Inevitable Betrayal
Steal effects usually price the body you get: you pay for the creature you take, and the rate is fixed regardless of what you steal. This one inverts the transaction by pulling from an opponent's entire library instead of their board, which means the reward scales with their best creature rather than a set number, and it bypasses graveyard, exile, and hand entirely to reach straight into the deck. It is a tutor pointed the wrong way across the table: the search-and-shuffle template that black and green reserve for their own libraries, read asymmetrically against an enemy's. The catch is that you cannot cast it now. The you spend up front only buys three time counters, and the search does not resolve until the third of your upkeeps has ticked away, with no hardcast valve to skip the wait. That three-turn telegraph is the entire balancing act: it hands the target time to draw the creature you were hoping to lift out of their library before you can reach it, or to deploy their best threats where the search cannot touch them. The suspend line does more than defer the cost, though. It means the spell lives in exile, not your hand, so it dodges discard and shrugs off the interaction aimed at your grip. What finally resolves is a gamble on future information: not what your opponent holds today, but what is still buried in their deck three turns from now, after they have had every chance to dig the prize out first.





