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Chapter 4: The Road to Nowhere
Chapter 4: The Dirty Circuit
The world didnt just end at the edge of the Archive; it unraveled, the treeline dissolving into a stutter of static and white nothingness that made my stomach lurch with a familiar, sick vertigo. One step forward and the moss was damp, smelling of ancient rot and rain; the next, the ground simply ceased to be, replaced by a flat, predatory silence that tasted like ozone.
Liora's left palm throbbed violet against the Threshold's sealed hatch, the Dirty Circuit's hum already fraying like a thread pulled too taut. The scent of lanolin and stagnant indigo dye clung to the back of her throat, thick enough to taste. Outside the hatch, the Core Drive-Spindle groaned under the weight of the lockdown protocols, a sound like grinding teeth.
Behind us, the red-and-gold banners of the Eraser squads were already cresting the final ridge of the Archives perimeter, their movements a terrifying, synchronized blur of erasure-ink and steel. I could hear the rhythmic, metallic *thrum* of their disruption-rods clearing the path behind them—the sound of reality being scrubbed clean, one shelf at a time, moving faster than any human heart had a right to beat. They weren't just following us; they were deleting the very idea of our escape.
She forced her fingers to curl, ignoring the way the ocular hemorrhaging blurred the world into a smear of bruised reds and deep purples. The indigo staining had reached her mid-bicep now, the skin there tight and cold, as if the Thirteenth Strand were trying to weave her arm into the machine's very architecture.
"Do not look back, Lyra. It serves no structural purpose."
"Open," she snapped, the command clipped and dry.
Dorians voice was a blade of ice cutting through the fog of my panic. He stood a few feet ahead of me, his silhouette sharp against the void. He looked ridiculous and magnificent all at once—his high-collared charcoal coat was torn at the shoulder, and his once-pristine lace cuffs were stained with the dark, tacky smear of his own blood. He was adjusting his left cufflink, his thumb moving in a frantic, rhythmic circle. *Click. Click.* It was the only sign that the man was anything other than a clockwork soldier.
The heavy gears of the hatch screamed in protest—a mechanical whine that mirrored the vibration in her own marrow. As the circular door slid back, the pressure differential nearly buckled her knees. The air inside the Weaving Chamber was thick with the ozone of the Looms low-level sentience, a static that made the fine hairs on her neck stand like needles.
I looked at his hands. The "Thread-Burn" was worse than it had been ten minutes ago. Dark rifts had opened beneath his fingernails, leaking a shimmering, ghostly ichor that defied gravity, beads of it floating upward before vanishing.
Thorne was where she had left him, bolted into the restraint chair at the heart of the spindle. He looked less like a man and more like a sacrificial tapestry. His skin was a map of etched indigo ink-blood, the lines pulsing in time with the Looms erratic heartbeat. His chest heaved, organs vibrating with a frequency that would have shattered a lesser anchor.
"You're bleeding," I said, my voice sounding thin and reedy in the vacuum of the Great Thinning.
"You're late," Thorne growled. The words were a jagged edge, laced with a raw, protective snarl. He didn't look at her; his eyes were fixed on the great, spinning void of the Loom above them. "The weight... it's increasing, Liora. Its heavy. Too heavy."
"A minor oversight in the redistribution of tension," he replied, not looking at me. He reached into the inner pocket of his coat and withdrew a coil of shimmering material. It wasn't rope, not exactly. It was a braid of raw silver and spun glass, pulsing with a low, rhythmic amber light. "The landscape between here and the Heart of the First Fae is no longer a cohesive narrative. It is a series of disjointed stanzas. If we are separated, the world will read us as individual errors and delete us accordingly."
"A minor snag at the gate," Liora lied, her voice steady despite the tremors racking her frame. She crossed the chamber with a measured gait, her boots clicking on the floorboards that were slick with violet light-bleed. Gravity wobbled, a sudden lurch that made the loom-shuttles dance in their housings.
He stepped toward me, the silver coil unspooling between his battered fingers. He didn't ask. He didn't wait for consent. He simply moved into my personal space, the scent of cedarwood and burnt copper trailing after him.
