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Chapter Five: Lunar Row

Author: Dr shukran
last update publish date: 2026-05-04 03:19:34

"You can tell everything about a person by the way they have organized their tools.

Someone who respects their instruments respects the work.

Someone who respects the work can be trusted with yours."

* * *

Kai wakes up before I do, which has always been true. He has been an early riser since infancy, emerging from sleep with a seriousness that used to make his father uncomfortable and makes me proud in a way I could not articulate if I tried. He does not cry out or call for me. He simply gets up, and I know he is awake because the quality of the silence in the apartment changes, gains a small, deliberate weight.

I find him at the kitchen table with his drawing book open, working on something in pencil with the focused economy of a child who does not consider art to be playing. He draws the way I make notes, quickly, precisely, as if the image already exists somewhere and he is simply locating it on the page.

"Good morning," I say.

"There were three silver flashes last night," he says, without looking up. "I counted. I know you want to know."

I sit across from him. I have never told Kai to count the flashes. He started doing it himself at age five, presenting me with the data each morning the way another child might present a drawing made for a parent, as a gift, as evidence of effort. My son understands, in the particular way that very perceptive children understand things that adults have not yet found words to explain to them, that his body is a question I am working to answer. He has decided to help.

"Three is the same as yesterday," I say.

"I know. I have a chart." He turns the drawing book toward me. On the inside back cover, in his careful seven-year-old handwriting, he has been keeping a log. Date, flash count, duration where he could estimate it, and a column he has labeled F which I study for a moment before I understand it stands for feeling, his subjective assessment of each episode on a scale he invented himself.

I look at this chart for a long time.

Then I look at my son, who has gone back to his drawing, and I think: whatever you are, Kai De Leon, you are extraordinary. Not because of the second soul or the impossible resonance signature or anything that any laboratory has ever found in your blood. Because of this. Because you are seven years old and you are making data tables to help your mother understand you.

"This is very good work," I tell him.

He nods, accepting the assessment without false modesty. "What is for breakfast?"

The message comes at ten in the morning, slipped under the apartment door while Fiona has taken Kai to the small courtyard behind the Halverson Building, where a few of the residents have set up a makeshift play area. It is a single card, heavier than ordinary paper, with an address on Lunar Row and a time: eight o'clock tonight. Below the time, in precise handwriting that is neither warm nor cold, just exact: Bring your kit. Use the side entrance. Tell no one where you are going.

No signature.

I do not need one.

I spend the day preparing with the thoroughness of someone who understands that the first impression you make in a professional setting determines every interaction that follows. I go through my medical kit item by item, inventorying what I have and cataloguing what I will need. Eleven months of building a private supply through careful, patient acquisition from underground sources has given me a reasonable foundation, but a reasonable foundation is not the same as properly equipped, and I make a list of what to request once I have assessed the clinic's existing resources.

I also spend an hour in the bathroom with the door locked, practicing.

Letting the aura out is not painful. It is the suppression that hurts, the constant low-grade effort of keeping the silver light pressed below the surface of my skin where no passing wolf can sense it. When I finally release it in the small steamed room, alone, it unfolds from my hands like something that has been holding its breath, spreading a cool silver luminescence across my palms and fingertips, and I flex my fingers in it and I feel, for the first time in eleven months, like the full version of myself.

I practice calibration. Output and draw-back. Sustained low emission. Targeted pulse. The specific resonance signature required for Blood Resonance preparation work. My hands remember all of it, even though I have not used the gift fully in nearly a year, because the body does not forget the things it was built for.

When I am done, I press the aura back down, breathe through the familiar discomfort of suppression, and go back out to help Fiona with lunch.

Lunar Row at eight in the evening looks like wealth that does not need to announce itself. The buildings are older than the rest of Silver Hollow, stone-faced and serious, their windows lit from within by the warm amber that expensive interiors always produce. The street itself is quiet in the way that only streets with money behind them manage to be quiet, a deliberate, maintained absence of chaos.

The address on the card belongs to a building with no sign and no street-level indication of what it contains. The side entrance is a recessed door on the narrow passage between two structures, accessible only if you know to look for it. I find it because I spent thirty minutes this afternoon memorizing the block from every available angle using the city mapping tool that the Halverson Building's shared tablet provides for residents.

The door opens before I knock.

The woman on the other side is perhaps sixty, compact and precise, with the close-cropped silver hair and the particular quality of stillness that belongs to former military or former surgical personnel. She looks at me with dark eyes that assess and file in a single pass. "You are the healer," she says.

"Yes."

"I am Soren. I manage the facility." She steps back to let me in. "Mr. Moreno said you would want to see everything before you agreed to touch anything. He was correct?"

"He was correct," I say, and something about being correctly anticipated by someone I met once, in a room with a dead body, in the middle of the night, unsettles me in a way I choose to set aside for later.

What Soren shows me over the next twenty minutes recalibrates everything I assumed about the Moreno organization's medical operation.

The facility runs three levels below street grade, accessed through a staircase that looks residential and opens into something that does not. The equipment is not black market salvage. It is current, maintained, and in several areas more sophisticated than anything I worked with at the facility in Kuala Lumpur. The blood storage is temperature-controlled and catalogued with a precision that suggests whoever designed the system had serious training. The treatment rooms are clean in the way that operating theaters are clean, not the surface clean of something wiped down before an inspection but the deep clean of something that has been maintained as a standard.

"Who built this?" I ask in the third room.

"The previous medical director," Soren says. "He had his failings. This was not one of them."

I think about Arden's careful phrasing last night. He made a decision that was not in the organization's interest. I think about what kind of decision a man who built this would make that would end his tenure here. I file the question.

