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Now reading: Chapter 27: The Pig in the Web from Reborn as the Queen's Captive: The Shadow Courtier System, a Fantasy novel by TimothyRose.

Lord Vaneer arrived at the palace the next morning dressed like a man who believed wealth could shield him from consequence.

He was massive, broad shouldered and swollen with years of luxury. His velvet doublet was dark erald trimd with gold thread, the colors of House Caligari worn proudly across his chest like armor. Thick rings glittered on every finger. His oily black beard had been combed and perfud, but no amount of grooming could hide the sweat already gathering at his temples.

He did not co with soldiers.

That alone told Silas everything he needed to know.

A man who ca with soldiers was preparing for war. A man who ca alone was pretending he had nothing to fear.

Lord Vaneer was escorted into the office of the Shadow Advisor by two palace guards. The heavy oak doors shut behind him with a deep final thud.

Silas sat behind his massive black desk. He did not stand. He did not offer wine. He did not smile.

Elara stood quietly near the window, her hands folded in front of her dark silk uniform. Her pale green eyes remained lowered, but Silas knew she was watching everything. Every twitch. Every breath. Every flicker of panic.

Lyra stood beside the bookshelves with a leather ledger held against her chest. She looked composed and elegant in her dark blue dress, but there was a sharpness in her sapphire eyes that made her seem more dangerous than any drawn blade.

Vaneer looked between them, then forced a laugh.

"Shadow Advisor," he said with a shallow bow that barely bent his thick neck. "I must confess I was surprised to receive your summons. My estate is currently drowning in administrative burdens. The western mines require constant supervision."

"Sit," Silas said.

The word was quiet.

Vaneer’s smile stiffened.

For a mont, the fat lord looked like he wanted to refuse. Then his eyes dropped to the silver ring on Silas’s finger. The seal of Ravena’s authority caught the violet light and glead coldly.

Vaneer sat.

The chair creaked under his weight.

Silas let the silence stretch.

He had learned long ago that powerful n hated silence more than threats. A threat gave them sothing to answer. Silence forced them to listen to their own fear.

Vaneer cleared his throat. "May I ask why I have been summoned?"

"You owe the Crown two years of unpaid tithe," Silas said.

Vaneer relaxed slightly.

That was interesting.

He had expected the conversation to begin there. Which ant he had already prepared excuses.

"My Lord Advisor, I assure you the matter has been grossly misunderstood," Vaneer said, spreading his thick hands in a gesture of wounded innocence. "The western mines have suffered trendously since the deep veins collapsed. The ore quality has declined. The refining process produces more slag than usable steel. I have sent reports to the treasury every month."

Lyra opened the ledger in her hands without looking up.

"Those reports were received," she said. "They were also remarkably consistent."

Vaneer glanced at her for the first ti, and his expression shifted with mild annoyance. To him, she was still only a scribe. A woman who belonged behind shelves, not in the room where power moved.

"Royal Scribe," he said stiffly. "I was unaware this discussion required clerical witnesses."

"It requires people who can read numbers," Silas replied.

Vaneer’s face reddened.

Silas leaned back in his chair and steepled his fingers.

"Your declared output has fallen by nearly sixty percent over the past two years. Your raw extraction numbers, however, have risen by twenty seven percent. According to your own declarations, you are mining more rock than ever while producing less steel than ever."

Vaneer gave a weary sigh, as if he were explaining sothing simple to a child.

"That is exactly the problem with poor ore quality. One must dig twice as much to produce half as much. I would have assud the royal archives contained basic mining principles."

Lyra’s eyes sharpened.

Silas smiled faintly.

There it was.

Arrogance.

The little weakness inside every bloated lord who had gone too long without being challenged.

"Lyra," Silas said.

She placed the first ledger on the desk.

"The western geological surveys," she said calmly. "Conducted before the Perpetual Twilight and verified by three independent royal engineers. The western peaks contain so of the purest iron veins on the continent. The average slag loss should be less than eight percent."

She placed a second ledger beside the first.

"Your reports claim slag loss above seventy percent."

Vaneer’s fingers tightened on the arms of his chair.

A small movent.

Almost nothing.

But Silas saw it.

"Old surveys," Vaneer said with a dismissive snort. "The mountains have changed. The Twilight affected the land. Everyone knows this."

"Of course," Silas said softly. "The Twilight has beco a very convenient excuse for many things."

Vaneer’s eyes flicked toward the door.

Elara noticed it too.

Silas watched the movent and filed it away.

