Chapter 349
Chapter 349
ARIA
“No,” he said. “She didn’t.”
We walked for a moment in silence. The grounds were doing their afternoon things around us
–
pack members going about their business, the ordinary hum of a place that had absorbed a significant morning and was continuing to function.
“I’m going to approve the treatment,” I said.
He didn’t look surprised. “I thought you might.”
“With conditions.”
“Nina told me the conditions,” he said. “They’re reasonable.”
“Sera won’t think they’re reasonable,” I said.
“Sera,” Kael said, “is in a territory that just documented her entry, her conduct in Ivory’s clinic, and a maintenance incident in three separate official records that are now part of the coalition-accessible file. Her options for complaint are limited.” He paused. “She can take the conditions or she can leave untreated. Either outcome is manageable.”
I thought about that. About the file. About the documentation that Nina had been building with the systematic thoroughness of someone who understood that paper was its own form of force.
―
“The things she said to me in the corridor,” I said. Not fishing for a response – just saying it because it was true and I was trying to practice being honest about things rather than carrying them quietly until they compacted into something harder to move. “She was accurate about some of it. About the pack’s feelings about Ivory. About the circumstances of how I came to be here.”
Kael stopped walking. I stopped with him. He was looking at me with an expression that was doing several things at once – listening, assessing, deciding. He’d gotten better at showing the deciding part, I thought. At not keeping the whole process entirely behind the face,
“She was using accurate things,” he said finally, “as weapons. Those are different categories.” He turned to face me more fully, which was something he did when he meant what he was about to say and wanted it received clearly.
1/3
“Yes, this pack loved Ivory before you arrived. Yes, the circumstances of the bond were what they were. Yes, there are people here who would have chosen differently if they’d been given the choice.” A pause. “None of that makes you wrong for being here. None of it makes what you’ve done
the Hunt, the work, the four fragments, everything since – worth less because the starting conditions were complicated.”
I looked at him. At the medal he wasn’t wearing tonight but that I could picture clearly, that Ivory had placed around his neck with steady hands.
“I know you still love her,” I said. Still not accusing – still just saying the true thing out loud. “I know that’s not going away and I know I can’t ask it to.”
“No,” he said. “It’s not going away.”
your
“And I know I broke trust,” I said. “And that isn’t going away
“No,” he agreed. “Not quickly.”
either.”
We stood in the corridor with all of that sitting between us, real and unresolved and not pretending to be anything except what it was.
“But you’re here,” I said. “Still making choices.”
“Still making choices,” he confirmed.
I thought about what Jason had said, weeks ago now. That choosing was the thing. That the choosing being effortful rather than automatic didn’t make it less real – it made it more real, because you had to keep deciding rather than just falling into it.
Kael was choosing. Every day, in small and large ways, making the choices that said *this is where I stand regardless of how complicated the reasons are.* Listing my name in a speech in front of visiting Alphas. Going after Dan with the specific warmth of someone who understood exactly what they were communicating. Walking beside me through the mornings like they were something worth being present for.
“Thank you,” I said. “For what you did with Dan. And for what you said. During the speech.”
—
—
the version of him that
He looked at me with an expression that was almost almost existed before the trust had broken. Not quite. But the shape of it was there.
“You earned the acknowledgment,” he said. “Four fragments is four fragments regardless of everything else.”
“It meant something,” I said. “That you said it out loud.”
2/3
He nodded once, in the way that said the thing had been received and didn’t need more words than it had already gotten.
We continued walking.
I went to find Ivory in the late afternoon.
–
Not to the clinic Nina had been right that she’d need the day to process and document, and walking into her working space without an invitation felt like the wrong approach. I found her in the small courtyard off the east wing that I’d seen her use when she needed somewhere quiet to think. I’d noticed it weeks ago, filed it, and hadn’t done anything with the information until now.
She was sitting on the low bench with a notebook, writing something with the focused speed of someone getting
word
down while they were still clearly formed. She heard me coming – I’d stopped being surprised by how attuned Shadowmere people were to their surroundings, it was simply how they existed in their territory – and looked up.
Neither of us spoke for a moment.
“I heard you’re doing documentation,” I said finally, because starting with something practical felt more honest than starting with something large.
—
the
“Three separate incident reports,” she said, without inflecting it into anything. “The maintenance incident requires its own form. The clinic incident has two components consultation record and the property damage documentation. The coalition notification is a fourth document.” She looked at her notebook. “I’m currently on the third.”
“I’ll get out of your way,” I said.
“You can stay,” she said. And the words were flat
not warm, not an invitation into anything
except the physical space – but they were said. She looked back at her notebook and continued writing.
3/3
O

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