Chapter 227— Glimpse of Trauma
In Valdris, in the particular kind of room that appeared on no official architectural plan and was accessed through routes that appeared on no official map, several men and women were laughing.
Not loudly. The laughter had the quality of people who had learned, through professional necessity, to express satisfaction at a register that didn’t carry through walls. But it was genuine. The specific warmth of people who had worked very hard at a very complex problem and were watching the solution arrive at exactly the predicted coordinates.
The Merchant Prince had a document in front of him that contained Chancellor Asim’s psychological profile, compiled over months by an analyst in the Federation whose relationship to Valdris was one of the city’s most valuable and least visible assets.
He had known Asim would take the bait.
Not because the chancellor was a simple man — he wasn’t. He was a sophisticated political operator with decades of experience and a genuine capacity for strategic patience. But grief was a solvent. It dissolved sophistication. It got into the places where rational processing lived and introduced a slow corrosion that the person experiencing it couldn’t fully detect because the corrosion was happening in the instrument they were using to check for corrosion.
They had killed the boy knowing what it would do to the father.
The Merchant Prince did not find this comfortable. He found it necessary, which was different, and he had long since trained himself to work in the space between those two things without confusing them. Comfort was for people who could afford principles. Valdris had been made to be last — late to power, geographically constrained, lacking the military weight of Ashmar, the spiritual authority of Solhaven, the institutional mass of the Republic. They had compensated with gold and with information and with the particular advantage of a city that everyone underestimated because gold and information were not as visible as armies.
They had slingshot their way from the last leg to a very comfortable position.
The next operation had two components, running simultaneously.
The first: a pointed illumination of Asim’s infiltration into Central. It wouldn’t be immediate — not before Asim’s people had time to do meaningful damage, because the damage was useful and the Republic needed to feel it. But timed to ensure that when the Republic’s investigation reached the question of who was the second layer of destabilization
, the answer pointed clearly at the Federation. The second: Solhaven.
The Holy Theocracy had been watching the Republic’s breach with the specific expression of an institution that was simultaneously alarmed and vindicated — alarmed because the Shroud was not supposed to be able to do this, vindicated because they had always maintained that the Republic’s secular approach to dimensional management was spiritually and practically insufficient. They were not wrong about the second point, which was what made their position exploitable. People who are partly right are easier to move than people who are entirely wrong, because you can use the part they’re right about as the lever.
Valdris had assets in Solhaven’s intelligence apparatus. Not many, although careful placed. The Theocracy was harder to infiltrate than the other nations because its operational security ran through genuine belief rather than procedure — true believers were harder to compromise than bureaucrats, because bureaucrats were motivated by advancement and true believers were motivated by something that didn’t respond to advancement.
But true believers could be shown things. Carefully curated things. Evidence that the Republic was not only failing to contain the Shroud threat but was actively concealing the extent of its failure from its allies — including Solhaven. Evidence that the Federation was preparing military action. Evidence that positioned Solhaven as the party that would be caught between two antagonists if it didn’t make a choice before the choice was made for it.
The evidence was largely true. The framing was entirely manufactured. This was, in the Merchant Prince’s experience, the most stable kind of disinformation — build it on real foundations, and it survived scrutiny in all the places scrutiny was applied.
None of these countries liked each other.
That was the foundational fact that made everything else possible. The Republic, the Federation, the Theocracy — they were cooperating because they shared a common threat, and shared common threats were the only thing that produced cooperation between entities that had genuine competing interests. It was a setup built on necessity rather than trust, which meant the only thing holding it together was the continued overwhelming presence of the necessity.
A well-regulated spark could have unforeseen consequences.
The Merchant Prince understood this better than anyone in the room, which was why he was not laughing. Unforeseen consequences were what happened when you were very good at starting fires and slightly overconfident about your ability to control where they spread.
He was not overconfident. But he was committed.
