Everyone was quiet, holding their breath, probably thinking the extra air in their lungs shouldn’t be wasted breathing and should contribute to their overall weight.
They all had their eyes on the statues around them. Watching the flas. The fires were sputtering at various rates, and that much was certain, so were very lit, others barely holding on, a few sowhere in between, all of them moving in that slow guttering way that felt less like natural fla behavior and more like a countdown that had already started before anyone walked through the door.
Nobody was talking. Not because there was nothing to say, there was plenty to say, but because nobody had figured out which words would help and everyone instinctively understood that the ones that didn’t help would make things worse. So they stood on their bases and breathed carefully and watched.
Noah stood with Pip on his left and Nami on his right, three others filling the remaining space on the base beneath the fifth statue on the left. He could feel the stone through his boots. He could feel the way the six of them had unconsciously distributed their weight across the surface, shifting and adjusting without coordinating it, bodies solving a problem that brains were still catching up to.
’Fourteen flas,’ he counted again. ’Fourteen bases. A hundred and forty sothing people across all of them, unevenly, badly unevenly, so bases carrying eight or nine bodies and others carrying three and the difference between those two situations is the difference between that fla staying alive and that fla going out.’
He looked at the sixth on the right. Three people. The fla above them was maybe a hand’s width above the stone palm and sinking.
"This is so sick place." A girl’s voice, sowhere near the back. High and strained, the kind of voice that was one more bad thing away from breaking entirely. "Why would that woman open a world this cruel. People just died."
Nobody answered her. Because she was right and nobody wanted to confirm it out loud.
"We’re all going to die." Soone else. A boy this ti, the words coming out flat, not panicked, just stated, the way you state things when your brain has finished processing and arrived sowhere terrible.
"Shut up," Werner said sharply from two bases over.
"Telling to shut up doesn’t change the math."
"No but it changes the noise level and right now I don’t need your noise."
The boy went quiet. Not because Werner had convinced him of anything, but because speaking out loud made it more real and more real was not sothing anyone in this chamber was chasing.
Noah looked around at the faces near him. Pip was doing that thing he did when his brain was working, eyes moving without his head moving, tracking details and cataloguing them in so internal system that would eventually produce an output. Nami was still, the particular stillness of soone who has decided panic is not an option and is enforcing that decision on themselves one breath at a ti. Her knives were sheathed. She hadn’t reached for them again since Noah had told her to put them away.
Across the chamber, in various states of barely holding together, a hundred and thirty so odd recruits stood on stone and tried to survive by standing still. So had their eyes closed, lips moving in the small private motion of prayer. Others were sweating through their clothes despite the cool air, the sweat of a body that has received signals it doesn’t know what to do with, stress hormones dumped into a situation that offered no physical outlet. A few were gripping each other’s arms, not out of affection but out of the need to confirm that another person was present and real and also still there.
This was not a beast. It was not a dragon. Both of those things, as terrible as they were, followed so recognizable logic. They wanted to eat, or to protect territory, or to eliminate a threat. You could be afraid of them in a way that had direction, that pointed toward so possible response. Running, fighting, hiding, sothing.
This was different. This was a room that killed you for leaving and killed you for staying and there was no version of the word threat that felt adequate for it, because a threat implied sothing that could be negotiated with or overco or at minimum understood, and the fourteen stone knights standing over their flas with their weapons ready communicated nothing except that they had been doing this for a very long ti and would continue doing it after everyone in this room was gone.
The cold that had settled in several people’s stomachs was not the cold of low temperature. It was the cold of a particular kind of fear, the kind that didn’t accelerate the heartbeat but instead slowed everything down, made thoughts co in careful single file, made the world feel very precisely itself and nothing more. The warmth underneath that cold, the paradox of it, was the body’s insistence on continuing to live even when the mind wasn’t sure that was a reasonable position to take.
A recruit near the second statue on the right had both hands pressed flat against the base, leaning forward with his full weight on his palms, as if squeezing out every possible pound the stone could feel. His eyes were fixed on the fla above him and he had not looked away in several minutes.
’They’re figuring out the individual solutions,’ Noah thought, watching. ’Everyone is optimizing their own situation. Finding the best position on their own base, the best way to distribute weight, the most efficient way to contribute. Individual problems being solved individually.’
That was the instinct. Of course it was. When you are afraid for your life you think about your own life first, and the recruits pressing their full weight into stone bases were not being selfish, they were being human, doing precisely what survival demanded in the most imdiate sense.
’But fourteen bases don’t get solved individually. You solve one base and the one next to it starts losing.’
