Alorna slipped out of the sideways place with the unconscious princess slung over her shoulder, the transition so smooth it felt less like movent and more like deciding to be elsewhere. One mont the bog had been around her, cold, wet, and swallowing, and the next it simply was not. Stone replaced mud beneath her boots, the air went still, and the pressure of the storm vanished as if it had never existed.
Imujin and the others were already waiting when Alorna erged, positioned with quiet precision rather than urgency. No one reached for the princess. No one spoke. The space itself felt prepared, as though this mont had been anticipated down to the second.
Imujin stood a few paces ahead, posture loose in a way that suggested confidence rather than ease. His eyes were sharp and active, assessing, already cataloging details before Alorna had fully settled her footing. When she shifted the princess’s weight and straightened, he took in the slackness of the captive’s body, the angle of her head, the shallow rhythm of her breathing, and the faint tremor in her hands. He gave a single nod when he was satisfied. No words followed, and none were required.
Dr. Lambert moved the mont Alorna cleared the transition, stepping in with practiced certainty.
She did not hesitate, did not announce herself, and did not bother with reassurance. Her focus narrowed to anatomy and timing as she knelt beside the princess, one hand bracing, the other already drawing the needle. She stepped in close, steady and precise, and drove the syringe straight into the princess’s chest, angling perfectly to deliver a shot of adrenaline directly to the heart.
The drug took effect instantly, and the result was brutal.
The princess gasped in silence, her eyes flying open as her body seized against the shock. Her chest heaved as she dragged in a breath that felt endless, a scream trapped behind clenched teeth and air that refused to carry sound. Her back struck the ground as her muscles locked, breath rasping and uneven, and then instinct took over. She forced herself upright on shaking arms, wide-eyed, disoriented, and breathing hard as her heart hamred against her ribs.
Her gaze snapped to Imujin the mont her vision cleared enough to find him.
Recognition followed a heartbeat later, cutting through the chemical shock with ruthless clarity.
The color drained from her face as understanding settled in, sharp and imdiate. Whatever else she had expected, whatever half-ford hope or denial might have lingered through the confusion of capture and transit, collapsed the instant their eyes t. She understood that this was deliberate, intentional, and far beyond anything that could be bargained, stalled, or talked away.
Imujin smiled, slow and controlled, the expression of soone fully aware of what his presence ant and entirely comfortable with it. There was no rush in him, no need to assert dominance through movent or volu. He did not step closer, did not raise his voice, and did not reach for her. The mont belonged to him already, claid simply by existing within it.
Only then did the rest of it land. The fear had nothing to do with where she was or how she had arrived there. It ca from who was standing in front of her, from stories she had grown up hearing in fragnts and warnings, from a na spoken carefully and never without consequence. Whatever this place was, whatever these people wanted, that realization outweighed all of it.
“Hello, niece,” he said quietly, eting her eyes without blinking, greeting one of his brother’s children for the first ti in many years.
With an extraordinary amount of decorum, Princess Selai pushed herself to her feet. She took longer than she needed, not because she was weak, but because she refused to look rushed. Her breathing slowed under conscious control. She straightened her spine, adjusted her clothing, and reclaid what dignity she could salvage from the circumstances. When she finally looked at her uncle, her expression was composed, her posture precise, her voice asured and steady.
“Uncle,” she said evenly. “Why are you here? Why are you in this small backwater piece of shit town, and why am I in your custody?”
Imujin regarded her for a long mont before answering. His gaze was not hostile, but it was not kind either. It was the look of soone weighing a variable rather than addressing a person.
“You’re not technically in my custody, niece,” he said.
Another voice cut in from the side, close enough to matter.
“Technically, you’re in mine.”
Selai turned sharply.
A man had entered without ceremony, moving as if doors, guards, and protocols were suggestions rather than barriers. He carried himself with infuriating ease, as though the room had arranged itself around his presence rather than the other way around. She recognized him instantly. The singer. The one she had seen from her palanquin. The voice that had torn formation apart, that had turned advance into disaster and threat into humiliation.
Her jaw tightened, teeth grinding together as the realization finished settling.
“It’s you,” she said. “You did this.”
Vaeliyan smiled, slow and unhurried, the expression relaxed in a way that made her want to strike him. The accusation did not unsettle him in the slightest.
“No,” he replied, his voice light and sharp all at once. “You fucking idiot. You did this.”
The words landed with deliberate cruelty.
“You chose to co here. You chose to step into a situation that was far beyond your understanding. You thought you could walk over my ho and get away with it.” His smile never wavered. “Now you’re my prisoner. And apparently, you’re my master’s niece. So, tell , what does that make him? The Emperor’s brother?”
