《Saint and Sinners [Dark Fantasy, Comedy]》 Chapter 1: Knights Fall I knew I was bleeding out when the forms appeared. Not the light at the end of the tunnel they speak of in chapel, nor the faces of my ancestors come to welcome me to the hallowed halls beyond. No¡ªjust Administrator Dunnock from the Royal Veridian Insurance Corps, materializing beside me on the battlefield with his immaculate ledger and three copies of Form C-117: "Injury Sustained During Sanctioned Border Action." "Lord Greywers," he said, unfazed by the crossbow bolt protruding from my shoulder or the screams of dying men around us. "If you could just mark your signature¡ªor an X will suffice given your condition¡ªwe can begin processing your claim." I spat blood onto the churned mud. "Bit busy at the moment." A raider charged past, nearly trampling Dunnock, who simply sidestepped without looking up from his paperwork. The man''s quill never stopped moving, even as I rolled to avoid an axe that embedded itself where my head had been. "Your coverage plan," he continued, "the ''Knight''s Modest Protection Package,'' includes basic field treatment for one primary wound per quarter. I should note your previous claim from the Thornwood skirmish has put you dangerously close to your annual limit." I staggered to my feet, the world tilting at unnatural angles. My sword felt as though it had tripled in weight. "Can this wait until after¡ª" "Standard procedure requires immediate documentation to prevent retroactive claim denial," Dunnock said. "Although I should mention your specific policy excludes injuries sustained while protecting non-titled persons." The village was burning behind us. Farmers and their families fled between the buildings, desperately seeking safety that didn''t exist. A woman carried a child no older than five, her face streaked with soot and terror. The raiders were gaining on them. "Excuse me," I said to Dunnock, and launched myself toward them. This, as with most decisions in my life, was a mistake. *** Three hours earlier, I''d been watching dust clouds on the horizon with Captain Eliza Dureforge, trying to look like I understood what they meant. "They''re probing our western flank," she said, the morning light glinting off the intricate metalwork of her prosthetic hand. "Probably hoping we''ve left the village exposed." I nodded sagely, as though I''d observed the same tactical insight and not just a smudge of brown against the sky. My father always said a lord should look certain even when he isn''t. He was terrible at following his own advice, which might explain our family''s current circumstances. "I want you to take the third company and secure that approach," she continued, giving me a sideways glance that suggested she knew exactly how much experience I didn''t have. "Your knights should be sufficient." "My knights" consisted of four aging men-at-arms who remembered my grandfather''s glory days and two green boys whose families had paid handsomely to attach them to even a declining noble house. Hardly the shining cavalry showcased at tournaments. "Of course, Captain," I said with the confidence of someone whose arm wasn''t still aching from our last encounter with border raiders. Captain Dureforge''s gaze lingered on my left shoulder, where I''d been favoring one side. She had the unsettling quality of seeing everything without seeming to look. "Your previous injury¡ªit''s fully healed?" "Absolutely," I lied. The hasty field treatment I''d received had closed the wound but left a persistent ache that woke me at night. My coverage plan didn''t stretch to proper restorative magic, just enough to get me back in the saddle. "The Royal Veridian Corps provides exemplary service." "Hmm." Her grunt contained volumes of skepticism. "Try not to die, Greywers. The paperwork''s awful." As I walked toward my waiting men, a gleaming contingent of knights thundered past, their armor catching the sun like mirrors. At their head rode Captain Rowan Valerius, his tabard crisp and unblemished, the golden insignia of the Immortal Phoenix Insurance Collective embroidered prominently beneath his family crest. "Greywers!" he called down from his immaculate warhorse. "Heading out to guard the sheep again? Don''t strain yourself!" The perfect teeth in his perfect smile made me want to introduce them to my gauntlet. We''d trained together as squires, before his family''s connections secured him command of the elite cavalry unit while I was assigned to the inglorious task of "territorial integrity maintenance"¡ªa fancy term for keeping bandits from stealing too many peasants. "Valerius," I replied with a bow so slight it bordered on insult. "I see your father''s annual premium could buy a small village. The Phoenix does remarkable work¡ªyou hardly notice the emptiness behind the eyes." His smile tightened. "At least I won''t be sewn up with pig gut when I take a hit. What does your discount coverage include these days? A drunk with a needle and some whiskey for the pain?" Before I could respond, a horn sounded from the eastern watchtower. Rowan''s unit wheeled in perfect formation toward the main road. "Duty calls, Greywers. Try not to bleed on the commoners¡ªit upsets them." He spurred his horse forward, his knights falling in behind him like a river of steel. I watched them go, then turned to my waiting men. Old Willem, my father''s last remaining sergeant, raised an eyebrow that spoke paragraphs about nobility and its failings. "Impressive formation," I admitted. "Think they practice that in mirrors?" Willem snorted. "Wouldn''t know, m''lord. Too busy doing the actual fighting to worry about looking pretty while doing it." I clapped him on the shoulder¡ªhis good one, as the other had never quite healed right after a pike took a chunk out of it fifteen years back. Willem had been offered a decent settlement from the Bronze Shield Collective but had spent it on his daughter''s dowry instead of the regenerative treatment he needed. Some priorities run deeper than sinew and bone. "Well then," I said, mounting my serviceable but decidedly unimpressive horse. "Let''s go guard some sheep." *** The raiders hit us harder than expected. They weren''t the usual rabble of desperate men with crude weapons and cruder tactics. These fighters moved with coordination, wielding weapons that seemed too well-crafted for simple bandits. Most troubling were the strange glass vials some carried¡ªfilled with a viscous blue liquid that glowed faintly in the shadows. I''d dispatched Willem to report back to Captain Dureforge while we tried to hold the western approach to the village. The fighting had started well enough¡ªmy small unit formed a tight defensive position at a natural chokepoint on the road. But when the raiders realized they couldn''t break through directly, they simply melted back into the forest. We''d been congratulating ourselves on repelling them when the screams began from the village behind us. They''d circled around¡ªa classic flanking maneuver that I should have anticipated. By the time we''d remounted and raced back, half the village was in flames. Ensure your favorite authors get the support they deserve. Read