The rest of the folder took two hours to go through.
Raphael walked them through it page by page, he explained every detail, answer every questions and searched for answers to the questions he doesn’t have answers to.
He walked them through every falsified eting minutes. Altered correspondence. A record of paynts....careful, indirect, routed through enough interdiaries to be deniable but present, absolutely present if you knew what you were looking at.
And at the back of the folder.
A single docunt.
One page.
Raphael put it on the table last.
Looked at Eve before she read it.
"This one is harder," he said.
She picked it up. read it then placed it back on the table it down.
"What is it," Damon said.
"A directive," Eve said. Her voice was even. She made it even. "Dated twenty years ago." She paused. "Signed by Malachai." Another pause. "Authorizing the removal of the Seraphim heir." She looked at the page. "Not Azrael. Not Lilith." She stopped. ". Specifically. Three months before I was born."
The study was completely still.
Damian’s hand on the table went flat.
Damon stood up.
Silas looked at the page.
"He signed it," Silas said.
"Yes," Eve said.
"In his own hand."
"Yes," she said.
"That’s...." Silas stopped.
"That’s everything," Vessa said quietly. From the end of the table. Her voice was the steadiest in the room. "That single docunt is everything. Signed. Dated. His hand. His directive." She looked at Eve. "That’s not circumstantial. That’s not a falsified record that requires interpretation." She paused. "That’s Malachai authorizing the murder of an unborn child in his own handwriting."
The room held it.
Damon was standing.
Hadn’t sat back down.
His hands were at his sides and his face was doing the thing it did when sothing had hit hard enough.
"Damon," Eve said.
He looked at her.
She held his gaze.
"I’m okay," he said.
"I know," she said.
"I just need a...." He stopped. took a deep breath "I’m okay."
She nodded.
He walked back to his sit and sat down.
Damian looked at Raphael.
"The docunt is authenticated," he said. "Not just copied."
"I verified the seal," Raphael said. "Malachai’s personal seal. The ink dating is consistent with twenty years ago." He paused. "And there are two witnesses nad on the docunt." He looked at the page. "Both of them still alive."
The room absorbed that.
Two witnesses.
Two people who had been in the room when Malachai signed a directive to murder an unborn heir and had put their nas on it.
"Nas," Damian said.
Raphael told him.
Silas wrote them down.
Damian looked at the nas.
Looked at Raphael.
"Can we get to them," he said.
"One of them yes," Raphael said. "The other I’m less certain about." He paused. "But we only need one." He looked at the docunt. "Combined with Sable’s testimony and the original vote record, one witness to the signing is sufficient." He paused. "More than sufficient."
Damian looked at the folder.
At everything spread across his father’s desk.
The vault. The witness. The window.
All three.
They had all three.
He sat back in his chair.
Felt the specific weight of a long ga arriving at its final moves.
"We take this to the Conclave," he said. "Formally. Through every legitimate process available." He looked at Eve. "His weapon. His thod. Used against him."
Eve looked at the signed directive.
At Malachai’s handwriting authorizing her death before she was born.
At the docunt that had sat in a sub level vault for years waiting for soone to find it.
"When," she said.
"Two weeks," Damian said. "We prepare everything. Sable’s testimony formally recorded. The witnesses contacted. The docuntation organized for submission." He paused. "We do it right. No gaps. No room for him to find a counter." He looked at the room. "When we walk into that Conclave we walk in with everything."
Eve nodded.
Looked at the folder one more ti.
Then she looked at Raphael.
"Thank you," she said. "For going in."
He looked at her.
"Your mother asked to watch for you," he said. " He paused. "This is fulfiling my promises to your parents."
Eve held his gaze.
Felt everything that lived in that.
Then she looked at the table.
At the folder.
At two weeks of preparation standing between them and the end of sothing that had started two decades ago and had cost everyone in this room sothing they couldn’t get back.
She was ready.
****
Malachai’s POV
He knew sothing was wrong on the third day.
Not because of anything visible.
Nothing was visible. That was the point. That was always the point, the visible things were for other people, for the ones who operated on the surface of situations rather than underneath them. Malachai had spent two hundred years underneath.
What he felt on the third day was absence.
Callum had gone quiet.
Not the quiet of a man being careful. The quiet of a man who had stopped being useful. Stopped reporting. Stopped being present in the specific way that an asset was present, the regular small transmissions of information that accumulated into a picture.
Gone.
Three days of silence.
He sat down alone In his study at the Court. The one nobody else used. The one with the window that looked out over the old formal garden that hadn’t been formally tended in thirty years and had beco sothing wilder and more interesting because of it.
He sat and he thought.
***
Vael found him there at midday.
Set a cup of tea on the desk without being asked.
Stood.
"Callum," Malachai said.
"Yes," Vael said.
"They know."
Not a question.
Vael was quiet for a mont. "It appears so."
Malachai looked at the garden.
At the overgrown thing it had beco.
He had always found it more interesting than the formal version.
"How," he said.
"Unknown," Vael said. "They were careful. Whatever thod they used to identify him didn’t co through any of our channels."
"Soone told them," Malachai said. "Or they set a trap and he walked into it." He paused. "Callum is not a stupid man. If he walked into a trap it was a good one."
"Yes," Vael said.
Malachai picked up the tea.
Drank it then set it down.
He was not angry.
Anger was for people who hadn’t anticipated loss as a structural feature of long gas. He had been playing long gas since before most of the people in this building had been born and he had learned early that losses were not aberrations. They were the cost of operating at the level he operated at.
You absorbed them.
You recalculated.
You moved.
"The Biological Sovereignty filing," he said.
"Pulled," Vael said. "As you instructed."
"And the Aldenre trip," he said. "Did we find out what that was."
Vael paused.
That pause was specific.
Malachai looked at him.
"Tell ," he said.
"We’ve identified a property in Aldenre," Vael said carefully. "An inn called the Grey Bell. Our contact in the village reports that a woman matching Vessa Morvaine’s description has been staying there intermittently for the past three weeks."
Malachai set down his cup.
"Vessa," he said.
"We believe so," Vael said. "We can’t confirm without,,,,,"
"It’s her," Malachai said.
He said it simply. Without heat. The flat acknowledgnt of a thing he had been waiting forty one years to hear and had hoped he would never have to.
Vessa Morvaine.
Alive.
User Comments
0 comments from readers