LOGINPOV: Dorian
I process the world in patterns. This is not a choice — it is the way my mind is built, has always been built, the thing that made me exceptional in an academic sense and exhausting in a personal one. I see the gap between what people say and what their bodies communicate. I see the micro-expressions, the hesitations, the precise words selected from all possible words. I see the pattern underneath the surface, and the pattern underneath that.
It means no one surprises me. It has meant that for a very long time.
Rose surprises me.
I have been trying to understand this since the opening ceremony, when her collar slipped — barely, a fraction of a second — and I saw the edge of a birthmark on her neck. I have seen images of the dual-moon mark in historical texts. I was not certain enough to act, but I was certain enough to watch.
The Selection protocol requires individual meetings with each candidate. My session with Rose is mid-morning. I arrive to find her already there, standing with her back to the wall near the window — not defensively positioned, just positioned. She has chosen the spot with the best sightline to both doors. I log this.
You are not going to perform for me, I say.
She meets my eyes. She says no.
Most candidates do.
I know. I watched them.
What did you conclude?
A pause — not hesitation, consideration. She says the performance is the test, and whoever designed the test knows exactly what they are looking for.
And what are they looking for?
She looks at me for a long moment. She says she is still working that out.
It is the most honest thing anyone has said to me in this building, which is full of very smart people being very carefully dishonest. I feel something shift in my assessment — not just interest, which I already had, but something with more weight. The beginning of trust, possibly. I am cautious with that word.
We talk for the required hour. She is careful, measured, gives me information that seems appropriate and withholds what does not. But I am watching the patterns, and the pattern tells me she is not withholding out of deception — she is withholding out of survival instinct, the habit of a person who learned young that information given freely is often information used against you. I recognise that instinct. I have had it my whole life.
At the end of the session, I raised what I saw at the ceremony.
I am not going to ask you to confirm anything, I say. I am telling you that I saw something, and that I have not mentioned it to anyone, and that I will not — unless you want me to.
She goes very still. Not frightened — calculating. She asks why. She says I do not know her.
No. But I know what that mark means to the King. I hold her gaze. And I think you do too.
The stillness holds for another moment. Then she says thank you and uses my name, which she has not done before. I note the shift.
I go back to my chambers and I start pulling the threads I have access to.
The palace library is extensive. Alpha candidates have broad access, which the librarians seem faintly resentful of but cannot override. I spend the afternoon there, working through Selection records going back two centuries. I am looking for patterns.
The gaps are what I find. Three names were struck from the official register. Incomplete files. Pages removed — not missing, removed; the binding holes are still there. I cross-reference what remains with public records from the relevant years. The three struck names have almost no external record either. They have been made not to exist.
I find a cross-reference in one of the struck files — a notation pointing to the King's private medical archive. Access denied, but the reference number is visible. I write it down. I recall a document I noticed in the council chamber records during my legitimate access earlier that week. The file number matches. That document was labelled: Completed Cases.
I sit in the library for a long time after that. Then I go to the restricted section.
The historical account of the first Dual Moon Breeder is four centuries old and written in the language of clinical neutrality that is more horrifying than anything explicit could be. She bonded with five Alphas. Produced heirs of unprecedented power. Three of her Alphas were executed by the ruling king within the year. She died shortly after. Of grief, the account says.
I close the document. I sit in the restricted archive, and I understand, with the precision that is both my gift and my burden, exactly what is happening in this palace, and exactly what the King intends to do about it.
I go to Rose's door at an hour that is technically improper. She answers immediately — she was not sleeping. I look at her face, and I see what I was afraid to see: shadows under her eyes that are deeper than three days ago, a slight pallor. I take both her hands before I have decided to.
I think the previous Selection candidate was killed, I say.
She looks at me steadily. She says she knows.
How long have you known?
She opens the door wider and tells me to come in.
We talk until dawn. When I finally leave, Cain is in the corridor — standing outside her door, apparently having also been awake, apparently also keeping watch. We look at each other in the grey early light.
Tomorrow, he says. Not a question.
Tomorrow, I agree. We both understand what we are agreeing to, even if we have not named it yet.
