2 Chapters
Malachus Worthington's dream is becoming the secret financial backer controlling the city's industrial district..
Malachus turned another page in the planning commission's file, scanning rows of permit approvals and zoning amendments. The documents were dense with bureaucratic language, but he had learned long ago that power hid best in plain sight. He found it three-quarters through the stack. A crystalline scroll wedged between two routine sewer maintenance contracts, its edges catching the lamplight. The bioluminescent ink glowed faintly as he unrolled it, revealing a chemical analysis from the refinery tower that loomed over the district's largest operation. The numbers told a simple story: the vats were leaking compounds into the groundwater at levels that would condemn the entire quarter if anyone noticed. Malachus sat back, the scroll still glowing in his hands. The operator's grand factory hub with its towering smokestacks and fused glass panels was built on corroded foundations, literally. The permits in front of him showed the operator had known for eighteen months. Every signature, every amended safety report, every redirected inspection — all documented proof of deliberate concealment. He rolled the scroll carefully and slipped it into his coat. The industrial district's most visible power was about to become its most desperate seller, and Malachus would be the only buyer who knew why the price had to be so low.
The message came through three intermediaries, each one believing they were simply passing along routine administrative notice. A city inspection of the refinery tower, unscheduled, set for three days from now. Malachus read the words twice, then set the paper down on his desk. He needed to see the tower before the inspectors did. Not to hide evidence — the operator had already done that work himself, poorly. Malachus needed to know whether the contamination was visible enough to trigger immediate shutdown or subtle enough to require laboratory analysis. The difference meant either losing his leverage entirely or gaining seventy-two hours to close the sale. He walked to the observation tower on the district's western edge, a building whose maintenance contracts he'd quietly absorbed six months ago through a holding company the operator would never connect to him. From the upper platform, he could see the refinery's corroded base where the vats met the foundation. Dark stains marked the stone, spreading in patterns that no inspector could miss. Malachus descended the tower and made his way toward the refinery quarter. Three fire genasi workers stood near a ventilation array, their flame-hair dimmed low as they spoke in tight voices. One gestured toward the approaching guard formation — a full contingent of city enforcers assembling two streets over, their polished armor catching the afternoon light. The inspection wasn't just routine. Someone had filed a formal complaint. The operator's time had just collapsed from three days to hours, maybe less. Malachus turned down a side passage and pulled out a blank form from his coat, one that carried the city engineer's seal he'd acquired last year through a clerk who thought he was helping with permit streamlining. He wrote quickly, redirecting the inspection team to the observation tower first for "preliminary atmospheric readings before ground-level assessment." The tower's upper platform had clean air, pristine instruments, and would buy him exactly the time he needed. Malachus handed the form to a runner near the administrative hall, paid him twice the standard rate for immediate delivery, and watched him sprint toward the guard formation. The inspectors shifted course within minutes, their captain studying the revised orders before leading his squad toward the tower. Malachus walked directly to the refinery operator's office. By the time the man answered his door, pale and sweating, Malachus had already calculated the new offer — low enough to account for imminent discovery, high enough that bankruptcy looked worse. The operator signed before the inspectors finished climbing the tower's first ladder. Malachus folded the deed into his coat and left through the back entrance, his anonymity intact, his foundation one property wider.
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