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Arcane: The Gods Want Me to Pick a Route-Chapter 94: Welcome to Zaun, Councilor Eight (EC)
The bloodstains on the Bridge of Progressβstill not fully scrubbed awayβcaught Jayceβs eye. The Enforcer driving noticed where he was looking and spoke up on his own. ππ«ππ²π¨πππππ―ππΉ.ππ¨πΊ
"This war... we lost completely, Councilor Talis."
Jayce frowned. "How many people did we lose?"
The Enforcerβs expression stiffened, and he lowered his voice. "We didnβt lose that manyβhonestly, not even as many as the last time the Undercity conflict blew up. But the Noxians... theyβre basically all dead."
"So what youβre saying is... Zaunites intentionally let us off?" Jayce asked.
"I think so," the Enforcer said. "If theyβd wanted to kill us, it wouldβve been easier than slaughtering the Noxians. But instead, they captured all of us, tied us up together on the bridge, and only let us go after they came out of Piltover and were heading back to Zaun."
When he said it, fear was plain in his eyes.
If that wolf-like monsterβand Zaunβs bossβhad charged into the Enforcersβ formation that day... would he still be here, driving Councilor Talis around, able to talk?
Obviously not.
The Enforcerβs words made Jayce nod slowly.
Maybe Mel was right. Zaunβs "sincerity" really was substantial.
They had a kind of power Piltover couldnβt even understandβyet they hadnβt chosen to occupy Piltover. Theyβd chosen cooperation between the two cities instead.
Even though it was called "cooperation," it looked like Piltover was taking the loss. Setting aside the land, control rights, and resources given to Zaunβjust the ports and jointly managed trade routes alone... Zaun and Piltover "co-managing" them? Any way you looked at it, it felt like Piltover was propping Zaun up with one-sided support.
But once Jayce put himself in their shoes, he couldnβt help thinking Zaun was being... almost merciful.
Heβd been in politics for years. If it had been himβif it had been Piltoverβs councilors who won this warβZaun wouldβve been squeezed even harder. Forget autonomy and independence; they wouldβve had their spine snapped and been crushed into permanent collapse.
That was why Jayce was so curious about what Zaun was really thinking.
"Weβre here," the Enforcer told him. "I canβt go any farther. The cooperation agreement hasnβt been signed yet, and until it is, Zaun still forbids Piltovans from entering."
Jayce found it absurdβand somehow funny at the same time.
Before, Zaunites needed Piltoverβs permission to enter Piltover.
Now it was reversed. Without Zaunβs permission, even though there was no one guarding the Promenade side of the Bridge of Progress, the Enforcers still didnβt dare cross that line.
Jayce nodded. Face calm, he grabbed his bag and walked alone toward the Promenade.
There truly was no one guarding it. Following the route the Enforcer had told him, Jayce found the Shrieker that descended into the Sump.
A group of Zaunites were already waiting there. When they saw Jayce, a strange look flickered in their eyes.
Jayce was tall, dressed in a councilorβs white outfit, with the unmistakable air of wealthβhe couldnβt have been more conspicuous if he tried.
But just as Jayce thought they might do something, those Zaunites simply looked away and went back to talking amongst themselves.
"Boss is going up to the topside to be a councilor. Theyβre recruiting people right nowβare you going?"
"Honestly, I really want to go help Boss in Piltover... but, uh... I still want to stay in Zaun more."
"Yeah, no kidding. If we had a choice, who wouldnβt want to stay in Zaun? But if everyone thinks like you, howβs Zaun supposed to develop? I say we should go. Wylanβs not coming because his wifeβs about to have a babyβwhat about you?"
"M-me? My momβs about to have a baby?"
"Have a baby, my ass. What mom do you even have? Your mom died on the bridge years ago."
"Can you talk like a normal person? I was joking. Fine, fineβIβll go, alright?"
Jayce listened to their conversation, his expression turning odd.
