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He broke the seal with his thumbnail. The paper unfurled like sothing that rembered breath.

Four words, written in a hand that was too careful to be careless and too plain to be common.

Kill Kaelen of Luminis.

Lyren read the words once and again. For a third ti, until the letters bled against the page. He did not need instruction to want his brother dead. To want sothing and need were different words, though, and the difference mattered.

Lyren dislikes being controlled and at this point, it was starting to piss him off the more.This felt like fuel pushed into his hands as if soone had been watching his fire run low.

In a low roaring voice he yelled at no one in particular.

"Why don’t you kill him yourself!"

He turned the parchnt over. It was blank. He held it over the lamp. No hidden ink blood. He pinched the corners and felt grit, minute grains, like ground glass that got under his nails. He brought the page to his nose. It had no scent. He licked a fingertip and touched the margin; it tasted of iron, ancient and thin as old blood.

"Who sent you," he murmured to the page, "and what do you think I am?"

He pictured Kaelen catching his fire in his bare hand, reducing it to gentled light. He pictured his mother’s palm striking his cheek and her voice repeating the words failure! Multiple tis He pictured Salyer’s hand on his shoulder, heavy with encouragent that felt like a bridle.

Lyren folded the parchnt with exquisite care and slid it into the inner lining of his coat. Then he rose and blew the lamp out with a breath that ca too hot.

"Soon," he said in the dark.

********

The Conclave Tower wore the rain like a robe. Within, the council chamber burned bright as a hearth in winter, and the voices that filled it had the sa property: warmth bluffed over danger. The circle of seats was less a circle tonight than a collection of walls.

"Close the outer gates," a Soltair voice urged. "If we are probed, it’s from outside."

"Open them," ca a Marrowind counter, jeweled with scorn. "Let anyone who wishes to walk into the Marches do so and never return. Our problem is within."

"The Sanctum sees no breach," High Priest Calvess declared, his cone-voice lilting with oily certitude. "Only a regrettable increase in ritual requirents."

"Regrettable is an amusing word for drainage," a lean woman in the back row said. "The Basilica vaults have drawn more in a month than they are budgeted to pull in a season."

In the high gallery’s shadow, Joanna watched, wet hair slicked to her neck, cloak dimd to dull gray. She marked who flinched at the word Source and who did not. She marked who watched the door when the Sanctum runner slipped in with a sealed packet for Calvess. She marked the way two scribes (Conclave, not House) wrote two versions of the sa sentence.

By the ti the session adjourned, she had a list of six nas no one had spoken aloud. When she passed under the arch, she did not look up at the gargoyles carved there, mouths frozen open as if in warning. She had stopped believing in the stone that warned.

*******

Under the main keep, in a small chamber paneled with old cedar and older secrets, Salyer Hammon drew a finger along the carved edges of a map. The city’s arteries were inked on vellum streets and sewers, ley lines and ward-knots splayed out like anatomy on a table. He moved a glass bead from the Basilica to a dark square labeled only with a sigil: a circle crossed by three vertical strokes.

Evelina stood by the lattice window, her hands locked white around each other. Her hair was perfect; her voice was not.

"He humiliated Lyren," she said. "In front of them all."

"Humiliation," Salyer said, still moving beads, "is a kindling. Useful when the night is damp."

Her eyes flashed. "You didn’t see him afterward."

"I heard him," Salyer said mildly. "Half the wing heard him. Let the boy break a few vases; it will teach the servants to move faster."

She turned her face away. Beyond the window, rain hissed on slate. "You told this would be easy."

"I told you it would be clean," he corrected. "It can still be. The Ember Ledger is on our side. Kaelen’s na is gone. He is a guest here at your indulgence. Guests are easily... mislaid."

Evelina’s mouth thinned. "You speak as if he didn’t live here once"

"I speak," Salyer murmured, "as soone who has seen worse."

She closed her eyes. When she opened them, the mask had settled again. "Valerius will not choose."