Every man for himself was not, despite how it sounded, a philosophy of selfishness. It was a philosophy of clarity — the acknowledgment that in a world where every major power was pursuing its own survival, the only honest position was to pursue yours with full competence and no illusions about the nature of the game. Valdris had been playing the game with one hand behind its back for a century, constrained by its size and its reputation and the casual disregard of larger powers who saw a merchant city and thought they understood it.
They were done playing with one hand.
"The Republic’s investigation into the secondary infiltration," the Merchant Prince said, without looking up from the document. "Timeline."
One of his analysts — a young woman with an air of someone who had been very good at her work for long enough that she no longer needed to perform competence — looked at her own documents. "It’s going to take some time for the republic to confirm foreign involvement. More to attribute it to the Federation specifically."
"And Asim’s position in this time frame?"
"Compromised. He’ll know the attribution is coming before it arrives, which means he’ll either double down or attempt a preemptive diplomatic position. Given his psychological profile—"
"He’ll double down," the Merchant Prince said. "He’s a man who doubles down. It’s what makes him effective as a chancellor and predictable as an adversary." He turned a page. "Solhaven’s response to the Republic-Federation confrontation."
"Withdrawal from the cooperation initiative, initially framed as neutral. Then, when we give them the evidence package about the Republic’s concealment—"
"They align with whoever appears to be on the side of transparency," the Merchant Prince said. "Which we will ensure appears to be no one, because we will give both sides equal and contradictory evidence of the other’s concealment." He set the document down. "A war is coming."
The room was quiet.
"Not because we want one," he clarified, though his tone suggested the clarification was somewhat academic. "Because the conditions for one have been building for a decade and the events of the last three weeks have removed the last structural barriers. The Republic is wounded and defensive. The Federation is angry and grieving. Solhaven is frightened and looking for certainty. These are not the conditions of stable cooperation. These are the conditions of a match being held near a room full of things that burn."
He looked around the room. At the people who had worked very hard on a very complex problem and were watching it arrive at the predicted coordinates.
"Valdris will not be in that room," he said. "We will be outside it, at a comfortable distance, with water, waiting to assist the survivors." He paused. "Make sure the evidence packages are timed correctly. The Solhaven delivery goes three days after the Republic finds the Federation attribution. Not before — we need the Republic already angry when Solhaven receives it, or the framing won’t land."
He picked the document back up.
The laughter in the room had quieted. What replaced it was the sound of people returning to work.
-----
Bright found Mara first.
She was three streets east of where he’d started, moving with the directional purpose that her Clear Mind integration produced even in chaos — the specific quality of someone whose internal compass had not been significantly revised because Clear Mind’s baseline function was exactly the kind of cognitive filtering that made Narrative Imposition work harder for less result. She hadn’t been immune. But she’d been more resistant than most.
"You look terrible," she said, when he reached her.
"The smile won’t stop," he said. His face was still doing the thing — the crooked, strained expression that his body had decided was appropriate and had not been informed that the situation had evolved. "It’s been forty minutes."
She looked at it. "That’s a powerful ability’s residue. It fades." A pause. "Probably."
"Reassuring."
"I’m not a healer." She fell into step beside him, daggers sheathed but hands near them.
"The fanatics," Bright said.
"I saw them."
"Not the Covenant?."
"No." Her voice was flat. "Wrong everything. They’re here for the chaos, not the cause. Someone sent them."
"Someone who knew the chaos was coming," he said.
Mara said nothing. She’d already arrived at the same conclusion and had been sitting with it for the last hour, turning it over, finding the same edges every time.
They moved through a city that was beginning, slowly and unevenly, to remember itself. Response units were establishing perimeters. The fanatics were moving deeper into the administrative district, and the response units were thin enough that the perimeters didn’t yet cover everything.
Bright’s danger sense was quiet. Not silent — it was never fully silent, not in a city with active Crawlers and burning buildings and people with weapons who had been sent here to do damage. But it was reading the situation as manageable rather than immediate, which was the sense’s way of telling him that the worst was over and what remained was the work of recovery rather than the work of survival.
The smile faded somewhere in the third street.
His face returned to his own.
And he found that he preferred it.
