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Chapter 2 - Chapter 2: The Collector’s Toll

The sun rose over Oakhaven like a bruised fruit.

​Vilky sat by the window in Elara's body. She watched the light catch the dust motes dancing in the stagnant air of the cottage.

​She had spent the night dissecting Thorne's memories.

​She knew he was a man of predictable, violent patterns. The village ignored the sounds of his rage because it was easier than intervening.

​That silence was her greatest ally.

​The tax collector, a man named Cedric, would arrive by noon.

​According to Thorne's recollections, Cedric was a bloated parasite who enjoyed the authority his ledger provided.

​He was the gateway to the regional capital. He was the first rung on a very tall ladder.

​Vilky stood up. Her ribs still ached from Thorne's boots.

​She didn't heal the bruises. She needed them.

​She walked to the washbasin and looked at her reflection. Elara was beautiful in a fragile, exhausted way.

​The kind of beauty that invited predators.

​Vilky pulled her hair loose. She made sure the purple mark on her jaw was clearly visible.

​Ventum Charge: 43/100.

​The cost of shifting back and forth was manageable, but she needed a more stable source of energy.

​The biological friction requirement was noted in the back of her mind. It was a tactical necessity, nothing more.

​She heard the sound of hooves on the dry earth outside.

​Two horses. One carriage.

​Vilky moved to the door. She didn't rush. She moved with the hesitant, dragging gait of a woman who expected a blow.

​Outside, the village square was a patch of dirt surrounded by sagging timber hovels.

​Cedric stepped out of the carriage. He wore a doublet of stained velvet. He looked like a hog dressed in silk.

​Two guards stood behind him. They wore leather boiled in oil and carried rusted halberds.

​They weren't soldiers. They were thugs with a paycheck.

​"Thorne!" Cedric bellowed. He held a scroll in one hand and a cane in the other.

​"I know you're in there, you drunkard. The Crown doesn't wait for your hangover to clear."

​Vilky opened the door. She let it creak.

​She stood on the threshold, trembling. She let her eyes go wide and watery.

​"He... he isn't here, My Lord," she said. Her voice was a thin, broken reed.

​Cedric's eyes traveled over her. They lingered on the bruise on her jaw, then moved down to the swell of her chest.

​He smiled. It was an oily, confident expression.

​"Not here? And where would a man like Thorne go on tax day?"

​"He went to the woods," Vilky lied. "He said he found something. A... a vein of iron. He was frantic."

​She stepped forward, then winced, clutching her side.

​"He was angry when he left. He took the last of our coin."

​Cedric stepped closer. The smell of cheap perfume and sweat preceded him.

​"Took the coin, did he? That puts you in a difficult position, Elara."

​He reached out with his cane and lifted her chin. He saw the marks of "Thorne's" violence.

​"The King's silver must be paid. One way or another."

​Vilky looked at the guards. They were bored. They were looking at the village well, ignoring their master's appetites.

​"Please," Vilky whispered. "I have nothing left. Unless... I have some old jewelry. From my mother. It's inside."

​Cedric looked back at his guards. "Stay with the carriage. I'll see what this woman has to offer as collateral."

​The guards chuckled. One of them spat in the dirt.

​"Take your time, Master Cedric. The sun is high."

​Cedric pushed past Vilky into the dimness of the cottage.

​He didn't notice that as soon as the door closed, the woman's trembling stopped.

​He didn't notice the way her eyes became as hard as flint.

​"Where is this jewelry?" Cedric asked. He leaned his cane against the table and began to unbutton his doublet.

​"In the bedroom," Vilky said. Her voice was no longer thin. It was flat.

​Cedric turned, his brow furrowing. "What was that?"

​Vilky was already moving.

​She used the photographic memory of the room's layout. She knew exactly where the uneven floorboard was.

​She stepped over it with the grace of a dancer.

​Cedric reached for her arm. "Don't get cheeky with me, girl."

​Vilky didn't pull away. She lunged forward.

​She didn't use a knife. She used her mouth.

​She slammed her lips against his in a mock kiss of desperation.

​Cedric's first instinct was triumph. He thought she was bartering the only thing she had.

​Then the vacuum started.

​Ventum Charge: 40... 38... 35.

​The violet flare erupted in the small room.

​Cedric's eyes bulged. His hands clawed at Vilky's shoulders, but she held him with a strength that shouldn't have been possible for Elara.

​She felt his life force being sucked into the Ventum Core.

​It was different from Thorne. Thorne was all rage and bitterness.

​Cedric was greed. He was the memory of counting coins. He was the knowledge of the capital's bureaucracy.

​He was the map of the trade routes.

​Vilky drank it all.

​She saw the names of the local lords. She saw the secret ledger hidden in the carriage.

​She saw the face of Cedric's wife, a cold woman he hated.

​Cedric's body began to shrivel. His velvet doublet became too large for his frame.

​His eyes turned to grey glass.

​The ash rose from his skin, swirling in the air before being absorbed into Vilky's pores.

​Within seconds, the tax collector was gone.

​Ventum Charge: 75/100.

​New Identity Acquired: Cedric the Tax Collector.

​Vilky stood in the center of the room. She felt the weight of his memories settling into her mind like books on a shelf.

​She heard the guards laughing outside.

​"Master Cedric's getting his money's worth today," one of them shouted.

​Vilky didn't waste time. She focused on the image of Cedric.

​The transformation was swifter this time. She was becoming more efficient.

​The extra fat blossomed around her waist. Her hair receded. Her skin took on the sallow, pampered hue of a man who never worked a day in the sun.

​She picked up the cane. She adjusted the velvet doublet.

​She practiced the voice.

​"Shut your mouths out there! I'm nearly finished."

​It was perfect. The same arrogant whine.

​She looked at Elara's bed. She needed a reason for the woman to be gone.

​She took a heavy iron poker from the hearth. She smashed the small wooden jewelry box on the table.

​She scattered a few cheap copper rings on the floor.

​She opened the back window.

​Then, she walked to the door and opened it.

​The guards looked up. They saw their master, looking slightly disheveled but satisfied.

​"Where's the girl?" one guard asked, peering past her.

​Vilky, as Cedric, spat on the ground.

​"The bitch tried to stab me while I was looking at her trinkets. Jumped out the back window and ran for the woods."

​He pointed toward the dense treeline behind the cottage.

​"Let her go. She's got nothing left anyway. We have the taxes to collect from the rest of these peasants."

​The guards looked at each other and shrugged. A runaway wife was nothing new.

​"Whatever you say, Master Cedric. To the next village?"

​"No," Vilky said. She climbed into the carriage. "The sun is setting soon. We head back to the regional hub. I have a report to write."

​She sat on the plush bench of the carriage.

​She reached under the seat and found the hidden compartment Cedric's memories had revealed.

​She pulled out the real ledger.

​Her photographic memory scanned the pages. Names. Figures. Delinquent accounts.

​She saw the name of a local Baron. He was skimming from the Crown.

​Cedric had been using that information for blackmail.

​Vilky leaned back. A cold smile touched Cedric's face.

​She had the money. She had the authority. And she had a secret that could destroy a noble.

​The carriage began to move.

​She looked out the window at the receding hovels of Oakhaven.

​She felt no pity for the people she left behind.

​She felt only the cold, steady hum of the Ventum Core.

​She needed to find a way to recharge the Core more effectively.

​The biological friction requirement was still a bottleneck.

​Cedric's memories provided a solution. The regional capital had "houses of silk" where such things were transactional.

​It would be her first stop.

​She closed the ledger.

​She was no longer a victim. She was the ghost in the machine of Exilic.

​And she was coming for the throne.

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