The man wanted to leave now.

Good.

Fear made people honest. Panic made them useful.

Silas opened a drawer and removed a small pouch of dark cloth. He placed it on the desk between them.

Vaneer stared at it.

"What is that?"

Silas untied the string and tipped the pouch over.

A thin layer of black tallic dust spilled across the polished wood.

Vaneer went still.

The room beca very quiet.

Silas touched the dust with one finger and rubbed it slowly between his thumb and forefinger.

"Forge residue," Silas said. "Fresh. Heavy. Produced from high heat refinent. The kind that stains woolen cloaks when guards spend too much ti near active smithing chambers."

Vaneer’s throat bobbed.

"I do not know what ga this is."

"No," Silas said. "You know exactly what ga this is."

The temperature in the room seed to drop.

Silas leaned forward, his dark eyes locked onto Vaneer’s sweating face.

"You have been lying to the Crown. That alone is dangerous. But lying to the Crown is not what frightens you."

Vaneer said nothing.

Silas continued.

"You have also been lying to Lady Seraphina Caligari."

The na landed like a knife slipping between ribs.

Vaneer’s face drained of color.

Lyra closed the ledger with a soft thud.

Elara remained motionless by the window, but Silas saw the satisfaction in the faint lift of her chin.

Vaneer forced a laugh.

It ca out cracked.

"That is absurd."

"Is it?" Silas asked. "You claim your mines are failing. You report reduced refined steel to the Crown and reduced shipnts to House Caligari. Yet inside your eastern cellars there are enough broadswords to arm a thousand n."

Vaneer stood so quickly the chair scraped against the stone floor.

"Who told you that?"

Silas smiled.

Vaneer realized the mistake a heartbeat too late.

Silas did not answer.

He did not need to.

The question was confession enough.

Vaneer looked toward Lyra, then Elara, then the door again. His breathing had grown heavy. The jewels on his fingers trembled as his hands curled into fists.

"You have spies in my estate," he whispered.

"I have eyes everywhere," Silas replied.

That was not entirely true.

Not yet.

But a frightened man did not need truth. He needed the shape of it.

Vaneer swallowed hard and slowly sat back down.

The chair creaked again.

This ti it sounded like a man being lowered into a coffin.

Silas opened another drawer and removed a folded parchnt. He did not hand it to Vaneer. He simply placed it on top of the tallic dust.

"This is what will happen if you leave this room without agreeing to my terms," Silas said. "One copy of this report will reach Queen Ravena. Another copy will reach Lady Seraphina. Her Majesty will strip your title for tax fraud. The Silk Spider will punish you for theft. I suspect the Queen will be rciful by comparison."

Vaneer’s lips parted.

No sound ca out.

Silas allowed himself a small cold smile.

"You do not fear execution, Lord Vaneer. n like you always believe execution is for other people. What you fear is Seraphina discovering that while you bowed to her in public, you were stealing her iron in private."

Vaneer wiped sweat from his brow with a shaking hand.

"You do not understand her," he whispered.

"I understand exactly what she is," Silas said. "That is why you are still alive."

Vaneer stared at him.

The anger was gone now.

Good.

Anger made n stupid. Fear made them teachable.

"What do you want?" Vaneer asked.

Silas leaned back again.

There it was.

The first honest sentence the man had spoken since entering the room.

"You will pay the full royal tithe owed to the Crown by the end of the week," Silas said. "Every coin. No delay. No negotiation. No theatrical poverty."

Vaneer’s mouth opened in protest.

Silas raised one finger.

"You will also transfer three hundred broadswords from your eastern cellar to a warehouse of my choosing. Quietly. No official manifest. No Caligari seal. No questions."

"Three hundred?" Vaneer hissed. "That is impossible."

"It is less than one third of your hidden stock."

Vaneer froze again.

Silas’s smile deepened.

"Do not insult by pretending I do not know the scale of your treason."

Vaneer looked like he wanted to vomit.

"The gold is difficult but possible," he said slowly. "The swords are dangerous. Moving that many blades through the city without Seraphina noticing will not be easy."

"Then you will prove you are not as useless as you look."

The insult struck him hard, but Vaneer swallowed it.

He had no choice.

"And after that?" Vaneer asked. "You bleed again? Then again? Until I have nothing left?"

Silas studied him carefully.

There was intelligence under the fat. Greed too. Fear. Ambition. Resentnt.

Useful things.

"No," Silas said. "After that, you continue serving Lady Seraphina exactly as before."

