The palace did not sleep beneath the Perpetual Twilight.
It only pretended to.
Silas stood in the deepest vault of the restricted archives with the black leather book open before him. The violet crystal orb above the stone table cast a dim glow across the ancient pages. The ink on the parchnt seed darker than ordinary ink. It did not simply sit on the page. It rested there with weight.
Lyra moved between the shelves with quiet urgency. She had already recovered a roll of oath bound vellum from a sealed cabinet near the eastern wall. The vellum was pale and smooth, kept inside a silver tube lined with old preservation runes. It was the kind of material used for royal treaties, marriage contracts and blood succession docunts.
Elara had left the vault to send word to her ghosts. Vaneer’s estate would be watched before sunset. Every servant entrance. Every stable gate. Every wagon path between the upper city and the western warehouses.
Silas trusted Elara to handle that part.
Now he needed to handle this.
Lyra returned to the stone table and placed the silver tube beside the book. Her sapphire eyes moved from the prir to Silas’s face.
"This is a bad idea," she said.
"You have said that already."
"I intend to say it again until you start listening."
Silas smiled faintly. "I am listening. I am simply ignoring you."
Lyra exhaled through her nose and pulled the oath bound vellum from the silver tube. She unrolled it carefully across the stone table. The material was thin but strong. Faint golden fibers ran through it like veins beneath pale skin.
"This parchnt was prepared for binding agreents between noble houses," she said. "It rembers oaths. If the rune fails, it may not only fail quietly. It may record sothing neither of us intended to reveal."
"Then we make sure it does not fail."
"That confidence will get you killed one day."
"Possibly," Silas said. "But not today."
Lyra looked at him for a long mont. Then she shook her head and reached for a small bronze box on the table.
"The ash of a burned contract," she said. "I had to take this from the archive disposal urn. It ca from an old marriage agreent between two extinct houses."
Silas opened the bronze box. Inside was a pinch of fine grey ash. It looked ordinary, but the mont he lifted the lid, the air around the table tightened slightly. The ash still rembered being a promise.
"And the water?" Silas asked.
Lyra lifted a small glass vial filled with dark liquid.
"Collected from the moonless basin beneath the south tower," she replied. "The servants use it for ritual cleaning before executions. It has never touched sunlight."
Silas studied the materials.
Ash from a broken promise. Water that had never seen the moon. Vellum that rembered oaths. Blood from the writer.
The ingredients were not random. They were symbolic. They carried aning before the spell even began.
That was the difference between this magic and the System.
The System asured actions.
This magic listened to aning.
Silas reached for the black quill.
Lyra caught his wrist again.
He looked at her.
Her expression was serious.
"Silas, before you write anything, you need to understand sothing. Rune Poetry does not reward cleverness alone. It rewards alignnt. The word, the rune, the intent and the price must agree with one another."
"Then I will align them."
"You cannot handle this the way you manipulate people."
Silas’s eyes narrowed slightly.
Lyra did not look away.
"If you write a verse ant to hear lies while secretly trying to hide from the sa verse, the magic may turn inward. It may decide that the greatest lie in the room is you."
The words settled between them.
For a mont, only the soft pulse of the crimson door runes disturbed the silence.
Silas looked down at the open prir.
_Let the page hear what the mouth denies._
A simple line.
A dangerous one.
He was full of lies. His na. His soul. His origin. His relationship with Ravena. His plans for Seraphina. His use of Vaneer. His intentions toward the throne. Almost every part of him was wrapped in deception.
Lyra was right.
This spell could cut him open if he approached it carelessly.
Silas released the quill.
"Then I shall define the target," he said.
Lyra blinked.
"The page does not need to hear every lie," Silas continued. "Only lies written by the bearer of a specific mark."
Lyra’s eyes sharpened with interest despite herself.
"A narrowed condition," she said.
"Exactly. Vaneer’s signature has already reacted once. We use it as the anchor. The spell listens only when a docunt bearing his hand contradicts his intent."
Lyra stared at him.
Then a slow smile touched her lips.
"That is still dangerous," she said. "But much less suicidal."
"I prefer my risks asured."
"No," Lyra replied. "You prefer them profitable."
Silas smiled.
She was learning him too well.
Lyra took the quill and dipped it into an empty ink bowl. She added the ash first. Then the moonless water. The mixture turned from grey to black almost instantly. Silas took the small silver pin from the table and pricked his finger without hesitation. A single drop of blood fell into the bowl.
The ink rippled.
For one heartbeat, Silas saw his reflection inside it. Not his face. Not the face of Lord Silas Vane. Sothing colder. A shadow of glass towers, burning ledgers and a black quill suspended above an unseen throne.
Then the image vanished.
Lyra had gone very still.
"You saw that," Silas said.
"Yes."
"What did you see?"
"Not enough," she replied. "And too much."
Silas did not press her.
So questions were better left unanswered until the person holding the answer believed silence had beco more dangerous than speech.
He picked up the quill.
