Ti/Date: Late Night, TC1853.01.06
Location: tropolitan Police Station - 4th Ring
The tropolitan Police Station hulked against the night sky like so ancient guardian—all stone and iron bars and the weight of a thousand confessions. Even this late, lights blazed in windows where officers processed the city’s endless parade of criminals and victims, the desperate and the dangerous, the liars and the rare few who actually told the truth.
Raven walked up to the main entrance like she had every right to be there. The starlight gown probably helped with that—expensive fabric catching lamplight, making her look like money even if she felt like three days of exhaustion wrapped in silk. A few late-night stragglers stared. Couldn’t bla them, really. Girls in gowns that cost more than most people earned in a year didn’t typically show up at police stations alone after midnight.
The evidence bag felt heavier than it should in her hand. Just a crystal flute, a bit of liquid. But the weight of what it represented—that was sothing else entirely.
Inside, a desk sergeant who’d clearly seen too many years of this job looked up from his paperwork with the kind of tired resignation that said he expected nothing good. His pen hovered over so half-finished report, probably another dostic dispute or petty theft.
"Late night, miss," he said. Not unkind, just... worn down. "How can the tropolitan Police assist you tonight?"
"I need to report an attempted poisoning." Raven set the evidence bag on his desk with a soft click. "Specifically, the use of illegal aphrodisiacs and fertility enhancers in a conspiracy to commit sexual assault."
The change was instantaneous. Bored to alert in half a heartbeat, his pen clattering as he straightened. These kinds of cases—they destroyed lives, ended careers, sotis literally ended in executions. Not the sort of thing you processed with routine paperwork.
"That’s a grave accusation, miss." He was already reaching for different forms, the serious ones. "I’ll need to get one of our senior investigators. Lieutenant Holt!"
The man who erged from the back offices moved like violence barely restrained—all controlled precision and barely concealed readiness. Lieutenant Jarik Holt looked to be in his early thirties, lean in that dangerous way that suggested he knew exactly how to hurt soone if needed. Pale eyes. A scar running from his temple to jaw. The kind of man who’d seen the worst humanity had to offer and sohow kept getting up to face it again.
"What have we got, Sergeant?"
"Young lady here claims soone tried to poison her with aphrodisiacs. Says it’s part of so kind of conspiracy."
Holt’s eyes swept over Raven—the gown, the composure, the way she held herself. His expression shifted. Rich family, then. Which ant complications. Money and influence had a way of making evidence vanish, witnesses forget what they’d seen.
"I see. Miss...?"
"Brenner." She let herself hesitate just enough. Like revealing sothing she’d rather keep private. "Mara Brenner. Though I suppose that na will be worthless by morning."
The na hit like she’d known it would. Recognition flickered across both their faces—the sergeant’s eyes widening slightly, Holt’s narrowing with sudden focus.
"The Brenner rchant family? From the 5th Ring?"
"The sa." Every word asured, careful. "And the poison ca from within my own household. My mother and sister arranged it as part of a larger sche to destroy my reputation and force into a marriage that would serve their political ambitions."
The two officers exchanged one of those looks—the kind that ca from working together long enough that whole conversations happened in a glance. Noble families. rchant dynasties. The cases that never quite went anywhere because money had a way of making problems disappear.
"That’s a serious accusation," Holt said finally. Voice carefully neutral, giving nothing away. "Do you have proof?"
Raven gestured to the evidence bag. "The glass contains residue of the substances they used. My fingerprints are on it because I was forced to handle it, but I managed to avoid actually consuming the contents through..." She paused, eting his eyes. "Let’s call it quick thinking. The crystal flute still contains the actual Amber Kiss they intended for to drink. I preserved it using thods I’d rather not explain in detail."
"And you’re certain about the nature of these substances?"
"Amber Kiss." No hesitation. If you were going to make accusations like this, you’d better sound like you knew exactly what you were talking about. "A combination of aphrodisiacs and fertility enhancers specifically designed to strip away inhibitions while ensuring maximum receptivity to conception. It’s illegal under Imperial statute 847-C. Penalties include imprisonnt and, in cases involving minors, potential execution."
Sothing shifted in Holt’s expression. Not quite satisfaction, but close. Like he’d just heard confirmation of sothing he’d suspected.
"How old are you, Miss Brenner?"
