The western service road curved beneath the outer wall of the upper city like a vein hidden under bruised skin.
It was not a road nobles used. It was narrow, uneven and lined with storage houses, old stables and workshops that supplied the estates above. The stones were slick with twilight mist. Iron lanterns burned low along the walls, their violet flas barely cutting through the cold gloom that never lifted from the Sunless Throne.
Silas stood beneath the broken awning of an abandoned cooper’s shop and watched the road in silence.
He had changed clothes again. The fine charcoal silk of the Shadow Advisor was gone. In its place he wore a plain dark riding coat, black gloves and a hood drawn low over his face. The silver ring remained hidden. Tonight he was not the Queen’s advisor. Tonight he was another shadow among many.
Elara stood beside him with her arms folded beneath her cloak. There was a sharp alertness in her pale green eyes. Around them, her ghosts had already taken their positions. A laundress sat near a doorway pretending to nd a torn sleeve. A stable boy swept mud across the sa patch of stone again and again. Two kitchen girls argued near a cart of spoiled cabbages loud enough to sound natural and close enough to watch the bend in the road.
They were invisible because the world had trained itself not to see them.
That was why Silas valued them.
A soldier could guard a gate. A spy could follow a noble. But servants lived inside the blind spots of power. They heard the truth because powerful n believed the room beca empty once the servants lowered their eyes.
Silas had made a career on Earth out of blind spots.
He rembered glass boardrooms and n in tailored suits laughing at janitors who emptied bins after midnight. Those sa bins had once given him a discarded acquisition mo that let him destroy a rival firm in six weeks. He rembered security guards who were ignored until their shift logs proved an affair between a director and a regulator. He rembered secretaries who knew more about billion dollar rgers than the executives signing them.
Power always forgot the people who carried its tea.
That mistake had followed him into this world.
He had no intention of correcting it.
Elara glanced at him. "You are smiling."
"Am I?"
"Yes.."
"You have good eyes."
She looked back at the road. "Vaneer’s first wagon passed the lower iron gate ten minutes ago. Nessa confird six wagons. Four riders in front, six behind, two n per wagon."
"Too many guards for grain. Too few for sothing truly legal."
"That is what I thought."
Silas looked toward the bend in the road.
"Where is Lyra?"
"At the library. She sent word that Sergeant Odran Pell had debts with three gambling dens and one private lender."
"Seraphina?"
Elara shook her head. "Not one of hers. The lender used to serve Draven."
Of course.
Draven was in chains, but his old network was not dead. Soldiers did not vanish because their general fell. They scattered. They waited. They sold their loyalty to whoever gave them hope or coin.
Silas disliked loose pieces.
Loose pieces beca knives in the dark.
A soft whistle ca from the stable boy.
Elara straightened.
"They are here."
The first wagon erged through the twilight mist.
It was covered in rough brown canvas and pulled by two thick black horses. The wheels sank slightly under the weight of the cargo. Not grain. Not cloth. Not household goods. Heavy iron sat beneath that canvas. Hidden badly enough to fool guards who did not care. Hidden well enough to look innocent from a distance.
The four riders at the front wore plain cloaks, but Silas saw the steel beneath the fabric. rcenaries. Not City Guard. Not Caligari colors. Vaneer had chosen n who belonged to coin, not banners.
Good.
Coin could be redirected.
The wagons rolled closer.
Elara lifted one finger.
Across the road, the kitchen girls suddenly knocked over the cart of spoiled cabbages. Rotten vegetables spilled across the stones directly in front of the lead horses. One girl scread at the other. The other scread louder. The stable boy rushed forward pretending to help and dropped his broom under the first horse’s legs.
The lead horse reared.
The convoy stopped.
The front rider cursed. "Move, you useless rats!"
The kitchen girls began apologizing at once. Too loudly. Too helplessly. Perfect.
One of the rcenaries climbed down from his horse and shoved the stable boy aside. "Clear the road before I clear it with your blood."
Silas stepped from beneath the awning.
"That would be inconvenient."
The rcenary turned.
His hand went to his sword.
Silas removed his glove.
The silver ring caught the violet lantern light.
The man froze.
The other riders saw it a heartbeat later. Their hands stopped moving. The wagon drivers lowered their eyes. The entire convoy seed to hold its breath.
Silas walked toward the first wagon slowly.
"Who commands this shipnt?" he asked.
A broad man climbed down from the second wagon. He was tall, thick ard and bald, with a square jaw and a scar across his left eyebrow. Unlike the others, he did not look afraid imdiately. He looked irritated that fear had beco necessary.
"My lord," the man said carefully. "This shipnt belongs to Lord Vaneer. We have docunts."
"I am sure you do."
Silas held out his hand.
The bald man hesitated.
Elara stepped out of the shadows behind him with a dagger already in her hand. She did not touch him. She did not need to.
The man handed Silas the parchnt.
Silas unfolded it.
A transport license. Wax seal. Vaneer’s mark. Destination listed as western grain storage. Cargo listed as mining tools and repair chains.
Lazy.
Vaneer had moved too quickly.
Panic made paperwork ugly.
Silas looked at the bald man. "Your na."
"Brannik."
"You work for Vaneer?"
"I work for whoever pays."
"Honest. That saves ti."
Brannik’s eyes flicked toward Elara, then back to Silas. "My lord, we were told this shipnt had royal approval."
