Chapter 9 Ivalys

NINE

IVALYS

We surface through a trapdoor I never would have found on my own.

The passage from the crypts led through cramped tunnels, then Rathok paused at another intersection, glanced back at me, and we turned there.

The bone walls gave way to brick, then to plastered stone marked with symbols I couldn’t read.

He moved with the certainty of someone who’d walked this path before—many times, judging by the way he ducked under low ceilings and stepped over loose stones without looking.

Now we’re in a room. Cramped. Barely ten feet square. A narrow bed pushed against one wall. A single chair. A table scarred with knife marks. The air tastes of dust and old chalk.

A safe room. It sits behind a contract-scribe’s shop, according to the muffled scratching of quills I can hear through the wall. The sounds of commerce. Obligation being made permanent, one signature at a time.

“You need to rest before we continue. The wards here are stronger.” Rathok secures the trapdoor, dropping a heavy bolt into place. “The Ledger Master’s direct observation can’t reach this space. He knows the safe room exists, but he can’t see inside.”

“Small comfort.”

“It’s more than most people get.”

I take in the details. Containment sigils cover the walls—chalked symbols in patterns that overlap and interweave, some fresh, others faded from years of re-application. Candlelight flickers in a holder on the table, casting shadows that don’t quite reach the corners.

On a shelf near the bed: medical supplies. Bandages. A needle and thread. A bottle of something amber that might be alcohol or might be something stronger.

The room speaks of function, not comfort. Of a man who’s spent an age expecting to need an escape route more than a home.

My gaze returns to him.

He’s leaning against the wall, one hand pressed to his chest where the wraith’s claws opened him. Blood seeps between his fingers—not the black ichor of the dead, but red. Living. His.

“You need to let me look at that.”

“It’ll heal.”

“It’ll fester.” I move to the shelf, grab the medical supplies. “I watched one of those things rake you open. Four gashes, deep enough to show muscle. That’s not something you walk off.”

“I’ve survived worse.”

“I don’t doubt it.” I turn to face him, supplies in hand. “But surviving and healing aren’t the same thing. You can’t fight if those wounds go septic. And I’m not dragging your corpse through the tunnels when you collapse from infection.”

Something flickers across his features. Not amusement. Recognition, maybe. An acknowledgment that I’m not backing down.

“You have training.” Not a question.

“I raised my brother after our relatives lost interest. Gror was clumsy as a child—always scraping himself, falling, getting into fights he couldn’t win.” I gesture at the chair. “Sit. Take off what’s left of your armor.”

He doesn’t move.

Then he pushes off the wall. Crosses to the chair. Sits.

His hands go to the straps of his ruined chest piece. The leather is shredded where the claws caught him, hanging in strips that expose the damage beneath. He works the buckles with fingers that aren’t quite steady, peeling the armor away piece by piece.

I force myself to watch clinically. To see the wounds, not the body they’re carved into.

Four parallel gashes run from his left shoulder to his sternum. Deep. The edges are ragged, already purpling where infection threatens to take hold. Blood weeps sluggishly from the wounds, painting his green skin in streaks of crimson.

I pour alcohol onto a clean cloth. The smell burns my nostrils—harsh, medicinal, nothing meant for drinking.

“This is going to hurt.”

“I know.”

I press the cloth to the first gash.

His jaw locks. Muscle bunches beneath skin. But he doesn’t flinch, doesn’t pull away. Just sits there, utterly still, while I clean wounds that would have most people screaming.

The quiet between us grows heavy. Weighted with things neither of us is saying.

I work methodically. Clean, assess, clean again. The gashes are deep but straight—easier to close than jagged wounds. The thread I found is coarse, meant for leather repair, but it’ll hold better than nothing.

“Needle next.” I thread it with hands that want to shake and refuse to let them. “Hold still.”

The first stitch makes his breath hitch. Just barely. A sound most people would miss.

I don’t miss it.

“Tell me about contract magic.” The words come out before I plan them—a distraction, for him or for me. “How it really works. Not the simplified version you gave me before.”

I pull another stitch through, feel him absorb the pain without showing it.

“What do you want to know?”

“Everything.” Another stitch. “My mother was a truth-speaker. She could rewrite contracts by speaking truth over them. But I don’t understand how.”

“The Ledger isn’t stone.” His voice has gone strained.

From the pain, or from something else. “It’s ink.

Living ink, bound by the shadow-magic that flooded this land when the Veil shattered.

Every contract in Gravebind connects to that original power—every debt, every obligation, every promise made in blood. ”

I tie off a stitch. Start the next one.

Another stitch. He doesn’t react.

“My brother’s contract, you told me the scribe who wrote it worked for the Ledger Master. So it’s probably fraudulent.” I tie off another stitch, start the next. “If I speak that truth, what happens?”

He shifts slightly, muscle flexing beneath my hands.

“The debt dies. The claim on your brother transfers to its rightful owner.” His breath comes harsher now. Whether from the stitching or the implications. “The Ledger Master. He designed the fraud. He owns the scribe. The debt becomes his.”

“And what happens to someone when they owe a debt they can’t pay?”

His silence is answer enough.

I finish the last stitch. Tie it off. Reach for the bandages.

My hands are steadier than they should be. The work has centered me somehow—given me something physical to focus on while my mind processes everything he’s said.

I wrap bandages around his chest, careful to keep the pressure even. I feel his pulse beneath my palm—faster than it should be, hotter than human blood. The sigil on my hand pulses in response, warmth spreading up my arm.

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