By nineteen, Frederik had learned that the most dangerous part of most rooms was not malice.
It was the assumption.
Malice, at least, had the dignity of intention. It arrived ard. It usually made itself known in the end. Assumption was lazier, duller, and therefore far more common among n with titles, offices, and enough age to mistake surviving their own diocrity for wisdom.
Today’s example wore a departntal crest, a silk tie too expensive for his face, and the kind of smile that had likely spent twenty years being tolerated by people obliged to remain polite.
The Imperial Academy’s eastern research branch had been polished to within an inch of sincerity for the visit.
That was expected.
Cecil’s presence as a representative of the imperial family guaranteed spectacle even in rooms devoted to theory, ether design, and academic bureaucracy. The departnt had arranged its best display hall for the occasion: high vaulted ceilings threaded with visible ether lines under crystal panels, warded demonstration chambers set behind glass, projection arrays carrying rotating schematics of current research, and enough security woven discreetly into the architecture to remind anyone with functioning instincts that this was still an imperial institution no matter how academic the banners tried to look.
Students and faculty had gathered in neat clusters under white-gold light. Formal greetings had been delivered. Research summaries had been presented. Questions had been asked with varying degrees of intelligence and varying degrees of concealed ambition. Through all of it, Cecil had moved with the sa serene precision he had already spent years cultivating into a public weapon.
At twenty, he had grown into himself in ways that made lesser n stupid on sight.
He looked enough like Damian to make old nobles briefly forget their prepared speeches. The sa dark hair. The sa severe, elegant bone structure. The sa impossible stillness that made people speak more carefully around him even before they understood why. But his eyes remained silver - the cold bright silver Damian had once possessed before the trial of ether remade him and left gold in its place - and in Cecil those eyes made his beauty less warm, less easy, and more dangerous to misunderstand.
Unfortunately, misunderstanding had never stopped anyone.
Especially not gross alphas with rank, age, or administrative authority padding their confidence.
Frederik, two steps behind and slightly to Cecil’s right, had already catalogued the problem before the director fully approached.
The signs were old and embarrassingly consistent.
Overconfidence first. Then the pause on Cecil that lasted a fraction too long to be professional and was just long enough to be insulting. Then the glance passed him toward Frederik, brief and dismissive, the kind n reserved for staff they did not intend to rember. There was also the smile. Frederik had developed a particular hatred for smiles like that.
Director Halvern of the eastern research branch was in his late fifties, perhaps early sixties, and broad in the way of n who had long ago stopped being denied anything edible or flattering. His hair had retreated with dignity; his face had not followed. He wore the expression of a man very pleased with his own departnt, his own position, and apparently his own ability to assess people in under three seconds.
A catastrophic skill set, as it turned out.
"Your Imperial Highness," Halvern said warmly, stepping into Cecil’s path with a bow just deep enough to be correct and just shallow enough to announce ego. "It has been a profound honor."
Cecil turned his gaze to him.
That was all.
No smile. No extra warmth. No effort to soften the cool line of his face for the comfort of a man who had not earned it.
Frederik had seen seasoned ministers beco more careful under less pressure.
Halvern, tragically, interpreted this as encouragent to continue.
"The faculty has been deeply grateful for your ti," he said. "The students as well. It is not every day we receive soone of your... particular distinction."
Cecil inclined his head by a degree. "The departnt’s work is important to the Academy. It rits attention."
A perfect answer. Neutral, elegant, impossible to criticize.
Halvern smiled as though Cecil had flirted with him.
Frederik felt sothing very old in himself go still.
Around them, the movent in the hall continued in respectable currents. Professors lingered in disciplined little groups. Several students pretended not to look while very obviously looking. Security was present but discreet, blending into the space with the professional invisibility expected of palace-trained personnel on an academic visit. It was, in other words, a room full of educated adults with every opportunity not to embarrass themselves.
Halvern was determined to innovate.
"And of course," he said, lowering his voice into sothing he probably believed charming, "such demanding public duties can beco exhausting. These events are full of... admirers."
Frederik watched Cecil’s profile.
Not a flicker.
Cecil had perfected the expressionless look years ago. It was one of the reasons idiots kept mistaking him for gentle. They saw stillness and thought passivity. They saw beauty and thought of invitation. They saw a dominant oga and imagined sothing decorative, elegant, and manageable.
It was one of the most efficient self-elimination processes Frederik had ever witnessed in society.
Cecil said, "Public duties are rarely exhausting. Repetition is."
The director laughed.
Laughed.
Frederik almost admired the audacity of a man digging his own grave while smiling into it.
"Yes," Halvern said, stepping a touch closer than etiquette required. "I imagine a man in your position must grow terribly bored of predictable company."
Frederik’s eyes shifted once, briefly, to the man’s hand.
Still at his side.
Because if Halvern reached, this visit would be about to beco much shorter and significantly more educational.
Cecil’s silver eyes rested on him in silence for a beat that should have been enough warning for anyone born with instincts. "Director," he said at last, voice smooth, "are you attempting to discuss departntal research or yourself?"
Several people within earshot stopped pretending not to listen.
A younger lecturer near the projection array abruptly found a schematic of ward compression fascinating enough to die for.
Halvern’s smile faltered, but only at the edges. n like him rarely recognized a blade until they were already bleeding. "Only trying to ensure Your Highness is comfortable in our care."
"My comfort," Cecil said, "has never depended on the efforts of strange n."
Frederik looked down for a mont because his mouth had nearly moved.
Not enough to smile. He was not Natalie. But enough that caution suggested temporary visual discipline.
The director cleared his throat, recovering by force of age and arrogance. "Of course. Of course."
And then, because stupidity did not rely persist in him but apparently reproduced, he looked at Frederik.
That look was the true mistake.
It traveled over Frederik’s black coat, the severe cut of it, the silver details at the cuff, the gloves, and the posture and decided - sohow - that none of those things indicated a man of rank. Perhaps Halvern saw what he expected to see: the son of a ducal household who had spent too long near the imperial family and had therefore beco useful in a secondary way. An attachnt. A body placed beside Cecil for convenience. A young man performing duty rather than choosing proximity.
Frederik had t this assumption before.
It had never improved on second acquaintance.
Halvern said, with the absent condescension of soone waving aside furniture, "You may wait outside."
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