He could already see it happening at the edges. The sixth on the right had three people and its fla was clearly losing ground. The ninth on the left had four but two of them were small-frad and their combined weight was doing the work of maybe two and a half larger people. The adjustnt that would fix one would pull from another.
---
"I’m going."
The voice ca from the base of the fourth statue on the left. A green recruit, lean with sharp cheekbones, was stepping down from the stone platform. He had the look of soone who had made a decision and was moving before his body could reconsider it.
Three heads turned toward him from the sa base. "What are you doing?" soone hissed.
He was already moving, crossing the open floor in a diagonal toward the sixth on the right, his boots loud in the silence. He reached the base and stepped up and the five people already standing there shifted to make room without being asked.
The fla above the sixth right jumped. Climbed. Settled into sothing that looked like stability for the first ti since they’d entered.
The boy stood there and let out a breath.
Then his base on the fourth left dipped. Three people where there had been four, and the difference showed imdiately in the fla above them, dropping half a handspan in the space of seconds.
A yellow girl near the wall made a sound.
The boy who’d just crossed the floor looked back at where he’d co from. At the fla dropping over the people he’d left. At the girl, specifically, standing there watching her fla lose ground, watching him from across the chamber with an expression that was doing several things at once.
"I won’t have you die," he said across the space between them.
The silence that followed had a very specific texture.
Werner broke it. "You have got to be joking." His voice was not unkind, exactly, but it carried the exhausted disbelief of a man watching the world make his situation harder in real ti. "We are standing in a room that has already killed four people and this man thinks it’s a romcom."
"There’s a gap on four left," Nami said, flat and practical.
"I can see that, yes," Werner said. "I can see that because the man who was standing there is now standing forty feet away making eyes at soone."
"Soone needs to cover it."
"Soone does."
Nobody moved.
The fla on the fourth left dropped another fraction. The three people standing on it were looking at each other and then at the gap and then at the other bases around them with the specific look of people doing math they didn’t like the answer to.
’This is the shape of it,’ Noah thought, watching. ’Every individual act of trying to help creates a new hole sowhere else. You can run across the room for soone you care about and you can be right that they needed you and you can also be directly responsible for the problem you just left behind. Both things are true simultaneously. The room was designed for this. Designed to make generosity expensive.’
He looked at the fourth left fla still dropping. At the three people on it and the space where the fourth had been. At the other bases around the chamber with their own uneven numbers and their own flas at their own various stages of survival.
And at the floor between all of them, empty stone, fourteen separate islands with fourteen separate problems, and no obvious way to be in more than one place.
---
It started going wrong on the right side, base eight.
Two people. It had been two people since they entered and nobody had gone to cover it because the bases on either side were already short and moving from one of those felt impossible and moving from the fuller ones near the entrance felt like abandoning the safety of the wall, and so base eight on the right had sat there with two people and its fla had been declining with the slow patience of sothing that knows it will eventually win.
Brom was on base nine right with six others, the largest cluster in the chamber. He had noticed base eight. Everyone near him had noticed base eight. The noticing had been happening for several minutes in the form of glances and not-quite-conversations that stopped before they beca actual proposals.
A green recruit on Brom’s base, a boy Noah didn’t know well, slight-frad and quiet through training, had been looking at base eight and then at the girl standing on it for the last several minutes. Not in the way soone looks at a tactical problem. In the way soone looks at a specific person.
He stepped forward.
Brom’s hand closed on his collar.
"I need to go to eight," the boy said.
"You’re staying here."
"There are six of you. You don’t need ."
"Seven is better than six." Brom’s voice had no particular heat in it. It was the voice of a man stating a position he had already decided on and was not interested in discussing. "You stay."
"Let go of ."
"No."
The boy tried to pull forward. Brom weighed nearly twice what he did and had strength enhancent magic besides, and the attempt accomplished nothing except demonstrating that it couldn’t be accomplished. The collar held. The boy stumbled back half a step.
"You can’t hold here," he said.
"I am holding you here," Brom said. "Those are different statents."
"This is insane, there are seven of us, one person going to eight doesn’t change anything for us—"
"It changes the number from seven to six and I don’t want six." Brom was not looking at the boy anymore. He was looking at the fla above them, full and bright, one of the brightest one in the chamber. "We have what we have. I’m keeping what we have."
Soone else on the base said quietly, "Brom, let him go."
"No."
"He’s right that we have enough—"
"Nobody asked you what we have enough of."
The argunt spread laterally, other recruits on the base and nearby bases picking it up, voices overlapping, several conversations happening simultaneously about what Brom should do and what the boy should be allowed to do and what the right number of people on any one base actually was, and all of it noise, all of it burning ti and energy and solving nothing.