this novel on Royal Road. Now I found myself cutting through the chaos, trying to reach the woman and child before the three raiders closing in could catch them. My sword arm moved automatically, muscle memory from thousands of training hours doing what my conscious mind couldn''t process fast enough. The first raider fell before he knew I was there, my blade opening his throat in a spray of crimson. The second was more prepared, parrying my strike and countering with a wicked curved dagger that slipped past my guard and scraped along my breastplate. I brought my pommel down hard on his wrist, feeling bones crack beneath the metal. As he recoiled, I drove my sword through the gap between his leather cuirass and belt. The third man was smarter. He ignored me completely, lunging for the woman instead. She stumbled, the child tumbling from her arms with a shriek. I abandoned all technique, throwing myself forward in a desperate dive that caught the raider around the legs. We crashed to the ground together, rolling through the dirt and ash. He was stronger than he looked. His elbow caught me in the temple, sending sparks across my vision. I lost my grip on my sword, scrabbling blindly as his weight pinned me down. Then his hands were around my throat, squeezing with surprising power. Black spots danced at the edges of my sight. I groped desperately for anything to use as a weapon. My fingers closed around something slick and cold¡ªone of the glass vials that had fallen from his belt. Without thinking, I smashed it against the side of his head. The glass shattered. Blue liquid splashed across his face and my hand. He screamed¡ªnot a scream of pain but of pure terror. The raider launched himself away from me, clawing at his face as though trying to tear his own skin off. Where the liquid touched, his flesh began to ripple and shift like wax near a flame. I scrambled backward, watching in horror as the man''s features melted and reformed, twisted into a grotesque parody of humanity. His screams turned to wet, gurgling sounds before falling silent altogether. My hand burned where the blue substance had touched it¡ªnot with heat but with a cold so intense it felt like flames. I wiped it frantically against the ground, leaving smears of dirt and blue across my palm. "What in all hells..." I muttered, staring at the now-still form of the raider. Whatever had been in that vial, it wasn''t any alchemical compound I''d encountered before. The woman had gathered her child and was staring at me with equal parts gratitude and horror. I tried to smile reassuringly, but given the circumstances, I probably looked deranged. "You should¡ª" I began, but the words died as something punched through my back. I looked down absurdly at the crossbow bolt protruding from just below my collarbone, the metal head gleaming wetly through the front of my armor. A curious detachment came over me¡ªI remembered thinking how expensive it would be to repair the hole in my breastplate. Then the pain hit, and I fell to my knees. The woman fled with her child. I couldn''t blame her. Behind me, I heard footsteps approaching¡ªthe distinctive sound of soft-soled boots designed for moving quietly. I tried to reach for my sword, but my arm wouldn''t obey. "This one touched the serum," a voice said, clinical and dispassionate. "He''ll need to be examined." "Too complicated," another replied. "Clean kill and move on. We''re pulling back." I slumped forward onto my hands and knees, blood pattering beneath me like rain. The blue stain on my hand seemed to pulse, spreading thin tendrils up my wrist. Something cold pressed against the back of my head¡ªthe loading end of another crossbow, I assumed. This, then, was how the last scion of House Greywers would meet his end: face down in mud, killed by raiders who wouldn''t even remember his name. My mother would be furious. She''d spent far too much maintaining the appearance of our family''s importance for me to die so ignominiously. The crossbow never fired. Instead, there was a wet thud and a gurgling sound. The pressure against my head vanished. I turned, movements sluggish, to see my would-be executioner crumpling, an arrow protruding from his eye socket. Willem stood twenty paces away, already nocking another arrow. The remaining raider fled. Willem let him go, hurrying to my side instead. "You look like shit, m''lord," he observed helpfully. "Astounding tactical assessment," I managed through gritted teeth. "Should promote you." He examined the bolt. "Clean through. That''s good." "Feels fantastic," I agreed. The world was beginning to swim around me. "This needs proper attention," Willem said, his gruff voice failing to hide his concern. "That Phoenix bastard brought their company healer. We could¡ª" "No," I said immediately. The thought of Rowan Valerius''s smug face watching as I begged for help from his premium healers was worse than the bolt. "My coverage will handle it." Which was when Administrator Dunnock materialized with his damnable forms. *** After I''d dispatched the raider threatening the woman and child, everything became hazy. I remember Willem arguing with Dunnock while helping me onto my horse. I recall Captain Dureforge arriving, her face grim as she surveyed the aftermath. "The raiders?" I asked her, struggling to stay upright in the saddle. "Routed," she said shortly. "Though they got away with more grain stores than I''d like. Your warning gave us time to prevent worse." I nodded, immediately regretting the movement as the world tilted sickeningly. "You need treatment," she said, eyeing the bolt still protruding from my shoulder. "That''s beyond a field medic." "I''ll manage," I said, though we both knew I was bleeding too much. Captain Dureforge''s expression softened marginally. "There''s a Royal Corps station two hours'' ride." I doubted I''d remain conscious that long, but I nodded anyway. I''d seen too many knights bankrupted by out-of-network emergency treatments to risk it. The bolt hadn''t hit anything immediately vital¡ªI think I''d have noticed dying faster¡ªand my coverage would deny the claim entirely if I sought unauthorized care. As Willem helped me toward the road home, I looked back at the village. Rowan''s men were helping extinguish fires and gather the dead. Say what you would about his personality, his unit did good work. Amidst the activity, I caught Rowan watching me, his expression unreadable from this distance. I managed a weak salute, which he returned after a moment''s hesitation. Some rivalries run deeper than others, but there''s a basic understanding among those who''ve bled on the same ground. The journey back to my keep passed in a blur of pain and increasing cold. By the time we arrived, I could barely feel my left arm, and the strange blue stain had spread halfway to my elbow, tracing ethereal patterns beneath my skin. As servants helped me dismount, a messenger approached, bearing a letter sealed with the royal crest. "Wonderful timing," I muttered, swaying on my feet. "The kingdom requires my urgent attention while I bleed to death." Willem took the letter, tucking it into his belt. "It''ll wait." The castle