The simple, unadorned word — Yes — hung in the air of the cramped office, heavier than any physical weight. It was an answer born of desperation, a drowning man's grasp for an offered hand, and it sealed our fates together more surely than any battlefield alliance. For a long moment, we just looked at each other, the flickering lantern light casting dancing, skeletal shadows on the walls, a silent acknowledgment of the threshold we were about to cross. There was no going back from this.
"The System's terms are absolute, Lucas," I said, my voice low and steady, trying to convey the gravity of what we were about to do. "Once the oath is made, it can't be unmade. If you break it, the punishment is… severe. Your very soul will be branded as a Perjurer. You'll be cut off from the System's grace permanently, perhaps even dying."
He met my gaze without flinching, his eyes clear and hard with a terrifying, newfound resolve. "The Empire offers us slow poison or a quick death. You are offering a chance, Jack. A real one. I've bet the lives of six thousand people on my faith in you already. What's one more bet on my own soul?"
The quiet courage in his voice humbled me. I closed my eyes and focused my will, not on my power, but on my connection to the overarching reality of this world. System, I projected, my thoughts a clear, formal petition. I, Eren Kai, wish to initiate a System-Binding Oath of Secrecy with Lucas of Bastion.
The world went silent. The faint hum of the lantern, the distant sounds of the settlement, even the blood pounding in my ears — it all faded away into a soft, expectant hush. A panel of brilliant, crystalline blue light materialized in the air between us, its glow so pure and clean it made the lantern's fire look like a dirty, flickering smudge. Lucas gasped, his eyes wide with a mixture of terror and absolute, undiluted awe.
Etched on the panel in serene, silver script were the words:
[SYSTEM-BINDING OATH INITIATED] [PRIMARY SIGNATORY: Eren Kai] [SECONDARY SIGNATORY: Lucas Montgomery]
[TERMS OF THE OATH: The OATH OF THE VEIL.] [The Secondary Signatory, Lucas, does hereby swear upon the core of his soul to hold in absolute secrecy all information designated as 'Veiled Knowledge' by the Primary Signatory, Eren Kai. He shall not speak, write, or otherwise convey this knowledge to any entity, living or constructed, by any means, direct or indirect, unless given express, verbal permission by the Primary Signatory for each specific instance. This oath is eternal, transcending circumstance, duress, and even death. It can only be rescinded by mutual consent of both parties, witnessed again by the Prime System.]
[PROPOSED PUNISHMENT FOR VIOLATION: SOUL-BRAND OF THE PERJURER.]
I read the terms aloud, my own voice sounding distant and formal in the sanctified silence. As I finished, two shimmering, ethereal outlines of a handprint appeared at the bottom of the glowing panel.
"Place your hand there, Lucas," I whispered.
With a trembling, but determined, hand, he reached out and pressed his palm against one of the outlines. The instant his skin touched it, the silver script flared, and he let out a sharp, choked gasp, his whole body going rigid. I knew what he was feeling — the cold, clean, and terrifying touch of the Prime System itself, examining the very fabric of his soul, weighing his intent, his conviction.
Then it was my turn. I placed my own hand on the other outline. A jolt, both familiar and new, shot up my arm. I felt the connection solidify, a new, unbreakable thread of silver light being woven between my soul and his, a bond of trust enforced by the fundamental laws of our universe.
The panel flared one last time with an almost blinding light, then dissolved into a shower of soft, silver motes that faded into nothing. The sounds of the world rushed back in, and Lucas slumped back in his chair, pale and sweating, but his eyes were shining with a new, fierce clarity. He had just stared into the face of God, and he had not been found wanting.
"Now you know," I said softly. "The System is more than just quests and status screens. It is a witness. And it has a long memory."
And so, in the quiet, lantern-lit confines of his office, with the weight of our shared oath settling around us like a heavy cloak, I began to tell him.
I did not tell him everything. I did not speak of my Soul Strength, a secret so fundamental and dangerous that sharing it would be like handing him a lit stick of dynamite. I did not speak of the Architect, or the cosmic tragedy of the Static Sea, or the Royal Bloodline the Kyorians feared. Those were my burdens, my ghosts to carry alone.
But I gave him the truth he needed. I told him of the Sanctum, describing it not as a pocket dimension birthed by my soul, but as a hidden, pre-Confluence installation, an ancient relic of immense power that I had been lucky enough to find and activate. A place of absolute safety. I told him of Jeeves and Leoric, not as Anima forged from my will, but as the Sanctum's "custodians" — ancient, sentient constructs who served me in exchange for my protection and Essence. I described Rexxar as the Sanctum's Guardian, a powerful, summoned warrior bound to its defense. I explained the Ghost Road, not as a psionic network, but as a series of translocation pads left by the Sanctum's original builders. I framed my own powers not as unique manifestations, but as abilities granted and enhanced by my connection to this ancient, powerful place.
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I was building a new lie, but it was a lie constructed around a framework of functional truth. As I spoke, I watched the expressions flicker across Lucas' face. Shock. Disbelief. And then, a slow, dawning, and absolute understanding.
"The healing salves that just… appeared after the wolf attack," he whispered, his eyes wide. "The advanced fortification plans you 'found.' The impossible accuracy of your warnings before the beast tide that night." His gaze met mine, filled with a new, profound respect. "And that lion man! It was all you. All of it."
