Chapter 102: Truth Walks In
The door finished closing.
Two silhouettes stepped out of the glare and became people.
Obi came first, hands in pockets like he’d strolled in from a better party. Shoulders broader under a scuffed jacket that had never met an iron and wouldn’t have enjoyed it. The grin - the one that made guards reconsider their job descriptions - arrived before he did.
Beside him, Alteea flowed in like a problem you paid extra to solve. Lab coat cinched, black, professional skirt under it, a slim lens perched up in her hair like decoration disguised as a tool. She smiled the way mercury shines. The flirt lived in the angle of her chin, the force lived in everything else.
"This is a closed proceidure!" Marcus snapped, finding his voice again, too late and too loud. "Remove them."
Obi tipped two fingers off his brow at the Wardens without looking at them. "If it’s closed, Counselor, you should start with your mouth. Shut it."
A wave of sound - murmurs and sharp breaths - lapped the glass tiers. Solomon didn’t lift a hand. That, more than anything, kept the room from exploding.
"Hi, sweethearts" Alteea sang to no one and everyone, dropping a stack of slates on the nearest input pad. "I brought receipts. Don’t worry, Marcus. They’re in a font that tells the true truth."
The projection lattice found her files and poured them into the air. Screens bloomed: a second angle of Vent D-12, sharp as guilt: a time-index feed from a Warden chest cam whose metadata didn’t match Marcus’s story, device logs the color of bureaucracy that took itself very seriously.
Marcus tried to move in front of the light like a man becoming a wall. The hall moved with him, and he realized too late walls weren’t helping him today.
"Counselor" Solomon said - quiet, even - "they will present if they have proof."
Obi’s grin widened. "Look at that. The grown-up’s talking."
Alteea flicked her lens down from her hair with a thumb and brought the cam feed into focus. "Exhibit fresh-as-yesterday: Chest cam WX-917, assigned to Warden... not Sato, interestingly. Time code stamped twelve nights ago, synced to the grid by the same clock as street cam A-12. Please admire how bad the lighting is and then admire how complete the scene is from this angle."
"So you have eyes in the Underworks too, huh! Who would have thought!" Said Obi, the guilt of multiple cameras disassembled and turned into... Whatever his ego said that day.
The street recording showed a uniform stepping into the alley, baton already out, the posture of someone who had come to teach instead of ask. A woman in an apron, backing away. Feris, entering frame like a blade deciding it had a purpose. A crackle - taser prongs flaring - and a shoulder taking the hit. The cam jogged, blurred, caught a brass glint from nowhere and a uniform’s jaw learning what gravity meant.
Alteea pinched to pause. "I know, I know" she went on, not to Marcus. "Compression noise. Could be fake. Except, oh wait - phase lag. See the subtle drift between street cam A-12 and WX-917? That lag only happens when the grid is live - not when you splice two clips after the fact. You tried to hide your stitching in the noise, sweetheart. The grid won’t let you."
She winked at the projection. The projection didn’t take it personally.
Obi leaned his elbows on the inner rail like it was a bar. "Scoreboard: A literal video - one. Black Suit - zero."
A rustle ran the upper ring. Even the out-city delegates stopped pretending neutrality. The false Warden with the bandaged jaw (who had not been the one in the alley) shifted his weight like his boots had started to itch.
Marcus found a pad and slammed it flat so the click could pretend to be authority. "You steal internal footage and call it proof? That chest cam is not authorized to leave my net -"
"Your net?" Alteea bubbled. "Darling. Your net? You filed a private watcher overlay on it three days ago. Here." A new window split open: a perfumed list of accesses with the neatest name at the top - MARC. VAL.
"You borrowed it to edit" she said sweetly. "But you forgot the overlay leaves perfume. Little ghost tag, little time stamp. It lingers." She described a circle in the air with her finger. The system obeyed because it liked being right. "You can wipe the clip - you can’t wipe the scent."
Obi whistled. "Catching crimes by smell now, huh? You’re terrifying. Wish I could ask you to marry me..."
She tilted her head without looking away from Marcus. "You couldn’t afford me."
Laughter scattered before shame snapped it up. Kori’s shoulders eased one millimeter and then reset. Raizen inhaled once through his nose, nothing like relief, everything like oxygen finding muscle again.
Alteea flicked to a document tree. "Ohh, but we’re not done. Taser discharge logs - the one filed yesterday after twelve days of silence. That delay reads like narrative panic. And this, my favorite, the ghost registry for "Warden Rhys Sato." Used once. Cross-linked to no payroll ID, no housing, no rotation. A uniform without a life. How poetic. How fake."
She turned bright eyes up to the bench and rested a palm over her heart. "Sorry for the tone, Chair. I flirt when I’m bored. I get bored when men lie with fonts."
Solomon finally stood.
He did not move fast. He didn’t need to. The sound of him standing happened to the room like weather - sudden shade against heat. He was still young enough to be called a boy by people who would never say it out loud in this hall. He was also the only gravity that mattered.
"Enough" he said, not too loud. The room learned that word, as if it never heard it before.
He stepped off the bench platform and onto the floor as if the Spire itself made room for him. In the projection light, his face looked carved and present. Anger lived behind his eyes with its hand on a leash. He let it stand and didn’t let it speak.
