"Used it for what specifically," Mira said, her accountant’s mind going imdiately to application and outco.
Elara looked at her.
"Succession magic at this classification level does one of three things," she said. "It can suppress a bloodline’s magical inheritance — effectively neutralising a royal’s power without visible cause. It can accelerate a transition of power through bloodline interference, making a natural death appear to happen at a convenient ti. Or—" She paused. "It can be used to falsify bloodline markers. To make soone appear to carry a bloodline they don’t."
The room was quiet.
"Making a non-royal appear royal," Ken said.
"Or making one royal appear more legitimate than another," Elara said. "Adjusting the magical signature that the Emperor’s — that the previous Emperor’s bloodline left on his children. Strengthening one. Weakening others."
Dimitri looked like he’d swallowed sothing unpleasant. "How long would that have taken to arrange."
"Months," Caius said, from his chair. Everyone looked at him. "The materials in that shipnt — I know what they’re used for, from the trade side. The synthesis process takes four to six months minimum. If this shipnt was three months ago and wasn’t the first—"
"It wasn’t the first," Elara said. "I found two prior andnts in the customs archive this morning. Sa port. Sa manifest structure. Eighteen months ago and eleven months ago." She looked at the room. "The first shipnt was approximately two months before the Emperor beca ill."
The silence this ti had a different quality.
Mira put down her pen.
Dimitri stopped taking notes.
Ken’s hand had gone to his sword belt, not gripping, just resting, the way it did when his body was ahead of his mind.
Mahir, by the door, had gone very still.
"You’re saying," Dimitri said carefully, "that the Emperor’s illness—"
"I’m saying the timing is worth examining," Elara said. "I’m not making a claim I can’t prove yet. What I have is three shipnts, a tiline, and a na. What I need is the connection between the shipnts and the application." She paused. "Which ans I need access to the imperial physician’s records from the past eighteen months."
"Those are sealed," Mira said imdiately.
"Yes."
"Sealed by the Empress Dowager’s office specifically, after the Emperor’s death."
"Yes."
"So accessing them without authorisation would be—"
"Sothing I’m going to need help with," Elara said. "Which is why we’re having this conversation."
Another silence. The working kind, the kind where people were running numbers and risk assessnts and deciding how committed they were to the direction this was going.
Caius broke it.
"I know soone in the physician’s office," he said. "Not a physician. A records clerk. She was — is — soone I trust. She was uncomfortable after the Emperor died. She said sothing once about the records being reorganised before they were sealed. Things moved. Things that shouldn’t have been moved." He paused. "I didn’t ask further at the ti. I didn’t know enough to know what to ask."
"You know enough now," Elara said.
He nodded once.
"Can you get to her without it being traced back to this wing," Elara said.
"If I go through the lower city contacts. Yes."
Elara looked at Ken. "Go with him. Plainclothes again. Take one other knight, your choice."
Ken nodded.
"Dimitri." She turned. "I need the inheritance docuntation for the past three years. Specifically any andnts to royal bloodline records — any princess, any prince, anything that was filed and then quietly revised. It’ll be in the imperial archive, general access section. It won’t look like what it is."
"What will it look like," Dimitri asked.
"Administrative corrections. Clerical errors. Small andnts filed under routine maintenance." She looked at him. "You’ll recognise them because they’ll be the ones that don’t need to exist."
Dimitri wrote sothing, nodded.
"Mira." Elara moved to the window. "Cross-reference the household budgets of every senior princess against unusual expenditures in the past two years. Specifically paynts that went to coastal trading companies or spell component suppliers. Anything that could be a front for the consortium."
Mira was already writing. "Tiline?"
"End of day."
Mira didn’t blink. "End of day."
Elara turned to face the room.
"Everything stays in this wing," she said. "Nothing written leaves this office. No conversations about this in corridors, in quarters, anywhere outside this door. If soone asks what you’re working on—" She paused. "You’re doing routine household accounting. You’re always doing routine household accounting. That is the most boring and convincing answer available."
Dim smiles around the room. Even Caius managed one.
"Go," she said.
They went.
Ken and Caius through the main door. Dimitri and Mira through the connecting passage to the archive wing. The room emptied in under a minute, efficient and quiet, the way things moved in her household now.
Mahir stayed.
He was still by the door, still in his position, the slight adjustnt in his weight still present if you knew to look for it. He looked at her with the sa expression he’d had all morning — professional, attentive, correct in every visible way.
Elara looked at him.
"The coat," she said.
He didn’t react. "Your Highness?"
"On my shoulders this morning. That was you."
A pause. Very short. "You were cold."
"I don’t notice cold when I’m working."
"I know," he said. "You still were."
Elara looked at him for a mont.
"Thank you," she said.
Which she did not say often. Which she suspected he knew, because the slight thing that moved through his expression at the words was not the response of a man hearing sothing routine.
He inclined his head. "Your Highness."
"Your neck," she said. "Does it still hurt."
He blinked. "I slept on a sofa."
"Yes. Does your neck hurt."
A short pause, the kind where he was deciding whether honesty or professionalism was more appropriate. "Sowhat."
"There’s a physician in the east wing. Household staff only, no palace reporting chain. Go before the others get back." She turned to the desk. "I need you functional this afternoon. You’re coming with to the archive and I don’t need you managing a neck complaint while we work."
"I’m fine, Your Highness—"
"Mahir."
He stopped.
She didn’t turn around. Just picked up the pen and found her place in the east column.
"Go to the physician," she said. "That’s an order."
A longer pause than usual.
"Yes, Your Highness," he said, and she could hear sothing in it that wasn’t quite amusent and wasn’t quite warmth and was probably both. The door opened and closed.
She wrote four words on the docunt.
Stopped.
Looked at the folded coat still sitting on the corner of the desk, precisely where she’d left it.
She picked it up, turned it over in her hands once, and then set it over the back of the chair beside her desk.
Not on the corner.
Beside her.
She went back to the docunts.
Outside, the palace continued its morning. Servants moved through corridors, guards rotated at their posts, the vast machinery of an empire in transition ground forward on schedule. Sowhere in the east wing, a physician who reported only to her would assess a man who would insist twice that he was fine before accepting treatnt.
She knew this without needing to see it.
She also knew, without filing it anywhere in particular, that she had put the coat on the chair beside her because that was where it should be.
She didn’t examine that conclusion further.
She had docunts to finish.
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