The boy tried again. A sharper pull this ti, twisting his body into it, getting one hand up to work at the grip on his collar.
KRAAAK
The sound that ca after was not loud. A short sharp crack, like green wood splitting, and then it was done and the boy was on the floor and not moving and the chamber went completely silent in the way it had gone silent after each statue had returned to its base, the silence of people who have just seen sothing that cannot be taken back.
Brom looked down at what was on the floor. His expression did not change.
"I needed his weight," he said.
Nobody spoke for several seconds.
"What is wrong with you." The voice ca from sowhere near the left wall, a girl, barely above a whisper.
"He was going to leave." Brom stepped back to his position on the base. "Dead weight is still weight."
"You killed him." Soone else now, louder, the shock converting into sothing with more edge. "You killed him over a number on a base."
"I kept the number at seven."
"You are SICK—"
"We are all going to die in this room," Brom said, and his voice was still level, still carrying that flat certainty, "or we are not going to die in this room. The difference between those outcos is numbers on bases. I have seven. I intend to keep seven. If any of you would like to lecture about morality you can do that after we get out, assuming we get out, which becos less likely every ti soone decides their feelings matter more than the mathematics."
The chamber noise ca back all at once, overlapping and urgent and going in several directions simultaneously. Soone was crying. Several people were crying. Werner was saying sothing from his base that Noah couldn’t fully make out over the other voices. Two recruits near Brom’s base had taken several steps away from it without seeming to realize they’d moved.
’This is what it looks like,’ Noah thought, watching Brom stand on his base with six living people and one dead one and the fla burning bright above all of them. ’Two hours. Maybe less. And soone’s already decided that murder is a reasonable tool for resource managent.’
He thought about the beetle massacre site. About recruits who’d been willing to kill three people to protect competition results. About how that had felt like desperation then and had felt manageable because he’d been able to talk them down.
This was not that. This was a room specifically designed to put people in a position where their instincts worked against each other, where generosity had a cost and selfishness had a logic, and it had taken less than an hour to find the person in the group whose particular combination of fear and ruthlessness would reach the obvious conclusion first.
’Desperation doesn’t create people like Brom,’ he thought. ’It just removes the reasons they had for not acting like themselves.’
The shouting was still going, directed at Brom mostly, and Brom was absorbing it the way stone absorbs weather, present and completely unmoved. He had done the calculation and executed it and he would not be argued out of having done it because no argunt would change the number back to seven.
Noah looked away from Brom and at the rest of the chamber. At the flas at their various heights. At the people on their bases watching each other across the open floor. At the stones lined up along the right wall, fourteen of them, round and large, sitting exactly where they’d been since the beginning.
He had been looking at them periodically since Pip found the chanism. They were the only things in the chamber that weren’t either statues or bases or flas or people. The room had put them here for a reason. Everything else in the room was here for a reason.
Fourteen stones. Fourteen bases.
He looked at the contraptions at the base of each statue. At the chanisms Pip had found, the things that responded to weight. He looked at the size of the stones. At how large they were.
’If you roll a stone onto a base,’ he thought slowly, ’the stone doesn’t get tired. The stone doesn’t need to redistribute to cover a gap sowhere else. The stone just sits there and weighs what it weighs indefinitely.’
The shape of it assembled in his mind the way solutions sotis did, not all at once but in pieces that arrived in the right order, each one clicking into the next.
One stone per base. Rolled into position. Sitting on the contraption. Keeping the fla alive without a person needing to stand there.
’Fourteen stones,’ he thought. ’Fourteen bases. That’s not a coincidence. That’s an answer.’
And then the rest of it arrived and he almost laughed, and the laugh was not the kind that cos from sothing being funny but the kind that cos from recognizing sothing that is specifically, deliberately, architecturally cruel.
Ten slots on the stone. He hadn’t touched one yet but he understood what he was looking at well enough to know that moving a stone would require ten people. That was what those empty boxes in the stone ant. Ten people, coordinated, leaving their bases simultaneously to move one stone to one contraption.
Ten people leaving ten bases. Ten flas starting to die the mont those ten people stepped off.
You could not fix this without first breaking sothing else. The room had been designed that way, built from the ground up as a problem where every solution carried a cost, where the only path forward required accepting damage on the way to it, and it would keep requiring that, over and over, thirteen more tis after the first, each stone moved while other flas died and statues woke and people on the remaining bases stood there watching the math get worse around them.
Noah stood on his base with the weight of it settling over him and looked at the flas and the statues and the dead boy on the floor of base nine right, and thought about whoever had designed this place, whoever had looked at a room and decided this was what went inside it.
’You sick bastard,’ he thought, almost with admiration. ’You absolute sick bastard.’’
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