surgeon¡ªa kindly but limited man whose knowledge extended primarily to setting bones and stitching simple wounds¡ªblanched when he saw the crossbow bolt and the blue corruption spreading up my arm. "My lord," he said carefully, "this is beyond my skill to treat properly." "Just get the bolt out and stitch it closed," I told him. "I''ll visit the Royal Corps office tomorrow." He looked doubtful. "This wound... there''s something unnatural about it." I laughed, though it came out as more of a wheeze. "That makes two of us then." As he prepared his instruments, I caught sight of my reflection in a polished metal plate. Pale as death, with blood-matted hair and dirt-streaked face. The once-proud green eyes of House Greywers looked back at me, dulled with pain and something else¡ªthe crushing weight of knowing I wasn''t equal to the legacy I''d inherited. The surgeon offered me a leather strap to bite down on. I accepted it gratefully. "The letter, my lord?" Willem asked, perhaps trying to distract me as the surgeon positioned his tools around the bolt. "Probably another summons to court to explain why our border patrols require additional funding," I said. "Or complaints about my failure to attend the last three ceremonial functions." The surgeon gripped the crossbow bolt firmly. "Ready, my lord?" I nodded, biting down on the leather. As white-hot pain exploded through my chest, I heard Willem tearing open the royal seal. "My lord," he said, his voice suddenly tight. "It''s a direct summons from the Lord Chancellor. Your presence is required at court... within two weeks." The surgeon extracted the bolt with a sound I hope never to hear again. Fresh blood poured from the wound, alarmingly dark and streaked with blue. Two weeks. In my current state, I''d barely be able to ride in a month, let alone present myself appropriately at court. The implications were clear¡ªeither appear as befitted my station or acknowledge my house''s inability to maintain even the basic appearances of nobility. "Well," I said, as the world began to darken around the edges, "that complicates matters." The last thing I remember before consciousness fled was the surgeon''s worried face as he examined the strange blue patterns spreading beneath my skin, and his whispered words: "This is no natural wound, my lord. You need more help than I can give." More help than I could afford, he meant. Unless... I''d heard whispers among the wounded knights. Tales of an alternative when conventional options failed. A name spoken in hushed tones between men desperate enough to risk everything: The Twilight Covenant. Then, darkness claimed me, and I knew nothing more. Chapter 2: Terms and Conditions I woke to the sound of my mother''s disapproval. My eyelids felt weighted with lead, but I forced them open. My bedchamber swam into blurry focus¡ªfaded tapestries that had once been vibrant, furniture polished to a shine that couldn''t quite hide the wear. Mother¡ªLady Vivienne Greywers¡ªstood at the foot of my bed, ramrod straight despite her advancing years, engaged in a hushed argument with Willem. "Absolutely not," she said, though her eyes briefly flickered to the blue patterns visible at my collar. "No son of mine will resort to such... alternatives." She turned away too quickly, her fingers unconsciously brushing the emerald signet¡ªour last valuable heirloom¡ªas though weighing different kinds of sacrifice. "My lady," Willem was saying, his voice low and urgent, "the blue marks have spread to his chest. The surgeon says¡ª" "I know what the surgeon says." She waved a dismissive hand. "We''ll call for the Royal Corps healer." I tried to speak, producing only a dry croak. Both turned to me, argument forgotten in an instant. "Magius." My mother glided to my side, resting a cool hand on my forehead. Despite her stern demeanor, worry lines creased her brow. "Don''t exert yourself." I gestured weakly for water. Willem poured a cup and held it to my lips. "The summons," I managed after swallowing. My voice sounded as though I''d been gargling gravel. "How long?" "Eleven days now," Willem said. "You''ve been in and out for three." Wonderful. I struggled to sit up, ignoring the protests from both my body and my companions. The movement sent daggers of pain through my shoulder, but I needed to see for myself. I pulled aside the bandages covering my wound. What I saw nearly made me vomit. The puncture itself was an angry red circle, stitched closed with the surgeon''s neat, even sutures. But surrounding it, spreading outward like frost on a windowpane, were intricate blue lines that pulsed faintly beneath my skin. They followed no pattern I recognized¡ªnot veins or muscle fibers, but something almost... deliberate. As though someone had drawn a map across my flesh in glowing ink. "What in all hells is this?" I whispered. "Language, Magius," my mother chided automatically. I stared at her in disbelief. "I''m growing a luminous blue spiderweb under my skin, and you''re concerned with my vocabulary?" Her lips thinned to a bloodless line. "Panic won''t help. The Royal Corps will¡ª" "The Royal Corps will document it, submit forms in triplicate, then inform me that ''exotic contaminants'' aren''t covered under my policy," I said. "By which time I''ll either be dead or turned into something from a traveling carnival." Willem cleared his throat. "There''s another option. I''ve heard of a company¡ª" "No." My mother''s voice could have frozen flame. "Those charlatans prey on the desperate. We are not desperate." I gestured pointedly at my glowing chest. She ignored this. "We still have your father''s emerald signet. It will cover a proper healer." The signet ring¡ªthe last valuable heirloom our family possessed that wasn''t essential to maintaining our fa?ade of relevance. She''d been saving it for a political alliance, a final bargaining chip to restore some measure of our lost standing. "And then what?" I asked softly. "I appear at court in eleven days wearing borrowed finery, with no reserves left? How does that serve the family?" Her eyes flashed. "Better than consorting with hedge-witches and contract-mongers." Willem, bless his weathered soul, chose that moment to intervene. "My lady, perhaps some rest would help clear your mind. I''ll stay with Lord Greywers." She looked as though she might argue, but exhaustion won out. With a final warning glance at me¡ªone I''d seen since childhood, promising this conversation wasn''t finished¡ªshe swept from the room. The moment the door closed, I slumped back against the pillows. "How bad is it really?" Willem''s face said everything his words wouldn''t. "The regular surgeon won''t touch it anymore. Says it''s beyond his knowledge." "And the Royal Corps?" "Sent a letter." He retrieved a piece of parchment from a side table. "Says they''ll need to consult with specialists about coverage for ''unconventional magical contamination,'' and that the review process typically takes four to six weeks." I laughed, the sound catching painfully in my dry throat. "How considerate of them to outline the timeline for my funeral arrangements." Willem didn''t smile. "There is another option." "The one Mother forbade