She looked at him.
The system on her shoulder was completely still.
"The collar doesn’t an that," she said. "It never ant that. What it ant was a lie that was built into the frawork for purposes that had nothing to do with you." She paused. "The charter I filed — it says that specifically. In the legal record. The collar is a physical object with magical properties that belong to the person wearing it. Not to anyone else."
He looked at his tea.
"I know," he said. Quietly. "I know that’s what it says."
She waited.
"It’s harder," he said, "to know it the other way."
She sat with this.
"Yes," she said. "It is."
He looked up.
Just briefly. Just for a second.
Then back to the tea.
She stayed for the rest of the two hours.
When she left she did not have a solution. She had what she had co for — the actual shape of the problem, felt rather than theorized, which was the only foundation that solutions she trusted were built on.
She walked back to the office.
Started building.
’’’
The collar.
The collar had been part of the working list since before she’d understood why.
She pulled the original research docuntation — the stack she’d been carrying since before the palace, the one she’d found in the fourth consort’s possession and then in the original Elara’s private papers and which she had been circling without landing on for over two years.
The fourth consort had written, in her research diary: ’the collar architecture contains a resonance layer that is not explained by the functional docuntation. The resonance appears to interface with the bloodline registry magic in a way that produces an effect I cannot fully characterize. The existing research suggests this was intentional.’
The original Elara — the one whose body she inhabited, whose life she had stepped into — had written in the margin of her own research copy: ’why would the resonance layer be intentional. What was it ant to do.’
Both of them had found it.
Neither of them had found the answer.
She looked at the resonance layer docuntation.
She had been looking at it for two years and seeing a surveillance chanism.
She had been looking at it wrong.
She spread the research across the table.
Called Dimitri.
He ca and looked at what she’d spread.
"The resonance layer," she said. "Not the extraction pathway. The underlying resonance architecture. What does it interface with."
Dimitri sat down.
Picked up the fourth consort’s research diary.
Read for a while.
"The bloodline registry magic," he said. "She says it interfaces with—" He stopped.
"What," she said.
He read more carefully.
"She says the interface produces an effect she can’t characterize," he said. "But in the previous entry—" He flipped back. "She says she found a reference in the pre-imperial archive. Before the collar frawork was standardized. In the original design docuntation." He looked at Elara. "She was trying to access the original design docuntation."
"Did she get it," she said.
He looked at the diary.
"The entry stops," he said. "There are three pages torn out." He paused. "After the torn pages the entries resu about two weeks later and don’t ntion the collar again."
She looked at the diary.
At the torn pages.
"Soone stopped her research," she said.
"Or she stopped it herself," Dimitri said. "After she found sothing."
She looked at the original Elara’s margin note.
’Why would the resonance layer be intentional. What was it ant to do.’
The original Elara had been a princess. A princess who had researched the collar frawork and then — she had beco regent. Unexpectedly. The emperor had died young and the succession had landed on her in a way nobody had predicted.
She looked at the margin note.
’What was it ant to do.’
She thought about the beast knight in the tea house. ’They use the collar. Like we’re still inside it.’
She thought about the extraction pathway — a surveillance tool, built into the frawork, twelve years of monitoring.
She thought about the resonance layer, which was not the extraction pathway, which was older, which was in the original design docuntation that the fourth consort had tried to access and then stopped trying to access.
Sothing was in the collar that neither the extraction pathway nor the standard functional docuntation explained.
Sothing that both the fourth consort and the original Elara had found the edge of and not been allowed to reach.
She looked at the working list.
Added: ’Pre-imperial archive. Original collar design docuntation. Find it.’
Then, below: ’Why did two separate researchers stop before the answer.’
She sat with the research spread around her.
The system was on her shoulder.
"You know what I’m going to find," she said to it. "Or you have a theory."
’I have a theory,’ it said.
"Tell ," she said.
’Later,’ it said. ’Find it yourself first. You need to find it yourself.’
She looked at it.
It looked back at her with its enormous eyes and the specific expression of sothing that was protecting her from a shortcut.
"Fine," she said.
She went back to the docuntation.
She had a court reception to attend in three days.
She had a brother to assess.
She had a man nad Seval to understand.
She had twenty-two unaccounted beast knights and the shape of a problem she was still building toward and a resonance layer in a collar frawork that two won before her had tried to understand and hadn’t.
She had the working list.
She picked up the pen.
Added item forty-one.
The list grew.
It always did.
She kept going anyway.
The court reception was in the evening.
Lian i arrived in the middle of it — not late enough to be notable, not early enough to be eager, the specific timing of soone who understood that entrances were information and had calibrated accordingly.
She had dressed carefully.
Not as herself. As the person who had been herself for eleven months — the rchant from Liang ridian, the woman with the trade commission contract and the practical clothing and the slightly curling hair that the palace’s Elara had never had. She wore deep blue, which was Liang ridian’s trade color, and her hair was up in the way she’d learned to wear it in Varen — efficient, plain, nothing that required maintenance. Small earrings. No jewelry that would invite assessnt.
She looked, she had confird in the mirror before leaving, like exactly who she was supposed to be.
Mahir had looked at her in the doorway and said nothing for two full seconds.
Then: "The earrings are new."
"Mira found them," she said.
"They’re good," he said. Flat. The way he said things that weren’t operational and were trying to pass as operational.
She had looked at him for a mont and then left before either of them could say anything else about the earrings.
’’’
The reception hall was large and warm and full of the specific noise of people performing themselves at each other.
She had forgotten this about court functions.
She had spent three years managing them — standing at the front of rooms like this, watching the performance, reading it, using it. From that position you saw the chanics clearly. From inside the crowd the chanics were different — you were part of the noise, part of the warmth, another person performing themselves in the specific way the occasion required.
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