She reached for him, her movements deliberate and charged. She didn't touch his shoulder or his hand; she reached for the silver-violet tether that linked his ribcage to her own palm aperture. As her fingers closed around the invisible line, she felt the jolt of his seething energy.
"Hold still," he commanded.
"Bind or break," she whispered.
He looped the silver cord around my waist, his knuckles brushing against the fabric of my tunic over my hips. I went rigid. I counted under my breath—*one, two, three, four*—tracking the way his fingers moved. He wasn't fumbling. Even with his nails bleeding and his strength flagging, he tied the knot with the clinical precision of a Master Weaver. He was looking at the knot, then at my hands, never once meeting my eyes.
The connection snapped shut.
"This is a tether of shared intent," he said, his breath ghosting over my temple. "If you fall into a void, I will be the anchor. If I fall, you are the counter-weight. Do not allow the line to slacken. If the tension drops below the threshold of awareness, the bond will sever, and we will both be lost to the erasure."
Liora gasped as Thornes shared senses flooded her mind. It was a sensory assault of jagged indigo noise. She felt the Looms hunger—a predatory, ancient intent that Thorne was shielding her from, though he didn't realize she could feel the strain of his secrecy. Through him, she heard a voice that wasn't a voice—a rhythmic thrumming that sounded like a name being spoken underwater.
I reached down, my fingers tracing the cold, vibrating braid. "You're binding us. Like a pair of broken shutters."
"Steady," she commanded, though whether to him or the machine, she wasn't sure. "The Dirty Circuit is screaming. If we dont resonate now, the Thirteenth Strand will whip-saw and take the whole spindle with it."
"I am ensuring systemic survival," he corrected, cinching the knot tight. He stepped back, his thumb finding his cufflink again for a quick, nervous rotation. The other end of the cord was already secured around his own lean waist. The six feet of silver thread between us hummed, a bridge across the abyss. "We move now. Follow my exact footfalls. The geometry of this forest is... imaginative at best."
"Then do it," Thorne spat, his fingers clawing at the armrests of the restraint chair. "Before it eats whats left of the floor."
We began the trek.
Liora closed her eyes, her mind diving into the weave. She saw the "Dirty Circuit"—the heretical loop they had forged to keep the machine breathing. It was a chaotic mess of frayed ends and bleeding light. It whispered betrayal to her, the red threads of the loom's original design recoiling from the indigo stain she had introduced.
It was a nightmare of displaced geography. We walked through a grove of ancient oaks that suddenly transitioned into a hallway of crystalline pillars rising like jagged teeth from the white static. As we crossed, the floor beneath me simply dissolved into a translucent mist. I felt my weight go, my stomach dropping into the white nothing.
"Bind-bind-bind it now," she muttered, the repetition a frantic shield against the panic rising in her chest. Her fingers traced invisible patterns in the air, mimicking the throw of a shuttle. "Catch the warp. Hold the weft. Don't let the tension drop."
The silver tether snapped taut. The glass-and-silver braid bit into my waist, the amber light flared to a blinding gold, and I was jerked forward by the sheer force of Dorians counter-weight. He had anchored himself to a solid pillar, his heels digging into the stone, his face contorted as the tension of the line held my entire existence over the edge of the void. For a second, we were the only two solid things in a world of ghosts. Then, with a grunt of effort, he pulled, and my boots found the edge of the next crystalline slab.
The violet light in her palm flared. Thorne roared, his back arching as he took the brunt of the resonance. The chamber groaned. A violet bleed erupted from a seam in the ceiling, liquid light dripping like sap and splashing upward against the ceiling as gravity inverted for a terrifying heartbeat.
One, two, three, four. I watched Dorians back. I watched the way he tested the air with his left hand, his fingers splayed as if feeling for the invisible grain of the world.
"You can't just pull at fate's hem like it's your favorite cloak," she hissed at the air, her voice a winding metaphor for the chaos around them. "Watch the weave, Thorne! Anchor it!"
"The weft is slipping here," I whispered, pointing to a patch of ground that looked like a blurred oil painting. My eyes sought the patterns—the way the light hit the mist, the way the shadows pooled in corners that shouldn't exist. "The grain is running vertical. If you step there, you'll slide right out of the hour."
