Chapter 1094: Fighting Words.
Cain felt a slow rage pool and cool beneath his skin. "You chose for us. You turned traitor into negotiation and expect us to nod. You made a decision that binds us."
Hunter’s jaw set. "I made a decision that keeps people alive."
Roselle’s laugh was sharp and bitter. "Alive? Or useful? Don’t dress it up. Don’t put virtue on top of bribery."
Hunter’s eyes flicked to Roselle, then to Susan. "I kept lists. Names. Safehouses. Foodstock in basements. You cut the uplink and I negotiated corridors. You cut and I held."
Cain had the image then: Hunter in suits and smoky rooms, speaking softly into a mic, trading havens for pause. A man trying to play both sides and believing he could. Bravery and cowardice tangled in a clean knot.
He took a breath. "You kept something from us."
Hunter’s expression hardened. "I kept people from sliding into the sea when the armada burned this place down."
Cain didn’t lower his eyes. "You kept something from us and thought it would forgive you. You acted like a man in a business deal. We act like men at war."
There was a risk here—not immediate, not a gun to the head risk but a deeper trajectory risk. Hunter had chosen a path that would make further movement political, messy. If Daelmonts had eyes in the council, Hunter’s bargains might have bought breathing room—but also given them leverage. Cain saw how it could thicken the city’s rot into something the blade couldn’t slice clean.
Susan wiped her face with the heel of her hand. "We have two options. Break Hunter’s deals, or keep them and bend to them."
Cain looked at Hunter. He looked at Roselle and Susan. He felt the weight of every life he’d saved and every life he’d taken. The climb had been literal; now it would be moral.
Cain stepped back, the shaft’s dead bulb casting him half in light and half in shadow. He felt older than his years. Not because the city had carved him, but because the city always had.
"We keep moving," he said finally. "But not because we trust hands that deal in bargains. We keep moving because if we stop deciding, someone else will decide for us."
Hunter’s silence answered him. It wasn’t assent. It wasn’t defiance. It was a hearing of terms.
They moved out of the maintenance artery and into the bones of the spire. The climb continued—higher now, and more dangerous for the histories it would intersect. Cain’s blade felt heavier in his hand, not because of metal but because decisions had weight.
Above them the city aired a cold dawn. The spire’s upper floors waited like rooms in a house filled with business. They would enter it as thieves or liberators. In either case, someone would bleed.
Cain knew the shape of the moment before it finished forming. The climb, the confrontation, the brittle silence that followed—it was all momentum, and momentum demanded direction. He set his jaw and kept moving, boots on steel, the air around them thinning as if the spire itself resented their presence.
Susan muttered under her breath, a half-prayer or half-curse, and pressed her palm against the wall as if the metal might steady her pulse. Roselle walked ahead of her, sharp and restless, fingers brushing her blades like they were nervous tics instead of weapons. Hunter stayed close but just outside their orbit, his presence a constant question.
At the next junction, the shaft widened into a small chamber. A fan the size of a wagon wheel churned the air lazily, blades dulled with dust. The passage forward was blocked, but Roselle didn’t hesitate; she ducked low, rolled, and slipped through the gap between rotations. Her voice came from the other side, faint and confident: "It’s slow enough. Move."
Susan went next, her ribs protesting with each crouch. Hunter helped her across without asking, his hand catching her arm to steady her before she stumbled into the metal. She let him, but the look she gave him afterward was sharper than gratitude.
Cain followed last. For a heartbeat the spinning blades caught the dim light, flashing like an executioner’s rhythm. He timed it, stepped forward, and passed through without breaking stride. When he emerged, Hunter was already watching him.
"You don’t trust me," Hunter said quietly.
Cain adjusted his cloak, water still clinging to the edges. "Trust is for men who don’t hide their bargains."
"And yet you keep me close."
"Close," Cain said, "is the only place I can see you clearly."
The climb resumed. Each landing they passed bore markings—logos of corporations, sigils of families, coded stamps that meant wealth. The higher they went, the more polished the steel, the fewer the stains. Cain felt the metaphor pressing against his skull: dirt and oil below, glass and silence above.
When they reached the command floors, the corridor opened into a ring of windows. Beyond them stretched the sea, vast and bruised with the wreckage of disabled carriers. Fires dotted the horizon like lanterns at a funeral. The city’s reflection shimmered in the glass—towers, spires, and the faint scars of battle still crawling across the surface.
Susan pressed her hand against the glass, breath fogging it. "They’ll rebuild," she said. "They always do."
Roselle shook her head. "Not like before. You saw what we did. That scar will stay. Even Daelmonts can’t polish it out."
Hunter leaned against the frame, gaze tracking the carriers. "Don’t mistake damage for victory. They’ll fold it into their ledger. Call it an adjustment. They’ll make the loss useful."
"Useful," Roselle echoed, venom in her voice. "Always your word."
Before Hunter could answer, Steve’s voice crackled over the comm, thin but insistent: "You’re not alone up there. I’ve got heat signatures—half a dozen, maybe more—moving your way. Armed. They’re not guards. Too quiet. Too precise."
Cain felt the shift. Not fear—focus. He gestured them into cover along the ring of consoles. Roselle crouched low, blades drawn, eyes bright with the anticipation of violence. Susan checked the charge on her weapon, jaw clenched despite the pain. Hunter stayed upright, calm in a way that Cain didn’t trust.
The doors slid open with a sigh. Figures entered, not in uniform but in tailored black, faces masked in porcelain half-visors that gleamed under the pale lights. They moved without wasted motion, like dancers trained for war.