us from discussing?" He nodded, glancing at the door. "They call it the Twilight Covenant. Operates out of Stetdon." "I''ve heard whispers." Usually accompanied by crossed fingers and warding signs. "Desperate knights, miracle cures, mysterious costs." "Not just knights," Willem said. "Anyone the regular companies won''t touch. Or can''t afford." I examined the blue lines again. They''d definitely spread since I''d last been conscious, now reaching my collarbone. "And their success rate?" "Better than dying," he said bluntly. I couldn''t argue with that math. "The city''s a day''s ride in my condition." "I''ve arranged a covered wagon. Comfortable enough, if not exactly fitting your station." I raised an eyebrow. "Rather presumptuous of you." "Learned from the best, m''lord." The ghost of a smile touched his lips. "Your father would have done the same." That struck deeper than I expected. My father¡ªthe man who''d struggled his entire life to maintain our family''s position while watching our fortunes slowly crumble. Who''d died still believing one grand gesture might restore everything we''d lost. "When do we leave?" I asked. "Nightfall," Willem said. "Less chance of your mother intercepting us." I nodded, already feeling exhaustion pulling me back toward unconsciousness. "Willem?" "M''lord?" "If this goes badly... take care of her." His gnarled hand briefly clasped my good shoulder. "Save your strength for complaining about my driving." *** The city of Stetdon hadn''t changed since my last visit¡ªit still stank of too many people living too closely together, with occasional wafts of perfume from the noble quarters failing to mask the underlying reek of the tanneries and fish markets. What had changed was my perspective on it. Slumped in the back of a wagon, swaying with every cobblestone and pothole, I saw the city through the eyes of someone searching for salvation rather than diversion. We passed the grand healing houses first¡ªmassive marble structures with colonnaded entrances where liveried attendants assisted wealthy clients from gilded carriages. The House of Celestial Mercy. The Royal Amaranthine Company. The Immortal Phoenix Collective. Their banners hung pristine in the morning air, gold and silver thread catching the sunlight. "Not stopping at any of those, I take it?" I asked Willem, who drove our modest conveyance with the grim determination of a man who expected trouble at every turn. "Not unless you''ve found a duke''s ransom since we left home," he replied. He guided us away from the main thoroughfare, down increasingly narrow streets where the buildings leaned toward each other as if sharing secrets. Love this novel? Read it on Royal Road to ensure the author gets credit. The difference between districts was stark. In the space of ten minutes, we''d gone from gleaming temples of healing to cramped quarters where the sick huddled in doorways. Here, the only "treatment" came from herbalists with carts of dubious concoctions, or itinerant barber-surgeons offering bloodletting and tooth-pulling with the same unwashed tools. "This is where most of your villagers end up when they''re injured," Willem said unnecessarily. "If they can make the journey at all." I already knew this, theoretically. But knowing something and seeing it were different matters. A young girl with a withered arm watched us pass, her hollow eyes following our wagon with neither hope nor resentment¡ªjust the dull acceptance that this was how the world worked. My wounded shoulder throbbed in time with my pulse. The blue lines had spread to my neck now, a fact I''d carefully hidden from Willem with a high-collared shirt. Some truths served no purpose but to worry those who couldn''t change them. "How exactly do you know where to find these people?" I asked as we turned down yet another twisting alley. Willem kept his eyes on the narrow passage. "Sergeant in the Fourth Company. Lost his leg at Thornwood Ford. Royal Corps denied his claim¡ªsaid he''d violated protocol by advancing without authorization." "And the Twilight Covenant helped him?" A shrug. "He walks again. Limps, but walks." "At what cost?" Willem''s silence was answer enough. The streets grew marginally wider as we entered what had once been a fashionable district before the city expanded northward. Now it housed those wealthy enough to escape the slums but not important enough for the royal quarter¡ªmerchants, guild masters, successful artisans. And, apparently, alternative insurance providers. "There," Willem said, pointing to an unremarkable townhouse wedged between a candlemaker''s shop and what appeared to be a retired courtesan''s salon, judging by the faded red curtains. I squinted at the building. If I''d expected something overtly mysterious¡ªblack paint, strange symbols, perhaps a stuffed raven or two¡ªI was disappointed. The only distinguishing feature was a simple wooden sign bearing the insignia of a crescent moon embracing a star. "You''re certain this is it?" I asked. Willem helped me from the wagon, supporting my weight as my legs threatened to buckle. The blue lines had begun to itch fiercely, a sensation like ants crawling beneath my skin. "Got the address from a reliable source," he said. "The same one who recommended that ''foolproof'' dice game in Westmark that nearly got us hanged?" He had the decency to look embarrassed. "Different source." The door opened before we could knock, revealing a thin man in his fifties dressed in formal attire at least three decades out of fashion. His silver beard was trimmed to geometric precision, and a monocle gleamed over his right eye. He looked more like a court accountant than a purveyor of forbidden healing. "Lord Magius Greywers," he said, voice crisp as new parchment. "Precisely on time." I blinked. "You were expecting me?" "Of course." He stepped aside with a slight bow. "Administrator Thorne, at your service. We''ve been anticipating your arrival since your... incident." I shot Willem a questioning look, but he seemed equally confused. "How could you possibly know about¡ª" "We make it our business to know when potential clients might require our services," Thorne interrupted smoothly. "Particularly those with your... unique characteristics." The way he said "unique" sent a chill through me that had nothing to do with my injury. Nevertheless, I allowed him to usher us inside. The alternative was to collapse on the doorstep, which seemed unlikely to improve my situation. The interior was a study in contradictions. The reception area featured respectable, if outdated, furniture arranged with mathematical precision. Yet between conventional items sat objects of decidedly unconventional nature¡ªa clock whose hands moved counterclockwise, a potted plant whose flowers opened and closed in rhythm with my breathing, a mirror that showed my reflection with a slight delay. "Please, be seated," Thorne gestured to a comfortable-looking chair that adjusted itself as I approached, conforming to my body as I sank into it. "Willem, if you wouldn''t mind waiting in the antechamber? Client confidentiality is paramount." Willem hesitated, hand straying toward the knife at his belt. "It''s