There is a patient waiting in the fourth room.

He is young, perhaps nineteen, with the broad build of a wolf who shifted early and the particular pallor of someone who has been losing blood steadily for long enough that his body has stopped registering the loss as an emergency and simply adapted. His left arm is wrapped in field dressing that someone who knew what they were doing applied perhaps six hours ago. The dressing has done its job. The wound underneath has not closed because the object that made it was silver-tipped, and silver-tipped wounds in wolves do not close on their own.

He looks at me with the wariness of someone who has been told to trust a stranger and is working on it.

"I am going to remove the dressing now," I tell him. "I will tell you everything I am doing before I do it. If at any point you want me to stop, say so and I will stop. Do you understand?"

He blinks. As if this is not what he expected to be said to him. "Yes," he says, after a moment.

I work with my aura released, the silver light pooling in my hands as I assess the wound, running a careful diagnostic read along the tissue damage and the silver contamination line. The boy's breath catches when the light touches him, the involuntary response of a wolf encountering healer energy, and then his shoulders drop two inches as the pain response begins to quiet.

"It is a clean contamination," I tell him, as I work. "The silver did not fragment. Full removal of residue, and with the right compound, the tissue will close within forty-eight hours." I glance up. "What is your name?"

"Reo," he says. He sounds younger than he looks.

"Reo. You are going to be fine."

I hear the door behind me and I do not turn around because I am in the middle of a contamination extraction and breaking contact mid-procedure causes a cascade that is painful for the patient and counterproductive for the work. I feel the shift in the room's atmosphere the way you feel a change in air pressure, something expanding and then settling, and I know without looking who has come in.

"She told him he would be fine," Arden says from behind me, and his voice is quiet enough that it is clearly meant for his own observation more than for anyone else in the room.

"He will be," I say, still working. "Unless he does something in the next forty-eight hours that reopens this. Which I am going to advise strongly against." I look at Reo. "Whatever you were doing when this happened. Do not do that for two days."

Reo almost smiles. It makes him look about fifteen. "Yes, ma'am."

When I am done and Reo has been settled in a recovery room with the compound-soaked dressing and clear aftercare instructions that I write out by hand because verbal instructions are forgotten under fatigue, I wash up at the sink in the procedure room and Arden is still there, leaning against the wall with his arms folded, watching me with an expression I cannot read yet.

I am cataloguing his expressions the way I catalogue everything, building a reference set that will eventually allow me to read him with the accuracy that this arrangement requires. I have three data points so far. Last night in E-14 he was controlled and assessing. When he said the thing about Kai he was unguarded for approximately four seconds. Now he is something else, something more open than controlled but not yet unguarded, and I do not have a word for it yet.

"The facility is better than I expected," I say.

"I know what you expected."

"The supply catalogue is missing four compounds that I will need for consistent operation. I can provide a list."

"Soren will take it from you tonight."

I dry my hands and turn to face him. He is still in a suit. I wonder if he owns anything else. "Kai's treatment," I say. "You said two weeks."

"The donor has been confirmed. The lunar window opens in eleven days. The protocol will be ready." He pauses. "I reviewed what my laboratory director sent me about his case this afternoon. The modified protocol you described in E-14, for a potential dual-resonance presentation. Is that something you can develop in eleven days?"

"I have been developing it for four months. I need the equipment here to finalize it."

"Then you have access to everything in this facility, starting tonight." He pushes off from the wall. "There is one more thing."

He crosses to the procedure room's small desk and opens a folder that was sitting there when I arrived, that I noticed and did not touch. He turns it toward me. Inside is a photograph, a personnel file, and a single page of notes in handwriting I do not recognize.

"Marco De Leon," Arden says. "I had someone pull the full file from Greystone this afternoon."

I go very still.

"The territorial violation charge is based on a single witness statement," he says. "The witness is a Moreno-affiliated pack member who I have reason to believe was placed specifically for the purpose of making that statement." He looks at me steadily. "Your brother-in-law did not commit this violation, Ms. De Leon. What I do not yet know is who in my organization authorized his imprisonment. And that question has my full attention."

The folder sits open on the desk between us.

I look at the photograph of Marco, who has his wife's nose and his own obstinate jaw and has been sitting in Greystone for eighteen months for something he did not do, and I think about Fiona at the kitchen table last night saying let me have something.

"How long?" I ask. My voice is level. It costs me.

"To find who authorized it? Days. To get him out through proper channels without triggering a cover-up?" He pauses. "I need to know what he saw before he was arrested. I need you to ask Fiona."

"She does not know I am here."

"She does not need to know where you are," he says. "She just needs to tell you what Marco told her in the weeks before his arrest. Anything unusual. Anyone he mentioned. Any place he was not supposed to be." He closes the folder and slides it across the desk toward me. "Take this. Read it tonight."

I pick up the folder.

I look at him across the small clean room with its good equipment and its careful lighting and I think about the list of things I do not yet understand about Arden Moreno, which is long, and the list of things I am beginning to suspect, which is shorter but more consequential.

"Why does it matter to you?" I ask. "Whether Marco is innocent. Whether whoever authorized it is found."

He holds my gaze. "Because someone inside my organization used my resources to imprison an innocent man without my knowledge. That is not a question of justice, Ms. De Leon. That is a question of who in my house is making decisions without my authority." A pause, precise and deliberate. "I do not tolerate that."

He leaves.

I stand in the procedure room with the folder in my hands and the silver aura still warm beneath my skin and I understand, with the clarity that comes from finally seeing the full shape of something you have only had pieces of until now, that I have not simply joined an organization.

I have walked into the middle of a war that has already begun.

And I am, somehow, already a piece on the board.

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