Selai drew a slow breath through her nose, forcing her temper back under control. “No,” she said. “He is my mother’s brother, not my father’s. But they were close.”
Imujin inclined his head slightly, the motion acknowledging information rather than emotion.
“He was like a brother to ,” he said. “What we were does not matter anymore. What you are to now is a nuisance.”
Selai stiffened at the word, but Imujin continued without raising his voice or altering his stance.
“You could have made this easy, Selai. All of you could have. You could have agreed to work together. You could have accepted limits. Instead, you decided that power was sothing to be taken rather than shared, and that decision fractured the mont you brought the Legion into your ambitions.”
His eyes hardened, focus narrowing.
“So, we chose the other side. We joined the rebels.”
The statent settled heavily in the room.
“The Green was founded because you lot could not coexist peacefully. You needed an existential threat to force you into a tentative unity, so we stepped away and beca that threat. The Princedoms have nothing without the Legion at their throats. Without an enemy to unify against, you would have turned on each other until there was nothing left but ruin and titles carved into ash.”
He shook his head once, a small motion heavy with judgnt.
“Yes, making us your enemy forced you to cooperate. It made you stronger. If we had joined any one of you instead, the others would have been destroyed, and I no longer believe that would have been an unacceptable outco.”
His gaze returned to Selai, sharp and unwavering, stripping away pretense.
“But I could not watch my sister’s children slaughter each other. Not then.” He paused, just long enough for the weight of the words to settle. “Ti, however, has a way of changing what restraint costs.”
Selai looked at Vaeliyan with careful appraisal and spoke without raising her voice. She did not rush the mont. She let the silence settle, let him see that she was not panicking, not grasping for leverage that was not there.
“So, this is it?” she asked. “You plan to ransom back for the safety of your little town?”
Vaeliyan blinked once, as if the question genuinely surprised him. Then he laughed, a short sound stripped of humor, more exhale than amusent.
“That’s where you go first?” he said. “You really think I’m so small‑ti criminal who kidnaps people and shakes kingdoms down for protection money?”
He tilted his head slightly, studying her reaction the way one might examine a flawed premise.
“Oh no,” he continued. “You’re worth far more than that. You’re the key to sothing much bigger, and there’s a lot you don’t understand yet.”
He gestured once, slow and deliberate, indicating the room around them, the walls, the air, the quiet.
“This space is blind,” he said. “Blind to the Legion, blind to the System, and blind to the Princedoms. No one outside this room can hear us. No recordings. No surveillance. Nothing leaks out of here.” He t her eyes. “That’s why I’m telling you the truth.”
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Selai’s eyes narrowed, her posture tightening by degrees.
“You’re going to open the doors of your kingdom for ,” Vaeliyan said, as calmly as if he were stating a logistical requirent.
The silence that followed stretched, heavy and deliberate.
“And why,” Selai asked carefully, “would I ever agree to do sothing like that?”
Vaeliyan smiled, and there was nothing kind in it.
“Because Imujin intends for to beco Emperor,” he said. “Isn’t that right?”
Imujin regarded him for a mont before answering, his expression unreadable.
“So, you finally heard what I was telling you,” he replied. “I was never hiding it.”
Vaeliyan did not shrug this ti. “You were never subtle,” he said. “You never needed to be.”
Imujin’s gaze shifted back to Selai, fixing her in place.
“Do you want to know who you’re speaking to?” he asked.
She hesitated, just long enough for the question to do its work.
Imujin continued anyway.
“This is Princess Selai,” he said, his voice even and unhurried. “And this is Vaeliyan Verdance. The world will co to know him by another na, and if I have any say in the matter, he will be our next Emperor. The Legion will follow him, whether they realize it yet or not.”
Selai’s composure cracked, the discipline she had been holding slipping for the first ti.
“What are you saying?” she demanded. “Even if any of this were true, if I told your Primark...”
“You would all be executed,” she finished, the words coming out colder than she intended.
Imujin smiled, thin and patient, as if she had finally reached the correct conclusion.
“Selai,” he said softly. “You will not be able to speak of what you learn here until it is far too late for it to change anything. The sa is true for your siblings. That window closed a long ti ago.”
Her breath caught despite her efforts to control it.
“Do you want to know what really happened to Graveholt?” he asked.
The blood drained from her face.
She had known sothing was wrong. She had felt it in her bones from the beginning. The silence around Graveholt had never made sense, not in a world that docunted everything.
“How did you do it?” she whispered. “A weapon? So kind of new tech?”
Imujin shook his head slowly.
“No, my dear,” he said. “It was much simpler than that.”
He looked to Vaeliyan.
“Would you show her?”