fine," I told him, though I was far from certain. "I''ll shout if they try to harvest my organs." After a moment''s consideration, Willem nodded stiffly and allowed himself to be led to an adjoining room. The door closed behind him with a click that sounded oddly final. Thorne settled behind a desk cluttered with precise stacks of papers, ledgers, and small arcane instruments whose purpose I couldn''t begin to guess. He regarded me through his monocle, which I now noticed magnified his eye to an unsettling degree. "Now then," he said, producing a blank form from a drawer. "Let''s begin your assessment." For the next hour, I answered questions that ranged from mundane to bizarre. My age and title. My family history. Whether I''d ever died temporarily. If I dreamed in color. The precise shade of green of my eyes. My preferred sleeping position. Whether I''d ever swallowed a coin as a child. "Is this relevant to healing my injury?" I finally asked after being questioned about my grandmother''s favorite flower. "Everything is relevant, Lord Greywers." Thorne made another notation in his ledger. "We provide customized coverage based on a holistic understanding of our clients." "Speaking of my injury..." I gestured to my shoulder, where a damp blue stain had begun to seep through my shirt. "Ah, yes." Thorne set aside his quill. "Perhaps you could show me the afflicted area?" Reluctantly, I unbuttoned my shirt. The blue lines had spread further, now forming an intricate latticework across my chest and down my left arm. Where they crossed, small nodes pulsed with an ethereal light. To his credit, Thorne''s expression didn''t change. He simply leaned forward, examining the patterns with clinical detachment. "Fascinating," he murmured. "Probability-altering serum with a Class Three targeting matrix. You''re fortunate you didn''t apply it directly to your bloodstream." "I didn''t apply it at all," I said. "It was in a vial carried by raiders. One broke against a man''s face, and..." I swallowed, remembering the horrific transformation. "He didn''t fare as well as I have." "Indeed." Thorne made another notation. "And conventional treatment has been..." "Nonexistent. The Royal Corps is still processing my paperwork." "Standard procedure." He nodded sympathetically. "By the time they approve specialist intervention, you''d likely have transformed into something rather non-human. Possibly gaseous." I stared at him. "Gaseous?" "Or crystalline. The patterns suggest multiple possible outcomes." He closed his ledger with a snap. "Fortunately, we specialize in cases conventional companies find... administratively inconvenient." "At what cost?" I asked bluntly. "I should warn you that House Greywers isn''t what it once was." Thorne waved a dismissive hand. "Our pricing structure is more flexible than our competitors''. We consider factors beyond mere coin." That didn''t sound reassuring. "Such as?" "Services rendered. Information shared. Occasionally, objects of particular resonance." His monocled eye fixed on me with uncomfortable intensity. "We find value where others see only ledger entries." "You''re being deliberately vague," I observed. A thin smile. "Deliberately precise, but in terms you''re not yet equipped to understand." He slid a document across the desk. "Your proposed coverage plan. Basic treatment for your current condition, with optional extensions for future incidents." I examined the parchment. The language was as convoluted as any insurance contract, full of clauses and subclauses that seemed designed to induce migraines. The premium, however, was startlingly reasonable¡ªabout a third of what I currently paid the Royal Corps for significantly less coverage. "This can''t be right," I said, tapping the figure. "I assure you, our calculations are meticulous." "It''s too low. What''s the catch?" Thorne''s smile widened fractionally. "So refreshing¡ªa client who assumes there must be hidden costs. Most simply sign without question when presented with a favorable rate." "I''ve found that when something seems too good to be true, it generally involves someone eventualy coming to collect my fingers as interest." "How colorful." He adjusted his monocle. "The ''catch,'' as you put it, involves certain... accommodations you may be required to make regarding your treatment providers." "Meaning?" "Our healers operate somewhat... unconventionally. They may require access to your person, your dwelling, or your activities at times that might seem irregular." I laughed, then winced as the movement sent fresh pain through my shoulder. "You''re asking me to grant complete strangers unfettered access to my life because they offer slightly discounted magical healthcare?" "I''m offering you the only chance you have to survive the next week," Thorne replied, his voice suddenly cold. "The blue patterns reaching toward your throat suggest you have perhaps three days before the transformation reaches your brain. At that point, whether you become gaseous, crystalline, or something more... creative... becomes academic." The room seemed to chill. For the first time, I noticed that no sounds penetrated from outside¡ªno street noise, no murmurs from the anteroom where Willem waited. It was as if the office existed in its own pocket of the world. "Who exactly are these healers?" I asked quietly. "They prefer to introduce themselves." Thorne pushed the contract toward me again. "Your options are quite limited, Lord Greywers. Your condition is beyond conventional treatment even if you could afford it. The Twilight Covenant represents your only viable path forward." I stared at the contract, weighing my choices. Die slowly as the blue serum transformed me into something inhuman, or sign away aspects of my autonomy to mysterious practitioners of questionable methods. When framed that way, it wasn''t much of a choice. "Do you have ink?" I asked. Thorne produced an ornate silver pen and a small crystal vial. "We require a more... personalized... signature method." He uncapped the pen to reveal a needle-sharp point. "You can''t be serious," I said. "I am rarely anything else." He placed the pen in my hand. "One drop on the signature line will suffice." With a sigh that contained equal parts resignation and gallows humor, I pricked my finger and allowed a single drop of blood to fall onto the indicated line. The moment it touched the parchment, the crimson spread outward, forming the elaborate script of my full name and title. "How did it¡ª" "The contract now recognizes you," Thorne explained, rolling the parchment and sealing it with wax. "And more importantly, they can find you when needed." "They?" A door I hadn''t noticed before opened at the far end of the room. Through it, I caught a glimpse of a woman in a religious habit, a crescent moon tattoo glowing silver on her temple. "Sister Morgana will see you now," Thorne said. "The first phase of your treatment begins with her." As I rose on unsteady legs to follow, I couldn''t shake the feeling that I''d just traded one form of transformation for another¡ªand I had no idea which would prove more fundamental. Chapter 3: The First Sister I''ve made some