Involuntary Employment
Threaten effects have always fought a math problem: you spend a card and mana to borrow a body for one attack, then hand it back, so the tempo swing has to justify a two-for-one deficit against the opponent's board. The standard fix is a sacrifice outlet that eats the creature before end of turn, turning the borrow into a permanent removal spell. This one attacks the deal from a different angle, stapling a Treasure to the effect so a chunk of the four mana refunds itself. That token is the quiet accountant: it recoups part of the cost the turn you cast this, and if the plan is to feed the stolen creature to an outlet, the Treasure is the color-fixed mana that pays for the outlet while the creature itself is the fuel it consumes. That reframes the sorcery from a raw tempo play into a small combo enabler, the piece that grabs the body and, when the Treasure cracks, bankrolls whatever eats it. The rate is honest about what you're buying: a one-shot mana source that spends itself, bolted to a temporary theft, costs more than a bare Act of Treason, and the design accepts that markup to smooth the exact turn where a threaten deck runs mana-hungry. Haste and the untap round out the package, so the borrowed creature can swing or tap for value no matter what state it was sitting in.