"Counsel Valerius" Solomon said, almost gentle. "You made a mistake. Bu you also made a choice. That’s worse."
Marcus found the stance he used when he pretended humility. "My duty is to -"
Solomon’s hand lifted, a single finger, and the rest of Marcus’s sentence gave up the will to exist.
"Let’s learn" Solomon said to the hall, to the city, to everyone who had ever believed that the Spire was a song and not a sword. He gestured once, small, and the system obeyed, overlaying Alteea’s feeds with Marcus’s, building a third window that wasn’t either: a forensic layer only the bench could conjure.
"Compression ratio" Solomon murmured. "Notice the micro-variance here and here." The image sharpened to show static wearing a pattern like a bruise. "If you clip two moments from different clocks, the grid hum won’t match. Your edit dropped a half-frame on the tenth second of the alley altercation. Didn’t you hear it when you watched it back? The metal sound goes off-key."
He pivoted without walking, all economy. "Taser logs. Department policy requires an automatic ping the moment prongs discharge. That ping didn’t happen. It didn’t get lost. It didn’t get delayed. It didn’t happen. Because the device went out through a private channel and reentered the net later, wearing a faked timestamp like a bright coat on a rainy day. A fake tazer on a "Real" Warden."
Marcus tried to interrupt. Solomon didn’t let him.
The hall leaned closer, and in that lean there was worship and fear and the relief of watching competence – young, indeed. But it does what it promised to do when you were told it existed.
Solomon turned his head a fraction toward the platform where Raizen and Feris stood. Something like apology moved behind his eyes and did not reach his mouth. "Charges dismissed" he said, simple as a door opening. "Strike the record. Archive the evidence. Public notice to follow."
He found Marcus then, and for a heartbeat you could see the child in him who had been taught to be a ruler faster than most people learn their own handwriting.
"Neoshima forgives ambition" he said. "It does not forgive treachery disguised as law."
Marcus took a step forward, then remembered where he was and took it back halfway. "You presume to -"
"Presume?" Solomon’s voice didn’t rise. It didn’t have to. "No. I conclude."
Then, as if it wasn’t enough, he added:
"Our ancestors used to behead. To mercilessly kill. To "Give an example" for others that might try to do the same. They said "Bring down anyone who doesn’t obey." But I believe in second chances. Marcus, you served in the Council for quite some time now. And I know you. More than I want to."
"What you did – or tried to do – is bad. Very bad. But I believe that everyone deserves to live. Regardless of their political views. Regardless of their opinion. But I believe that you can fix your ways. I believe that you can do better. But a crime must be punished. You shall be removed from the Council."
The Wardens had been waiting for the invitation to exist. They moved in, not rough, not gentle. Marcus twisted in a way that suggested he might become someone else if he escaped the angle of this light. He did not escape it. The black suit that made him inevitable a moment ago made him suddenly small.
"Oh, and another thing – I want full coverage of any damage." Solomon added.
As they turned Marcus, he found Raizen and tried to pour venom into his eyes. It came out water.
"I shall be back." His mouth moved, without saying any word.
Raizen watched him go like a man studying weather he had already walked through. He didn’t say anything. His eyes did. "Then I’ll be ready."
Silence - this one not shocked, not reverent - broke across the room and left something warmer in its place. People did not cheer. The Spire was not for cheering. But heads lifted like a weight had taken its hand off their necks.
"Divisions Three and Four" Solomon said without returning to his chair "resume training schedules. You will stand at the Spire when asked and you will move when told and sometimes before. Consider your resolve... noted."
He didn’t smile. The city did that for him.
The Wardens escorted Marcus out through the door he had once believed belonged to him. The hall breathed, new again, raw the way skin is raw after a bandage comes off.
Alteea exhaled theatrically, stretched like a cat, and let the projection close. "Well" she said to no one, then, brighter, "Raizen, dear, that was delicious. You stand well under lights. Next time you plan to break the law in public, schedule it with my calendar so I can dress accordingly."
"I did not break the law. I... Uh... Got rid of someone that was breaking it...?" Raizen raised his eyebrows.
She winked at Kori and blew a kiss to Saffi in the gallery even though Saffi tried to pretend she hadn’t come. "Assistant of the month" Alteea mouthed. Saffi went pink, which meant she was furious and pleased in exactly equal measure.
Obi sauntered across the floor like a man testing the limits of protocol and finding they only worked on people who respected them. He passed Feris and didn’t say "you did good" because he knew she would hate that. He paused at Raizen.
"You always pick the scenic route to trouble" Obi said, and hooked an arm around Raizen’s neck, not hard, not soft, pulling him into a half-headlock that felt like family and a threat pretending to be a hug.
Raizen’s hands stayed loose at his sides. "You always pick the wrong timing to show up."
"That’s why I’m memorable." Obi’s grin flashed and faded, replaced by something that didn’t have a mouth for it. He leaned closer, voice for Raizen alone and still heard by everyone because the hall knew how to hear what mattered.
Alteea checked her lens, satisfied it had captured everything worth remembering. Hikari released the word she had been whispering under her breath and replaced it with a new one.
The Spire watched itself in the glass. The city leaned toward tomorrow.
Obi... Is Obi, so he didn’t let go.