Chapter 975: Baseline
The tower doesn’t smell like stone. It smells like paper that learned how to breathe.
Light thins as soon as I cross the seam. Sound loses its edges. My first step inside lands and the floor decides to be floor. The second step waits to make up its mind.
I hold still and count a breath.
Four in. Six out.
Valeria settles in my bones, calm and cool, the way a blade feels when it stops pretending it’s separate from the hand that holds it.
’Inventory,’ I tell myself. ’No bravado. Just truth.’
I lift my right hand and reach for Grey.
It answers like a far-away radio through rain. Two pages try to lie flat in the air between my fingers—and then wrinkle. The left one warps at the corner; the right one tears where a thumbprint ought to be. I push a little more and both pages break apart into silver dust that doesn’t fall.
Cost: wrong. Response: worse. Result: failure.
"Noted," I say to no one in particular.
I try Mythweaver the way I was taught to when the room is listening: small and plain. I write a three-word margin on the air above my head.
"All speech plain."
The sentence appears in faint, careful strokes, holds for one heartbeat, and sputters. Letters stutter, invert, and fade. The tower doesn’t reject the line. It taxes it until the ink has to choose between staying and being honest.
’Plain still works,’ I think, ’just not as a blanket.’
Lucent Harmony next. I keep it tight and close, the way Luna taught me when she wanted me to feel safety without confusing it for invulnerability. I let Harmony lay a cool cloth over my skin and set my stance inside that circle.
It holds. Barely.
The room doesn’t soothe with me like it does in the field; it watches. Harmony shrinks to the size of a ribcage and becomes a personal habit, not an aura.
"Fine," I whisper. "Me first."
Nine-circle circuits? I place a toe against the floor line and hum the first knot of the Bahamut Method. The response comes in shards. Power tries to gather and finds the floor refusing to be a partner. The knot completes with sand in it.
"Not here," I say. "Not like that."
Soul Resonance is not for empty rooms. I let it rest.
Erebus clicks a dry greeting along the pact-line, small and polite in my ear bone. ’Ledger is open. No singing unless you are already bleeding.’
’Prefer not to bleed,’ I answer.
’Stinginess looks good on you.’
I test Grey one more time, this time with no theater. Thumb-sized page. Two-touch fold. I press it to the floor like a stamp and pull back fast.
The little page sticks half a second and flips to ash. Ash hangs where gravity should be.
"Okay," I say. "Baseline: almost no Grey. Mythweaver on a diet. Harmony is me-sized. Nine-circle powers fight the room. Resonance on standby. Soul and sword intact."
I take one step farther into the entry hall. The walls aren’t walls. They are letters pretending to be plaster. Each curve looks honest until you stare long enough to feel it staring back.
I don’t try to read them. Not yet.
The floor is level in the way a polite lie is level. I glance up. The ceiling is higher than it ought to be without quite being tall. Distance doesn’t want to commit. The whole place feels like the answer to a question that hasn’t been asked.
I drop my hand to Valeria’s hilt.
She warms once—acknowledgment, not invitation. No words. No theatrics. Just the weight of old metal that remembers what cutting is for.
I move to the side where the light flattens least and set my feet the way Tiamat made me do it until my ankles burned.
Forward stance. Back stance. Switch. Small.
I run the first kata.
The blade clears the sheath without sound. The cut is the cut—a straight line that does not argue with itself. No edge tricks. No verb carried on the swing. First bite, then exit, then breath.
The tower does nothing.
That tells me everything.
I run the second kata.
The turning cut, the hand-change that should feel like water, feels like a hinge with grit. My right hip complains. My left shoulder has too much habit and not enough honesty. I know what perfect looks like. I can’t land it without thinking too hard.
’Rust,’ I admit. ’One year back on Earth and too much of it was meetings, wars, and miracles. Not enough floors and sweat.’
I picture Tiamat’s face when I got lazy on the recovery. She always knew when my edge wanted to skip steps and just be pretty.
’You broke through to Mid Radiant because she didn’t let you lie to your stance. You stayed there because you started fixing problems with power instead of angles.’
I run the third kata.
