The Darkness System: Rise of the Broken Sovereign
Chapter 80: Binding Contract (2)
George smiled. It was the most genuine expression Kael had seen on the elf’s face. He reached out—casually, naturally—and adjusted a silver clasp in Rosalie’s hair.
"Truly an artist," George murmured.
"George." Rosalie’s tone didn’t change. "You’re performing."
"Am I being obvious?"
"The recruits are watching."
Cassian coughed.
The kind of sound that said I am acknowledging this moment and forcing you to acknowledge that I am acknowledging it.
George straightened his posture.
Rosalie’s lips twitched.
"Children," she said, and the word carried no condescension, just flat description. "Please approach."
They did.
Rosalie opened a drawer and withdrew three small scrolls, each sealed with dark wax stamped with the same star-and-shield insignia from George’s collar. She placed them o the stone desk with precise, identical spacing.
"These are your binding contracts. Read them fully before signing. Every clause is explicit. Nothing is hidden in subtext or encoded language." Her dark eyes moved to each of them in turn. "I do not write deceptive contracts. But deception in binding contracts creates instability. Instability creates loopholes. Loopholes create failures."
She said failures the way most people said death.
George picked up the thread. "Before you read, the standard explanation. If, after reviewing the terms, you decide you do not wish to join the Guardians, you will be permitted to leave. Freely. No pressure, no retaliation." He paused. "However, your memories of this location, this organization, and everything you’ve seen or heard since entering this building will be selectively erased. You will remember the shuttle ride. You will remember a failed mission assignment. Nothing more."
"Memory alteration," Yenna said flatly.
"Standard precaution," Rosalie replied. "Non-negotiable."
Kael picked up his scroll. The wax cracked cleanly beneath his thumb.
He unrolled it.
The script was elegant but legible—Rosalie’s handwriting, he assumed. Each line was numbered. Each clause was separated by a thin horizontal rule. No ambiguity anywhere.
Clause One: The signatory shall not disclose the physical location of any Guardian facility to any non-member, living or dead, through any medium, including but not limited to verbal communication, written text, telepathic transmission, or post-mortem soul extraction.
Clause Three: All operative identities encountered within Guardian facilities shall remain confidential. Masks, codenames, and altered appearances are to be treated as the individual’s true identity for all external purposes.
Clause Seven: The signatory shall not voluntarily share Guardian operational intelligence with any external faction, including the signatory’s family of origin, academy administration, or government affiliation.
Clause Twelve: Violation of any binding clause triggers automatic mana seal. Severity scales with breach. Minor violations result in temporary cultivation suppression. Major violations result in permanent realm reduction. Critical violations—
Kael’s eyes lingered on the last line.
Critical violations result in soul dissolution. No resurrection. No exception.
He kept reading.
Clause Fifteen: The signatory may resign from the Guardians at any time after completing their assigned probationary mission. Resignation reinstates all confidentiality obligations permanently. Memory alteration is offered but not mandatory upon voluntary resignation. 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦
Clause Nineteen: The Guardians do not command loyalty through coercion. This contract exists to protect the organization, not to enslave its members. Sign with understanding, not obligation.
Kael read it twice.
Clever. The contract was aggressive where it needed to be—identity, location, information security—and deliberately permissive everywhere else. No requirement to obey orders. No clause demanding they accept future missions. No ownership language. The only permanent chain was silence.
And the soul dissolution, of course. That was fairly persuasive on its own.
He glanced at Yenna. She was on her second read-through, lips moving slightly. Her ice-blue eyes were sharp, tracking every line. Whatever she was looking for, she hadn’t found it yet.
Cassian had finished his scroll. He was staring at it with an expression Kael couldn’t read behind those sunglasses.
George watched them with patient stillness. Even Bruno had quieted, standing sentinel near the door, his earlier hostility banked.
Rosalie simply waited.
After several minutes, Yenna set down her scroll.
"Clause nineteen," she said. "You claim no coercion. But the memory wipe for refusal is itself coercive. It removes informed choice by eliminating the consequence of refusing."
Rosalie’s dark eyes held hers.
"The memory wipe does not eliminate consequence," she said. "It eliminates knowledge. You would not remember what you lost because you would not remember there was anything to lose." She paused. "Ignorance of a cage is not freedom. But neither is walking into one with open eyes and calling it preference."
Yenna stared at her.
Rosalie stared back.
Silence.
Then Yenna exhaled through her nose and said nothing else.
George clasped his hands. "Is there anyone who wants to tap out?"
The question hung in the amber light.
Kael thought about it.
Then he picked up the pen from the desk.
He signed.
Kael Vorn.
The moment the ink settled, something clicked into place. Not physical—not exactly. A weight settled around his essence, invisible and light. Like wearing a garment he couldn’t see but could feel against his skin.
Yenna signed second. Her jaw was tight, but her hand was steady.
Yenna Frostveil.
Cassian signed last.
Cassian Vale.
George smiled—warm now, genuine, the receptionist mask fully abandoned.
"You are officially welcome to the Guardians." He reached into his jacket and withdrew three small tokens, each carved from black metal, each engraved with a name. He handed them out one by one. "Complete this mission successfully, and you’ll be promoted to one-star Guardians. Full benefits. Full access. Full pay."
Kael turned the token over in his palm. His name caught the light. The star-and-shield insignia gleamed on the reverse.
"One star," he repeated. "How many are there?"
"Five," Bruno grunted from the door. "And you’re a long way from any of them."
Kael pocketed the token without responding.
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