Vaneer blinked.

Silas continued.

"You will report to her. You will smile for her. You will pretend to be loyal. You will let her believe her loyal iron pig is still chained to her web."

Vaneer’s breathing slowed.

"And in truth?"

"In truth," Silas said, "you will belong to ."

The words settled over the room like falling ash.

Vaneer stared at him with dawning horror.

"I cannot betray Seraphina."

"You already did."

Vaneer flinched.

Silas stood and walked around the desk. His movents were slow, controlled, almost gentle. He stopped beside Vaneer’s chair and looked down at him.

"The only question left is whether your betrayal remains profitable or becos fatal."

Vaneer’s jaw clenched.

For a mont, Silas thought the man might still resist. Pride was a stubborn poison. It killed more nobles than blades ever did.

Then Vaneer lowered his head.

"What guarantee do I have that you will not expose after I obey?"

Silas looked toward Lyra.

She stepped forward and placed a blank parchnt on the desk. Then she set down an inkpot and a black quill.

"No guarantee," Silas said. "Only incentive. So long as you are useful, you live. So long as you obey, your secrets remain buried. Betray and I send your confession to the Queen and the Silk Spider before sunset."

Vaneer stared at the parchnt.

"What is this?"

"A private agreent," Lyra said. "Written in neutral language. A logistical cooperation order between the office of the Shadow Advisor and the western mines."

Vaneer narrowed his eyes. "And the true terms?"

"Unwritten," Silas said. "Which ans you will not be foolish enough to let anyone search for them."

For the first ti since entering the room, Vaneer looked at Silas with sothing close to understanding.

Then sothing darker followed.

Respect.

He reached for the quill.

His hand trembled as he signed.

The mont the final stroke dried on the parchnt, Silas felt a faint pressure pass through the room. Not System power. Not Ravena’s shadow magic. Sothing older and quieter.

Lyra noticed it too. Her eyes widened slightly.

The ink on the page shimred for a single heartbeat, then darkened to a rich black.

Vaneer did not notice. He pushed the parchnt away as if touching it burned him.

Silas looked down at the signature.

A strange sensation stirred in his chest.

Not pain.

Not warmth.

Recognition.

A whisper moved through the back of his mind, soft as paper sliding across stone.

Words had weight here.

Contracts had teeth.

aning could bind reality.

For the first ti, Silas felt the faint outline of sothing sleeping beneath the surface of this world’s magic.

The System interface remained silent.

No prompt appeared.

No skill activated.

No reward chid in his mind.

Silas’s eyes sharpened.

Interesting.

This was not the System.

This was sothing else.

Sothing native to this world.

Sothing the original Silas of House Vane may have been closer to understanding than anyone had realized.

Vaneer stood shakily.

"I will have the gold delivered within four days," he said. "The swords will take longer."

"Three nights," Silas said.

"That is madness."

"Three nights."

Vaneer swallowed. "Fine."

Silas walked back behind his desk and sat down.

"You may leave."

Vaneer hesitated at the door.

"What are you going to do with three hundred swords?"

Silas looked at him.

The question was bold.

Almost brave.

Silas smiled.

"I am going to make sure the next army that enters this palace belongs to ."

Vaneer turned pale again.

He opened the door and hurried out.

The mont he was gone, Elara released a slow breath.

"He will betray you," she said quietly.

"Eventually," Silas replied.

Lyra picked up the signed parchnt and examined the ink with a deep frown.

"Silas," she said. "This signature reacted."

"I saw."

"That should not happen. Not with ordinary ink. Not with ordinary parchnt."

Silas stood and approached her.

"What does it an?"

Lyra looked up at him, and for the first ti that morning, the Royal Scribe looked genuinely unsettled.

"It ans the agreent carried enough intent to wake the law beneath the words," she whispered. "That is the beginning of contract magic. But you did not cast anything."

Silas stared at the parchnt.

The black signature seed almost alive.

"I did not use the System," he said softly.

"No," Lyra replied. "You did not."

A slow smile spread across Silas’s face.

Cold.

Curious.

Hungry.

The court had given him politics. The System had given him tools. Ravena had given him a title. Seraphina had given him a war.

But this world had just given him sothing far more valuable.

A path.

Far beneath the palace, in the forgotten depths of the restricted archives, an old book bound in black leather shifted slightly on its shelf.

Dust slid from its cover.

Faded silver letters appeared across the spine for the first ti in centuries.

The Rune Poet’s Prir.

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