The palace of Omnia dreamed.
Its marble halls breathed with whispers; its chandeliers swayed though no wind moved; its guards slumbered in armor they were sworn never to shed.
And upon the Emperor's brow — a crown of iron and garnet — lay the faint pressure of phantom fingers.
Pulling.
Always pulling.
He woke with a gasp.
His chest heaved. His throat clawed for air. Sweat traced rivulets down his temples.
The first thing he heard was not steel, nor alarm, but a lullaby.
A child's lullaby.
Soft. Haunting. Sung by no throat, carried on no breath. It slithered between the pillars like a silk ribbon, curling around his bedposts, brushing the edges of his ears.
Sleep, little lamb… sleep, little thorn… the strings are here, the dawn is shorn…
He threw the covers aside and called for his guards.
But they did not answer.
Because they were already asleep.
Helmets bowed. Hands slack. Spears clattering softly against the floor as though even steel itself had grown drowsy under the song.
The Emperor stood alone.
Beyond the window, in the courtyard where the statue of Omnia's first Emperor reached triumphantly to the heavens, a figure now hung.
A marionette.
Perfectly crafted.
Perfectly cruel.
Its hair, its bearing — unmistakable.
Lord Caster.
The minister of coin. Keeper of Omnia's vaults.
Its wrists were slit, straw wrists leaking sawdust.
Its mouth was sewn shut with silver wire.
Its glass eyes stared eternally upward.
The Emperor staggered back, clutching his chest.
The first string had unraveled.
The Whispers Begin
Mormond did not sit upon a throne.
He sat upon rooftops, gargoyle-like, legs dangling in silence as the city churned beneath him.
Omnia by daylight was radiant — domes and arches, banners of gold, fountains spilling silver waters into marble basins.
But Omnia by night was a carcass.
Rats ran the alleys. Beggars coughed blood. Lanterns flickered like fearful eyes.
From here, he saw all.
And through Milos, his perfect orphan guise, he was already in.
The pet of Valerius, Minister of Secrets.
Valerius — a man who trafficked in scandal the way merchants trafficked in wine.
Every noble in Omnia paid him in silence, in bribes, in veiled nods of fear.
And Valerius had no idea that the boy sipping broth at his table, polishing his boots, fetching his ink… was the shadow that would unmake him.
Mormond whispered to Nini as they crouched together in the night.
"Whispers are sharper than swords. Tonight, I pluck the first one. House Thorne."
Nini's black dress clung to her like the ink of midnight. Her laughter rippled, soft and sweet.
"They keep the empire's purse, don't they?"
Mormond smirked.
"Not for long."
House Thorne
The Thornes. A dynasty of bankers, treasurers, coin-blooded parasites.
Their halls were vaults. Their rooms smelled of ledger ink and dust.
The matriarch, Lady Veyra Thorne, was sharper than iron — but sharper still was her fear.
She had spent her youth accumulating wealth, her middle age preserving it, and now, in her twilight, she feared nothing more than losing it.
Mormond began softly.
A ledger.
Just one.
"Misplaced," Valerius murmured as he slid it into Lord Renwick's trembling hands — Renwick, a rival house leader who loathed Thorne arrogance.
The ledger contained enough inconsistencies, enough falsified trade routes, enough bribes masked as "charity" to plant the seed of doubt.
Renwick smiled like a jackal.
The whisper began.
The Matriarch Unravels
Lady Veyra awoke one night to the sound of weeping in her halls.
She followed it. Lantern in hand.
Through corridors where servants should have been asleep, yet none stirred.
Down staircases that grew longer than she remembered.
The weeping grew louder.
She entered her bedchamber.
And there, by the mirror, stood a girl in a black dress.
Eyes like coals.
Skin pale as melted wax.
Weeping.
Veyra dropped her lantern.
"Nini…" she whispered, though she did not know the name.
The girl raised her head.
Her lips did not move.
But the mirror behind her whispered instead:
They're coming for your gold, Veyra. They're coming for your legacy. They're coming for your children. They'll take it all.
The glass cracked.
Veyra screamed.
When her maids found her at dawn, she was clawing at her own reflection, swearing she saw fire in her jewels, swearing she heard voices in her vaults.
The whisper grew.
The Patriarch's Strings
Lord Albrecht Thorne was a man of steel and ceremony — a ledger in flesh.
He trusted in signatures, in seals, in the permanence of ink.
One evening, he sat at his desk, writing defenses against accusations whispered in the streets.
He raised his quill.
He dipped it in ink.
But when he looked again…
The ink was red.
Thread-red.
And his hand was no longer his own.
Strings curled from his wrist, guiding his quill across the parchment.
He tried to stop. His muscles strained. His jaw clenched.
But the strings were stronger.
And slowly, carefully, elegantly, the confession wrote itself.
"I, Albrecht Thorne, do confess to embezzlement, treason against the Crown, and conspiracy with foreign powers…"
Tears streamed down his cheeks as the pen carved his ruin.
Every loop of the script was beautiful — Mormond's calligraphy through unwilling flesh.
When the confession was complete, Albrecht rose, puppet-like, strings pulling his body.
He walked to the balcony.
The city below looked up.
And in silence, without a word, he stepped forward.
The body struck marble.
The whisper became a scream.
Collapse
House Thorne fell in a week.
Merchants withdrew their support.
Investors clawed at their doors.
Nobles circled like vultures over carrion.
The empire's coffers trembled.
Gold lost weight. Silver lost trust.
The Emperor raged in his throne room. He demanded order. He demanded answers.
But whispers cannot be slain by decrees.
And in the shadows above the throne, unseen, a silver-haired boy smiled.
Epilogue – Strings on the Crown :
Valerius poured himself wine. His lips curled in satisfaction.
"Milos," he said, waving the boy closer. "It seems fortune smiles on me. The Thornes destroyed themselves, and I — ha! — I alone survive their ruin."
Milos bowed his head. Silent. Obedient.
The perfect orphan.
Valerius raised his glass.
"To the future, boy. To Omnia's new order."
Milos looked up.
And for just a moment, Valerius swore the boy's eyes glimmered silver.
But when he blinked, the orphan only smiled shyly, as if embarrassed.
Outside, in the palace courtyard, the wind swayed the marionette of Lord Caster.
Its glass eyes stared eternally.
Its sewn lips grinned forever.
And in the highest spire, a new marionette joined it.
Lord Albrecht Thorne.
Ledger nailed to his chest.
Hands bound in strings.
Head tilted, mouth sewn shut.
The Emperor dreamed again that night.
This time, the crown was not on his head.
It was in the hands of a boy with silver hair, smiling gently, humming a lullaby that froze even the sun.
🕸️ TO BE CONTINUED 🕸️
