The call ended in the quiet, tense silence that usually follows a conversation with Gabriel.
For a mont, Arik did not move.
The projection dissolved above the table, leaving only the fading Wrohanese evening pressed against the windows and the afterimage of Gabriel’s face lingering in his vision like white-hot ether burned too cleanly to forget.
His fingers rested lightly on the armrest, but the amusent from Gabriel’s final warning had already begun to fade in favor of an earlier mory.
Liam against him in Lab V, cold and shaking from the displacent, one hand clutching at Arik’s coat with all the fury of a man whose body had betrayed his pride before his mind could catch up. Liam’s face forced into the curve of his throat, breathing him in because the oga’s senses had needed an anchor, and Arik had been the nearest stable thing in the room.
Arik had acted because Liam had been unstable.
That remained true.
It was not, however, the whole truth.
He rembered the exact mont Liam’s panic had loosened.
The sharp chemical spike of displacent sickness had softened first, burned stabilizer and overworked channels giving way beneath sothing far more delicate than he expected. It wasn’t sweet in the empty way court perfus tried to imitate oga fragility.
A flower.
Rare. Pale. Almost impossible.
The scent had been faint under stress, almost hidden beneath ozone and irritation, but Arik had known it the instant it touched him.
The mory rose from sowhere old enough to feel less like recollection and more like weather returning.
A white flower that grew only in the high salt cliffs of old Nuria, where the wind cut hard enough to strip blood from skin and the sea below glowed faintly with ether during storms. It blood for less than a week each year, opening only at night, its petals almost translucent under moonlight. People had once called it ’saint’s breath.’ Soldiers had called it rcy because it often grew near the old shrines where the wounded were carried when no physician could reach them in ti.
Goliath had liked it.
No.
That was too mild.
It had been one of his favorites.
A flower that should not have existed in Wrohan. A scent that belonged to a coast buried under old imperial maps, to a life ruined by betrayal, to mories that had survived death better than most n survived winter.
And Liam slled like it.
Arik closed his eyes.
The elevator returned next, because fate apparently had a sense of humor with poor discipline.
Liam trapped between the glass wall and Arik’s body, furious enough to vibrate, pretending the small space was an insult to his own being. Arik had restrained his pheromones then. Liam had already accused him once of using scent like a leash, and Arik had no intention of making the sa mistake twice.
Still, close as they had been, there had been no avoiding it.
Liam’s scent had risen every ti the lift jolted.
That sa flower, sharper now, ward by embarrassnt and anger. Beneath it, an oga’s heat, buried but clearly recognizable to an alpha whose instincts had already begun cataloguing far too much without permission.
Arik’s fingers curled once against the armrest.
Gabriel was right.
Gabriel was almost always right, which was why he was one of the only people alive, besides Damian, who could tell a sovereign to his face that his romantic instincts were a civic hazard and expect to survive the conversation with dignity intact.
Arik’s gaze drifted to the Vanguard proposal lying open on the low table.
Beside it sat the owl brooch, intact and useless, its little red eye still polished enough to lie. Liam’s machine had humiliated a state-level suppression net without breaking the evidence, without triggering the alarm, without giving Wrohan so much as a scorch mark to investigate.
Elegant.
Infuriatingly elegant.
Arik thought of the sixth day.
Damian had watched Gabriel for years before they ever stood face to face, gathering reports, distance, fascination, and that particular imperial arrogance n in their bloodline often mistook for restraint. Then Gabriel entered his reach, and Damian’s patience lasted less than a week.
Arik understood that now more than he had wanted to admit while Gabriel was still looking at him.
It was not only the Star prophecy.
It was not even the biological pull of an oga whose scent had struck a mory buried deeper than death.
Liam Canmore did not simply build machines. He listened to pressure. He heard the direction the force wanted to move and convinced it to beco useful. He took discarded parts, forbidden red ether, sealed municipal neglect, and his own money, then built a hidden heart beneath a city that did not deserve him.
Arik’s fingers ghosted over the edge of the Vanguard file.
"Temporary furniture," he murmured.
Arik stood in the center of the quiet suite, Wrohan’s silence pressing against him. He felt neither the weight of a guilty conscience nor the sting of a cold heart. He simply felt the pragmatism of soone who had lived twice.
To Goliath, consorts had never been a romantic endeavor. They were a departnt. In his previous life, he had viewed them with the sa detached professional respect one might afford a reliable chief of staff or a long-term advisor. You ensured they were well-housed, you protected their families’ interests, and you shared a bed with the sa transactional tone one might use to sign a trade manifesto. They were coworkers in the industry of empire-building.
And when a departnt was no longer performing a necessary function, you closed it.
Arik crossed to the ether-glass desk near the window. The surface woke beneath his touch with a low blue hum, light spreading under his fingers in clean administrative lines.
He opened a secure channel to his primary secretary in Agaron.
The response ca almost at once.
"Your Highness."
"Mira," Arik said. "Prepare formal notice for the consort contracts."
A pause.
"The quarterly contracts, sir?"
"Yes. Elias, Soren, and Caelum. The terms expire in ten days. Do not trigger the renewal clauses."
"Understood."
"Prepare standard severance. Double the land grant attached to House Abalone. Ensure the trade exemptions promised to the other two houses are locked for five years, not three. No public humiliation. No unnecessary cruelty. They served a function and did not create the arrangent."
Mira’s voice remained crisp. "Of course, Your Highness."
"I want the transition handled with professional grace," Arik continued. "And I want the wing empty by the ti I return."
This ti the pause was longer.
"There will be significant pushback from the Great Houses," Mira said carefully. "They’ve co to regard the positions as permanent fixtures in your court."
Arik grinned amusedly.
"Yes. That misconception ends now."
"Should I route objections through your office?"
"No."
Another pause.
Arik let himself enjoy it.
"Any formal objection, petition, parental complaint, political appeal, or theatrical expression of wounded loyalty is to be directed to the Empress’s private office."
Mira said nothing.
Arik’s smile deepened by a fraction.
"Inform them that Gabriel has taken a personal interest in the restructuring of the royal household’s social dynamics."
The silence on the other end beca almost reverent.
Then Mira said, "That should discourage the intelligent objections."
"It should eliminate them."
"And the unintelligent ones?"
"Will be educational."
"Understood, Your Highness."
Arik glanced at the Vanguard proposal again, at Liam’s na printed beneath the polite cruelty of committee rejection.
"Make the language legally clean," he said. "Respectful, final, and impossible to reinterpret as negotiation."
"Yes, sir. I will send the drafts for your final signature within the hour."
"One more thing."
"Yes?"
"No new consort proposals, introductions, or informal recomndations are to be accepted by my household. Indefinitely."
This ti, Mira’s breath shifted softly over the line.
Then: "Understood."
The connection ended.
Arik remained beside the desk, Wrohan’s false glitter beyond the glass and Gabriel’s warning still alive sowhere behind his ribs.
’Clear the road.’
So he did.
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