Reckless Spite
Black has always paid for its removal, and few cards state the principle more bluntly: a two-for-one at instant speed, priced not in mana but in five life off the top. The mana cost is almost incidental; what gates the card is the life loss, a flat fee that does not scale with the threats removed or the game state you are in. That makes it a study in how black's color pie treats efficiency as a resource you bleed for rather than a discount you earn. The nonblack restriction handles the rest of the gating, a hereditary clause from an era when black removal routinely refused to touch its own color, drawing a line around what the color was allowed to answer. Killing two creatures for three mana at instant speed is a rate that should never see a clean printing, and it does not: the five-life tax is the pressure valve that keeps spot removal this efficient honest, turning a blowout into a calculated gamble about whether you can afford the swing. It rewards the racing posture black already wants, where life is ammunition and a board cleared at the right combat step can justify the points it cost. The whole card is a single, legible design idea: instant-speed double removal, but only if you are willing to put your own clock on the line to cast it.







