“Why are you helping me?” he asked, because honesty had a currency too.
Outside, the city breathed. The rain had left glass twinkling, and a cat threaded itself around a root of lamplight. Rion walked up the steps and pushed through the hidden door into the night. He felt the world resolve differently: fewer extraneous details, a single name bright as a lodestar and a thread that would guide him toward traces.
Rion knelt at the threshold. His left hand—scarred along the knuckles from a year he could not remember—hovered over the rim of the ring. He had learned the chant from an old woman who sold peppermint tea and memories in tiny bottled corks. She had uttered the words into his palm, and they had felt like keys. She had warned him: Eden does not offer absolution. It offers transactions.
Rion rose. The rain above had stopped; the city smelled clean of ozone. He felt Mael’s name like a warm stone in his pocket. He thought of leaving immediately — of finding the street with the broken lamppost where he thought Mael might have lived — but the keeper placed a hand over his wrist.
They left the bookstore together. The city was a palimpsest of choices; its walls held names tucked into mortar. Rion carried the thread in his pocket as a promise and Mael’s laugh in his chest as ballast. He had paid for the memory he wanted; he had accepted what he lost. For now, that was a kind of peace.
Rion caught himself thinking of the Bleach Circle under Route 7 — the runes, the ledger, the quiet keeper who balanced lives like weights. He understood that Eden’s economy would never cease: people would keep trading pieces until the world’s edges smoothed into something unrecognizable. That knowledge trembled in him like a premonition.
Then a smell cut through—smoke, but not of fire: cigarette smoke and singed paper, an antiseptic dryness. It threaded with a laugh. The voice he sought unfolded; it was quieter than he’d imagined but unmistakable. He latched onto it like a man to a rope.
Not all returned to Eden. Some found the circles beneath other streets, in other cities; some bought back pieces until they had nothing left to offer. The Bleach Circle hummed on, patient, efficient. It did not judge. It only made trades.