Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 222— A Boring Discussion Between Monsters
The ink finished arranging itself at Dimitri’s feet with the unhurried precision of a calligrapher who had all the time in the world.
He read it.
You built your empire through bloodlines you didn’t inherit. I find that more honest than the alternative. Most men in your position would have simply married better and called it destiny. You married strategically and called it what it was. There’s a difference. I’ve always respected the difference.
Dimitri stood with his hands loose at his sides and considered the words on the ground and what they implied about the person who had written them.
The first thing they implied was that the Author had done his research. The merchant empire, the strategic marriages, the deliberate construction of a family network that functioned as a power pool — none of this was secret exactly, but neither was it the surface information that a casual observer would lead with. He’d gone looking for the specific fact most likely to resonate. Which meant this was not an opening attack. It was an opening offer. Come, the words said in their careful ink cursive, let us establish that I see you accurately before we proceed to whatever we’re proceeding to.
The second thing they implied was that the Author was watching his reaction.
Dimitri didn’t look for him. That was the natural impulse — the words on the ground created the instinct to scan the surrounding shadows, the rooftops, the empty windows of the evacuated buildings bordering the courtyard. He resisted it. His Bloodline awareness was doing the work that his eyes would do poorly. The Author’s position resolved not as a location but as a quality — a place in the genetic web where the information was wrong, where biological reality and narrative reality had been gently, expertly separated and the gap filled with something that felt like absence but moved with purpose.
He was circling, although not quickly but with the patience of someone conducting an assessment rather than preparing an assault.
The civilians on the courtyard benches remained in their contented fog. Six of them — an elderly couple, three middle-aged, one young woman who had been crying when the Narrative Imposition had reached her and now sat with a small, bewildered smile, her face still wet. They were not harmed. They were simply elsewhere, living in whatever version of the present the Author had written over the actual one. Dimitri extended the most delicate application of his Bloodline awareness toward the nearest of them — not to interfere, just to read.
The genetic reality was intact. The Author wasn’t touching the biological substrate of their being. What he was touching was something above that, in the layer where perception assembled itself from data and produced the experience of this is what is happening. Dimitri couldn’t reach that layer with his talent. But he could feel the gap between the substrate and the surface, and the gap told him how long the Imposition had been running and approximately how much power maintaining it required.
Considerably more than it should, for six civilians at this distance.
Which meant the Author was maintaining considerably more than six civilians at this distance. He was running this across — Dimitri stretched his awareness, estimated, recalibrated — most of central at this point. Several hundred people, at minimum. All of them currently living in a version of Central that was not on fire and had not been breached and was proceeding through a perfectly ordinary evening.
He was holding all of that and still had the attention to write personal notes to Champions in empty courtyards.
Dimitri said nothing. He folded his hands behind his back and waited, and let the ink read whatever it wanted to read in his posture.
New words formed beside the first ones, the ink pulling from the nearest shadow pool with unhurried fluency.
Hmmmm...You’re not scanning. Most people scan. It’s the first thing they do when they feel watched by me — they try to find the source with their eyes, as though eyes were the relevant instrument. You’re using your talent instead. Bloodline awareness at this level costs something. You’re paying it anyway. That tells me you’ve already decided this warrants your full attention. Ahh! I appreciate the compliment Mr bane of blood.
He allowed himself a small sound — not quite a laugh, more an acknowledgment.
"You write quickly," he said, to the courtyard and the circling presence and the ink.
A pause. Then new words, and this time there was something different in the quality of the cursive — a slight loosening, the way a person’s handwriting changes when they stop performing and start conversing.
I’ve had a great deal of practice. Writing is thinking made visible. Most people are afraid of what becomes visible when they think. I resolved that fear a long time ago.
"When you looked into the abyss," Dimitri said.
When I looked into the abyss. Yes. Though I object to the framing — the abyss looked back, which suggests a mutual engagement rather than a unilateral act of foolishness. We came to an understanding.
The presence shifted. Still circling, but the radius had contracted. Moving closer not with the telegraphed intention of an attack but with the gradual approach of someone who has decided to stop conducting a conversation through proxies.
You’re wondering what I want from this. You’ve already determined I don’t intend to kill you immediately — correct — and you’ve already determined I’m not here by accident — also correct. What you haven’t determined is the third thing.
Dimitri waited.
Whether I’m showing you something true or writing something true for you to see. Given who I am, you understand why that question has no clean answer. I want you to sit with that discomfort. It’s important.
Then the ink stilled, and the shadow at the courtyard’s eastern edge moved differently than shadows moved, and the Black Author stepped halfway into the light.
He looked exactly as unremarkable as Dimitri’s intelligence files had suggested and entirely unlike what those files had prepared him for. The gap between description and presence was the gap between being told about deep water and standing at its edge. He was medium height, middle years, dark coat with the ink-soaked quality that Dimitri now understood was not a clothing choice but nature — the substance responded to him the way a body responded to its own blood, with the automatic intimacy of things that belonged to each other.
His eyes were the thing the files had not adequately conveyed. Not their color. Their patience. The specific quality of someone who had been watching things unfold for a very long time and had reached the stage beyond urgency, where everything that was going to happen was already in motion and the watching was simply the process of confirming what had already been written.
"Dimitri Stein," the Author said. His voice, in person, had the same unhurried quality as the ink. "Bane of Blood. Senator. Father of an implausible number of children." A slight pause. "Former dockworker in the Velhar merchant district, age twelve through fifteen, before the first strategic marriage that started the whole enterprise."
"You did your research," Dimitri said.
"I always do." The Author remained at the threshold of the shadow, one foot in, one foot out, the posture of someone who had not yet committed to the room. "I find most people don’t. They make decisions about other people based on what’s visible from a comfortable distance, and then they’re surprised when the person doesn’t behave according to the visible version." He studied Dimitri with the frank appraisal of someone who had abandoned the social convention of pretending not to look. "You and I are alike in this way. We both understand that the relevant information is almost never the surface information." 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
"We are not alike," Dimitri said, without heat.
"No," the Author agreed pleasantly. "Not in every way. But in the ways that matter for this conversation, sufficiently." He tilted his head. "You’re not afraid."
"I’m aware of the situation at hand."
"Most people who are aware of the situation are afraid." Something in his expression that might, in a different person, have been appreciation. "Do you know what most Champions do when they encounter me unexpectedly? They attack immediately. It’s the correct instinct, actually — delay works against them, because delay gives me time to write the situation into something they can’t navigate. The correct tactical response to the Black Author, alone, with no support, is immediate maximum force." He paused. "You haven’t done that."
"I’m curious what you want."
"Ah." The Author’s expression settled into something more genuine "There it is. You’re curious. Not strategically curious — not let him talk while I plan my approach curious. Actually curious. Because you’ve already run the calculation and determined that if I intended to kill you I would have written that into the situation already, and the fact that I haven’t means I’m here for something else, and the something else is the more dangerous variable." He stepped fully into the light.
The ink followed him the way a shadow followed its owner.
"I want you to understand something correctly," the Black Author said. "Just one thing. Just one person who understands it correctly. Is that so much to ask?"
Dimitri looked at him. "From a man who just breached Central and killed over a hundred people in the process? Yes."
The Author received this without flinching. "Fair," he said. "Fair. I won’t argue the accounting."
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