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The Neutral Party

Author: Sarah Kim
last update publish date: 2026-06-02 21:34:51

The council room has always had a particular smell. Sebastien doesn't know what produces it: old oak, old stone, something mineral in the walls that predates the building above it, but every time he comes down the fourteen stairs, he feels it before he sees anything, that specific cold weight of a room that holds its own history in the air rather than on its walls. He finds it reassuring on ordinary days and oppressive on days like this.

There are five people in the room when he reaches the bottom of the stairs. Niall standing near the door with his security director's habit of positioning himself equidistant from every exit. Adaeze Carvalho at the far end of the table, two seats away from the nearest chair, with the compressed stillness of a woman who arrived early to position herself precisely and has been holding that position since. Roman Vasile has a document open in front of him and has not looked up since Sebastien came in, which means he's either reading something critical or deploying the specific social tactic of a very old person who understands the power of late attention. Joon-Ho Lim is beside him, hands flat on the table, closed laptop in front of him, looking like someone who has been awake for so long that even his posture has given up trying to look alert.

Nobody speaks.

The room holds them all in its cold oak smell and they hold themselves in whatever private arrangement of guilt and dread and professional composure they've assembled for this occasion, and Sebastien stands at the head of the table and thinks: we did this.

Not the Vein degradation specifically. The specific human mess of reasons for the Vein degradation.

He opens his mouth to say something purposeful and managerial and the door at the top of the stairs opens.

Footsteps. Unhurried. One person.

The man who comes down is unremarkable in the way that a few people manage to be genuinely, specifically unremarkable, not aggressively plain, not disguised, just... present in the room without drawing the eye to themselves. Medium height, medium build, dark hair, the kind of face you'd describe in terms of category rather than specifics. He's wearing a coat that might be any colour in the low light of the council room. He carries one file. He sits in the chair that is slightly removed from the table, the corner chair, the one that nobody chose, and he puts the file down.

He says: "Sixty days. After which the Vein degradation is structurally irreversible."

Nobody asks who he is. Nobody asks how he knows this. This tells Veira a great deal, except Veira is not here, and it tells Sebastien instead, who is also, in his way, cataloguing.

The meeting takes two hours.

Sebastien has been to many difficult meetings. This one has the particular texture of a meeting where everyone in the room is being simultaneously precise and selective, precise about the information they're presenting, selective about what they're presenting as information versus what they're sitting with privately. He is, he's aware, doing this himself. They all are. Five people around a table being professionally thorough about a catastrophe that is, at its origin, a catastrophe of professional thoroughness.

The Vein is explained to the room by Emre, which is how Sebastien has mentally named the man in the corner chair, because that's the name he signed the registration form with when the Folklore network confirmed he'd agreed to come. He explains it with the brisk clarity of someone who has explained it before, who knows which details are important and which are rabbit holes. The five bloodlines. The resonance architecture. The conduit function. The degradation timeline. He is selective here too, Sebastien can feel it, the specific quality of someone making choices about sequencing, but the overall picture is accurate and damning.

"Historical data," Emre says, when Roman asks how he knows the sixty-day figure so precisely.

Roman looks at him. This look lasts about two seconds and contains something that would, in a different register, be called an argument. Then Roman lets it go.

Sebastien lets it go too. For now.

Afterward, when Adaeze and Roman and Joon-Ho go upstairs to the temporary offices Niall has arranged in the floors above, Sebastien stays. He waits. Emre is still in his corner chair, looking at a point in the middle distance, and Sebastien gets the impression he's been waiting to be asked something.

He pulls out his phone. He shows Emre the two messages from the unknown number. He watches Emre's face read them. Nothing performs. Nothing shifts. The face stays in its particular state of unremarkability. This, Sebastien has decided, is a kind of expertise, the deliberate cultivation of a face that does not react to things that should, ordinarily, prompt reactions.

"Start with the places she goes when she needs to think," Emre says. "She has specific ones."

"How do you know that?"

"Folklore intelligence files."

Sebastien looks at him. He looks at him long enough that in most contexts it would be uncomfortable, and Emre looks back without any visible experience of discomfort, and Sebastien makes a note of this, which is a polite way of saying he files it in the category of things he intends to return to when he has the leverage to do so.

"Right," Sebastien says.

He goes upstairs.

He is two steps up when Emre says, without inflection: "She's not gone because she's afraid. She's gone because she's very, very clear." A pause, the length of a breath. "There's a difference. The approach has to account for it."

Sebastien doesn't turn around. He puts his hand on the stone wall of the staircase and he stands there for a moment with Emre's assessment and the thing it implies — that finding her is the easy part, that she's not hiding — and then he goes upstairs because the alternative is standing in the council room having a feeling he's not ready to have yet.

The room empties. The door closes. The electric hum of the old walls continues, steady and unconcerned.

In the corner chair, Emre opens his file. He takes out a single photograph and looks at it for a moment. A woman on a cliff path, coat dark against a grey sky, looking out at the water. Not a surveillance photo — the angle is wrong for surveillance, too close, too personal, the kind of distance that requires presence.

He puts it away. He closes the file.

He calls a number. When it connects he says: "Tell her I'm looking. Don't tell her who's looking."

He ends the call.

Outside, on the Borders coast, if you stood on the cliff path and looked hard enough, you could see a woman standing in the wind, watching the tide come in.

She is not afraid.

She is counting.

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