"I am... the anchor!" Thornes voice was a guttural vibration. "But the Loom... it's not just a machine anymore, Liora. Its talking. Cant you hear it?"
Dorian paused, his head cocking to the side. He adjusted his cufflink. "Vertical grain? That is a fascinating, if entirely inefficient, way to describe a localized temporal shear. But you are correct. The stability of the path is... questionable."
Lioras ocular bleed worsened, a trickle of hot red masking the violet glow. "Its a knot of wood and wire, Thorne. Nothing more. Don't listen to the fray."
"Its not a shear, Dorian. Its a loose end," I snapped, the irritation flaring hot in my chest. I rubbed the hem of my sleeve, the rough wool a grounding comfort. "The Guild didn't just cut the threads here; they let them fray. Look at the edges of that rock. Its not breaking; its unravelling into its component colors."
The resonance stabilized, but only barely. The Dirty Circuit remained stained, a pulsing bruise on the worlds fabric. The obligation was partially met—the machine wouldn't explode for another hour—but the cost was etched in the deepening ink-lines on Thornes face.
"Precisely why we must maintain our pace," he said, skipping over a rift of pure white light. The silver tether yanked at my waist, pulling me forward. "The 'Correction' squads do not stop to debate metaphors, Lyra. They simply erase the metaphor and the poet along with it."
The rhythmic *tack-tack-tack* of a bone-white cane echoed from the high observation gallery.
We climbed a ridge that overlooked what used to be the Deep Forest Archive. From this height, the devastation was clear. Huge, circular bites had been taken out of the world, leaving behind nothing but the white, static void. It looked like a moth-eaten tapestry held up to a blinding sun.
Liora looked up, her vision tunneling. Elder Maros stood at the railing, his eyes clouded by indigo cataracts that seemed to catch the violet light of the chamber. He looked small, his authority a fraying garment held together by desperation.
I felt a coldness creeping up my neck. I reached up and touched my collarbone. The ink-markings—the Fae-sigils that were slowly overwriting my skin—felt raised and warm, like fresh scars. They were spreading. The more the world erased, the more my own body seemed to be filling in the blanks with this dark, alien pigment.
"A temporary unravelling," Maros called down, his voice an oily persuasion that failed to mask the tremor in his hands. "Liora, the High Gallery is in an uproar. The gravity fluctuations... the 'bleeds'... the Purists are calling it a contagion. They say youve brought a plague into the Core."
"How much further?" I asked. My legs felt like leaden weights. The spiritual exhaustion was no longer a dull ache; it was a physical pressure behind my eyes, a rhythmic thrumming that matched the spread of the ink.
"The Purists wouldn't know a stable bind if it strangled them," Liora said, her voice clipped. She began unconsciously braiding a stray lock of her hair, her eyes scanning the shadows of the gallery. "You promised protection, Maros. Hide us from the Conclave until the circuit takes."
Dorian didn't answer immediately. He was staring at a point on the horizon where a single, massive tree stood, its leaves a vibrant, impossible gold amidst the grey rot of the surrounding woods.
"The weave has changed," Maros whispered, leaning heavily on his cane. "They are mobilizing below. The lockdown won't hold them forever. They view your... 'stain'... as proof of corruption. They are coming to purge the spindle, Liora. You must fix this. Make it look like the Old Weave again. Polish the heresy away."
"The Heart of the First Fae," he said, his voice dropping an octave, losing some of its clinical sheen. "It is the only anchor point left in this sector that Malakor cannot easily scrub. The roots are too deep. They are tied to the foundation of the world, not just the Loom the Guild oversees."
"You can't un-dye the silk once its hit the vat," Liora snapped, her fatalism returning like a cold draft. She snapped an invisible thread between her thumb and forefinger. "This knot is tightening, and youre complaining about the color of the thread. If they breach the spindle, the Loom will unravel every soul in the Threshold. Tell them that."
He stumbled then. It wasn't a large movement—just a momentary buckle of his knees—but the tether went slack.
