The archive was cold.
Not the ambient cold of stone buildings in early morning — the specific, deliberate cold of a space where preservation spells had been running uninterrupted for decades, keeping paper from yellowing and ink from fading and the accumulated record of an empire from becoming dust. Elara’s breath didn’t mist but she could feel it at the edges of her fingers, the kind of chill that settled into joints and stayed.
She didn’t ntion it.
Mahir walked beside her, two steps back and to her left, which was his default position in public spaces — close enough to intervene, far enough to look like escort rather than shadow. The physician had apparently done sothing useful because the slight adjustnt in his weight was gone. He moved normally. She noted this and moved on.
The archive clerk at the entrance had seen them coming and made a decision about his face very quickly — settling on the careful neutral expression palace staff used when they weren’t sure what level of deference was appropriate and had decided to err toward maximum. He bowed. Offered access logs. Stepped aside.
Elara walked in without stopping.
---
The imperial records occupied three floors of a building that had been added to six tis across four dynasties, each addition slightly misaligned with the last, creating a structure that made architectural sense only if you understood the political climate of each building period. Elara had mapped it on her second visit. She knew which corridors connected and which ones pretended to.
She went to the third floor.
The general access section was, as she’d told Dimitri, exactly what it sounded like — records available to any palace official with appropriate clearance, filed under the assumption that most people accessing them were looking for obvious things and would not dig into the margins of administrative corrections filed under routine maintenance.
Most people were right.
She was not most people.
She found the first anded bloodline record in eleven minutes.
It was filed between two genuinely routine corrections — a clerical error in a land grant, a misattributed birth record from a provincial governor’s household — sandwiched so deliberately between boring docunts that it almost worked. Almost.
The andnt itself was three lines. Bloodline marker correction, it said. *Verification of inheritance sequence, Third consort, correction to primary classification. Administrative error in original filing.*
She read it twice.
Then she set it aside and kept looking.
The second took longer. Twenty minutes, a different filing system on a different shelf, three years prior. Sa language. *Administrative error.* Sa structure. This one was for a different na — not a princess. A prince. The seventh, who had died fourteen months ago of a sudden illness that the physicians had attributed to a congenital magical deficiency.
She held the docunt under the reading lamp and looked at the date.
Filed eight months before his death.
She set it beside the first one.
The third she almost missed entirely. It had been misfiled — not accidentally, she suspected, but deliberately placed in the wrong decade’s records, buried under fifteen years of genuinely dull provincial census data. She found it because she was thorough and because she had spent two hours now and had covered more ground than anyone was supposed to cover in a single visit to this section.
This one was different from the others.
Not a correction. Not an andnt.
An addition.
A bloodline marker insertion, filed as a correction to an original record that, when she cross-referenced, did not appear to exist. The original it was supposedly correcting had never been filed.
It created a record out of nothing.
Correcting sothing that had never existed, thereby making the correction the only version of the truth.
Elara sat back in her chair.
Looked at the three docunts.
Looked at the lamp.
Thought for a mont about what she was holding, the weight of it — not in her hands, which felt nothing about paper, but in the operational sense. The information sense. The *this changes everything* sense that she processed the way she processed all things, without drama, just the clean click of a variable slotting into place and restructuring everything downstream of it.
"Your Highness."
Mahir’s voice. Quiet, close. She looked up.
He was standing two steps away, not crowding, but his attention had sharpened — she could read that in him now, the particular quality of focus that ant he’d been watching her face and had seen sothing that required acknowledgnt.
"You found it," he said.
"Three sothings," she said. She indicated the docunts. "Co here."
He crossed the remaining distance and looked over her shoulder at the three pages laid side by side. She watched his eyes move across them, tracking, processing. Mahir read fast and retained everything — she’d established that early and factored it into how she briefed him.
He read all three.
Was quiet for a mont.
"The addition," he said.
"Yes."
"It creates a bloodline where there wasn’t one."
"Or confirms one that couldn’t be confird through normal channels," Elara said. "There are two interpretations. Soone creating a false claim to royal blood. Or soone with a legitimate claim that was never officially recorded — possibly because recording it would have been politically inconvenient at the ti."
Mahir straightened slowly. His voice was careful. "Who."
"I don’t have a na yet. The addition uses a reference code instead of a direct na. It cross-references to a sealed record in the restricted section." She paused. "Which is not general access."
A silence.
"You need the restricted section," Mahir said.
"Yes."
"Which requires—"
"Imperial regent authorisation," Elara said. "Which I technically have. The question is whether using it to access sealed bloodline records three weeks into my regency creates a political problem I’m not ready to manage yet."
Mahir considered this. "It will be logged."
"Everything is logged."
"The log will be seen."
"Yes. By whoever currently controls the archive oversight committee, which is—" She paused. "Actually I don’t know who controls it currently. The Emperor appointed it. Succession of administrative appointnts during a regency is an interesting gap in the protocols."
Sothing shifted in Mahir’s expression. The particular quality of focus tightening further.
"You could argue," he said slowly, "that the oversight committee’s authority lapses during regency transition and defaults to the regent."
Elara looked at him.
"That’s a reasonable legal interpretation," she said.
"It’s also the kind of interpretation that makes enemies quickly."
"Everything I do makes enemies quickly."
"More enemies," he said. "Faster."
Elara looked at the three docunts. Looked at the reference code on the addition. Looked at the lamp, which was doing nothing except existing, but sotis it helped to look at sothing neutral while thinking.
She thought about the manifest. About the three shipnts. About the Emperor’s illness and the timing of it and the seven months of administrative corrections that had preceded it. About a na she’d burned over a fla and the structure it sat at the center of, elegant and patient and built to last.
About the seventh prince, who had died fourteen months ago of a magical deficiency that had been officially docunted eight months before it killed him.
"Copy all three," she said. "Exact copies, my handwriting, nothing that marks them as taken from this archive. Then return them to exactly where they were."
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