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CHAPTER SEVEN — EYES THAT WATCH FROM BELOW

  William felt her before he saw her.

  It wasn’t instinct in the ordinary sense—there was no

  sudden chill, no dramatic premonition. It was subtler

  than that. A misalignment. A fraction of a second

  where the air behind him didn’t behave the way it

  should have.

  He stopped walking.

  Sylraen, a half-step behind him, noticed immediately.

  “You sensed it too.”

  “Yes,” William replied quietly. “And whoever it is

  doesn’t want to be.”

  Mirexa smiled faintly, blood-stained fingers flexing at

  her side. “An offering, perhaps.”

  “No,” William said. “An observer.”

  The rooftops above the narrow street were dark, the

  moonlight fractured by uneven stone and hanging

  banners. The town had quieted for the night, most

  civilians retreating indoors as the weight of recent

  events settled over them.

  That was when the System whispered.

  [Surveillance Detected] [Source: Unregistered /

  Mobile]

  Sylraen’s jaw tightened. “That’s not the System.”

  William turned slowly, eyes scanning shadows that

  The author's narrative has been misappropriated; report any instances of this story on Amazon.

  should have been empty.

  “Show yourself,” he said calmly. “Or leave.”

  The response was steel.

  A blade flashed from the darkness, aimed precisely

  for the gap between skull and spine—a killing strike

  delivered without hesitation or malice. William

  twisted at the last moment, the edge slicing shallowly

  across his shoulder instead of ending him.

  He caught the attacker mid-motion.

  Not with brute force—but timing.

  The figure crashed to the ground in a snarl of limbs,

  rolling free before he could pin them. She came up

  low and fast, daggers gleaming, movements fluid and

  predatory.

  Beastkin.

  Cat-like ears flattened against dark hair, eyes glowing

  gold in the low light. She was small, lithe, built for

  speed and survival rather than strength.

  Nyx.

  William didn’t know her name yet—but the System

  did.

  [Assassination Attempt Logged] [Target: William —

  Anomaly]

  She froze when the message appeared.

  Her eyes flicked to the empty air, then back to him.

  “You’re not supposed to see that,” she hissed.

  William tilted his head slightly. “Neither are you.”

  They circled each other slowly.

  Sylraen held her magic in check, watching with

  calculating interest. Mirexa looked delighted.

  “You’re good,” William said. “You’d have killed most

  people.”

  Nyx bared her teeth. “I wasn’t sent to kill most

  people.”

  “Who sent you?”

  Silence.

  Her grip tightened on the daggers. “Doesn’t matter.”

  “It does,” William replied. “Because you’re still alive.”

  That made her pause.

  Assassins understood patterns. And this one—this

  man—was not following any she recognized.

  “You could finish this,” she said warily. “Why haven’t

  you?”

  William considered her for a long moment.

  “You’re not loyal,” he said. “You’re desperate.”

  Her ears twitched—an involuntary tell.

  “I grew up in the System slums,” she snapped. “You

  either sell your blade, or you die quiet.”

  Mirexa stepped closer, eyes glowing faintly. “And yet

  you hesitate. Why?”

  Nyx swallowed. “Because he’s wrong. The System

  says he shouldn’t exist.”

  William met her gaze. “And what do you think?”

  She hesitated—then laughed, short and breathless.

  “I think if I don’t follow you,” she said, “I’ll regret it

  until I’m dead.”

  Sylraen arched a brow. “That is not a compelling

  argument.”

  Nyx shrugged. “It’s the only honest one I’ve got.”

  William extended a hand.

  “Stay,” he said. “Not as a servant. As a choice.”

  She stared at his hand like it might bite her.

  Slowly—carefully—she sheathed her daggers.

  Then she took it.

  [Bond Established: Conditional Loyalty]

  The System hesitated.

  [Warning: Influence Network Expanding]

  Nyx exhaled shakily, then grinned—wide, sharp, alive.

  “Well,” she said, “guess I just picked the most

  dangerous side possible.”

  William smiled faintly.

  “Yes,” he agreed. “You did.”

  From the rooftops, unseen eyes withdrew.

  And somewhere far beyond the town, something

  ancient and powerful adjusted its attention.

  William’s circle had grown.

  And the world would not ignore that for long.

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