"They don't care about the Loom's survival if the cost is the Thirteenth Strand," Maros replied, his face twisting in a panicked grimace. "They would rather see the world go grey than see it turn indigo. I can delay them, but... my influence is fraying. You owe me a miracle, Voss."
For a heartbeat, the silver glow of the rope dimmed. The world around us blurred. The ground beneath my feet felt as thin as parchment, ready to tear.
Maros turned and retreated into the shadows, his cane-taps sounding like a countdown.
"Dorian!" I lunged forward, grabbing his arm.
Below the main floor, Liora caught sight of the Junior Binders. They had been trapped in the spindle since the lockdown. They weren't hiding; they were huddled in the corners, scratching frantic patterns into the stone floor with bits of charcoal and bone. They weren't terrified of the stain—they were documenting it. A nascent evolution. The Stained.
He flinched, pulling away from my touch as if burned, but he found his footing. He didn't look at me. He looked at the blood dripping from his fingertips onto the white grass.
Thorne let out a choked sound. His skin was burning, the ink-blood etching deeper into his flesh, turning his veins into indigo wires.
"I am... functional," he said, his voice straining to maintain its rhythm. "The expenditure was perhaps more significant than I initially calculated. Umbral Kinesis requires a certain level of environmental shadow to act as a conduit. In this... blankness... I am forced to draw directly from the tension of my own nervous system."
"Liora," he gasped. "The Loom... its not shouting anymore. Its... its naming names."
"You're burning yourself out," I said, my voice flat and literal. "Thats what the bleeding is. Youre the fuel."
"Thorne, stop," she commanded, stepping closer. She reached out to adjust the restraint straps, her touch deliberate and heavy. "Its frequency sickness. Your organs are vibrating at the wrong pitch."
"I am the architect of our escape," he countered, though his breath was coming in short, jagged bursts as he worryingly clicked his cufflink again. "Architects do not concern themselves with the wear on their tools. We must find cover. The sun is setting, and the 'Thinning' is always more aggressive in the absence of light."
"No," Thorne snarled, his eyes snapping to hers. They were no longer the eyes of the man she had met; they were flecked with the same violet light as the Looms core. "It knows you. It knows what you saw at the Threshold when you were a girl. Its showing me... the unbinding."
We found a pocket of relative stability—a small, sunken dell protected by a ring of ancient stones that seemed to have been carved with runes of warding. The air here felt thicker, more real.
Liora froze. The lanolin smell in the air suddenly turned to the dry, metallic scent of her parents souls evaporating into the ether. "You don't talk about that. Never."
Dorian collapsed against a stone, his head falling back. He looked pale, the dark circles under his eyes like bruises. Even now, he began to fuss with the collar of his coat, trying to smooth a crease that wouldn't go away.
"I have to," Thorne said, his voice dropping to a terrifyingly calm register. "Because its not just a memory. Its an instruction."
"Eat," he commanded, gesturing with a trembling hand toward a small pack hed been carrying. "You have been counting in sets of four for the last three miles. Your cognitive functions are dipping into a state of ritualistic survival. You need glucose."
The hostile energy from the Archival Guards at the Threshold hatch spiked. Liora could hear them shouting, their halberds clattering against the reinforced steel. They were no longer guarding the secret; they were waiting for the order to kill the secret.
I wanted to argue, but my stomach chose that moment to let out a hollow, echoing groan. I sat down a few feet away, the silver rope still connecting us, pooling on the mossy ground like a sleeping snake.
The indigo contagion flared again. A violet light bled from Thornes eyes, illuminating the chamber in a sickening hue. Lioras palm aperture pulsed so hard it felt like her heart was beating in her hand. The tremors were now a constant shaking, a refusal of her body to remain in one piece.
I pulled out a piece of hard, dried fruit and a hunk of grey bread. It tasted like sawdust, but I forced it down.
"Bind or break," she whispered, her voice cracking. "Bind-bind-bind..."
"You're not eating," I noted.
The spindle seals at the very top of the chamber suddenly shuddered. A heavy thunk boomed through the stone—the sound of a ramming bar hitting the secondary locks. Distant but clear, the rhythmic chant of the Purists began to bleed through the ventilation shafts.