"Valerius has already chosen," Salyer said. "He chose the order. He will watch which son delivers it. You will ensure the younger one does." He flicked a bead from the western cloister to the river line. "Your task is unchanged. Keep the elder contained. Keep the younger hungry."

"Hungry?" The word nearly broke.

Salyer looked up at her then, the warmth in his gaze beca ticulously "Hunger makes princes. Satisfaction makes poets.He needs to learn to want more than he is given"

Evelina laughed once, brittle as an icicle. "And you think I do not know the difference."

He ca around the table and took her cold hands, holding them until she stilled. "My dear sister. Fear is natural. But let it be a leash you hold, not one that drags you down. If the ledger says the elder does not exist, then he does not. Everything else is useless."

Her spine straightened by degrees. "The council moves are unpredictable If they turn toward him..."

"They will not," Salyer said. "Not if his shadow troubles the Basilica tomorrow and finds nothing. Not if whispers say the Aetherborn fissures wards with a look. Not if the Sanctum finds its own incense choking."

Evelina watched his face, searching it for a crack and finding only polished patience. She thought of Lyren’s cheek, reddened under her palm. She thought of Kaelen’s quiet when she expected fury and felt hatred bloom like a bruise.

"If I fail," she said softly, "I bring sha to the family."

Salyer smiled the way a man smiles at a chessboard he has already won. "Then do not fail."

He released her hands. She did not ask him to stay. He did not offer. When he left, the cedar room slled faintly of rain and old smoke, as if soone had just blown out a candle.

Kaelen crossed back through the west garden, the rain easing to a mist that trapped lamplight in beads along every leaf. Joanna’s words walked with him, step for step, setting each thought on a sharper edge.

Sothing is draining the Source.

The engineered beast was a decoy.

The council is feeding the blight.

Echo brushed his leg, then trotted ahead, nose up, testing the air. Kaelen paused under the colonnade’s last arch and looked out at Luminis. Beneath the marvel of it,the terraces and towers, the fountains that sang, the city’s Aether sounded like a river strangled into a pipe.

"Third bell," he said to Echo. "Basilica vault five."

Echo sneezed, annoyed with the mist, which Kaelen took for assent.

He stepped into the passage leading toward his quarters. The torches there burned lower, as if soone had told them to be discreet. He felt the wards acknowledge him with a touch like a damp cloth: permitted, observed. He would not sleep. He would listen to the house breathe and catalog every breath.

As he reached his door, a faint scrape sounded from within; it was like tal against stone, then stillness. Echo stiffened, hackles lifting. Kaelen lifted a hand, palm out, and the wolf quieted but did not relax.

He did not push the door. He pulled on the air inside instead, tugging gently until the latch slipped and the portal cracked open on oiled silence. The room beyond held its shape: table, chair, travel chest, a single lamp guttering low. No scent of intruder. No body, the heat of a body was just gone.

On the table lay a clean square of vellum, unsealed, centered with surgical care.

Kaelen did not touch it. He extended his fingers above it and felt the tiniest static, residual Aether, scraped thin.

He read the single line from where he stood.

Co alone. Third bell. Basilica lower entrance.

He almost smiled. The city had decided to invite him to the sa eting he’d already agreed to attend, which ant one of two things: soone wanted him certain, or soone wanted him trapped.

"Not alone," Tiara had said.

"You don’t need to trust ," Joanna had said. "But you can’t do it all alone."

Kaelen pressed the door shut with two fingers and slid the bolt. He sat on the edge of the bed without taking off his cloak. Echo lay at his boots, eyes on the crack under the door. The rain made a whisper of the world beyond the walls.

In the Lantern Court, a bell tolled the first watch.

He closed his eyes, listening not to mory this ti, not to anger but to the net of life that bound house to house, root to root, breath to breath. Sowhere under the Basilica, sothing turned its face toward him and waited.

He opened his eyes.

"Third bell," he said again, and the words were a promise.

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