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Chapter 9 - Chapter 8 -“The Gilded Cage Rattles”

Valerius poured himself another glass of deep red wine, the liquid glowing like a vein of molten ruby in the candlelight. His chamber was quiet except for the faint crackle of the hearth, the gentle clinking of crystal, and the sigh of his own satisfaction.

He tipped the goblet to his lips and chuckled.

"Ha! Milos," he called, waving the boy closer with an idle flick of his wrist, as though summoning a trained hound.

The silver-haired orphan obeyed, stepping from the shadows as if he had been carved from them. Bare feet made no sound on marble. His posture was low, deferential. His hands clasped in front of him with perfect discipline.

Valerius's smile widened as he studied the boy.

"It seems fortune smiles on me," the Minister of Secrets declared. "The Thornes destroyed themselves, and I — ha! — I alone survive their ruin. Do you know what that means, boy?"

Milos tilted his head, innocent eyes wide.

"It means the future belongs to me."

The Minister lifted his glass high, voice rising like an anthem sung to his own greatness.

"To the future, boy. To Omnia's new order."

Milos bowed his head, letting the shadows of his silver hair veil his expression. Silent. Obedient. The perfect orphan.

But as Valerius's laughter rang through the chamber, as wine spilled across his lip and dripped down his chin like blood, a strange thing happened.

The boy looked up.

For the briefest of moments — too quick, too subtle to be grasped fully — Valerius thought he saw the boy's eyes glimmer silver. Not merely reflecting the light of the fire, but glowing from within, as though two threads of moonlight had been woven into his skull.

Valerius blinked.

The glimmer was gone. The boy only smiled, shy and hesitant, like a stray who feared the lash.

Valerius shook his head and chuckled again, dismissing the vision as the wine's trickery.

He would never know how close he came to truth.

The Courtyard of Marionettes

Outside the manor, in the palace courtyard, the wind swayed softly against the gallows-like spire where the marionette of Lord Caster dangled.

Its glass eyes reflected the moon.

Its sewn lips grinned eternally.

And above it, on the highest spire, another doll had joined the dance.

Lord Albrecht Thorne.

A ledger nailed to his chest.

Hands bound in strings.

Head tilted, mouth sewn shut.

The city whispered in the streets. The Thornes had fallen into ruin overnight. Their name was ash. Their vaults, emptied by rivals. Their legacy, a joke.

But no one laughed.

For they knew — though none dared speak it — that Omnia itself had begun to rot.

The Emperor's Dream

That same night, the Emperor of Omnia stirred in his gilded chamber. His sleep was restless, filled with visions of darkness. He saw strings — hundreds, thousands — stretching across his empire, tugging at his crown, tugging at his heart, tugging at his very soul.

He gasped awake, sweat slick on his brow.

"Guards," he croaked. "Guards!"

But when he turned — they were already asleep, their spears fallen from limp hands. Their mouths slack. Their chests rising and falling with unnatural rhythm.

And from somewhere beyond the chamber walls, faint but clear, came the haunting sound of a lullaby.

Soft.

Sweet.

Terrifying.

In his terror, the Emperor stumbled to his balcony and looked into the courtyard below.

His breath froze in his throat.

The marionettes swayed.

They were smiling at him.

The Arrival of the Hunter

Morning came cloaked in rumors. The market stalls buzzed with fear. The nobles held private councils, whispering of omens and curses.

And in the great temple, High Priestess Evanica knelt before the flame of judgment, her face lit in gold.

"The empire is unraveling," she whispered. "I can hear the discord."

She rose and turned to the kneeling figure beside her.

"Tifa," she said, her voice like a bell tolling across eternity. "You are no longer guardian alone. I name you Inquisitor — Divine hand of truth, endowed with the highest authority. Go. Seek the corruption beneath our marble streets. Root it out. Sever it."

Tifa lifted her head. Her eyes gleamed with holy fire, her hand resting on the hilt of her silver-forged blade.

"As you command, High Priestess. Omnia will be cleansed."

When she descended from the temple that day, all of Omnia saw her. Light wrapped her in a halo. Choirs sang her name. Her steps struck the earth like the rhythm of justice itself.

The nobles bowed. The guards knelt. Even the fearful commoners lifted their eyes with trembling hope.

But in the shadows of Valerius's estate, a boy with silver hair watched her procession with a smile that could have frozen the sun.

Threads and Whispers

Tifa wasted no time. Within days, she cut through the smokescreens of the court like a blade through silk.

The collapse of House Thorne, the marionettes, the spreading paranoia — she saw patterns where others saw accidents. She heard it, too: the faint hum of discord beneath the city's pulse. The resonance of something unnatural, vibrating just beneath reality.

Her investigation drew her step by step to the doors of Lord Valerius.

When she entered the estate, her very presence was a storm. The servants cowered, the guards fell silent, and even Valerius himself, bloated with pride and wine, bowed low, sweat beading on his brow.

And there, in the corner, stood Milos.

The orphan. The shadow. The silver-haired boy.

He lifted his eyes to hers. Wide. Innocent. Framed by soft lashes and the trembling of a child unused to kindness.

Tifa's breath caught.

For an instant, her instincts screamed. Something was wrong. The hum of discord spiked like a knife scraping across glass.

But when she looked again — she saw only a child.

A frightened, delicate thing, hidden behind the skirts of the most wretched man in Omnia.

Her heart warred with her mind.

Her holy senses told her the corruption was near. Her eyes told her it was impossible.

And across the room, Mormond — the true face behind the mask — smiled ever so slightly, his threads weaving silently into her doubt.

Epilogue Cliffhanger :

That night, Tifa prayed beneath the temple spires.

"Show me the truth," she whispered to the heavens.

And somewhere in the shadows of Omnia, Mormond whispered back:

"You already see it."

The marionettes swayed in the moonlight.

Their sewn lips parted.

And though no breath stirred their lungs, the wind carried a single word across the empty courtyard:

"Tifa."

🕸️ TO BE CONTINUED 🕸️

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