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Chapter Four: Ground Rules

Author: Jace Thorne
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-04-14 22:13:32

"Say that again," Demi said. "From the beginning."

"I already said it twice."

"You said it at your speed, which is faster than most people's thinking speed." Demi sat cross-legged on her bed, both hands wrapped around a mug gone cold, eyes fixed on Nora with the focused stillness of someone managing something large. "The crown prince of the Vael bloodline asked you to be his fake fiancée."

"Anchor. The legal term is anchor."

"I understand the legal term. I'm using the human one because I need to process this in a language my brain actually speaks." She set the mug down carefully. "And you signed it."

"After negotiating two additional clauses into the body of the document."

Demi stared at her.

"I read it six times," Nora said.

"Of course you did." Demi pressed her fingers to her mouth. "The money."

"Real. Verified against the academy's financial administration structure in the supplementary pages."

"Your mother's debt."

"Cleared upon signature. Third-party settlement through the academy's legal office. No direct connection to the arrangement in any public record." Nora kept her voice even, the way she kept it even when something mattered more than she wanted it to show. "It's done, Demi."

Demi was quiet for a moment. When she spoke again the processing energy had settled into something more direct. "How do you feel about it?"

"I feel like it's the most rational decision I've made since I got here."

"Nora."

"I feel " She stopped. Her hands were flat on her desk, a contract folder between them, and she looked at the window at the black island night pressing against the glass. "I feel like I did the right thing. For my mother. For myself." A pause. "I also feel like I'm missing something."

"The second clause."

"The second clause."

Demi had listened to the overheard conversation without interrupting, which Nora was learning meant she considered the information serious. She turned her pen over twice her thinking habit, already recognizable. "What do you think it is?"

"I don't know yet. But the way he said it " She replayed the smooth voice in memory. Not alarmed. Not warning anyone. Observing something he found useful. "He wasn't concerned. He was calculating."

"Which means it works in his favor. Or against Caspian." Demi looked at her steadily. "Either way, Caspian knows and didn't include it. That's a choice."

"Not a good foundation," Nora said.

"No." Demi stood, moved to refill her kettle. "The Vault. Tomorrow."

"Seven. Before the academic wing gets busy." Nora looked at the contract. "I need to find the original anchor law text before the access request goes through normal channels."

"I'm coming."

"You don't have to "

"I have a free morning and a deeply personal interest in whatever legal clause is currently missing from my best friend's vampire engagement contract." Demi raised an eyebrow over her shoulder. "I'm coming."

Nora looked at her. The words *best friend* had landed with complete casualness, as though it had already been settled and the strange thing was that it felt like it had.

"Seven," she said. "Get some sleep."

Demi smiled into her fresh tea. "Sure," she said, in the tone of someone filing this conversation for permanent reference.

His note arrived at six forty-three.

Folded, same handwriting, slipped under their door with the quietness of someone who moved through spaces without disturbing them. Nora found it getting up for water and read it in the half-dark.

“Today. Noon. Same office. We should establish parameters before the first function. C.V.”

She set it beside the contract folder.

Then she went to the Vault.

The restricted section was locked with physical keys layered over digital, which was interesting because the rest of the academy ran entirely on digital access. Someone had deliberately added a mechanical barrier. Someone who understood that digital locks left records.

"We can't get in," Demi said.

"Not today." Nora studied the narrow glass panel beside the door. The original text was visible from the third row, second shelf. Dark leather binding, no title on the spine. "But I know exactly which document it is."

"So we need the key. Or credentials."

"I have Level Two access. Academic staff have Level Three." Nora stepped back. "My thesis is on vampire legal linguistics. The restricted section holds original legal texts. That's a direct academic need, not a stretch. I filed a formal access request through the linguistics faculty and asked my supervisor to expedite."

"How long?"

"Standard processing is five to seven days. Expedited " she turned " faster."

Demi nodded. "And in the meantime?"

"In the meantime," Nora said, "I have a noon meeting."

She arrived exactly on time.

He was already seated, jacket off, which was the first time she'd seen him without one, and which made the room feel different in a way she set aside. Two cups on the table. One in front of each chair.

She sat down.

"Coffee," he said. "Black. I checked your order history from the campus café."

Nora looked at the cup. Then at him. "That's thorough."

"It's practical. This conversation will take a while." He held her gaze. "Ground rules."

"I'll go first," she said. "No surprises. Any change in our public behavior gets communicated a minimum of one week in advance. Not a note the morning of. One week."

He nodded once. "Agreed."

"No compulsion. It's in the contract but I want it said directly."

"You have my word."

"Your word and the clause."

Something close to amusement. "Both," he said.

"My academic work doesn't get displaced. The court calendar gets sent to me six weeks out so I can flag conflicts before they're locked in." She set both hands around her cup. "I won't manufacture emotion for the room. What you'll get from me in public is honest attention and genuine response. That reads more convincingly than performance. I assume you know that."

"It's why I chose you," he said. The inflection was absent, the way it was absent when he was simply confirming something factual.