POV: CainI did not like the plan, and I told Rose so directly, the way I had told her things directly since the first night in the carriage."Every time we have gone to that room expecting answers," I said, "we have come back with more questions than we started with. The buried room gave us the third mirror and the warning about the watcher. The upper room gave us the mural and the second chair and, indirectly, the discrepancy that nearly convinced us Dorian was the watcher himself. I do not trust that room to give us a clean answer simply because we need one.""I do not expect a clean answer," Rose said. "I expect the truth, whatever shape it takes. That has always been worth more to me than a comfortable answer that happens to be wrong."I could not argue with this, because it was, in every important way, exactly correct, and exactly like her.We went that evening, the same configuration as before, Rose first, myself second, Dorian with the lamp, Rafe and Luca at the street, though
POV: DorianI did not sleep that night, and I do not say this as a figure of speech. I sat in the office with Rose until the lamp burned out entirely, and then we sat in the dark for a while longer, because neither of us wanted to be the one to say that the conversation needed to end before either of us had anything resembling an answer.What I knew, by the time the window began to grey with the first suggestion of morning, was this. Three years ago, on a date my own access log claimed I had entered the record-keeping office, Selene's independent log showed nothing. My own notebook, the one I had never let leave my possession, had a single blank page where every surrounding page was filled.I did not remember the day.This was the detail that frightened me most, more than the discrepancy itself. I have a precise memory. I have built my entire usefulness to this structure on the foundation of remembering things accurately, cross-referencing them, catching the small inconsistency that e
POV: RoseWe built the list over four days, working at night, after everything else the day required had been finished, in the office with the window, the door locked, the lamp turned low enough that anyone passing in the corridor would assume the room was empty.Dorian approached it the way he approached every document, methodically, ruling people out before he allowed himself to consider ruling anyone in. Cain was eliminated within the first night, not because I asked Dorian to spare him, but because the access records showed, conclusively, that Cain had never once been alone in any location where the design's deepest secrets were kept. He had always been with someone, the position he occupied, between Rose and whatever threat existed, meant he was never unsupervised in the buried room, never alone in the old quarter, never given the specific kind of unwitnessed access the watcher would have required.Rafe was eliminated on the second night, for a different reason. His nineteen days
POV: RoseHe came to my door past midnight, and I knew from the particular quality of his knock, three measured strokes rather than his usual two, that whatever he had found required immediate attention.I let him in.He set the notebook on the table between us, open to a page I had seen before, the substitution layer he had decoded months ago, before Saren had even arrived in Ironmoor."Read this line," he said. "The one I have underlined."I read it.When the gap between iterations opens, the watcher who has waited longest will know before the keeper does, because the watcher's patience is older than the keeper's mark."I translated this correctly the first time," Dorian said. "I understood it as a general statement about the design's vulnerabilities, a warning that whoever opposed the line would learn of transitions before the new Keeper fully understood her own inheritance." He paused. "I did not understand, until tonight, that it was not describing a general principle. It was des
POV: DorianWe gathered everyone for this, all five of the bond, Saren, Selene, Calder, even Wren and Tessa, because Rose had decided, after the conversation with Calder and Selene, that the structure we were defending was not just the five of us, it was every person who had chosen to stand inside it, and a response built without their knowledge would betray the very principle we were trying to demonstrate.I had spent the intervening two days back in the document, looking for anything that might tell us how to respond to a presence that listened without acting, and I had found, on a careful third pass through the substitution layers, a detail I had missed twice before, because it was not hidden in cipher or spacing this time, simply stated plainly in a section I had assumed was purely instructional and had not read with the same suspicion I applied to everything else."The eight-hundred-year woman anticipated this," I said, when everyone had gathered in the Council chamber, the same
POV: CalderI noticed the gap in Selene's reports eleven days after we found the second chair, and I noticed it the same way I had noticed every gap that had ever mattered, by reading something so many times that the absence of a detail became as loud as its presence would have been.Selene's quarterly reports had become, over the years, the most thorough documents in the entire governance structure, a habit she had deliberately built after the relay incident, every channel accounted for, every contact logged, nothing held back, the specific discipline of someone who had once made the mistake of operating alone and had spent every subsequent year proving she would not make it again.This report had a gap.Not an omission exactly. A section, three paragraphs, describing correspondence with the settlement, that read correctly on the surface but contained, when I checked it against the underlying logs she had also submitted, a discrepancy. The report described four exchanges with Etta's
POV: RoseThe letter from the Northern Reach lord arrived in the spring.It was brief, in the way of a man who had decided something and was reporting it rather than seeking permission. His granddaughter — the seven-year-old, the one with the mark on her shoulder — had been told, in the language ap
POV: CainThe testimony took three days.Not because the content required three days — Bryn had been thorough and specific and entirely without management in the lower city street, and she was the same in the Council chamber, which told me that what I had seen in the street was not performance for
POV: RoseThe constitutional review concluded on a Tuesday in late autumn.I remember this because Luca said, when Adara announced the date, that it was fitting. Tuesdays had a particular character, being neither the beginning nor the end of a week, but the day when things that had already started
POV: LucaEight territories in twenty-two days.This was the kind of number that sounds manageable until you are inside it, at which point it becomes a condition of existence rather than a plan. We rode, and talked, and rode again, and ate in great halls and farmhouse kitchens and, once, in a lord'







