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Chapter 06
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The safehouse walls pressed in like the Urban Wall's iron grip, Lena’s fingers clawing at Jax's sleeve as another tremor ripped through her gut.
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She wasn’t breathing. Or maybe the air was just too thick with the scent of recycled dust and ozone to find its way into her lungs. The "Severing" wasn't a clean cut; it was a jagged tearing of skin from muscle. Every nerve ending that had once hummed with the slow, rhythmic pulse of the Atchafalaya was now screaming in high-pitched static. It was a hollow deafness, a vacuum where the world’s heartbeat used to be.
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"Lena, look at me. Breathe, damn it." Jax’s voice was a low rumble, the only anchor in a sea of gray noise.
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He didn't pull away. He leaned into her, his sheer physical mass a barricade against the sensory storm. Lena forced her eyes open. The peeling wallpaper of the Lower Ninth Ward safehouse seemed to vibrate, the floral patterns twisting like dying vines. She reached out, her hand trembling so violently she nearly missed his arm. When her palm finally slammed against his forearm—skin on skin—the world jolted back into focus.
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The tremors didn't stop, but they muffled. Like a door closing on a gale.
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"Better?" he asked. His jaw was set, the dark bruise on his shoulder visible through a fresh tear in the collar of his damp shirt. He looked like he’d been through a wreck, and she knew she was the reef he’d hit.
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"Hellfire," she hissed, her voice raspy. "It’s like… like being buried alive in a box made of radio static."
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She didn't let go of him. She couldn't. Her fingers tracked the line of his pulse. It was organic, rhythmic, and infinitely more centered than the erratic thrumming of the silver locket resting against her sternum. She felt the heavy metal of her mother’s heirloom vibrating, but it wasn't the warm, swamp-hum she grew up with. It was sharper. High-frequency. It was syncing with the industrial hum of the city power lines outside.
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"You're shaking less when I'm holding you," Jax noted, his eyes narrowing with a navigator’s precision. "Or when you’re touching that potted fern in the corner. Why?"
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Lena leaned her head back against the sofa, her eyes tracking a water stain on the ceiling. "The swamp... it's a circuit, Jax. A Duval is the ground wire. Maribelle unplugged me, but the current's still looking for a way out. Without the mud and the trees to take it, it’s just rattling my bones." She swallowed hard, the nausea rising. "I'm blind. Gator's truth—I can't feel a thing beyond these four walls except the hum of the 'Wall. No spirits, no water-paths. Just... silence."
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Jax shifted, his weight creaking the old floorboards. "If we’re going to move, I need the rest of it. You said Phlegethon isn't just a name. You owe me that much if I'm walking you into the mouth of this city."
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Lena’s thumb instinctively caught the chain of her locket, twisting the silver links tight around her index finger. The metal bit into her skin. "Phlegethon is the river of fire in the underworld," she murmured, her voice losing its edge, meandering like a slow-moving bayou creek. "The developers... Terrebonne Corp... they don't want the timber. They want the 'Heart.' There’s a pocket of gas and ancient peat under the Bend that’s been curing for a thousand years. It’s dense, Jax. Powerful. They want to pipe it out, but the Duval blood-oath is the only thing keeping the ground from collapsing into a sinkhole. Maribelle’s been holding them off, but now? Now she’s using the threat of it to leash me. If I don't come back, she lets them drill. The Bend dies, and the fire takes the rest."
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Jax swore under his breath, a sharp, sailors’ oath. "So they’re burning the house down to catch the mouse."
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"The cypress don't lie, cher—the roots whisper what your heart's too stubborn to hear. And right now, those roots are screaming."
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"Then we find this 'Neutral,'" Jax said, standing and pulling her up with him. He didn't break contact until she was steady. "We get you muffled, and we find a way to stop the bleed. But we have a leak. Someone knew we were hitting the Ninth Ward. I don't like moving through the open when I don't know who’s holding the map."
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Lena shivered, the cold of the "Urban Wall" already seeping through her skin. The city wasn't just iron and glass; it was a cage. "No, not that, no no," she whispered, the panic fluttering in her chest like a trapped bird. "Maribelle... she’s inside the static, Jax. I hear her. Or I’m breaking. I can't tell if it’s her voice or my mind fracturing."
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"We move," Jax said firmly. "Stay close. Touch my hand if the static gets too loud."
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***
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Stepping out onto the street was like walking into a thicket of thorns.
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The Lower Ninth Ward felt hollowed out, a landscape of cracked asphalt and overgrown lots that mirrored the Stagnation creeping back home in Cypress Bend. To Lena, every humming transformer on a telephone pole was a needle in her ear. Every passing car was a roar of unnatural energy that made her teeth ache.
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She walked with her shoulder pressed against Jax’s arm, a lifeline in the gray. The "hollow deafness" made the world feel flat, two-dimensional. She saw a stray cat dart under a rusted sedan, but she couldn't feel its life-force. She saw the mold on the brickwork of a crumbling double-shotgun house, but it didn't speak of growth or decay. It was just... there. Inert.