questionable decisions in my life. There was the time I wagered my best hunting falcon on a horse named "Certain Victory," which proved to be aspirational rather than descriptive. Or when I convinced the Duke of Adavar''s son that his father''s imported Thormark brandy was actually watered-down cooking spirits, and offered to "dispose of it properly" on his behalf. But following a silver-tattooed woman in an unconventional nun''s habit through a door that hadn''t existed minutes earlier? That was setting a new standard for poor judgment, even by my admittedly subterranean bar. The doorway led to a narrow corridor lined with shelves containing objects that defied easy categorization. Glass jars filled with what appeared to be moving shadows. A collection of hourglasses, all flowing upward. A preserved hand that seemed to be slowly forming a different gesture each time I looked away. "Administrator Thorne handles the tedious parts," said the woman walking ahead of me, her long black hair swaying with the motion. Her voice carried the clipped precision of someone who calculates odds for entertainment. "Paperwork, risk assessments, actuarial tables. Necessary evils." I focused on keeping pace despite the room''s increasing tendency to tilt. The blue patterns beneath my skin pulsed in time with my heartbeat, glowing brighter with each step. "And what parts do you handle?" I asked. She glanced back, amber eyes assessing me as one might evaluate a lame horse at auction. "I alter probabilities, Lord Greywers. I find the timeline where your condition improves rather than deteriorates, and I pull that future into your present." "That sounds..." "Heretical? Impossible? Beyond the scope of licensed healing practices?" She smiled thinly. "I assure you, the odds of your survival increase dramatically in my care versus conventional options. Currently standing at approximately twenty-seven percent." "Only twenty-seven?" I tried for nonchalance, but the number hit like a mailed fist to the stomach. "Up from the eight percent you walked in with. I find that improvement statistically significant." She stopped before another door. This one was ordinary enough, though the symbols carved around its frame definitely weren''t included in any chapel iconography I''d seen. "I''m Sister Morgana Blackthorn," she said, turning to face me fully. "You''ve contracted with the Twilight Covenant for treatment of a probability-altering contaminant. I''ll be handling the first phase of your treatment." "First phase?" The blue lines crawling toward my throat suddenly itched unbearably. "Each Sister specializes in different aspects of healing. Your case requires all three of us, in sequence." She tilted her head. "You have questions about the cost." It wasn''t a question. "Administrator Thorne was somewhat vague on the details." "Of course he was." She rolled her eyes. "He enjoys his little mysteries. Your premium covers the basics. Additional services may require... alternative compensation." "Such as?" Morgana''s smile didn''t reach her eyes. "Let''s focus on keeping you corporeal for now, shall we? We can discuss supplementary fees once you''re stabilized." She opened the door, revealing a circular room that seemed larger than the townhouse should have contained. The walls were covered with intricate mathematical formulae written in silver ink that occasionally shifted and rearranged itself. In the center stood a simple examination table surrounded by what looked like astronomical equipment¡ªbrass armillary spheres, star charts, and devices I couldn''t begin to identify. "Remove your shirt and lie down," Morgana instructed, moving to a cabinet filled with small drawers. As I complied, I noticed loaded dice, marked cards, and other gambling paraphernalia scattered among the medical instruments. A board covered in chalk notations hung on one wall, tracking what appeared to be elaborate betting odds on everything from horse races to which city districts would experience rainfall. "Hobby?" I asked, nodding toward a pair of weighted dice she''d absently picked up. "Professional research," she replied, rolling the dice between her fingers while examining my now-exposed chest. "Probability manipulation requires understanding its patterns. Gambling provides excellent practical application." She set the dice down, frowning at the blue latticework covering my torso. "Seventy-three percent chance this is derived from forbidden Adavarian research. Fifteen percent likelihood of independent origin. Twelve percent possibility of deliberately planted evidence to suggest the former." "You can tell all that just by looking?" "I can calculate probabilities based on pattern recognition." She leaned closer, her amber eyes reflecting the blue glow. "These aren''t ordinary contamination patterns¡ªthey''re following energy resonance lines in your body. Quite unusual." Her fingers hovered just above my skin, tracing the paths of the blue lines without touching them. "Interesting. They align with natural currents I typically see only in certain locations, never in a person." "I don''t understand," I said. "Few would." She straightened, retrieving instruments from a small table. "Your body appears to be developing channel structures that shouldn''t exist in human anatomy. The serum is mapping something inherent to your bloodline¡ªa trait that''s been dormant, perhaps for generations." "I don''t have anything unusual in my bloodline," I said automatically. Morgana''s expression suggested she''d heard more convincing lies from children caught stealing sweets. "Ninety-eight percent certainty that statement is false, whether you''re aware of it or not." Before I could argue, she pressed her palms together, then slowly drew them apart. The air between them shimmered, forming what looked like a web of silver threads that writhed and twisted as though alive. "These are your probability lines," she explained. "Each represents a potential future stemming from your current condition." Most of the threads were dull, fraying at the edges. Only a few gleamed brightly, and I noticed how they seemed to pulse in time with certain nodes in the blue patterns on my chest. "The dim ones lead to outcomes where you transform or expire," she said matter-of-factly. "Our job is to strengthen the threads leading to your continued existence as a human nobleman, however marginal that existence might be." I chose to ignore the slight. "How exactly do you do that?" "I redirect probability flows through calculated interventions." She manipulated the silver threads with her fingers, plucking some like harp strings while weaving others into new configurations. As she did, I noticed some threads seemed to connect to specific points on my body where the blue patterns formed nodes or intersections. "The process requires physical contact and will be... uncomfortable." In my experience, when medical practitioners use words like "uncomfortable," they''re typically understating by several orders of magnitude. "Define uncomfortable," I said. "Imagine every possible version of pain you might experience, branching out in infinite variations, briefly compressed into a single moment." She