Zaunites could go to Piltover legally now, and they were acting reluctant?
What... what was going on?
Back then, Zaunites wouldβve done anything to squeeze their way into Piltover.
Jayce was still trying to make sense of it when he heard a clackβthe Shrieker arriving at the top.
Taking a deep breath, Councilor Talis stepped inside.
The Zaunites didnβt follow him in. They stayed outside, like they were waiting for someone.
Inside the enormous Shrieker, Jayce was the only passenger, which let him finally settle his thoughts.
When the Shrieker stopped, Jayce stepped out.
It had reached Zaunβs EntresolβJayceβs first time ever setting foot here.
He frowned.
Everything was gray and dim. Buildings in oppressive, sickly hues sprawled in twisted, winding shapesβlike alchemical monsters crawling over each other. The structures were packed tightly together, and for someone with even mild perfectionist tendencies, it was irritating to look at.
And this was only the Entresol. Heβd heard the Sump was even messier, dirtier, worse.
Bitterness rose in Jayceβs throat.
Heβd told Mel he didnβt care, that he was willing to be the sacrifice and trade himself for Piltoverβs futureβbut how could he truly not care?
Every breath made his nose and throat burn, his lungs sting. He couldnβt even adapt to the air here, let alone go deeper into Zaun and deal with the people below.
He was standing there, swallowing that bitterness, when a group suddenly walked up to him.
At the front was a long-haired woman. Tallβonly a little shorter than Jayceβbut built even stronger than him.
"Heh." She looked him over and gave a quiet chuckle, brow lifting. A cigar hung from her lips. She took a long drag, exhaled smoke right into Jayceβs face, then tossed the cigar to the ground and crushed it under her boot.
"Boss, the boss said weβre not allowed to litter," a Zaunite beside her said seriously, stepping forward.
Sevika froze for a beat, rolled her eyes hard, then bent down, picked up the crushed cigar, and stuffed it into her trench coat pocket. She muttered under her breath, "So many damn rules now. What harm is one cigar gonna do?"
"Boss, it adds up," the Zaunite said earnestly. "The boss said our top priority is fixing sanitation. The wastewater pipes are repaired, but the toxic junk piled in the dumpsβand Zaunβs habit of throwing everything on the ground, dumping things into the waterβif we donβt break those habits, Zaunβs air is never getting better."
"Donβt lecture me," Sevika snapped, glaring at him. Then she turned back to Jayce, eyes raking over Councilor Talis, and squeezed out, "Youβre Councilor Talis, right?"
"I saw your photo on the airship. You do look goodβsame as the picture."
"Who are you?" Jayce asked, frowning.
"Sevika," she said, straightening and speaking loud and clear. "Or ratherβIβm Piltoverβs new councilor."
Jayce nodded. "Understood. Iβll remember your name."
Sevikaβs expression immediately soured. "Why does that sound like youβre threatening me?"
One of her long-time underlings sighed, leaned in, and whispered, "Bossβyouβre jumpy. Itβs not like before. He really does just mean heβll remember your name."
"..." Sevika blinked, realizing he was right.
She wasnβt the old Sevika anymoreβnot the Sevika who had to flinch when an Enforcer pointed at her face and said Iβll remember you, and then spend the next week dodging patrols.
Now she was Piltoverβs new councilor.
With that thought, Sevika looked at Jayce and said, "Thenβwelcome to Zaun, Zaunβs eighth councilor."
"Councilor Jayce Talis."
Jayce nodded, but his face clearly wasnβt thrilled with that title.
Sevika didnβt care. She continued, "Want me to have someone take you to meet our boss?"
"No need. Iβll look around myself. Thank you," Jayce replied.
"Fine."
Sevika lifted her hand and called to her people. "Letβs goβtaking office in Piltover!"
The group filed past Jayce and got into the Shrieker.
Jayce turned and walked forward into Zaun.
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