"I find the act of mastication to be... distracting at present," he said, his eyes closed. "I am focusing on maintaining the structural integrity of our immediate surroundings."
"Unbind the stained!"
I watched him. Truly watched him. The way his long lashes cast shadows on his cheekbones. The way his chest rose and fell in a slow, deliberate cadence. He was a man built on rules and metrics, a man who viewed the world as a problem to be solved with the right equation. And yet, he was bleeding for me.
"Unbind the stained!"
"Why are you doing this, Dorian?" I asked softly. "You could have stayed. You could have been the one to 'correct' me. Malakor would have rewarded you. Youd be a High Weaver in a year."
Liora stood her ground, her fingers tracing the invisible threads of a world falling apart. She looked at Thorne, who was no longer seething but listening—head tilted, eyes wide, tuned into a frequency she couldn't touch.
His eyes snapped open. They were a piercing, stormy grey. "Malakor thinks the world is a finished piece of work, Lyra. He thinks his only job is to protect the weave from any new threads. He is a curator of a dying museum."
The Looms resonance spiked, a high-pitched scream that only Thorne seemed to truly feel. His mouth opened as if to speak, his gaze fixed on a point behind Liora.
He looked at his hands, the blood finally starting to clot. "I do not wish to be a curator. I wish to know where the threads come from. And you... you are the only one who has ever seen the seam."
I didn't have an answer for that. I lay back on the moss, the exhaustion finally winning. The mark on my collarbone pulsed. *One, two, three, four.*
"Sleep," Dorian said. "I will hold the tension."
I drifted off to the sound of his thumb clicking against his cufflink.
***
*I was back in Oakhaven.*
*The village was vibrant, a riot of color and sound. My mother was at the loom, her shuttle flying back and forth like a silver bird. She was laughing, her hair catching the sunlight. 'Counting threads again, Lyra?' she asked, her voice like bells. 'Don't just count them, darling. Feel them. They aren't just silk; theyre lives. Theyre memories.'*
*I looked down at my own hands. I was holding a charcoal pencil, and I was drawing on the floor. I wasn't drawing pictures; I was drawing the connections. The way the bakers smile was tied to the morning sun, the way the sound of the river was tied to the roots of the willow tree.*
*But as I drew, the lines turned black. Deep, oily black. The ink began to bleed out of the floor, rising like a tide. Where it touched something, that thing vanished. The loom disappeared. The walls of the house dissolved into white light. My mothers laughter turned into a high-pitched whistle of wind.*
*'Lyra!' she cried, and her hand was reaching for mine, but her fingers were turning into pigment, into maps, into nothing.*
*I screamed, but no sound came out. I was drawing faster now, trying to draw her back, trying to sketch her face into reality, but the black ink on my skin seemed to pulse in time with my frantic heart. Every fearful stroke I made in the dream-dirt was a command my new "ink" obeyed; the ink didn't care about my grief, only the raw, chaotic power of my panic. The more I tried to hold onto the dream, the more my internal lack of control over the Fae-pigment began to eat the world around me. My fingers were dripping with ink, and then the ink began to climb my arm...*
***
"Lyra! Wake up! Control your intent!"
The voice was like a thunderclap. I bolted upright, my heart hammering against my ribs so hard I thought it would crack a bone.
I wasn't in Oakhaven. I was in the darkened dell.
But the dell was different.
The campfire we hadn't even lit was a flickering, dying ember of blue light. The stone Dorian had been leaning against was half-gone, the top half leaning precariously over a void of shimmering white.
And the ground—the ground where I had been sleeping—was dissolving.
My fingers were buried in the dirt. I hadn't realized I was moving in my sleep, but I had. My fear and my grief had channeled through the ink on my skin, and I had been tracing patterns—deep, spiraling knots in the earth that mimicked the terminal thinning of the Great Void. Wherever my fingers had touched, the reality was sagging, turning into a grey, translucent film.
"Stop!" Dorian shouted. He was lunging across the disappearing earth, his face a mask of raw, unfiltered terror.
He didn't grab my arm this time. He grabbed my hands, pinning them against his own chest, away from the ground.