The burden of a hundred small deceptions lifted from my shoulders, replaced by the weight of a single, great one. He nodded slowly, a lifetime of inexplicable events and 'lucky breaks' in Bastion suddenly snapping into sharp, perfect focus. "Okay," he said, the single word carrying a universe of acceptance. "Okay. What do we do?"
And so began the true work. Our conversation shifted from revelation to strategy, and the dynamic was electric. For the first time, I wasn't just a secret benefactor pulling strings from the shadows. We were partners.
"They are trying to buy our loyalty, one person at a time," Lucas said, his mind now sharp and focused, freed from the paranoia of the unknown. "Blade is a master of it. He identifies a need and offers a targeted solution that makes the recipient feel chosen, special. It creates dependency and breeds jealousy. We can't just forbid people from accepting their 'gifts.'"
"No," I agreed. "We have to beat him to the punch. We have to identify the needs first and provide better solutions, our own solutions, so that when he comes with his gifts, they are no longer needed."
And so, Operation Shepherd was born. A plan not of open defiance, but of subtle, preemptive caretaking. A way to inoculate our flock against the poisoned honey of the Empire.
The plan was a two-pronged assault. The Hidden Hand, and the Public Hand.
The Hidden Hand would be me and my Anima. I could send Jeeves out, cloaked by the Sanctum's veil, to conduct a true audit of Bastion. He wouldn't just observe; with his analytical mind, he would identify logistical weak points, resource shortages, and simmering social tensions with a speed and accuracy that was impossible for Lucas. He could determine that the mining teams' tools were wearing out twice as fast as expected due to a previously unknown corrosive element in the new iron seam. He could note that the families on the north side of the settlement felt marginalized because the main well was a ten-minute walk. Small things. Cracks. The very cracks that Blade would seek to exploit.
Leoric, fed this data, would become our secret quartermaster. He could design a new alloy for the pickaxe heads, something that could be smelted in Bastion's simple forges but would be three times as durable. He could draft blueprints for a simple, efficient aqueduct system. Rexxar, meanwhile, would act as our unseen guardian angel. When a hunting party went out, he could trail them from a distance, silently dispatching any truly dangerous predators before they even knew they were there, ensuring the hunters came back with a record catch and a story of a "strangely quiet and lucky day."
The Public Hand would be Lucas. Armed with this perfect, secret information, he would become the visionary leader they all believed him to be. He would "announce" his new initiative to improve the mining tools, presenting Leoric's designs as his own Artificers' innovations. He would organize a community project to build the aqueduct. He would be proactive, seemingly omniscient, meeting the needs of his people before they even had a chance to become grievances. I, as 'Jack,' would act as his quiet advisor, occasionally 'discovering' another piece of 'lost knowledge' to help things along, reinforcing both of our established personas.
We wouldn't be giving them handouts. We would be giving them the tools and the opportunity to succeed on their own terms. Their prosperity would come not as a gift from a smiling Imperial stranger, but from their own hard work, guided by their trusted leader. It was a plan built on a foundation of deception, all in the service of preserving their genuine independence and defiant spirit.
After hours of intense, exhilarating planning, Lucas finally left the office, his step lighter, his eyes burning with a fierce, renewed purpose. He was no longer a man trapped in a corner. He was a leader armed with a secret weapon.
Left alone in the Sanctum, I felt a deep sense of satisfaction, but it was tinged with a familiar unease. Operation Shepherd would protect Bastion, but it did nothing to solve my own, growing problem. I walked to one of my personal storage lockers and materialized the Heart of Contrition.
It pulsed softly in my palm, a warm, gentle light against my skin. It felt… peaceful. Content. The very opposite of a weapon. And yet, I knew it held the power to Unmake a world, and the power to elevate a being like Kharonus to a new, terrifying level of existence. I couldn't use it. I couldn't study it; its systems were beyond anything Leoric could comprehend. And the System itself refused to give me a price for its analysis. It was a loaded gun with a lock I couldn't pick.
My mind kept circling back to the demon lord. He knew what this was. He knew its history, its purpose, its power. He was the only being I had ever met who might have the answers I needed. But walking back into his hall, empty-handed and defiant, was suicide. I couldn't risk a direct confrontation. Not yet. Not until I knew more.
I paced the central hub, the weight of my dilemma a physical thing. How could I gain this knowledge without facing him? How could I get the answers without paying the price?
And then it hit me. The answer was so obvious, so elegant, I almost laughed aloud at my own foolishness. I didn't have to physically go back, I could just keep using my Glimpse. The fight in the Static Sea had drained me. My skills had all been used. But the one ability I had relied on, the one that had kickstarted this entire chain of events, was a mental one. A simulation. It had its own cooldown, separate from the drain on my body and mana and it had just reset two days ago.
I had a way to walk back into the Crucible, to stand before the demon's throne, to ask my questions, to gauge his reaction, to probe his knowledge… all without risking a single hair on my head. A consequence-free conversation with a being who personified consequences.
My decision was made. Operation Shepherd would protect my people. But to protect myself, and to understand the true nature of the power I now held, I had to once again prepare to step into a future that might yet come to pass. I had to pay another visit to Lord Kharonus, my arrogant, infuriating, and undeniably knowledgeable tutor. This time, I had a feeling the lesson would be very, very different.
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