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Chapter 49 - The Sky-Tower Gambit

Lucien Blackmoore slipped into the Sky-Tower club like ink spilled across high-thread-count silk—quiet, fast, but once it touched the fabric, it stayed. The place didn't just hum with money; it strutted with it. Nyx Dynamics' gleaming shrine to arrogance stuck like a crown on Valthara Prime's highest spire, all reinforced glass and smugness built for the elite to sip their guilt neat while pretending they weren't watching the world rot.

This was the mortal realm's idea of heaven—if heaven came with biometric scans and a bouncer who'd stab you with a smile. Everything gleamed. Even the shadows felt arranged by a designer. Not a speck out of place, not a lightbulb without a strategic flicker. Neon spilled through massive windows in that washed-out, synthetic pink that never touched skin right. Paired with the electric blue, it gave the place that hospital-chic vibe—like you could get a bloodletting and a brand deal in the same hour.

Rain pounded the glass like it was trying to make a point. Valthara's skyline glared back through the storm, smug and twitching, like a corpse held up by power cables and optimism.

Lucien's boots clacked against marble that looked dipped in oil and buffed with lies. Each step felt like a decision the floor barely approved of. The smell hit next—clove, too deliberate. Smoke, but the perfumed kind, not honest sweat and burned wire. All of it laced with something artificial, like someone bottled tension and sprayed it as ambiance.

The regulars wore money like blood armor. Razor-lapel suits, lips glossed like blades, expressions carved to intimidate and flirt in equal measure. Their eyes skimmed Lucien, not quite meeting his, but not ignoring him either. The coat did that. A long streak of crimson, scuffed to hell and stitched more times than it should've survived. In a room dressed in grayscale, he might as well have been a gunshot.

They parted for him, not consciously, just... moved. The way you might avoid a live wire if it wandered into your living room.

He didn't walk like he belonged here. He walked like he owned the part of it no one talked about—the ductwork, the dirt under the floor, the backroom panic. The Ledger pressed against his ribs, alive and cold, ticking in that slow, pulsing way that reminded him it wasn't just a tool. It remembered every name, every blood mark, every broken clause. Runic glyphs glowed faintly beneath its cracked surface—contracts pending, souls counted, and silent warnings flashing like neon needles.

It whispered beneath his skin: "Clients aligned. Kael's greed mapped. Boon unlocked: binding soul."

He passed a cluster of Nyx execs whispering around a translucent screen, their voices laced with market numbers and quiet threats. One of them looked up and gave Lucien the kind of smile you give a gun you're not sure is loaded.

"Nice coat, Red," a server said as she swept by, eyes flicking up from her tray for a half-second. Her voice carried that bored burn of someone halfway through their shift and three promotions below what they were promised.

Lucien didn't slow. "Better red than buried, sweetheart," he tossed over his shoulder. He didn't look back, but he heard her scoff, half a laugh caught in her throat.

Kael was already at the bar, one elbow on polished steel, nursing something gold and mean. His posture was casual, but not relaxed. The kind of pose you wear when you're trying not to look cornered. His suit was flawless, sharp enough to wound, but his eyes were wired too tight. Not panicked—just aware. Like he knew how quickly things turned and never stopped watching for the pivot.

Lucien paused a beat before sliding in. He liked that moment of watching someone unobserved—when the edges of their mask started to crack. The lighting shifted again overhead, flickering from cold ice-blue to deep warning red, casting Kael's reflection in the mirror behind the bar like a shadow wearing his own smirk.

The Ledger pulsed, sending a faint hum against Lucien's ribs: "Prediction: Kael will test loyalty, strike at weakness." Its glyphs glimmered briefly—a map of alliances and threats—before fading to steady blue.

Lucien stepped into the red. Grin curling.

"Kael, my man," he said, voice loose, old jazz after midnight. He dropped the dossier onto the bar like it owed him something. "This tower's all shine, no soul. But sign here and you're king of the polished graveyard. Paper crown, fine print throne. Real regal shit. Exactly your flavor."

Kael turned his head slow, like it took effort. His eyes hit Lucien's and didn't blink. "Blackmoore," he said, cool but dry. "Dragging ghosts into lounges now? Brave. Or stupid. Hard to tell with you. That coat, that grin... it's all a performance. And your performances usually end with someone screaming."

Lucien leaned in close enough to fog Kael's glass. "This isn't theater, Kael. This is utility. That contract? It's got teeth. Doesn't wait for permission. And the strings inside it? Cassian tied those with hands full of blades."

A server eased a drink beside them. Heavy glass. Deep amber. Kael ignored it. Lucien didn't. He brought it up slow, sniffed the edge. It smelled like burnt wood and expensive regrets. He didn't sip, just kept it near his hand like a threat.

Kael still hadn't touched his own.

"Heard about the noble," Kael said, tone slipping casual like a mask. "Left a note. Witness saw a man with gray eyes. Sound familiar?"

Lucien's smile slipped for half a second. He reached for the holo-scroll Kael nudged toward him, eyes narrowing as the data loaded. The text stuttered and bled on-screen, like it didn't want to hold the message. At the bottom, that familiar sigil pulsed—Cassian's. Crooked. Twisted. Wrong. Like it had been etched by a shaking hand in broken glass.

The Ledger's runes pulsed sharply, glowing blood-red: "His ruin binds you." The warning felt like ice in Lucien's veins.

"Cassian's work," Lucien muttered. "Petty. Violent. Wanted the fear to linger long after the blood dried."

Kael blew out a slow breath, jaw twitching. "Didn't think he'd stoop that low."

Lucien's fingers drummed against the glass. "He didn't stoop. He jumped. The man's not playing anymore—he's burning the board. And this?" He tapped the folder. "This gives you a say in where the ashes fall."

Kael's hand hovered over the page, fingers flexing once. Not fear—calculation. Lucien knew that look. Kael didn't flinch when he was scared, just counted faster.

The Ledger vibrated, a low pulse against Lucien's ribs: "Binding soul—contract sealed."

"You look rattled," Lucien said, sharp around the grin now. "What's the matter? Skeletons acting up in their suits again?"

Kael signed.

Just like that. One clean stroke. Like cutting a wire that had already frayed.

Lucien opened his old brass watch, the face spiderwebbed with scratches. It ticked with a kind of rhythm that felt more like a countdown than a clock.

"Welcome to the Sky-Tower gambit," Lucien said. "The price of entry's just your spine."

Kael didn't answer right away. Just stared at the ink on the contract like it might start moving if he blinked. Finally, he looked up, a smile tugging sharp at one side of his mouth.

"I like knives," he said. "I just don't like bleeding."

Lucien's laugh came dry and quiet, like boots over glass shards. "Then you're in the wrong damn city, friend. Here, bleeding's just how the music keeps time."

Lightning cracked beyond the window. The whole skyline lit up like a corpse jolting on a slab. The contract sat between them now—signed, sealed, and already starting to bite.

Lucien didn't look down. He felt the Ledger tighten under his ribs, pulse heavy now, like something in it had just opened its eyes.

Suddenly, a note slid across the bar from a nearby noble, pale and trembling. Lucien's eyes flicked to it. Faint glyphs flickered over the edge of the paper: "Gray-eyed man seen. Proxy moves. Market crash imminent."

Lucien snarled low, "Cassian's got no class."

He dodged as a pair of goons lunged, the neon flaring sharp as he twisted through the attack. The Ledger hummed fiercely, "You're no better." It pulsed, feeding him updates—contacts scrambling, souls shifting, the market bleeding.

Cassian's chaos was crashing the floors beneath him.

Lucien's grin sharpened. The counter was already forming.

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