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Chapter 7: The Deal on the Table

Author: Manie write
last update publish date: 2026-06-15 17:56:33

Sera's Pov

The knock came mid-morning. Mara opened the door before I could, already halfway through saying something else.

"Riven wants to see you. His study, second floor, end of the hall." She paused, reading my face the way she seemed to read everything. "It's not bad news."

"You don't know that."

"I know him." She went back to whatever she'd been doing. "Go on."

I found the study without trouble. The lodge wasn't large enough to get lost in, not really, and I'd spent the last two days learning its shape the way I learned everything, quietly, without announcing it.

The door was open. Riven was at a desk that took up most of one wall, papers stacked in neat columns, a window behind him looking out over the compound. He looked up when I stopped in the doorway.

"Sit," he said. Not Mara's tone, the one that wasn't a request. Just a statement of where the chair was.

I sat. He didn't say anything for a moment, just looked at me with that same steady, assessing quality he'd had at the border, like he was working through something and wanted to get the order right.

"You came from Ironmoor," he said.

"You already knew that."

"I did. I also know Caden Holt's name is attached to you somehow. I'm not asking you to explain that." He said it plainly, no weight on it, like he was clearing the ground before building something on it. "That's not why I called you up here."

"Then why did you?"

He leaned back slightly. "I want to offer you a position."

I waited.

"Not a servant's role," he said. "Not a breeder's ward, not staff, not anything like what you're picturing right now." He nodded toward the door, toward the lodge beyond it. "Mara's been running this household alone for two years. Records, supplies, scheduling, every administrative thing that keeps this place functioning. It's too much for one person and she's never complained about it once, which is exactly the problem."

"You want me to help her."

"I want you to take half of it. Formally. A real post. Household administrator." He said the title like it had weight, like it was a thing with edges, not a vague gesture toward usefulness. "Real work. Real standing in this pack. Real pay."

I sat with that for a second. It didn't track, not the way things were supposed to track.

"Why?" I said.

"Because your competence was visible in the first ten minutes you were conscious."

"That's not an answer."

"It's the only one you're getting today."

I looked at him. He looked back, unbothered, the same calm he'd had crouched in front of me at the border with a gash in my arm and two of his men standing well back. He wasn't selling this. He wasn't performing generosity, the way Caden sometimes had, a kindness offered with one hand and a ledger held in the other where you couldn't see it. Riven just sat there, having said the thing, waiting to see what I'd do with it.

"What happens if I say no?" I said.

"Then you don't have the position." He shrugged slightly. "You can still stay until you're healed. Nothing changes there."

"And if I say yes and I'm bad at it?"

"You won't be."

"You don't know that."

"I do, actually." Something moved at the corner of his mouth, not quite a smile. "But if I'm wrong, we'll deal with that when it happens. I don't plan around people failing before they've started."

I thought about three years of running a household I had no title in, no contract for, nothing that was mine if the person who'd given it to me ever changed his mind. Which he had. In one night, in front of an entire hall, with five words.

"Okay," I said.

"Okay you'll think about it, or okay yes?"

"Yes."

He nodded once, like that settled something administrative and nothing more, and reached for a folder already sitting on the corner of his desk, like he'd had it ready before I walked in. "Mara will go over the specifics with you. Hours, what's expected, where things are kept. She's been wanting someone to actually share the records room with for longer than she'll admit."

I took the folder. I didn't say thank you. It didn't feel like the kind of thing that wanted thanking, not the way he'd offered it, flat and factual, like he was handing me a set of keys to a door that had always technically had my name on it and he was just the one who'd finally noticed.

He didn't seem to expect it either. He'd already turned back to the papers on his desk, already moving on to whatever came next in his morning, like the conversation had taken exactly as long as it needed to and not a second more.

I stood and crossed to the door. I had one hand on the frame when he spoke again, not looking up from the papers.

"Your arm healed fast for a human."

I stopped.

He still wasn't looking at me. He said it the way he'd said everything else in that room, even and unhurried, like a passing observation about the weather. But it wasn't a passing observation. I knew that the way I knew most things about people, the small flat note underneath a sentence that told you it had been sitting there, waiting, until the moment was right to set it down.

I didn't answer. I didn't know what I would have said even if I'd wanted to. I walked out and pulled the door most of the way shut behind me, the same way he'd left mine the day I woke up here, not closed, not an ending, just a boundary respected.

I went and found Mara. She walked me through the records room, the ledgers, the supply schedules, the rotation of who handled what and when, and I listened and asked questions and filed all of it away the way I filed everything, methodically, a place for each piece.

But underneath all of it, all day, that one sentence sat in my chest like something cold that hadn't melted yet.

Your arm healed fast for a human.

It had. I'd noticed it myself, changing the bandage that morning, the wound closing faster and cleaner than any cut I'd ever had before, faster than made any sense. I'd noticed it and I'd folded it away with everything else I wasn't ready to look at yet, because there had been so much else, the gathering, the walk, the border, all of it taking up every piece of space I had.

He'd noticed too. Of course he had. He noticed everything, in that quiet, unhurried way of his, and he'd said it out loud, deliberately, at the exact moment I was leaving, so that it would follow me out the door and sit with me instead of him.

That night I lay in bed and looked at my arm in the dark, at the thin pale line where the gash had been, healing faster than it should, faster than it had any right to.

I didn't have an answer. But I had a question now, one that hadn't existed yesterday, and it followed me all the way down into sleep.

What am I?

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