Vaeliyan hesitated, the first trace of uncertainty crossing his face.
“Are you sure?” he asked.
Imujin nodded once, final and unambiguous.
“It’s fine,” he said. “By the ti she could speak of this, it will be far too late for it to matter.”
“Imujin,” Selai said carefully, without taking her eyes off Vaeliyan, “are you certain this is wise? Villain monologues tend to backfire.”
Her tone was asured, almost conversational, but her shoulders were tight and her weight subtly shifted, as if she were bracing herself against an unseen slope.
Vaeliyan snorted, the sound brief and dismissive.
Imujin, however, looked almost amused. Not entertained, not indulgent, but faintly pleased, as though the question itself confird sothing he already believed.
“Boy,” he said mildly, “you have no sense of pageantry.”
He gestured with one hand, slow and deliberate, fingers curling and uncurling as if shaping the air itself.
“There is gravitas that must be shown,” Imujin continued. “There is weight, and inevitability, and demonstration. Soone so convinced of their own certainty does not bend because they are asked.”
He paused, letting the words settle.
“They bend when they understand that the ground beneath them has already shifted, and that they have been standing on borrowed stability the entire ti.”
His gaze returned to Selai, sharp and unblinking, stripping away pretense and ceremony in equal asure.
“Princess Selai,” he said, “you know there is only one real way out of this for you.”
She said nothing. Her jaw flexed once, but she did not look away.
“While you are absent,” Imujin continued, “your granddaughters will maneuver for your position. They will do so politely at first, in council chambers and private dinners, wrapped in courtesy and tradition.”
His expression did not change.
“Then the knives will co out. Your court will fracture. Allies will smile while sharpening blades behind their backs. Promises will be made and broken within the sa breath. One of them will climb, and when they do, they will look outward for threats to erase.”
He let that sit, the silence stretching.
“They will send nuclear fire to this location,” he said calmly, as if describing a weather report. “They will kill everyone here unless you stop them.”
Selai’s jaw tightened further, her fingers curling at her side.
“But you will not stop them by force,” Imujin went on. “You will not stop them by decree, or threat, or appeal to loyalty. You will stop them by binding yourself to this man.”
He did not gesture toward Vaeliyan. He did not need to.
“Not as an equal. Not as a partner. As a vassal.”
The word landed like a physical blow, heavy and unavoidable.
“You will be his first,” Imujin said. “And because of that, the Branthorn will follow him. They will follow him while he takes the rest. While he conquers. While he unifies what you fractured.”
Selai laughed once, sharp and disbelieving, the sound brittle. “You speak as though this were already proven.”
“It is,” Imujin replied without hesitation.
He tilted his head slightly, just enough to change the angle of his gaze.
“As he crushed Graveholt.”
Her eyes went wide despite herself.
“That’s not possible,” she said. “Graveholt was destroyed by the Red Widow. Everyone knows that.”
“Yes,” Imujin agreed. “It was.”
He stepped closer, his voice lowering, not in threat but in certainty.
“But this man drove her into the heart of Graveholt. He buried the poisoned dagger in their mists without them ever realizing it. He did not do it with an army. He did not do it with allies. He did it alone.”
Selai swallowed, her throat suddenly dry.
“He was sent to push her out,” Imujin continued. “Instead, he survived her, redirected her, and forced her exactly where she would cause the most damage. What followed was inevitable.”
He turned slightly, angling his body just enough to acknowledge Vaeliyan’s presence.
“Vaeliyan,” he said. “Show her.”
Vaeliyan hesitated, a rare stillness settling over him.
“Are you sure?”
“Yes,” Imujin said. “Show her the man who will be her Emperor. Show her the man who will take everything she has and make it greater. That is the only option she has.”
Vaeliyan exhaled slowly, the breath steadying him.
“Alright,” he said. “You asked for it.”
He looked at Selai, and for the first ti there was sothing almost apologetic in his expression.
“It’s better if you don’t stare directly at ,” he said. “Most people get violently ill the first ti. It’s easier on the second or third. After that, it becos manageable. But the first ti is rough.”
“Vaeliyan,” Imujin said flatly. “You’re stalling.”
“I am not,” Vaeliyan replied.
“Alright,” Dr. Lambert cut in. “Enough.”
Selai did not look away.
Her eyes burned into him, unblinking, defiant.
And then he was one person.
And then he was not.
There was no disconnection. No distortion. No mont where the change could be denied or explained away. One instant he was a tall man, tall by the standards of the towns she had seen, clad in segnted yellow-and-black armor with winged plating and a helm shaped like an insect’s face.
The next instant, he was smaller. Almost boyish. Wrapped in a too-bright yellow jacket. Smiling.