shrugged. "Statistically speaking, some of those variations might include pleasant sensations, but the odds are negligible." "That''s... remarkably specific." "I believe in informed consent. Approximately sixty-three percent of practitioners don''t properly explain procedural discomfort, leading to patient distrust and reduced healing efficacy." She pressed a leather strap into my hand. "You''ll want to bite down on this." "That''s not reassuring." "It wasn''t meant to be. It was meant to be accurate." She positioned her hands above my chest, the silver threads dancing between her fingers. "Try not to move. It disturbs the probability matrices." I placed the leather between my teeth just as her hands descended onto my skin. The world exploded into infinite possibilities. I was drowning in freezing water. I was burning alive. I was shattered into countless fragments. I was every version of myself that could exist¡ªdying, living, transforming, remaining. All simultaneously, all compressed into a single excruciating moment. Through it all, I heard Morgana''s voice, impossibly calm: "Interesting. Your probability threads show unusual connections to something beneath us. Almost like roots seeking water." I might have screamed. I might have laughed. I might have done both, or neither, across different timelines that briefly overlapped in my perception. For an instant¡ªso brief I nearly missed it¡ªI saw through the floor, through stone and earth, to glowing lines that crisscrossed beneath the building like a vast, luminous web. The blue patterns on my skin seemed to reach toward them, resonating at the same frequency. You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story. Just when I became certain my mind would fragment permanently, everything snapped back into singular focus. I found myself gasping on the table, sweat-soaked and trembling, the leather strap in shreds between my teeth. "That went better than expected," Morgana said, examining her handiwork with clinical detachment. "Eighty-seven percent success rate on the first attempt. Most impressive." I tried to speak, failed, and tried again. "That was... better than expected?" "Considerably. I calculated only a twenty-two percent chance of consciousness retention." She picked up a silver hand mirror from her workbench and held it before me. "See for yourself." The blue patterns had changed. Where before they had spread chaotically across my skin, now they formed ordered, symmetrical designs centered around my wound. More importantly, they''d retreated from my throat and face, contracting back toward the original injury site. But something else had changed too. The patterns now resembled a network of channels or pathways, with clear nodes at what seemed like important junctions. It looked disturbingly like maps I''d seen in my father''s study¡ªmaps of roads or rivers or trading routes. "You''ve realigned the energy vectors," Morgana explained, using terms I didn''t fully understand. "The serum now has a ninety-four percent chance of remaining dormant rather than transformative, assuming you follow the maintenance protocol." I gingerly touched the patterns, finding them cool but no longer pulsing. "Maintenance protocol?" "Secondary treatments to reinforce the probability locks." She turned away, writing rapid calculations on a slate. "Sister Circe will provide alchemical stabilizers, and Sister Hekate will address any lingering corruptive elements." "When?" "Probabilities suggest Circe will find you within two days, when the alchemical aspect of your condition reaches the moment of greatest sympathetic influence." She set down her chalk and faced me again. "Her methods differ from mine. Prepare accordingly." I struggled to sit up, muscles protesting every movement. "Different how?" "I redirect futures. Circe transforms the present world. Hekate processes past trauma." Morgana reached for the weighted dice again, rolling them absently between her fingers. "Each approach has advantages and limitations." As I carefully pulled my shirt back on, I noticed Morgana studying me with renewed interest. "Your response pattern is statistically anomalous," she said. "The energy matrices in your blood responded to my probability manipulation as if they''d been waiting for activation." "Is that... bad?" "Unusual. Which makes you interesting." She stepped closer, her amber eyes calculating. "I''d wager there''s more to your bloodline than you''re aware of, Lord Greywers. Something that resonates with deeper patterns." The way she said it¡ªlike a gambler spotting a valuable tell¡ªmade me distinctly uncomfortable. "My family history is hardly relevant to my treatment." "Ninety-nine percent certainty that statement is false." She smiled thinly. "But we all have our little secrets, don''t we?" Before I could respond, she turned toward a cabinet and produced a small silver box. "Your first payment," she said, holding it out. I took it cautiously. "I thought the premium covered treatment." "Basic services, yes. This is... supplementary." She nodded toward the box. "A small wager between us." When I opened it, I found a set of dice carved from some iridescent material that shifted colors as I tilted them in the light. "What exactly am I supposed to do with these?" I asked. "Roll them every night before sleeping. Record the numbers. Bring the results to our next meeting." She began tidying her instruments with brisk efficiency. "The patterns they generate will help me fine-tune your treatment." It sounded suspiciously like ritualistic nonsense, the kind charlatans prescribed to keep patients occupied while natural healing occurred. "And if I don''t?" "Then the probability locks I''ve established have a sixty-eight percent chance of deteriorating within a week." She didn''t look up from her work. "Resulting in an eighty-one percent likelihood of you completing your transformation into something with considerably fewer legal rights than a nobleman." Put that way, rolling dice seemed a small price to pay. "One more thing," she added as she escorted me back toward the entrance. "The treatment creates a sympathetic link between practitioner and patient. You may experience occasional... echoes." "Echoes?" "Precognitive flashes. Heightened awareness of energy flows. Brief moments where you perceive things others cannot." She shrugged. "Nothing debilitating, but potentially disorienting if unexpected." Wonderful. As if my life needed additional complications. At the door, I found Willem pacing anxiously, his hand never far from his knife. His expression when he saw me was worth every moment of pain I''d endured¡ªpure, unfiltered relief. "You look... better," he said, eyes widening as he noted the changed patterns visible at my collar. "Statistically improved," I agreed. "Though apparently I''m now magically linked to a gambling-addicted probability witch who calls herself a nun." Sister Morgana arched an eyebrow. "Healing mage specializing in probabilistic realignment would be more accurate, but witch serves well enough in casual conversation." Willem''s hand tightened on his knife hilt. "It''s fine," I assured him, though I was far from certain