Mag-log in"You made Isolde Maren laugh at the dinner on Friday," Nora said. "Do you know that?"
Caspian looked up from the court calendar spread across the table between them. "I'm aware." "You don't seem like someone who tries to be funny." "I don't try," he said. "It happens occasionally and I've learned not to suppress it in rooms where it's useful." "That's the most calculated description of humor I've ever heard." "That's the most unsurprised response to a calculated description I've ever received." He looked back at the calendar. "Why does Isolde Maren's reaction matter to you?" "Because she laughed before she could stop herself." Nora set down her pen. "Which means it was real. Which means you have the capacity to produce genuine responses in people who are actively trying to assess you." She paused. "You just don't do it often enough for anyone to know it's there." Wednesday had arrived with grey weather and a wind off the Atlantic that found every gap in the stone corridors and reminded you it was there. The office was warm against it. and the court calendar on the table between them was covered in Nora's annotations from the last twenty minutes color-coded so, he was looking at her annotations with the expression he got when something was more useful than he'd expected and he wasn't certain what to do with that. "You said you wanted the court session protocol," he said. "We haven't started it yet." "We're starting with this," Nora said. "Because the protocol matters less than the thing underneath it, and the thing underneath it's how you come across when the protocol is stripped away." She held his gaze. "Which is what happens in the moments between formal proceedings. And those moments are where Lysander operates." He was quiet. "You want honest feedback," she said. "You told me on Friday that honest attention was why you chose me. So." She set her hands flat on the table. "Do you want it or not?" "Go ahead," he said. "You're composed in a way that reads as cold to people who don't have a reason to look past it," she said. "Not cruel. I want to be specific about that distinction. But when you're in a room and someone says something you find beneath your attention. Your face does nothing He said nothing. "At the dinner on Friday, there was a moment when the Harlow heir said something about the ferry schedule running late this semester and you didn't respond. Not a nod, not a shift in expression, nothing. He moved on immediately and he spent the rest of the evening making sure he wasn't standing near you." "I don't have an interest in managing Cassian Harlow's comfort." "I know that. But managing his comfort isn't the point managing his behavior is. And right now his behavior is gravitating toward Lysander because Lysander responds to him." She paused. "Even if Lysander's response is also calculated, it's warmer than nothing. People choose warm calculation over cold indifference every time." Caspian was looking at the calendar. His jaw was even. Not the left-side tension, just stillness that had arrived at a moderate speed, which she was beginning to map as the register for this is inconvenient and accurate. "You're telling me I need to be more personable," he said. "I'm telling you that you have more range than you use and that the gap between what you show and what you're capable of is a liability in this specific situation." She kept her voice even. "Lysander uses warmth as a weapon. The counter to that isn't more coldness, it's demonstrating that warmth exists on this side too. That the arrangement looks like something someone would actually choose." "It isn't something someone would actually choose." "I chose it," Nora said. He looked up. "I read the contract six times and I negotiated two clauses and I signed it," she said. "That's a choice. It had conditions attached, but so does every choice." She held his gaze. "If we walk into a room and what the court sees is you being glacial and me being present, the story they construct is that I'm performing for money and you're tolerating it for political necessity. That's not an anchor arrangement. That's a transaction." She paused. like, "Transactions can be challenged. Relationships are harder to dismiss." The room was quiet except for the wind finding the window frame. "What specifically," he said, "would you have me do differently." "Talk to people you don't need to talk to," she said. "Not much not in a way that reads as sudden or uncharacteristic, because that's its own problem. Just occasionally. A sentence or two directed at someone who isn't politically big." She paused. "And when I say something in a social setting, don't just confirm it. So then, respond to it. Actually respond, the way you do in this room when it's just us." "How do I respond in this room?" "Like you're listening," she said. "Like what I say has the possibility of surprising you. Like there's a version of the conversation that you haven't already predicted." She looked at him steadily. "You do it here. You've done it four or five times across our meetings and each time it makes you look like a person rather than a position. That's what the court needs to see." Just, Caspian was quiet for what felt like longer than usual. She watched him process it the way she'd watched him process the second clause conversation on Sunday inward. fast "You've been watching me very carefully," he said. "That's what you asked me to do," she said. "I'm good at it." "I know." His eyes held hers. "It's notable even so." "It shouldn't be. You watch me constantly." Something fractional around his eyes. "Do I." "At the dinner you tracked my position in the room four separate times when you were in conversations that should have had your full attention. I know because the people you were speaking with noticed it and adjusted what they were telling you so." She kept her voice neutral. like, "Isolde Maren specifically gave you a shorter version of whatever she was going to say because she saw you looking for me and understood the conversation had a ceiling." "That's " he stopped. "Accurate?" she said. like, "I was going to say something perceptive." "Accuracy is better," she said. "Perceptive implies it requires effort." He looked at her for a long moment. There was something in it she hadn't categorized before, not the recalibration. not the assessment "The protocol. She said, "Court session. Walk me through it." He moved back to the