The mont his fingers closed around it, the prir’s pages fluttered without wind. The open page shifted. The first verse remained, but beneath it blank space appeared as if waiting.
Silas placed the oath bound vellum in front of him.
He did not rush.
A bad sentence could wound him. A false command could devour him. The verse had to be precise.
He wrote the rune first.
The symbol was difficult. A curved feather crossing a closed eye. His hand should not have known the shape, but the body rembered what the mind did not. The original Silas had carried this sensitivity in his bones.
The rune ford slowly.
The ink drank into the vellum.
Then Silas wrote the verse beneath it.
_Let the page hear only the debt that hides behind Vaneer’s hand._
The mont the final letter touched the parchnt, the vault went silent.
Not quiet.
Silent.
The kind of silence that made the body realize sound had been removed from the world.
Lyra stopped breathing.
Silas did not move.
The black ink shivered. The feather rune curved inward. The closed eye opened.
Pain lanced through Silas’s finger.
Not severe. Not crippling. But sharp enough to make his jaw tighten. A thin line of blood slid from the prick in his skin and crawled down the quill instead of falling.
The vellum absorbed it.
Then the rune turned blacker than shadow.
The silence broke.
Lyra released the breath she had been holding.
"It held," she whispered.
Silas looked at the vellum.
The page looked ordinary now. Blank except for the rune and the verse. But he could feel it. A faint pressure. A waiting hunger. Not for truth exactly. For contradiction.
"How do we test it?" Silas asked.
Lyra recovered quickly. She reached into the leather folder beside her and removed one of Vaneer’s old signed reports.
"This is from three months ago," she said. "He claid the mine output had fallen because of low grade ore."
She placed the old report beside Silas’s rune page.
Nothing happened at first.
Then the rune opened again.
Black ink bled across the blank vellum.
The hand wrote in slow jagged letters.
_The ore was pure. The tithe was withheld. The steel was hidden._
Elara’s voice ca from the vault entrance.
"That is terrifying."
Silas turned.
Elara had returned without a sound. Her pale green eyes were fixed on the writing. She looked disturbed, but not afraid enough to leave.
"Your ghosts?" Silas asked.
"Placed," she replied. "Vaneer’s estate is being watched. Two laundry girls near the service gate. One kitchen girl inside the lower hall. A stable boy near the wagon yard. Nothing moves without us hearing."
"Good."
Elara stepped closer and looked at the vellum.
"Will that thing expose anyone?"
"Only Vaneer," Lyra said. "For now."
Elara did not look comforted.
Silas was.
The spell worked.
Not perfectly. Not safely. But it worked.
He had taken the first step.
A real step.
No reward appeared in his mind. No prompt congratulated him. No stat increased. The System remained silent and useless in the face of this world’s deeper law.
That made the success feel better.
Silas folded the rune vellum carefully and handed it to Lyra.
"Prepare a formal report request," he said.
"Vaneer will send docuntation of the sword transfer and the tax paynt. This page will read what he tries to hide."
Lyra nodded slowly, still staring at the rune.
"And if he lies?"
"Then we will know before he moves."
Elara looked toward Silas. "And if he tells Seraphina?"
Silas smiled coldly.
"Then the spider learns one of her pigs has been stealing from her."
Above them, sowhere in the palace, a bell rang once.
Then again.
Then a third ti.
Lyra’s face changed.
"What is it?" Silas asked.
"Royal summons," she said. "Not for court. For ergency council."
Elara turned toward the vault door. "Did sothing happen?"
Silas looked down at the newly written rune.
A cold certainty moved through him.
Sothing had.
They sealed the prir inside a black cloth and left the deep vault quickly. The climb back to the upper palace was silent. When they reached the grand library, servants were already moving through the corridors with frightened urgency. Guards marched toward the council wing. Whispers spread like smoke.
Silas caught fragnts as he passed.
Western road.
Burned wagons.
No survivors.
Radiant banner.
He stopped walking. Lyra stopped beside him.
Elara’s face tightened.
A palace ssenger ca running toward Silas and dropped to one knee so quickly his forehead nearly struck the floor.
"Shadow Advisor," the boy gasped. "Her Majesty commands your presence in the war council imdiately."
Silas looked down at him.
"What happened?"
The ssenger swallowed.
"A grain convoy from the eastern route was attacked before dawn," he said. "The wagons were burned. The guards were slaughtered. The attackers left a sun banner nailed to the road."
Lyra went pale.
Elara whispered, "The Radiant Court."
Silas said nothing.
His mind had already begun moving.
The timing was too perfect.
Seraphina’s grain network. Ravena’s political test. Vaneer’s hidden swords. The Radiant banner. A burned convoy that could starve the capital and push the Queen toward war.
Soone had just changed the board.
Silas adjusted the silver ring on his finger and began walking toward the council wing.
The Rune Poet’s first spell was behind him. The empire’s next crisis was ahead.
And sowhere in the web between grain, iron and sunlight, an unseen enemy had made the first move.
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