– "The Price of a Performance"
The palace bells tolled at midnight, though no festival was declared. Their iron throats rang not of joy but of dread — the toll of steel before the culling.
In the slums of Omnia, smoke rose before dawn.
The Purge had begun.
I. The Spark of Paranoia
It was not the Emperor who ordered it.
Not Valerius.
Not even the High Priestess.
It was Captain Seroth, commander of the palace guard — a man of iron will and iron cruelty.
Whispers of the "Silver Shadow" had spread through Omnia like wildfire. Nobles feared their sleep, their ledgers, their lives. A name not seen, not caught, yet everywhere. Seroth fanned that fear into fury.
"The slums are a nest of vermin," he declared before his men. "The Shadow breeds among the rats. Burn them out. Cut their tongues. Hang their daughters. We serve the crown by cleansing its gutters."
And so they marched.
Helms gleaming, spears raised, torches licking the night. The soldiers moved as a tide of brass and fire, rolling through the crooked alleys, pulling men from their hovels, dragging women by the hair, kicking children into the mud.
No trial.
No name.
No mercy.
A thousand screams rose beneath the smoke.
II. A Ghost at the Edge of Fire
Mormond was there.
Not as the Silver Shadow.
Not as the Conductor.
But as Milos — the meek orphan, trailing behind Lord Valerius's retinue, the mask so carefully woven.
Yet even the mask could not still his breath as he watched the first girl die.
She couldn't have been older than Nini when she was taken.
Brown hair tangled with soot.
Bare feet torn against the cobbles.
Her voice cracked, begging for her mother, until Seroth's hand silenced her with a backhand blow.
"String her up," the Captain ordered.
The girl's small wrists were bound to a post.
The noose tightened.
Her tears fell silently into the dirt.
And suddenly the world collapsed inward on Mormond's chest.
The slums became Marlock again.
The guards became the mob.
The fire became that night — the night he lost her.
His vision swam red.
And for the first time in years, Mormond was not the Conductor, not the manipulator. He was just a boy again.
A boy watching Nini die.
III. The Snap of the Strings
The child's body dropped.
And Mormond broke.
The mask of Milos cracked like porcelain. His knees buckled, his throat tore open in a scream he had not uttered since that night:
"STOP!"
The word was not just a cry. It was a command. A shattering.
The threads tore loose from his fingers, exploding outward in a storm of silver. Invisible, but real. Dozens. Hundreds. They lanced through the air, weaving themselves through torches, blades, throats, eyes.
A soldier raised his spear — and the weapon twisted, snapping his wrist backward.
Another soldier drew breath to shout — and the string at his jaw locked it shut.
A torchbearer screamed as his own fire whipped around, engulfing him in flames he carried.
The Purge dissolved into chaos.
Children scattered, women wept, men fled, as the marionette-master revealed himself not in shadows, but in the open street, strings lashing like a storm.
IV. The Eye That Watches
From the rooftop across the square, Tifa watched.
She had followed the resonance.
That unnatural hum beneath the city's song.
Every prayer, every scream, every heartbeat — she felt it.
And tonight, it sang louder than ever.
When the threads erupted, her heart clenched.
She saw not just chaos, but discord. The melody of the city splitting apart, unnatural hands plucking notes from living souls.
Her eyes narrowed.
Her instincts screamed.
And yet, at the center of the storm, she saw him — a boy.
Milos.
Lord Valerius's shy orphan.
Face streaked with tears, body trembling as though barely holding together.
But the strings danced to his grief.
The Silver Shadow stood before her.
V. The Battle Without Blades
The guards regrouped. Seroth bellowed, rallying them:
"Hold your ground! The Shadow is here — the child is the monster!"
And as if to prove his words, the boy's scream lashed again.
A dozen strings seized spears, forcing them to stab their wielders. Armor became cages. Helmets strangled their owners. The purge became a slaughter — soldiers turned into marionettes, their deaths choreographed by the Conductor's grief.
But Tifa did not draw her sword.
She did not leap into the fray.
She closed her eyes, and she listened.
Beneath the strings.
Beneath the screams.
Beneath the chaos.
She heard it.
A prayer.
A girl's voice.
Not the boy's.
Not Mormond's.
But Nini's.
VI. The Ghost Awakens
Nini stood at the edge of the square.
Or something wearing her face.
Her eyes empty, her wrists bound in strings. Yet her lips moved — parted, trembling, whispering the same words Tifa had once breathed beneath the temple spires:
"Show me the truth."
The threads tangled, buckled. Mormond faltered, staggering backward as though struck.
This was not his command.
Not his melody.
It was hers.
The ghost inside her was no longer passive.
It was growing.
The soldiers stopped burning. The strings trembled in the air, uncertain, confused, alive.
Mormond clutched his head, his mask fully broken, whispering:
"No… no… she's mine. Mine! You can't—"
But the prayer continued.
And the square fell silent.
VII. The Hunter Moves
Tifa dropped from the rooftop.
Her boots struck stone.
Her aura flared.
Holy light seared the square, washing over the corpses, the smoke, the trembling strings. The resonance clashed with Mormond's threads, divine order striking against human discord.
The boy froze, caught in her gaze.
For the briefest moment, it was not hunter versus prey.
It was two truths colliding:
The boy who could not let go of his sister.
The woman who could not ignore the song of the divine.
"Milos," Tifa said softly, her voice cutting through the smoke. "Or should I call you something else?"
Mormond's lips trembled.
The strings quivered.
And behind them all, Nini whispered again.
VIII. The Collapse
The soldiers broke first.
Those who survived fled into the alleys, screaming of demons and shadows. Seroth, bloodied but alive, staggered away, vowing vengeance.
But the square was no longer a battlefield. It was a stage.
The boy.
The ghost.
The inquisitor.
The threads between them taut as blades.
Mormond staggered backward, clutching his temples, eyes wild with fury and grief. He hissed, half to Tifa, half to the ghost, half to himself:
"She was mine! She was perfect! You can't take her away again!"
Tifa's voice cut like judgment:
"She was never yours to bind."
And the ghost whispered:
"Brother…"
IX. Epilogue Cliffhanger – The Fractured Crown :
That night, the Emperor dreamed again.
But not of strings.
Not of crowns.
Not of silver shadows.
He dreamed of fire.
The slums burned in his vision, and from the flames rose three figures:
A boy with silver eyes, weeping blood.
A girl bound in strings, praying.
And a woman crowned in light, her blade hidden behind mercy.
The Emperor reached for his crown.
But it was not there.
It dangled above him, suspended by a single silver thread.
When he looked up, the thread was held not by hands — but by lips sewn shut.
The marionette of the First Emperor grinned down at him.
And whispered:
"The game begins anew."
🕸️ TO BE CONTINUED 🕸️
