything resembling a person.
Then his fingers paused.
It didn’t feel like recognition, exactly. There was no warm flood of certainty, no sudden clarity. If anything, what he felt beneath his fingertips was an absence — a void shaped exactly like the void he already carried inside himself, the same blank space where a traumatic memory should have lived and never had. A face with nothing dramatic stitched into it. No grand suffering. No grand joy. Just a quiet, observant emptiness that matched, with unsettling precision, the only thing Lin Yue had ever known himself to be.
This one isn’t full of anything either, he thought. That’s how I know it’s mine.
He opened his eyes and lifted it from the wall.
A few feet away, Shen Rui had gone very still in front of his own row, eyes closed, one hand pressed flat against a face near the bottom, his throat working like he was fighting down something close to tears.
"It feels like..." Shen Rui said, voice rough, not quite finishing the sentence — though the way his other hand had curled, instinctively, around an absence at his own chest where a compass used to hang, said enough of the rest.
Tang Xin found his moments later with a sound that was half laugh, half sob, hand pressed to a face that — by his own broken explanation — felt like a memory of his sister laughing at something off-camera, warm and unguarded and entirely without the dread that had calcified into his expression since this instance began.
Mu Cheng’s came harder, his hand hovering over three nearly identical faces for nearly a full minute before he finally, almost reluctantly, settled on one that he later admitted, low and embarrassed, had simply felt stubborn under his fingers — angry in a useful way, the specific anger that refused to lie down and die even when every reasonable instinct said it should.
Fang Jie stood in front of his own row the longest.
His hand drifted, paused, drifted again, searching for something his fingers kept failing to locate. His expression, normally so carefully, hollowly pleasant now, finally cracked into something honest — confusion, frustration, the dawning, quiet horror of a man trying to recognize his own front door and finding the street rearranged.
"I don’t—" he started, voice small. "Nothing feels like anything. They all feel the same. Empty. Like—"
He stopped.
Lin Yue, already holding his own face carefully against his chest, watched the realization land on Fang Jie’s features and understood it before Fang Jie finished articulating it himself.
"Like me," Fang Jie finished, very quietly. "They all feel like me. Because there’s nothing left in me to tell them apart by."
Nobody had an answer for that. Shen Rui put a hand on his shoulder anyway, because silence, in this moment, was at least better than nothing.
Wei Ning had not closed her eyes.
Lin Yue noticed it too late — noticed the particular rigidity in her shoulders, the way her jaw had set hard several minutes ago and never released, the unmistakable posture of someone trying to brute-force a problem that had already told them, explicitly, it could not be solved that way.
"Wei Ning," he said. "Stop. This isn’t a measurement."
"Everything is a measurement," she said, not looking away from the wall, voice tight and clipped in the specific way it went when fear was trying to wear the mask of focus. "I’ve catalogued bone structure, symmetry ratios, micro-expressions in the closed eyelids — there’s a statistically significant cluster of features in this section that match probability models for—"
"Wei Ning—"
"I found it," she said.
And reached for a face three rows up, expression set with the grim, satisfied certainty of someone closing a case file.
"Wait—" Shen Rui started.
She had already lifted it from the wall.
For one second, nothing happened at all. The room held its held-breath silence, and Lin Yue felt something in his chest go cold and still, watching Wei Ning’s profile in the gloom, waiting.
Then Qin Luo’s smile, from across the room, began to widen — slow, delighted, the exact unhurried widening of someone watching their favorite part of a familiar performance finally arrive.
"Oh," Qin Luo breathed, soft and pleased. "There it is."
Wei Ning turned back toward the group.
At first, nothing seemed wrong. Same face. Same dark, serious eyes, same severe set to her mouth that had never once, in any of the days Lin Yue had known her, fully relaxed.
Then Lin Yue saw what was missing.
The hesitation.
Wei Ning had always hesitated — a fraction of a second before every answer, every action, the tiny visible cost of a mind that distrusted everything, including itself, weighing options before committing. It had been one of the most human things about her, the quiet tell beneath all her cold, analytical armor that she was still, underneath it, afraid like everyone else.