"Seventeen."
The admission dropped into silence like a blade. Sharp. Cutting through any political considerations that might have complicated things otherwise.
"Seventeen," Holt repeated. "Which places you under the protection of The International Children Protection Act of TC 1838. Anyone who administers illegal substances to a minor with the intent to facilitate sexual assault faces mandatory penalties under imperial law." He leaned forward slightly. "The Act has teeth. Real teeth. Not like the toothless laws nobles usually ignore."
"I’m aware of the legal frawork," Raven said quietly. "Which is why I ca here instead of trying to handle this within the family. So cris are too serious for private resolution."
"What’s the situation, Lieutenant?"
The woman who approached had steel-gray hair despite looking to be only in her early thirties—premature gray, the kind that ca from stress or genetics or both. Lieutenant Lyra Veyne carried herself with the precise efficiency of soone who’d fought for every inch of respect in a profession that didn’t hand it out freely. Her uniform was immaculate. Everything about her said she demanded perfection and accepted nothing less.
"Potential violation of statute 847-C," Holt said. "Minor victim, family conspiracy, possible political implications."
Veyne’s expression hardened like soone doing calculations in her head—the kind of calculations that involved powerful families and complicated prosecutions. "Family conspiracy involving a minor. That puts it under our jurisdiction automatically." She turned to Raven with eyes that missed absolutely nothing. "Miss Brenner, I’m going to ask you so very direct questions, and I need you to understand that false statents in a case of this magnitude carry serious criminal penalties."
"I understand."
"Good. Who specifically administered or attempted to administer these substances?"
"My sister, Amara Brenner. She handed the glass personally, claiming it was a special New Year’s blessing cocktail. My mother, Selene Brenner, was involved in the planning, though she didn’t directly handle the substances." Clinical voice. Like reciting facts for a report. "Both their fingerprints should be on the glass—preparation phases, addition of the Amber Kiss. Mine are only in the drinking position."
Veyne’s pen scratched across paper, and Holt leaned forward with the focused attention of a predator catching a scent.
"And the intended purpose of this poisoning?"
"To incapacitate so I could be transported to a hotel room where I would be... compromised... in the presence of witnesses. The resulting scandal would destroy my reputation and force into a marriage that would serve their political objectives."
Another one of those significant looks between the two officers. Years of partnership condensed into a single glance that said they’d both seen this before—maybe not exactly this, but close enough. Rich families removing inconvenient daughters. Forced marriages. Reputation destruction as a tool of control.
"You ntioned witnesses," Veyne continued. "Do you know who was supposed to discover this... compromising situation?"
"Several people were positioned throughout the banquet specifically for that purpose. I can provide nas if needed, though they may claim they were simply in the wrong place at the wrong ti."
"We’ll need those nas," Holt said. His voice had gone flat, hard. "And we’ll need to process that evidence imdiately. If what you’re saying is true, we may be looking at multiple felony charges."
What followed was three hours of ticulous questioning. Every detail laid out with surgical precision—the banquet setup, the hotel room at the Grand Imperial Hotel with its prepared incense and compromising furnishings, the network of witnesses positioned like pieces on a ga board. She gave them the truth, edited carefully but complete enough to expose what Amara had tried to do, what Selene had orchestrated.
How Amara had handed her the crystal flute with that venomous smile, claiming it was a special New Year’s blessing. How Selene had spent weeks setting up the evening’s events, making sure Raven would be isolated and vulnerable at exactly the right mont. How the hotel room had been prepared in advance—everything arranged to make any subsequent claims of innocence impossible to believe.
The officers took notes like their lives depended on it. Which, given the families involved, maybe they did. Every na, every location, every detail that could be verified or cross-referenced later. The kind of docuntation that either built an ironclad case or revealed the holes that would let the guilty walk free.
When Raven finished, silence filled the room except for the scratch of Holt’s pen as he made final notations. His jaw kept working, muscles ticking—a man fighting to maintain professional composure when what he really wanted was probably to put his fist through sothing.
By the ti her statent was signed and sealed, dawn had started painting the windows gold. The night shift was getting ready to hand off—you could hear it in the footsteps echoing from other corridors, sll it in the strong morning tea soone was brewing in the break room. Temperature had dropped overnight, and soone had stoked the heating stove. The tallic scent of warming iron mixed with tea and old coffee, and the peculiar sll of a police station at shift change.