"If something isn't working between us, if the dynamic is off, if I'm doing something wrong you tell me directly. Not through Seren. Not through a note. Directly."

"I can do that."

"Now you," she said.

He looked at her with the quality she'd started to read as his version of attention. "Public appearances twice a month minimum. More during court event season, weeks eight through fourteen. When we're in court settings, follow my lead on the formality register. It shifts depending on who's in the room. I'll cue you."

"How will I know the cue?"

"You'll learn to read it." A pause. "You'll learn quickly." He moved on before she could respond to that. "Lysander."

The name landed with contained weight. She waited.

"He'll approach you again. Warm, generous, useful-seeming. He'll try to build something with you that creates a conflict of loyalty." Caspian looked at his cup briefly. "Don't assume the warmth is the truth of him."

"I already don't."

"He's been doing this for two hundred years," he said. "He's very good at it. Even people who know better."

Nora thought about the smooth voice around the corner. The word *interesting* said without concern.

"Noted," she said.

"The first function is Friday evening. Bloodline dinner. East reception room. Forty people, formal dress." He met her eyes. "I know it's short notice."

"Two days."

"Yes."

"We just agreed to a one week standard."

"We did," he said. "The function can move to next Friday."

She looked at him. It was a genuine offer she could hear. She thought about the political cost of delaying the first formal introduction. About the fact that he'd offered before she pushed.

"Friday is fine," she said. "But two days is the floor. Not the standard."

"One week," he confirmed. "Standard."

They looked at each other across the table with the quality of two people who had discovered the negotiation was going to be the most honest part of the arrangement, and that this was either very useful or very dangerous.

"One more thing," Nora said.

He waited.

"The original anchor law." She kept her voice even. Conversational. "I've filed an access request to retrieve the full text for my thesis. Before I read it she held his gaze " is there anything you think I should know?"

The silence lasted three seconds.

She counted every one of them.

His face didn't change. Not the eyes, not the set of his mouth, not the angle of his shoulders. He was composure made structural and within it, something was moving very fast.

"The document is primarily procedural," he said. "Standard succession language."

"Primarily," Nora said.

"Primarily," he confirmed.

She picked up her coffee and drank. He said nothing further. Outside, the Atlantic moved against the cliff's patient, enormous, indifferent to what was being decided in the room above it.

He was going to let her find it herself.

She was going to let him think she didn't already know it was there.

"Friday," she said, standing. "I'll be ready."

She was three steps from the door when he said her name. Not Ms. Ashby. Just Nora placed carefully, the way his handwriting placed letters, like the decision to use it had been made deliberately and not taken back.

She turned.

"The coffee," he said. "Was it right?"

She looked at him for a moment at the question that wasn't entirely about coffee. At the two-hundred-and-forty-seven-year-old vampire who had checked her order history and gotten it exactly right and now needed to know if that counted for something.

"Yes," she said. "It was."

She left.

Twelve steps down the corridor before she let the breath go. The document was real. The money was real. Her mother's debt had a solution that had not existed forty-eight hours ago, and she had negotiated it herself, on her own terms, with two additional clauses written in his hand and signed beneath hers.

She told herself the unevenness in her pulse was relief.

She was still telling herself that when she pushed open the residential wing door and found Demi sitting upright on her bed, case study abandoned, expression arranged into the particular configuration that meant she had been waiting for exactly this long and not one minute longer.

"Well?" Demi said.

"Ground rules established." Nora set her bag down. "The first function is Friday."

"That's two days."

"I'm aware."

"You said one week was the standard."

"It is now." Nora sat at her desk. "We also covered Lysander, the court calendar, compulsion, and academic priority."

Demi watched her. "And the second clause?"

"I asked if there was anything in the original law I should know before I read it."

"What did he say?"

"That it was primarily procedural." Nora opened her thesis folder. "Standard succession language."

"Primarily," Demi said.

"That's what he said."

A pause. "He knows you're going to find it."

"Yes." Nora looked at the page in front of her without reading it. "And he let me walk out anyway."

"Why would he do that?"

Nora was quiet for a moment, turning the question over in the same way she turned over texts that didn't yield their meaning on first reading: patient, methodical, looking for the logic beneath the surface.

"Either it's a mistake," she said.

"Or?" Demi said.

"Or he wants me to find it." Nora looked up. "On my own. Before he has to tell me."

Demi absorbed this. "Those are very different things."

"I know." Nora pulled her reading toward her. "I'll know which one it is when I read the clause."

"And if it's the second one?" Demi said. "If he wants you to find it?"

Nora looked at the window. At the dark water visible between the cliff edge and the skyline, moving the way it always moved like something that had been doing this since before any of them existed and would be doing it long after.

"Then he's either very honest," she said, "or very strategic."

"Could be both," Demi said.

"Could be both," Nora agreed.

She turned back to her thesis.

Outside, the island settled into its nightly quiet, the specific silence of a place that was ne

ver fully asleep, only waiting. Somewhere in the main building, in an office with a sea-facing window and two cups that had gone cold, a decision had been made and not unmade.

Nora read until midnight.

She thought about it six more times before she slept.

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