calendar with the quality of someone returning from somewhere. "Student Court convenes every Thursday at three. The session opens with a bloodline roll each representative formally confirms attendance. Well, then the floor opens for motions." He turned the calendar toward her. "Motions require a seconding from at least one other bloodline representative to proceed. Without a second, they die at introduction." "So isolating a motion requires controlling the seconding." "Which requires relationships with at least two bloodline representatives." He held her gaze. "Lysander has them. Harlow will second anything that destabilizes Vael's succession. He doesn't need to be coordinating directly with Lysander to do that the parallel interest is enough." you know, "Who would second for you if you needed it." "Maren, conditionally. Devereux is unpredictable but hasn't aligned with Lysander yet. Ashcroft " he paused " Felix Ashcroft doesn't make second motions. He abstains consistently. It's his protection mechanism." "Then Maren is the critical relationship," Nora said. "Between the two of us." "Yes." "And she laughed on Friday." Nora tapped her pen against her notepad once. "She's worth spending time on." "I'll arrange something." "Don't arrange it," Nora said. "Let it happen. If she sees it was arranged she'll know what it's for." She looked at her notes. "Does she have any academic overlap with me? Seminar-level." "Her field is a vampire historical record. There's overlap with ancient linguistics in the second and third year curriculum." He paused. "You're in your first year." "I'm auditing the second year translation seminar on Tuesdays," Nora said. "Professor Aldren gave me access when I submitted my thesis proposal." She looked up. "Is Maren in that seminar?" He looked at her with the expression that arrived when the distance between what he'd expected and what she was had been revised again and the new estimate was still settling. "I don't know," he said. "Find out," she said. "Without making it obvious that you're finding out." "You're managing this." "I'm contributing to it," she said. "That's what the arrangement requires." "The arrangement requires public appearances." "The arrangement requires the court to believe it," she said. "Those aren't the same thing." She held his gaze. "The public appearances are the surface. This is the structure underneath. If the structure is wrong the surface collapses regardless of how well we perform on the night." He was quiet. "You know I'm right," she said. "I know you're right," he said. Without resistance, without qualification. The most straightforwardly she'd heard him agree to anything. Something about the directness of it made the room feel briefly different, a small shift in whatever the air between them had been maintaining. She looked at her notepad. "Seating hierarchy," she said. "For the court session." He walked her through it. The formal positions, the protocol of motion and counter-motion, the specific language required to open, challenge, and close proceedings. She asked questions that were precise and occasionally caught him mid-explanation because she'd already inferred the answer from something adjacent. He answered them without making her feel that the inference was presumptuous, which she noticed and didn't say anything about. They worked through it for an hour. The wind found the window twice more. She finished three pages of notes. He drank his coffee. which she'd noticed he did when he was concentrating rather than performing absent She didn't point it out. At the end of the hour she gathered her notes and stood. and he remained seated in the way he'd started doing at the end of their meetings "The thing you said on Sunday," she said. "About the original drafters. That they believed the human's choice was the only one that mattered." He looked up. "I've been thinking about why they'd write it that way." She kept her voice academic. Analytical. The register she used for texts. "The anchor law is twelve hundred years old. Whoever wrote it understood something about a vampire ruler taking on a human bond that the formal succession framework doesn't acknowledge." She paused. "I think they understood it could become real." "Yes," he said. One word. No elaboration. His jaw even, his hands still, the immediate stillness that meant the serious thing. "And you knew that," she said. "When you set up the arrangement." "I considered the possibility." "And you chose it anyway." "The succession required it." "That's not what I asked." She held his gaze across the room. "You considered the possibility that it could become real and you chose it anyway. Knowing the choice to end it belongs entirely to me." He held her gaze for five full seconds. She counted. "Yes," he said. The word sat in the room with the weight of something that had been waiting to be said and was heavier than it looked now that it was out. Nora nodded once. Filed it in the place where she kept the things that were too big to examine immediately and required more information before she could know what to do with them. "Thursday," she said. "I'll be ready for the court session." She was in the corridor before she let herself think about it about yes delivered in the serious stillness, about a twelve-hundred-year-old law written by someone who understood that these arrangements had a tendency to become something the framework never planned for. About a vampire prince who had known that and had given her the unilateral choice anyway. She was halfway back to the residential wing when her phone buzzed. Demi. Priya just told me something. Come to the common room when you're done. You know, it's about the restricted section. Nora read it twice. Then she turned and walked faster.Felix called before they'd left Abeo's street."The emergency protection request came back," he said, his voice clipped in a way that told Nora the news wasn't simple. "Yetunde Okonjo isn't at the facility anymore."Nora stood on the pavement outside Abeo's gate, Caspian beside her, the afternoon traffic moving past with its complete indifference to what had just landed in her chest."Define isn't there," she said."Discharged four days ago," Felix said. "According to the facility's own records, she checked herself out voluntarily. Signed the release forms personally.""Four days ago," Nora said. "Before or after the consultation invitations went out?""After," Felix said. "Two days after."Nora held the phone, working through the timeline. The invitation was intercepted. The impersonator seated in her place. And then, two days later, the real Yetunde Okonjo discharged herself from a facility she'd apparently been admitted to without anyone she trusted knowing where she was."Felix,"