myself. "We have an arrangement." "Indeed." Morgana''s amber eyes gleamed with something like amusement. "I''ve bought favorable odds on your survival, Lord Greywers. Try not to squander my investment." With that, she retreated into the townhouse, the door closing behind her with a soft click that somehow conveyed finality. "Do I want to know what happened in there?" Willem asked as he helped me back to our wagon. "Probably not." I settled against the cushions, exhaustion finally claiming its due. "But I''ll tell you anyway, because misery loves an audience." As we pulled away from the Twilight Covenant''s unassuming headquarters, I could have sworn I saw curtains twitch in an upper window¡ªand briefly glimpsed the other two Sisters watching our departure with expressions of mingled curiosity and calculation. *** By the time we reached my keep, night had fallen. The journey back from the capital had been mercifully uneventful, though I''d spent most of it drifting in and out of consciousness. Whatever Morgana had done had left me feeling hollow, as though parts of me had been temporarily scattered across multiple realities. The castle surgeon examined me with undisguised fascination, poking at the reconfigured blue patterns with the cautious touch one might use to approach a venomous snake. "Extraordinary," he muttered. "The patterns have completely restructured. And you say this Sister Morgana did this with... probability manipulation?" "So she claimed." I winced as he pressed too firmly on a sensitive area. "Though it felt more like having my soul put through a flour sifter." "And there will be additional treatments?" "Apparently my case requires all three Sisters, in sequence." I pulled my shirt closed. "I''m to expect the second one¡ªCirce¡ªwithin two days." The surgeon''s expression grew troubled. "My lord, these methods... they''re not sanctioned by the Royal College. If word gets out that you''ve sought treatment from the Twilight Covenant¡ª" "Then people will say the Greywers have fallen even further than previously believed." I shrugged, immediately regretting the movement. "Better alive and scandalized than dead and respectable." He couldn''t argue with that logic, though his frown suggested he wanted to. After he left, I sat alone in my chambers, staring at the silver dice Morgana had given me. They felt heavier than they should, as though packed with something denser than material substance. When I rolled them experimentally across my desk, the numbers that faced upward¡ªa three and a six¡ªseemed to momentarily glow before settling into ordinary ivory. Following instructions, I noted the numbers in a small ledger, feeling slightly ridiculous. What game was Morgana playing? Was this genuinely part of my treatment, or some elaborate scheme to satisfy her gambling addiction through proxy? I was pondering this when a knock came at my door. "Enter," I called, expecting Willem with an evening meal. Instead, my mother glided in, her face a perfect mask of composure that didn''t quite hide the worry in her eyes. "I see you''ve returned from your... excursion." The way she said it suggested I''d been caught sneaking out to a tavern rather than seeking life-saving treatment. "Mother." I inclined my head, too tired for a proper confrontation. "Yes, I visited the capital." Her gaze fixed on my partially open shirt, where the blue patterns¡ªnow neatly ordered in symmetrical designs¡ªwere clearly visible. "And did you find what you were looking for?" "Treatment, yes. A cure, not yet." I met her eyes directly. "The Twilight Covenant offered what the Royal Corps wouldn''t." Her lips thinned to a bloodless line. "At what cost, Magius? These people don''t provide charity." "A reasonable premium, actually. Less than I was paying for coverage that didn''t even acknowledge my condition." "And what else?" She knew me too well to believe that was the entire arrangement. "These... practitioners... always demand more than coin." I hesitated, uncertain how much to reveal. The dice on my desk suddenly seemed to pulse, as though reminding me of their presence. "Some follow-up treatments," I admitted. "Nothing unreasonable." "Your father would have done the same," she said softly, to my astonishment. "Always too practical to die for propriety''s sake." I stared at her. "You''re not... disappointed?" "Disappointed that my son chose survival over convention? No, Magius." She touched my shoulder where the blue patterns were brightest, her fingers lingering with what seemed like recognition rather than concern. "Though I had hoped... well, timing is rarely perfect in these matters." What did she mean by that? She straightened, composure returning like a familiar cloak. "The court summons still stands. Nine days remain. Will you be fit to travel by then?" "If the remaining treatments proceed as planned, yes." I glanced at the dice. "Though I may have some... unusual visitors in the meantime." "I''ll ensure the staff are discreet." She turned to leave, then paused at the door. "Magius?" "Yes, Mother?" "Whatever bargain you''ve struck... be careful. Some prices aren''t apparent until they come due." With that cryptic warning, she departed, leaving me to wonder just how much she knew about the Twilight Covenant¡ªand why she''d changed her position so dramatically. I picked up the dice again, studying their shifting colors in the candlelight. According to Morgana, Circe would find me when my condition reached "the moment of greatest sympathetic influence," whatever that meant. I hadn''t asked how she would locate me or how she''d know when the time was right. The answer came to me suddenly, with the strange certainty of knowledge I shouldn''t possess. The dice. They weren''t just for recording numbers¡ªthey were a beacon, a sympathetic link connecting me to the Sisters. Each roll broadcasted my condition to them, allowing them to track my progress from afar. I had no idea how I knew this. The information simply appeared in my mind, as clear and certain as my own name. One of Morgana''s "echoes," perhaps? I set the dice down with newfound wariness. What else might flow through this connection? What else might I be unwittingly sharing each time I rolled them? As I stared at them, I experienced a momentary disorientation¡ªa brief flash where I could see faint lines of light beneath the floor, pulsing ever so slightly with each heartbeat. The vision lasted only a second before vanishing, leaving me questioning whether I''d actually seen anything at all. Sleep proved elusive that night. I lay awake, watching the blue patterns glow softly in the darkness, wondering what transformations still awaited me¡ªand whether they would be limited to the merely physical. Just before dawn, I finally drifted off, and dreamed of a woman with constantly shifting eye color, brewing concoctions that released multicolored vapors forming images of futures that might never be. When I woke, a strange hunger gnawed at me¡ªnot for food, but for something I couldn''t name. And on my tongue lingered the phantom taste of herbs I''d never encountered. Circe was coming. And somehow, part of me was already reaching out to meet her.