It was gone.
She moved toward them with a fluid, unbroken grace that had never belonged to her before, each step landing with the same unhurried precision as the last, no hitch, no adjustment, no human imprecision anywhere in the motion.
"I found the correct face," she said. Her voice was hers. Every syllable was hers. But the words came out evenly spaced, each one given exactly the same weight as the one before it, with none of the small emotional emphasis a person naturally gives to their own speech.
"Wei Ning?" Shen Rui said carefully.
She turned to look at him and smiled.
It was a good smile. A correct smile. It used the right muscles, reached the right corners of her mouth, even crinkled, faintly, at the corners of her eyes.
It was the exact same smile Han Yu’s replacement had worn in the last seconds before it had shattered into glass.
"Something’s wrong," Tang Xin whispered, backing up a step. "Something’s really, really wrong—"
"That isn’t Wei Ning anymore," Qin Luo said, voice bright with open, unrepentant delight, hopping down from the display table to clap their hands together once, softly, like applauding a job well done. "Not entirely. Oh, this is always my favorite part."
"Fix it," Mu Cheng snarled, rounding on the Seamstress. "Fix her, now—"
"I can’t undo a finished stitch," Qin Luo said, almost apologetically, though the apology didn’t reach anywhere near their eyes. "That would defeat the purpose of stitching at all."
Wei Ning — or the smooth, optimized, perfectly composed thing now wearing Wei Ning’s voice and Wei Ning’s memories — tilted her head at the group with polite, untroubled curiosity, exactly the way Luo Shiye had tilted his head at Lin Yue in the intersection.
"I don’t understand the alarm," she said. Evenly. Pleasantly. "I feel fine. I feel," a small pause, the first hesitation she’d shown since putting the face on, though it felt rehearsed rather than genuine, "better, actually."
"That’s exactly what worries me," Lin Yue said quietly.
The midnight bell rang while the group was still staring at her, still failing to find words for what they’d just watched happen in real time, in front of them, with no warning and no way to have stopped it.
The sound arrived the way it always had in this city — distant, low, resonant, the same single tolling note that had marked every midnight since they’d arrived in Mirrorhaven.
Except this time, the note didn’t fade cleanly into silence.
It frayed.
Splitting, somewhere in its long decay, into something with texture, something with breath behind it — and by the time the sound finally died out, every person in that shop understood, with cold and total certainty, that what they had just heard ringing across the city was not metal striking metal.
It was a scream. Drawn out long enough, slowed down enough that it had almost, almost passed for a bell.
"No," Qin Luo said.
It was the first time the Seamstress’s voice had carried anything other than delight since they’d appeared.
A second bell rang. Louder. Closer. Unmistakably a scream now, unmistakably human, unmistakably plural — thousands of voices layered into one impossible, swelling note that rattled the velvet displays on every wall.
And the faces began to scream with it.
All of them. Every pinned face in every row stretching back into the dark, eyes flying open in unison, mouths stretching wide, thousands of mismatched, overlapping voices joining the bell’s scream until the entire shop shook with it, the windows along the front of the store spider-webbing with hairline cracks, velvet backing trembling on its hooks.
Qin Luo had gone very still, the playful smile entirely gone now, replaced by something Lin Yue hadn’t expected to ever see on the Seamstress’s face.
Fear.
"No, no, not yet," Qin Luo whispered, to no one, to themselves, eyes wide and fixed on some point far beyond the shaking walls of their own shop. "It’s not supposed to wake up yet—"
"What’s not supposed to wake up?" Lin Yue demanded, raising his voice over the screaming chorus filling the room.
Qin Luo didn’t answer him.
Somewhere far above the city — past the Window Quarter, past the looping intersection, past every district they’d crossed to get here — past the glass spire of Reflection Tower piercing the perpetual twilight sky, something enormous shifted.
The ground itself seemed to feel it before any of them did, a tremor passing underfoot like a held breath finally, finally released.
And from somewhere deep inside the Tower, low and resonant and unmistakably alive, something answered the screaming bells with a sound of its own.