"You're wondering if I'm real," Abeo Folarin said, before either of them had finished crossing her threshold.She'd opened the door before they'd knocked twice which told Nora something immediately, the specific alertness of someone who'd been watching the street, who'd expected exactly this visit at exactly this hour."Felix found an irregularity in your confirmation email," Nora said. "Registered before the invitations went out.""I know," Abeo said. "I registered it myself, three days before I received the consultation invitation, because I was told to expect interference and I wasn't going to let a fabricated email account be the reason my family lost its seat at that table."Nora held the doorway."Told by whom," she said.Abeo stepped back and gestured inside.Her home was small, neat, the walls lined with photographs going back generations, the specific archive of a family that understood its own history mattered even without formal documents to prove it. She led them to a sitt
The man's name, according to the credentials he'd submitted, was Tomas Adeyemi.Felix found that no one named Tomas Adeyemi existed in any birth record, school registry, or tax document connected to the Lagos region in the last forty years."He built the identity from fragments," Felix said. He had his laptop open on the reading room table, three windows running simultaneously, genealogical cross-reference, public records search, and a facial recognition pass Felix had run against the security footage from the consultation building's entrance. "A real birth certificate template. A real address that's actually a vacant property. A name pulled from a deceased relative of the actual ninth family, which is why it passed the initial verification.""Someone built it carefully," Nora said."Someone built it months ago," Felix said. "The credential application was submitted before the consultation invitations even went out. Whoever did this knew the process was coming before Amara's office ma
The woman in the third row did not stand when Nora was introduced.Everyone else in the room understood the formal register and rose for the founding anchor's entrance the way they'd risen for Amara's opening remarks, a courtesy extended without much thought. The woman in the third row remained seated, her arms folded, her gaze direct and entirely unimpressed.Nora noted her before the session had properly begun.The consultation room was in the High Court's primary building neutral ground, Amara had chosen it deliberately, a space that belonged to neither the bloodlines nor any single community. Twelve chairs arranged for the family representatives, one for each signature on the founding register. Nora sat at the head of the table with Caspian beside her, not above the twelve, level with them, which had been her specific instruction to Amara's staff when they'd set up the room.The woman's name, according to the seating chart, was Abeo Folarin.She represented the fourth family."Bef
The panel came back with a problem.Not with the document Dr. Holt's voice was precise and measured when she came out at three-forty, forty minutes past the two o'clock start, and Nora read the quality of it before the words arrived. Not alarm. The specific register of someone who had found something unexpected and was deciding how to present it accurately."The document is authentic," Dr. Holt said. "The panel's authentication is confirmed. There's no question about that." She held the formal certification in her hands. "There's a question about something else.""Tell me," Nora said."The permanence clause," Dr. Holt said. "Lines forty-three to forty-seven. We've been working with the translation you provided." She held Nora's gaze. "One of the panel members, Dr. Osei, who holds the senior classification in pre-modern dialectal analysis for this archive, read the original language directly."Nora held the table."And," she said."Line forty-six," Dr. Holt said. "Your translation read
The High Court's primary archive was not what she'd built in her mind.She'd imagined something institutional, the kind of building that communicated authority through scale, the way court buildings did, the kind of architecture that was designed to make you feel small before you got inside. What she got was a converted townhouse in a city she'd never been to, three stories, stone facade, a brass plate beside the door that said nothing more than *High Court Primary Archive Authorized Access Only.*Understated on purpose.The kind of building that didn't announce itself because the people who needed to find it already knew where it was.Amara met them at the door.She looked at the archival sleeve in Nora's hands before she said a word."The provenance documentation," she said. "You have it.""My mother's written statement of the chain of custody," Nora said. "Going back through the family line to her mother and her mother's mother. Four generations of oral attestation with supplementa
Felix Ashcroft was sitting in the chair Nora usually occupied.She registered this before she registered anything else about the room, the specific displacement of it. her chair takenCaspian was at the window. He turned when she came in."Close the door," he said.She closed it."You spoke to Lysa
"She didn't request a transfer," Priya said.She said it the way she said most things quietly, with the weight of someone who had verified before delivering. They were in the east common room. The three of them"How do you know," Demi said."I was in the administrative corridor at seven this mornin
"A fourth section," Professor Aldren said. "You're certain.""I'm asking if the archival inventory would confirm it," Nora said. "I'm not asserting anything I can't verify."He looked at her over the edge of his reading glasses with the expression he used when a student had arrived at something he
"You're doing it again," Nora said.Caspian didn't look at her. They were standing at the edge of the Hallowed Hall's west reception room. larger than the east one"I don't know what you're referring to," he said."You do." She kept her voice low. Around them, eighty people moved through the pre-di