"Did you see royal approval?"
"We saw Vaneer’s seal."
"Right."
One of the younger rcenaries near the rear wagon shifted his grip on his sword.
Elara noticed.
So did three ghosts.
Silas did not look back.
"Brannik," he said. "There are two ways this night continues. In the first, you defend Lord Vaneer’s illegal weapons and die in a service road for a man who will deny knowing your na."
Brannik’s jaw tightened.
"In the second," Silas continued, "you accept that this shipnt has been seized under the authority of the Shadow Advisor. You and your n walk away with your paynt doubled and your throats intact."
The rcenaries looked at one another.
Coin moved faster than loyalty.
Always.
Brannik studied Silas. "And if Lord Vaneer asks what happened?"
"You were robbed."
"By whom?"
Silas smiled faintly. "By ghosts."
For a mont, Brannik looked confused.
Then he understood that the servants around him were not servants at all. The laundress had one hand inside her basket. The stable boy had a knife tucked under his sleeve. The kitchen girls had stopped arguing and were watching the riders with cold focus.
Brannik let out a low breath.
"How much?"
Silas looked at Elara.
She tossed a small leather pouch at Brannik’s feet. It landed with the heavy sound of gold.
"Half now," Silas said. "Half when you forget this road exists."
Brannik picked up the pouch and weighed it in his hand.
A practical man.
Silas liked practical n.
The young rcenary at the rear spoke before Brannik could answer.
"We cannot just hand over six wagons. Vaneer will skin us."
Silas finally looked at him.
The boy was nervous. Thin. Brown haired. Too young for the sword at his hip and too eager to prove he deserved it.
"What is your na?" Silas asked.
The boy swallowed. "Taren."
"Taren," Silas said softly. "Vaneer is already owned. He simply has not accepted the shape of his cage yet. Do not die for a prisoner."
The words struck the convoy harder than a threat.
Brannik tied the pouch to his belt.
"We walk," he said.
Taren stared at him. "Brannik."
"We walk," Brannik repeated, harder this ti.
One by one the rcenaries stepped away from the wagons.
Elara’s ghosts moved imdiately. Servants climbed onto driver seats. The stable boy took the lead horses. The kitchen girls pulled the rotten cabbages aside as if nothing unusual had happened.
Silas approached the first wagon and pulled back the canvas.
Rows of broadswords lay beneath it.
Clean steel. Freshly forged. Wrapped in straw and oiled cloth. Enough to arm a private force. Enough to change the balance of a palace if placed in the right hands.
Silas touched one blade.
Cold. Well made. Better than he expected.
Vaneer had not been building a symbolic army.
He had been building a real one.
Elara ca to stand beside him. "Where do we take them?"
"Not to the palace."
"Too many eyes."
"Exactly."
"Then where?"
Silas released the canvas and looked toward the lower city.
"Old laundry tunnels beneath the south ward. The ones connected to the drained aqueduct."
Elara’s eyes widened slightly. "You know about those?"
"Lyra showed the old blueprints."
"My ghosts use those tunnels."
"Good. Then they already belong to us."
A faint smile touched her lips. There was pride in it. Not soft pride. Dangerous pride. The kind born when soone who had been invisible realized invisibility could beco a kingdom.
The convoy began moving again, but this ti no rcenary rode beside it.
Only servants.
Only ghosts.
Silas watched the wagons roll into the violet gloom.
He should have felt satisfaction.
Instead, his mind returned to the forged order Joric had described. Black wax. Silver mark. His authority mixed with military procedure. Soone inside the palace had access to official channels. Soone bold enough to fra him while he was still learning the shape of his own office.
On Earth, that kind of attack had a na.
Reputation capture.
You did not need to defeat a powerful man directly. You only had to make his na useful to your enemies. Forge his approval. Attach his signature to poison. Let the board turn against him before he understood the move had been made.
Silas had done it once to a pharmaceutical executive in Zurich.
The man had been arrogant, beloved by investors and impossible to remove. So Silas had not attacked his decisions. He had attached the man’s na to a shipnt route that was already dood by regulatory failure. By the ti the board discovered the rot, the signature was all they cared about.
The executive had lost everything in three days.
Silas rembered watching the man resign on a muted screen while drinking black coffee.
He had felt nothing then.
He felt sothing now.
Not regret.
Recognition.
Soone in the Sunless Throne knew how to play a similar ga.
That made them worth finding.
A whistle cut through the road.
Nessa appeared from an alley, breathless.
"My lord," she said. "A rider ca from Vaneer’s estate after the wagons left. He did not follow them. He went east."
Silas turned.
"Toward Seraphina?"
"No," Nessa said. "Toward the palace."
Elara’s smile vanished.
Silas looked at the road leading upward through the mist.
Vaneer had not warned Seraphina.
He had warned soone inside the palace.
Interesting.
Silas pulled his glove back over the ring and started walking.
"Elara," he said.
"Yes?"
"Send two ghosts after the rider. Quietly."
"And the wagons?"
"Hide them."
"And you?"
Silas looked toward the palace spires rising like black teeth beneath Ravena’s eternal twilight.
"I am going to return before the ssage arrives and see who will start pretending they do not already know."
Behind him, six wagons of stolen steel disappeared beneath canvas, servants and shadow.
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