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"Keep your head down," Jax muttered. His eyes were constantly moving, scanning the rooftops and the darkened windows of the street. "The Neutral’s place is six blocks. An old apothecary near the canal. It’s shielded, or so the word goes."
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They passed beneath a buzzing streetlamp. Lena’s locket lurched against her chest, the silver vibrating so hard it felt hot. "The machinery," she gasped, her hand flying to her throat. "It’s... it’s singing to me, Jax. It shouldn't do that."
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"Gator's truth," she added through gritted teeth, "this city is poison for a Duval."
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A distant tug pulled at the base of her skull—a psychic fishhook. Lena stumbled, her knees buckling. *Lena. Why wander in the dark, little bird?*
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The voice wasn't a sound. It was a vibration in her marrow.
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"She's here," Lena wheezed, her fingers digging into Jax’s bicep. "Maribelle. She’s following the thread."
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"We're almost there," Jax growled, practically lifting her off her feet to keep her moving.
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They reached a narrow storefront wedged between a boarded-up laundromat and a darkened bar. The windows were painted black, but a faint scent of dried sage and old vinegar seeped through the cracks in the door. No neon signs, no addresses. Just a small, rusted Bell Jar etched into the wood of the doorframe.
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Jax kicked the door. Not a knock—a demand.
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A slot slid open. A pair of eyes, yellowed like old parchment, peered out. "The Wall is high tonight," a gravelly voice said. "Why bring a dying witch to my door?"
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"She’s not dying," Jax snapped. "She’s Severed. Open the damn door before the Coven finds us on your stoop."
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The locks clicked—six of them—and the door swung open.
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The air inside was instantly different. It was cool, smelling of damp earth and crushed mint. Lena felt the static in her brain drop by a dozen decibels. The "Neutral" was a man who looked like he’d been carved out of driftwood—lean, weathered, and ancient. He wore a heavy apron stained with substances Lena didn't want to name.
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"I am Malleus," the man said, retreating into the shadows of a shop filled with jars of preserved specimens and bundles of hanging herbs. "And you have brought a very loud problem into my sanctuary."
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Lena slumped against a wooden counter, her hands reaching out to touch a bowl of river stones. The cold, smooth texture of the rocks helped ground her, pulling some of the fever from her skin. "I need... a muffle," she panted. "The Wall is killing me, and my aunt... she’s using the gap to get in."
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Malleus circled her, his eyes fixed on the silver locket. "The Duval girl. I heard the Bend was rotting. I didn't realize the anchor had been pulled so violently." He reached out a gnarled hand but didn't touch her. "The Severing is a leash, child. Every time you scream in the city, you’re ringing a bell for Maribelle to follow."
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"Can you fix it?" Jax asked, his hand resting on the hilt of the knife at his belt.
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"Fix? No. But I can shroud you," Malleus said, his voice turning transactional. "For a price. Information is the currency of New Orleans. Tell me about Phlegethon. The rumors say Terrebonne Corp found something other than oil."
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Lena stiffened. The secret was already out. "They found a way to burn the soul of the swamp," she said, her voice clipped and rhythmic. "They want the peat beneath the Heart. If they light it, it won't stop until the water turns to steam and the Bend is a charred hole in the map."
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Malleus hissed through his teeth. "Fools. They'll wake things that don't like the light." He turned to a shelf and pulled down a small vial of dark, viscous fluid. "This will muffle the static. It’s made from the silt of the midnight tide. It will coat your nerves, give you a temporary 'Wall' of your own. But it wears off. And it leaves you even more blind than you are now."
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"Do it," Lena said.
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Suddenly, the air in the shop grew heavy. A low, rhythmic thumping started against the glass of the window—the sound of a hundred heavy moths throwing themselves against the pane. The shadows in the corners of the room began to stretch, reaching toward Lena like obsidian fingers.
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Lena’s locket flared hot against her skin. She gasped, her hand flying to the metal. "No, not yet, no no."
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"She’s found us," Malleus whispered, his face paling. "The wards... something’s wrong. The leak isn't a person, Captain Harlan. It’s the girl’s own blood. Every tremor she has is a beacon."
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A sharp crack echoed through the room—the sound of a ward-stone splitting.
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Malleus looked at a small copper bowl on his desk. The water inside was turning black. "Terrebonne," he breathed. "They aren't just developers. They have their own 'seers.' Your safehouse wasn't leaked by an ally. It was tracked by the machinery."
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Jax grabbed Lena, pulling her away from the center of the room as the lightbulbs overhead began to flicker and pop. "We have to go. Now!"
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As the Neutral's ward flickered and died, the heavy silence of the shop was shattered. A cold wind whipped through the room, smelling of stagnant water and old moss. Lena fell to her knees, the "hollow deafness" suddenly replaced by a voice so clear it felt like a knife in her ear.
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Maribelle's voice slithered clear through the static, dripping with a terrifying, motherly honey.
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"Come home, cher, or watch the Bend rot with you."
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