Veyne stood and placed a hand on Raven’s shoulder. Official authority mixed with sothing almost maternal. "We can send you back with an escort, make sure you’re safe."
Raven shook her head. "No. If I’m seen leaving here under police escort, it will only cause trouble—for , and for your investigation. I’ll manage."
The lieutenants exchanged another look. This one said the girl understood political realities better than most adults twice her age—understood that her presence under guard might compromise their case before it even properly began.
"Then at least know this," Holt said. His expression had softened just slightly, respect breaking through the professional mask. "We’ll pursue this case properly. They won’t walk away from this. Not this ti."
Raven gave a small bow—gratitude and dismissal sohow conveyed in one gesture. Then she turned and walked toward the corridor, footsteps fading until the station was quiet again.
Holt leaned back in his chair, exhaling hard. "Finally," he muttered. Barely audible. "Finally, I can see justice done for my sister."
Veyne’s head snapped up. "Your sister?"
His mouth twisted—grief and fury fighting for dominance on his face. Old wounds cracking open. "Two years ago. Amara and her pack hounded her day after day." His hand clenched into a fist on the desk. Knuckles gone white. "She was only nineteen. A servant girl who caught Amara’s attention—wrong place, wrong ti, wrong face that reminded Amara of soone she hated. They called her worthless, mocked her body, stripped her of every shred of dignity. Took photos. Passed them around like currency."
The words were coming harder now. Each one was dragged from sowhere deep that he usually kept locked away tight. "She... she couldn’t bear it. I buried her with those photos still circulating."
Silence. Heavy. The kind that weighed on your chest.
Veyne’s eyes had gone dark with sothing beyond pity. The kind of determination that ca from seeing too many victims whose only cri had been existing.
"No matter how powerful the Brenners are," Holt continued, voice low and sharp, "this ti there will be consequences. The International Children’s Protection Act doesn’t give them the sa escape routes." He paused. Political realities warring with the desire for justice on his face. "Of course, for commoners, this would an the death penalty. But the Brenners..." Bitter laugh. Years of frustration packed into that sound. "They control significant portions of the grain industry. Half the noble houses in the 5th Ring are connected to them by marriage or business. At worst, they’ll face heavy financial penalties and forced relocation out of the 5th Ring."
Veyne’s expression darkened. "Money always buys leniency."
"Always." The word carried weight. All those cases where wealth had trumped justice. "Justice has different prices depending on your bloodline. But exile from the 5th Ring, public disgrace, financial ruin—it’s not death, but it’s more than they’ve ever faced before." He picked up the evidence bag, held it to the lamplight. Crystal catching and scattering the glow. "And this ti, we have real evidence. Not testimony that can be dismissed, not witnesses who can be bought off. Physical proof that even their money can’t erase."
They lapsed into silence. Just the faint buzz of the lamps, the distant sounds of the city waking up outside. Sowhere in the 5th Ring, the Brenner family was sleeping peacefully in their mansion, completely unaware that their world was about to collapse.
Veyne glanced toward the window. Dawn light getting stronger. Morning birds starting their songs. Street vendors setting up their carts—life beginning another day. "Strange, though, isn’t it? The way the higher-ups are suddenly obsessed with children. Fifteen years ago, they pushed this Act through with more urgency than I’ve ever seen for legislation. Then started pulling kids out of the outer rings, shoving them into training academies. All this protection, all this urgency..."
"Yeah," Holt said. Voice carrying the fatigue of soone who knew more than he should and less than he wanted. "Feels like preparation. For what, I couldn’t tell you." He set down the evidence bag with deliberate care. Like it contained sothing far more dangerous than glass and liquid. "Above our paygrade. Way above."
Far across the city, Raven slipped through the servant’s wing window and into her narrow bed just as the first morning bell chid. To anyone looking in, she was just a girl curled in sleep, wrapped in threadbare blankets—small, exhausted, powerless.
But in her mind, the night’s work echoed like a drumbeat.
Evidence. Law. Consequence.
The first move had been made. Opening gambit in a ga that would determine not just her fate, but the fate of everyone who’d tornted innocents for far too long.
The noose was tightening.
And for the first ti in this lifeti, she was the one holding the rope.
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