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Chapter 7 - Chapter 6 – A Stage of Whispers

The city of Omnia did not sleep.

Its towers glittered like blades under the moon, glass windows glowing faintly with candlelight and secrets. The streets wound like serpents, swallowing carriages, whispers, and deals never meant to be heard. From the cliffside above, the silver-haired boy stood, cloak drawn close, the wind tugging at him as though the night itself wanted to reveal his true shape.

But it would not.

Not yet.

Tonight, Mormond was no monster.

He was Milos.

An orphan. Pale-eyed, soft-spoken, trembling just enough to inspire pity. A boy who knew how to look at the ground when addressed. A boy who knew silence was currency, and tears—when shed at the right moment—were worth more than gold.

And Omnia, the empire's throat, was already opening for him.

The House of Valerius

Lord Valerius was a man who wore secrets as jewelry. His robes were stitched with foreign silks, his fingers fat with rings that clinked when he stroked his beard. His villa perched atop the western quarter, overlooking not the people, but the nobility. A vulture never feasts where the bones lie; it prefers to dine with its peers.

Milos had arrived on his doorstep like stray fortune.

A carriage had overturned in the square earlier that day—a scene crafted by invisible strings and the well-placed stumble of a drunken driver. From the wreckage, a pale boy had emerged, bloodied just enough to tug at noble hearts. His parents, merchants, crushed beneath the wheels. His voice cracked, pleading for help.

Valerius's guards would have cast him aside, but Valerius himself stepped forth. His eyes had narrowed, weighing the boy. And then, he had smiled.

"An orphan of trade," he mused, resting jeweled fingers beneath Milos's chin.

"Those are the most loyal kind."

So Milos was taken in. Bathed. Dressed in the soft linens of a house servant. Fed on sweet breads and watered wine. His room overlooked the gardens where statues of false gods stared into the moonlight with blank, hollow eyes.

Nini watched from the rafters, unseen, smiling like a crow on the corpse of a battlefield.

Weaving in Silence

Milos did not rush.

That was the true horror.

At dinners, he poured Valerius's wine with delicate care, never spilling, never speaking unless spoken to. He listened. Oh, how he listened. To ministers discussing tariffs cloaked as bribes. To generals confessing defeats as if they were victories. To wives whispering confessions into goblets heavy with shame.

Valerius adored him.

Within a week, Milos was a talisman. "Since the boy's arrival," Valerius laughed one night, "my rivals stumble, my fortunes rise. A lucky omen, my little ghost." He tousled Milos's hair like a proud father, blind to the silver thread coiled beneath that gentle smile.

Mormond wove his net strand by strand.

No blood spilled.

Not yet.

He mapped the villa by candlelight. Counted the guards' steps. Noted which locks groaned and which doors opened without a sound. He learned which concubine favored laudanum, which steward skimmed silver, which soldier longed for the sword-master's daughter. Every sin catalogued, every weakness stitched.

The game was patience.

The dagger hovered, but did not cut.

Whispers Before the Blade

One evening, Valerius summoned Milos to his private chamber.

The Minister of Secrets was drunk on spiced wine, his rings heavy on the boy's shoulder. "You remind me of myself, long ago," he murmured. "Small. Overlooked. But with eyes that drink everything."

He leaned closer, breath thick with rot. "I built this city on whispers, Milos. I made kings bow with nothing but letters written in shadows. Do you know why I keep you close?"

Milos lowered his gaze. "Because I am lucky, my lord."

Valerius laughed, clutching him tighter. "Yes! Lucky. And I have need of luck now. There is a viper in my nest. A man who dares to gather whispers against me. Lord Caster, that perfumed fool. He will ruin everything."

He kissed the boy's forehead like a benediction. "Stay close, my little charm. Stay, and perhaps my enemies will vanish."

Milos smiled.

Just enough.

The Silent Performance

Caster was dead within three nights.

Not murdered. Not exactly.

Milos played no dagger across his throat, no poison slipped into his cup. No—this was subtler. This was art.

Caster was found in his study, papers strewn, wrists slit, a quill still trembling in his hand. A letter lay upon the desk, confessing debts, despair, betrayal too heavy to bear. His servants swore he had been pacing for days, muttering of doom, of curses, of shadows that whispered in his ear at night.

A tragedy.

A suicide.

Or so it seemed.

Valerius wept crocodile tears at court, but inside his villa, he laughed until his jewels rattled. He poured wine over Milos's head like a baptism.

"You see? You bring me fortune, boy!" His eyes gleamed with mania. "Stay with me, and Omnia itself will kneel!"

And Milos, kneeling, dripping with wine, whispered under his breath—so faint that no one heard but the shadows.

"She's not ready to break yet. But she will."

His silver eyes flashed for a single heartbeat.

The Strings Tighten

Nini perched on the balcony rail that night, her black dress rustling like wings.

"You're playing with your food," she teased.

Mormond, once more himself, leaned against the pillar, coat draped like darkness incarnate. His fingers tugged invisible strings, weaving patterns in the moonlight.

"Patience, Nini," he murmured. "The sweetest harvest ripens slowly."

He looked toward the palace rising in the distance. The heart of Omnia. The heart of rot.

"Let them fatten on their own lies." His voice chilled the air. "Every whisper, every bribe, every secret they cradle—I will thread it all. And when the stage is ready…"

He smiled. That crescent-moon smile, sharp enough to cut bone.

"…they will dance."

Epilogue – The Puppet Crown :

In the palace of Omnia, the Emperor stirred in restless dreams. He saw strings in the dark, pulling at his crown, pulling at his heart. He woke with a gasp, sweat on his brow, but when he called for his guards…

They were already asleep.

In the hall beyond, a child's lullaby hummed.

Soft.

Haunting.

And in the courtyard, beneath the statue of the first Emperor, a marionette now dangled.

A perfect likeness of Lord Caster.

Its wrists were cut.

Its smile was sewn shut.

🕸️ To be continued… 🕸️

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