Chapter 980: The Room That Wanted to Drive (1)
The next hall pretends to be neutral. It has that bland architectural confidence you only get from rectangles that passed their safety inspections. The air is cool. The light is steady. The floor does not sigh.
Which is why I don't trust a single square inch of it.
"Place your bets," Valeria says, bright in my forearm. "Invisible marbles, judgmental tiles, or the classic 'falling ceiling that just wants attention'?"
Erebus brushes the pact-line once. "Proceed."
I take three short-guard steps—tip quiet, hips stacked, no pre-motor fidget. The first two land like I paid my taxes. The third step, the floor finishes for me.
It's a tiny thing. My boot is still an inch above stone when the ground decides where it will be. The rest of me follows because that's what bodies do with gravity and consensus.
"Hah," Valeria crows. "Floor said 'allow me.'"
"I decline," I tell the floor, and make the next step boring enough that even a control freak gets sleepy.
The hall does not appreciate my tone. Pale threads slide out of the wall at elbow height—thin as hair, clear as conscience—and hang there like violin strings stretched across a room. They don't touch me. They don't have to. When I raise my hand to test the tension, my wrist twitches toward the nearest string by a whisper I didn't order.
"Subtle," I say.
"Sticky," Valeria says. "Like rules with good fonts."
I set the blade low and run the slowest draw known to polite society. The strings hum—very quietly, very pleased with themselves—as if they have recorded a victory in a ledger no one gets to audit. I finish the draw anyway. Sword Unity means the blade moves and I realize I have already moved. The strings try to make that their idea. They don't get credit.
Four in. Six out.
The hum grows teeth the first time I move fast on purpose. A word shapes itself in the air without sound, and every joint in my legs hears it.
Stop.
I don't. Not because I am stubborn (I am), but because I don't let the word find purchase. I don't brace, don't prepare, don't load. I keep the movement so small the command can't find a hinge to grab. The step finishes and I'm already somewhere else when the order arrives to a party I left early.
"Order words," Valeria says. "Hate those. Very bossy."
Erebus: "Observe."
Right. I test. I say "Stop" out loud. The air collects it like a stamp and presses it back into my knees. My calves tighten, my hip thinks about becoming a statue. I breathe to six. The tension passes like a bad idea.
I say "Walk." Nothing happens except me walking, which is the point but not helpful.
I say "Kneel" as a joke and my left leg immediately tries to make me hilarious. I catch the weight shift and turn the collapse into a forward hinge that looks like intention because now it is. The floor accepts the lie because the lie is smaller than pride.
"Helpful note," Valeria says, chirpy. "Do not test 'Die'."
"Not on the list," I say, and mean it.
The strings thicken. They are still polite about it. Nothing touches me. It's all suggestion and odds and a little nudge on the end of a habit. My eyebrow tries to obey for old time's sake. I ignore it. The eyebrow will file a grievance later. We will not read it.
The hall opens into a square room with four tasteful pillars and no lamp at all because minimalism is very in this season. The threads web the far half of the chamber like a spider got its law degree. In the middle stands a plinth with a plate of frosted glass on top. Angled just so. I can see my outline if I want. I do not want.
Words bloom on the glass in neat, dinner-party script: PLEASE FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS.
"No," Valeria says instantly.
"Seconded," I say.
For a while we do the sensible thing: drills. Zero-tell entries across a floor that believes it should get a vote. Silent cuts while a wall tries to suggest my shoulder would enjoy moving first. Breath counted while the room adds a phantom extra beat to tempt me into sync. I do not sync. I keep the drum I own.
The glass is patient. It waits five minutes by an internal clock that believes in perfection, then prints a single word in larger type.
HALT.
My spine hears it. My knees hear it. Even my fingers consider it, the traitors. I don't argue. Arguments leak energy. I change the question. I let the blade's motion be the thing and allow the rest of me to remember I have already moved.
No bells. No strings tightening. The word sticks to air and peels off with a little disappointed noise. The plate writes another in high praise of variety.
SUBMIT.
Valeria hisses. "Rude."
I don't give it the courtesy of a flinch. I am already on the outside line of a pillar, already drifting my weight to a place the command doesn't own. It tries to route through the habit that likes to set the blade lower when I'm not sure. I don't give it a low to push. The blade stays where it needs to be. The body follows the blade.
Erebus notes, dry: "Compulsion prefers pre-load."
"Then we don't pre-load," I say, and keep everything that matters starting in the cut, not in the plan.
The plate tries "Down." Then "Yield." Then "On your knees" because it's feeling brave. The tone never changes. It isn't threat. It's assumption. The kind that shows up with place cards and a seating chart.
And underneath the politeness, something heavier than manners.
I try Lucent Harmony—not big, just enough to keep my ribs mine. The commands hit and slide. Harmony isn't a shield; it's good posture for the inside of a mind. The words want to own the hinge between intent and motion. Good posture leaves the hinge in my hands.
The room notices I'm not playing and changes games. Threads go slack in front of me and twang tight behind, like I'm moving through a harp that thinks it runs the orchestra. The plate mirrors my outline and, very faintly, shows a second outline a quarter-second ahead of me.
The future it's planning.