The hesitation didn't last.
It never did.
The city lurched—not forward or back, but sideways. Reality slipped half a step out of alignnt, like a docunt stamped with the wrong date and forced through anyway.
Kael felt it imdiately.
The shared weight he and Lyra carried twisted, tightening around both of them at once. He gasped silently, fingers clawing at the air as if trying to grab a sound that no longer existed.
Lyra felt it too.
Not pain.
Responsibility.
"Oh no," Eron whispered. "It's not targeting you anymore."
The sky darkened—not with clouds, but with omission. Stars blinked out one by one, as if erased from a map no one intended to use again.
The Devourer recalculated.
COLLATERAL INSUFFICIENT.
RISK UNACCEPTABLE.
INITIATING REDY.
The ground split.
Not violently—precisely.
Lines etched themselves into the streets, glowing faintly, spreading outward in perfect geotry. Neighborhoods locked into place like pieces on a board. Zombies froze at the borders, unable to cross invisible thresholds.
Eron stared in horror. "It's zoning us."
Lyra tightened her grip on Kael. "For what?"
Kael forced himself upright, shaking. He pressed two fingers to the dirt and dragged them slowly, deliberately, forming words the old way.
DEFAULT, he wrote.
Lyra's blood ran cold.
The city scread then—not with sound, but with motion. Doors slamd shut on their own. Barricades reinforced themselves. Survivors who had never seen Kael suddenly felt fear coil in their stomachs—for no reason they could na.
The cost was spreading.
Kael's silence had beco contagious.
Eron dropped to his knees. "It's rewriting causality. Making the world pay instead of you."
Kael shook his head violently, panic blazing in his eyes. He signed frantically now.
THIS WASN'T THE DEAL.
TAKE BACK.
The Devourer answered—not in words, but in structure.
A tower rose in the distance where none had stood before—black stone extruded from nothing, smooth and absolute. Every line pointed inward, toward a single purpose.
Lyra stared at it, dread settling deep. "That's not a lair."
"No," Eron said hollowly. "That's an account."
The weight on Kael surged. He collapsed, body convulsing as the shared burden tried to tear itself unevenly between him and Lyra. She scread, pulling him close, refusing to let go.
"Stop!" she shouted at the sky. "You said collateral was accepted!"
The presence returned—not curious, not interested.
Corrective.
COLLATERAL WAS ACCEPTED.
OUTCO WAS NOT.
Kael t Lyra's eyes, terror and resolve colliding. He signed slowly this ti, each motion deliberate despite the shaking.
IF THE WORLD PAYS—
He paused, hands trembling.
—WE ALL LOSE.
Lyra understood.
She looked at the rising tower. At the frozen streets. At the lives being quietly, efficiently folded into a balance sheet they'd never agreed to.
"No," she said, voice iron. "You don't get to default on us."
She stood, pulling Kael with her despite his weight, despite the system screaming resistance.
Eron staggered after them. "Where are you going?!"
Lyra didn't look back.
"To the account holder," she said.
The tower pulsed once—acknowledging the approach.
Sowhere beneath everything, the Devourer paused again.
Because escalation had failed.
And now—
for the first ti—
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