The smile was wrong. Too knowing.
His eyes were the storm.
Selai felt terror flood her system as recognition crashed through mory. She had seen him before. Not like this, not fully, but enough. A glimpse, stolen by accident, on the palanquin display when he had stepped into what remained of one of her ch Knights.
Cavil had never shown her who was destroying her forces. He had turned the feeds away, protected her from the truth.
But this man had walked into a Knight without triggering its self-destruction.
She had seen that.
Nausea surged as her mind tried and failed to reconcile the absence of dissonance, the seamless continuity of it. He had not changed into sothing else.
He had always been both.
Elian stepped into the room next, his presence quiet but imdiate. He did not announce himself, did not clear his throat, did not pause to assess the tension. He simply entered, as if the space had already accounted for him being there. Princess Selai was still reeling from the full weight of what she had just been shown, and his arrival only sharpened the sense that events were continuing whether she kept up or not.
The understanding refused to settle cleanly. It ca in layers instead, each one heavier than the last. This man had been the singer. But he also had been the slayer. He had been the unseen hand that turned her advance into a rout and her certainty into sothing brittle and unreliable. That alone would have been enough to destabilize her, enough to force a retreat and years of reassessnt.
But Graveholt.
That was the piece her mind kept circling back to, the one that refused to fit unless she allowed herself to accept sothing far worse than incompetence or bad luck. He had been responsible for that as well. Not through brute force. Not through so new superweapon or technology. He had done it through intent and precision. Through positioning. Through knowing exactly where to apply pressure so that sothing already monstrous finished the work for him.
Selai drew in a slow breath, steadying herself by sheer discipline. She had been trained for monts like this, for rooms where the balance of power shifted without warning. She straightened, forced her shoulders back, and looked at him again, refusing to let the tremor in her thoughts show on her face.
“Why?” she asked. “Why would you want to be Emperor? Why not rule this place and let rule mine?”
Warren laughed directly in her face.
There was no cruelty in it. No malice. Just genuine disbelief, as if the question itself revealed how badly she still misunderstood the situation.
Elian handed him a small stack of docuntation, crisp and already finalized. The motion was practiced, efficient, the kind of handoff that implied this was not a theoretical discussion but the final step of a process already completed.
“You decided to co here,” Warren said, his smile sharp, “to take my ho, kill my friends, and very likely kill child. And now you’re asking why I’m not just letting you walk away?”
He shook his head once, the gesture small but definitive.
“You’re not getting out of this, Selai.”
He turned slightly, addressing Imujin without breaking stride in the conversation, as if both discussions occupied the sa track in his mind.
“I still need to ask,” Warren said, “how do I make more rings?”
Imujin waved the question away with casual dismissal, the sort that suggested the answer existed but did not deserve attention right now.
“It is a simple process,” he said. “Unimportant in this mont.”
He refocused on Selai, and she felt the shift imdiately, as if the room itself had narrowed.
“What matters,” Imujin continued, “is that we are binding you to vassalhood under the Great House of Smith.”
Selai stiffened, the word landing harder than she expected.
Elian nodded once.
“All papers are signed,” he said. “Quietly, for now. There will be no announcent, no ceremony. But this is the founding of a Great House. Likely the last. And almost certainly the truest.”
Selai stared at him, disbelief pushing through her composure.
“What?” she demanded. “Do you have any idea how much capital it takes to found a Great House? The sheer credits alone would...”
“As you won’t be able to speak of this,” Warren interrupted calmly, “I might as well explain.”
He gestured vaguely toward the far wall, toward the mountains beyond it, toward the dark shapes she knew rose behind the city.
“You know those volcanoes behind us?”
Her breath caught before she could stop it.
She knew exactly what he ant. The geology reports she had skimd and signed off on years ago. The endless surveys that showed nothing worth flagging. The way the data always ca back clean, ordinary, unremarkable. The reason no one ever looked twice was simple. Whatever was there looked exactly like everything else around it to the scans.
“You’re telling ,” she said slowly, choosing each word with care, “that there’s a Psyroglass deposit there?”
Warren smiled, just slightly, and that was sohow worse than if he had grinned.
“No,” he said. “I’m telling you there’s an ocean of it. And the reason no one ever found it is because it reads as nothing special at all.”
The words hit like a physical impact, driving the air from her lungs.
“An ocean I own,” he continued. “An ocean that will drown this region in credits. Enough that I could buy your precious Princedoms outright if I felt like it. Enough to reshape markets, supply lines, and loyalties without firing a single shot.”
Selai’s knees nearly gave, and she had to lock them to stay standing.
An ocean of Psyroglass.
She understood then, with a clarity that left no room for denial.
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