The transition was violent. One moment the world was flickering out of existence; the next, it snapped back with the sound of a closing book. The void beneath us sealed itself, though the stone remained jagged and broken.
I was shaking. Great, racking tremors that I couldn't stop. I looked up at Dorian. He was kneeling over me, his hands crushing mine against the rough wool of his coat. His hair was a mess, falling over his eyes, and his collar was turned up on one side.
"You were unweaving the anchor," he hissed, his breath hot against my face. "In your sleep. You were creating a terminal thinning. Do you have any idea how close we came to total systemic collapse?"
"I... I was dreaming of home," I whispered. I looked down at my hands. They were covered in dirt and that shimmering, black Fae-pigment. "I didn't mean to. I can't control it when I'm under."
Dorians grip tightened for a second before he let go, as if hed suddenly realized how close he was. He sat back on his heels, breathing hard. He looked at the half-erased stone, then at the sky, which was now pitch black, save for the flickering, unnatural aurora of the surrounding voids.
"This is becoming... exceptionally tedious," he said. He reached for his cufflink, but his fingers were shaking too much to find the metal. He clicked his tongue against his teeth, a sharp, angry sound. "The instability of your subconscious is a variable I failed to properly weigh. If you cannot remain anchored, we will not make it to the Heart. We will simply cease to be somewhere in the middle of a forest that no longer exists."
I looked at him, at his disheveled hair and his bleeding hands, and then I looked at the campfire—or what was left of it. I had erased our fire. I had erased half of a prehistoric rock.
And then, I saw his boots.
Dorian Thorne, the most precise, arrogant, and well-dressed man in the Weavers Guild, was wearing boots that were currently covered in a thick, vibrant layer of glowing purple moss from the ridge wed crossed. One of his silk laces had snapped and was tied back together in a clumsy, bulky knot that a five-year-old would have been ashamed of.
It was such a mundane, human imperfection in the middle of the apocalypse.
A bubble of something hysterical rose in my throat. I tried to suppress it, I really did. I bit my lip, I counted—*one, two, three, four*—but the image of that birds-nest knot on his three-hundred-gold-piece boots was too much.
I laughed.
It was a small, choked sound at first, like a sob. But then it broke open.
Dorian froze. He stared at me as if Id started speaking in tongues. "I fail to see the analytical humor in our near-death experience, Lyra."
"Your... your boot," I gasped, pointing a shaking finger. "The knot. You told me... you told me architects don't worry about the wear on their tools. But that knot is a catastrophe, Dorian. Its a structural nightmare."
He looked down at his boot. He stared at the messy, tangled lace for a long, silent moment. He looked back at me, his eyes wide and baffled.
"The lace snapped during the transit through the crystalline hallway," he said, his voice regaining its clinical distance, but there was a crack in it. "I had to secure it. The tension was... a secondary concern compared to the threat of a twisted ankle."
"Its hideous," I said, wiping a tear of legitimate laughter from my eye. "The High Weaver would strip you of your rank just for that lace."
Dorian looked at the lace again. Then he looked at my soot-stained face and my ink-covered hands. A small, microscopic twitch started at the corner of his mouth.
"It is," he admitted, his voice barely a whisper. "It is an aesthetic abomination."
He let out a short, sharp breath that wasn't quite a laugh, but it was close. He sat back against the broken stone, his shoulders finally dropping from their rigid perches, his thumb absentmindedly finding his cufflink for a final, calming click.
"Precisely," I whispered.
The silence that followed wasn't the predatory silence of the void. It was just... quiet. The silver rope lay between us, glowing with a steady, soft light, reflecting the fragile connection of two people who were both, in their own ways, falling apart.
"You're laughing," I whispered, the sound more terrifying than the silence of the void.
He didn't look away this time. He met my eyes, and for the first heartbeat since the world broke, the thread between us didn't feel like a leash—it felt like a lifeline.
The Loom whispered a name, its voice a thrum of ancient, sentient intent that vibrated through Thornes very marrow, a name Liora could not hear, even as she felt the shared link between them begin to fray under the weight of a secret she hadn't woven.