Briar’s POV
The interim council takes shape without my involvent.
It happens quietly, without ceremony or grand announcents. Like most uncomfortable truths, it erges through late-night phone calls and gatherings disguised as temporary asures.
No official roles assigned. No clear authority established. Just a collection of recognizable faces united by the belief that this arrangent will last only until stability returns.
It never does.
I learn about their formation through fragnts at first. Asher delivers pieces of intelligence the way he always does, not through rumors but through careful observation. He notices who cuts off whom mid-sentence. Who returns to the sa argunt without resolution. Which voices have grown bolder now that no central authority exists to absorb the tension.
"They struggle to establish priorities," he tells one night, standing against the kitchen counter as I scrub a dish that already gleams. "Operations versus policy. Diplomacy versus public presence. Each faction demands their concerns take precedence."
I rinse the plate under running water and place it in the rack, droplets still clinging to my fingers as they trail across the granite surface. I make no effort to clean them away.
"We knew that would happen eventually."
"They revert to familiar patterns," he continues. "Working groups. Private negotiations. Outcos predetermined before official discussions so they can simulate agreent during formal etings."
I reach for the dish towel, working it between my fingers with asured deliberation, savoring the texture against my palms. "That represents performance, not genuine consensus."
He gives a slight nod. "You understand these dynamics well."
I do understand them.
Years of observation taught those rituals. I learned to identify who guided discussions without claiming leadership. I discovered which silences indicated pushback and which revealed anxiety. I mastered the timing of when to challenge their theater and when to let it unfold so everyone could witness what they were truly witnessing. Performance appears solid until the underlying rhythm shifts.
Elena arrives days later without warning, as she typically does. She refuses to take a seat. Instead, she moves through my living space like the walls are closing in, as if constant movent prevents her from voicing sothing irreversible.
"They are struggling badly," she announces without any preamble. "They want you to return."
"In what role exactly," I respond.
Her expression grows pained. "Informally. As an advisor. Working from the shadows."
I release a asured breath, the kind that carries more than oxygen. "So they want influence without responsibility."
"Exactly."
"No," I state.
Her muscles tense along her jawline. "Briar, authority abhors emptiness. Sothing will claim that space."
"I understand that," I answer. "It does not an I must be the one to fill it."
"They are already making concessions," Elena continues. "Dangerous ones."
I study her carefully. "Explain what you an by dangerous."
"Selective enforcent," she elaborates. "Postponed consequences. Boundary violations refrad as practical adjustnts. They label it evolution."
"That is how corruption begins," I observe. "Small enough to overlook. Reasonable enough to justify."
She ceases her pacing and locks eyes with . "That explains why they need you. You resolve problems without leaving fingerprints. You absorb the criticism so they remain untouchable."
"I refuse to serve as their shock absorber while they deny my existence later," I declare. "Not anymore."
Elena exhales sharply, the sound carrying frustration and exhaustion. "You demand perfection from a frawork that functions through chaos."
"I demand transparency," I counter. "From every participant. Including myself."
She appears ready to debate further. Then exhaustion wins instead.
"You are complicating this unnecessarily," she says.
"I am introducing honesty into the equation," I reply.
She departs still frustrated. I do not attempt to stop her. Any intervention would be dishonest to us both.
The boundary crisis erupts one week afterward.
Nobody dies. That becos everyone’s opening statent, as if the absence of casualties proves their competence. A security team crosses a demarcation line that was never properly reestablished because nobody wanted to acknowledge its movent. The response arrives delayed because three different people assud soone else was managing the situation.
Emotions escalate quickly. Soone extends claws in warning. Another person responds with panic.
Nobody dies.
Several individuals co dangerously close.
Close enough that the fear resonates in their voices afterward. Close enough that terror persists even after tensions decrease.
The interim council becos paralyzed.
Nobody wants to make decisions that could trigger similar incidents. Nobody wants to accept responsibility for the systemic failures that created this crisis. They schedule ergency sessions that accomplish nothing except highlighting their collective inability to function.
Asher brings reports of their dysfunction with the sa asured tone he uses for everything else. "Three separate factions are forming within the council itself. Each believes the others caused this incident through negligence."
I listen while preparing dinner, thodical movents hiding the calculations running through my mind.
"They bla coordination failures," he continues. "Communication breakdowns. Unclear authority chains."
"Those are symptoms," I observe. "Not causes."
"The underlying problem remains the sa," he agrees. "They want decision-making power without accountability. Leadership without visibility. Results without consequences."
I set down my knife and face him directly. "And they believe I can provide that magical solution."
"They believe you can make their problems disappear while they maintain plausible distance from whatever thods you employ."
I return to my preparations, considering the familiar weight of expectations I no longer wish to carry.
The provisional council will learn to function or it will collapse. Either outco will teach valuable lessons about the nature of genuine leadership versus comfortable illusion.
That education does not require my participation.
Reviews
All reviews (0)