Footwork only. Blade low, close to the guard, tip quiet. Steps that keep deciding until they are already done. The tower tries to make the end of a step arrive early. I refuse to have an end. I keep the step open until it finishes on its own. Harmony hums around my ribs. It’s enough to keep me from catching my own feet.
I slow down.
Tiamat’s drill: nine slow cuts, each faster than the last only because the line gets cleaner, not because the arm gets greedy.
One: I cut a line of air that doesn’t push my wrist.
Two: I cut a line of air that doesn’t lean on my elbow.
Three: I cut a line of air that doesn’t require my shoulder to apologize.
Four: I cut a line of air whose exit is as honest as its entrance.
Five: I cut a line of air that does not promise a second cut before it finishes the first.
Six: I cut a line of air that knows how to stop without looking like regret.
Seven: I cut a line of air that could live in a hallway with a low ceiling.
Eight: I cut a line of air that keeps the tip a rumor.
Nine: I cut a line of air that does not need a witness.
By the ninth, my breathing has decided to be helpful.
Four in. Six out.
I test a small law on the cut itself. Not a sentence in the air. A verb in the muscle.
"Stop."
The blade stops exactly where I told it to stop. The tower tries to make the stop become a hesitation. Harmony keeps it from looking like fear. Valeria settles and approves.
I run stance work.
Triangles. Lines. Circles. The floor tries to charge a tax on any pattern that looks like it means to repeat. I keep the patterns ugly on purpose. The tower is set to punish clean poetry; it doesn’t know what to do with bad handwriting. My footfalls find truth in the untidy.
After forty minutes, sweat runs down my back under the shirt and not a single part of me feels like it wasted the water.
I try nine-circle again, this time the smallest version of an anchor from the Bahamut Method—barely a thought, barely a mark. Instead of a knot, I leave a dot. The dot agrees to keep being a dot. When I step past it, the dot says: you were here, not you must come back. That’s all I want.
I try a Mythweaver line on the floor just to see what punishment feels like.
"Nothing here is urgent."
The sentence ghosts in, then frays. The tower taxes it and leaves a shadow feeling of delay. Not good enough to rely on. Good enough to remember as a last resort.
’Sword first,’ I think. ’Verb later.’
I set Valeria against my forearm and run Tiamat’s favorite cruelty.
Kata with pauses that arrive at random counts: three, five, two, seven, one. The pause is the cut. The cut is the pause. Any drift becomes a tell. The room tries to fill the pause with a meaning. I don’t let it. I leave the silence honest.
Erebus hums along the line, a tiny winter voice. ’If boredom were a saint, you’d have a shrine.’
’Boredom wins,’ I answer. ’Write it down.’
’Already engraving.’
My thighs start to ache. Good. The ache means I’m honest.
I try Grey one more time, spite more than hope. Thumb page. Two-touch fold. I don’t push at all; I lay it down like I’m setting a playing card on a bar. The tiny page sits for a full second this time before the tower taxes it into ash that doesn’t fall.
It’s not a total refusal. It’s a long bill.
"Fine," I tell the room. "We’ll pay with steps instead of coins."
I close my eyes and name what I have without making it sound braver than it is.
’Sword: intact. Breath: intact. Balance: rusty, fixable. Nine-circle: reduced, usable in dots. Mythweaver: flickers, no blankets. Grey: thumbprints at high cost. Resonance: save for when a rhythm shows. Harmony: me-sized, keep it that way.’
I open my eyes.
Nothing in the hall has changed. That’s the point.
I take the sheath in my left hand and the hilt in my right and run a hundred draws without a cut. Then I run a hundred cuts without a draw. Then I do both with my eyes on the floor seam that refuses to be straight. I do not count them out loud. I let the body do the math.
When the ache moves from legs to the space under my shoulder blades, I stop. I roll my neck. I take one more breath and decide to take the door only when my hands agree.
They do.
"One floor at a time," I say. "One verb at a time."
I look at the letters pretending to be plaster and pick a spot that feels least interested in me. I keep my voice small.
"Enter."
The wall doesn’t open. The floor does, half a step in front of my foot, as if the tower wants me to remember where I carry authority and where I don’t.
I don’t move forward yet.
I run the first kata again, slower than the first time, and land a cleaner ninth cut than I’ve thrown in months.
Then I step through.