"My uncle thought..." he began.
Arik tightened his hold on Ilyan’s hair just enough to make the words catch.
"I did not ask what your uncle thought," he said. "I asked whether he instructed you or whether you volunteered your own stupidity."
The oga swallowed.
Arik watched the movent of his throat with the sa detached focus he might have brought to a report he already knew would end badly for soone else.
"He asked if I could help," Ilyan said at last. "Only that. He said the formal chain would delay things. He thought if the request ca closer to you, more privately—"
"More privately," Arik repeated.
Ilyan heard the coldness in his words, his fingers barely tightening on Prince’s shoulders.
Arik saw the exact mont the oga understood that he had not rely crossed a line. He had stepped on the only part of the arrangent Arik had ever required to remain clean.
Arik let go of his hair then, but only to take the oga off his lap.
Ilyan landed beside him on the sofa, silk disordered now, blonde hair no longer elegant, the entire scene abruptly reclassified from seduction to an interview under threat.
Arik rose.
Standing over him, all black tailoring, gold-eyed stillness, and Goliath stripped clean of any softness the family might have recognized in him, he looked less like a man leaving a couch and more like a verdict standing up.
"I have one rule," Arik said.
Ilyan looked up at him, very still now.
"One."
The room stayed silent.
Arik’s gaze did not leave his face. "Do not interfere where you do not have access."
Nothing in his tone changed.
That made it much harder to survive.
"You were given proximity," Arik continued. "Not authority. You were given discretion. Not influence. You were given an arrangent. Not the right to test my structure for your family’s convenience."
Ilyan opened his mouth.
Arik lifted one hand.
The oga closed it again.
"You mistook my tolerance for softness," Arik said. "You mistook sex for loosened hierarchy. You mistook privacy for weakness." The corner of his mouth moved once, not remotely kind. "That is such an ugly kind of stupidity that I’m almost embarrassed for the house that produced it."
Ilyan’s face went pale.
"Your High—"
"No."
Arik’s voice stayed level.
"Do not try to turn this into personal sorrow. You knew exactly what you were doing the mont you let a procurent request touch my private access. The fact that you chose perfu and heat around it only makes it uglier."
Arik reached into the inner pocket of his coat and removed a slim black card case. From it he drew a single folded sheet - thin, expensive, and ward-marked at the edges.
Ilyan saw it and went very still.
Of course he recognized it.
Consort contract termination paperwork.
Arik unfolded it with calm ticulousness and laid it on the side table beside the untouched wine.
"The arrangent is terminated," he said.
Ilyan stared at the docunt as if the words might beco less final through force of disbelief.
"No," he said softly, then again, weaker, "no."
Arik looked at him the way one looked at a man discovering that consequences had not, in fact, been decorative.
"Yes."
The oga rose too quickly, heat and panic tangling his movents into sothing graceless. "You can’t end it over one request."
Arik raised a brow with the look of a man daring the oga to repeat that.
"I can end it," he said, "because you broke the only rule that made your continued existence in my private life tolerable."
The room seed to hold its breath.
Then Arik touched the comm panel in the wall with two fingers.
The channel opened silently.
"Seal the suite," he said.
There was no audible reply.
A beat later, the outer locks engaged.
Ilyan’s eyes widened.
Arik did not look at the doors.
"Notify Shadow Command," he continued. "Imdiate investigation into House Vael’s procurent contacts, restricted-channel requests, and private communications within the last thirty days. Priority review under my authority. Full cooperation expected. Anyone who resists loses the courtesy of being asked twice."
Now the oga was breathing too fast.
"My family had nothing to do with this—"
Arik turned his head, and Ilyan fell silent at once.
It was almost disappointing how easy people beca once they realized beauty was not defense.
"The Shadows," Arik said, "will determine exactly how much your family had to do with it."
Ilyan looked at him with the first real fear he had shown all evening. "Please."
Arik tilted his head a fraction. "That is not a useful word."
"It was only a request."
"And now it is an investigation."
The oga’s hands had tightened in the silk at his sides. Arik noticed. Not because he cared about the hands. Because panic made people stupid, and stupid people in sealed suites sotis beca noisy.
He walked back toward him, slow enough that every step counted.
"The contract is over," Arik said. "You are no longer my consort. You are a witness to your own bad judgnt and a possible point of entry into your house’s stupidity. The distinction matters."
Ilyan’s lips parted. "You would hand to the Shadows."
Arik’s expression did not move. "No."
For half a second, hope appeared.
Then Arik finished:
"I would hand your family to them. You, unfortunately, will have to sit still and watch what your usefulness cost."
That broke the last of the oga’s composure.
The fear beca visible under the silk and beauty and carefully maintained heat.
Arik stopped directly in front of him and looked down.
"You wanted access," he said. "Now you get to watch what access buys when it is abused in my house."
He touched the wall comm again.
"Send two Shadows to escort Lord Ilyan to holding suite three. Keep him comfortable. Keep him silent. He speaks only when questioned."
A pause.
Then:
"And tell Commander Frasner I’m giving him a present."
That ti, even Ilyan understood what the sentence ant.
His face lost the last of its color.
Arik stepped back before the knock ca at the door.
Two seconds later, the locks released in sequence. The inner panel opened, and two dark-uniford Shadows entered without a wasted movent between them. They took in the room - the broken shape of the evening, the termination paper on the table, the oga’s face - and needed no explanation.
One of them inclined his head. "Your Highness."
Arik did not look away from Ilyan. "Remove him."
The Shadow stepped forward.
Ilyan did not resist.
That would at least preserve what remained of his dignity before Gregoris started asuring how much of it the house was allowed to keep.
As the oga was escorted out, Arik spoke one final ti.
"Ilyan."
The man stopped and looked back.
Arik’s gaze remained bright, cold, and entirely without rcy.
"By morning, decide whether you want to be rembered as useful, stupid, or disloyal. The answer changes how much of your family remains standing."
The oga swallowed once.
He then nodded, because fear had finally made him intelligent.
When the door sealed behind them, the suite fell silent again.
The wine remained untouched. The heat still lingered in the air, stale now, purposeless. The sofa still held the imprint of the body that had mistaken itself for leverage.
Arik stood in the middle of the room and felt, with clean satisfaction, that Damian had been right.
This was better.
He reached for the comm again.
"zos."
The officer answered at once. "Yes."
"It’s done."
A beat.
Then, warm with entirely inappropriate satisfaction, "Did he cry?"
"No."
"That’s disappointing."
"That’s your personality defect, not mine."
zos laughed softly. "Am I still eting you for the cognac?"
Arik looked once at the dead, perfud room and then toward the sealed doors.
"Yes," he said.
Because if one had just terminated a consort, unleashed the Shadows on a ducal house, and improved the structure of the evening through proper violence, then stolen alcohol did, in fact, feel like the correct administrative follow-up.
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