The Reborn Sovereign of Ruin, Bound by His Star
Chapter 128: A special type of parent
The secure room had been designed to survive siege, interception, diplomatic espionage, and, according to Mezos, at least three forms of high-level ether disruption.
It had not been designed to survive Gabriel Lyon’s amusement.
That, Arik decided within the first five minutes of the call, was a severe architectural oversight.
The projection hovered above the central table in clean imperial light, stabilized by three layered wards and a private Agaronian channel that made every other communication system in Wrohan look like a child’s toy assembled by drunk bureaucrats. On the other side, seated in the imperial residence in Agaron, were his parents.
Damian Lyon looked exactly as he always did when pretending not to be invested.
Composed. Severe. Handsome in the sort of way that made entire courts develop instincts for survival. His black hair was neat, his golden eyes calm, his posture utterly controlled. To anyone outside the family, he would have looked like an emperor granting a necessary diplomatic audience to his heir.
Arik knew better.
His father was enjoying himself.
Worse, Gabriel was making no effort to hide it.
The Empress of Agaron sat beside Damian with one elbow resting against the arm of his chair, dark hair styled back, brown eyes bright with the kind of intelligence that made ministers confess before they realized they had been questioned. His expression was almost serene.
The curve at the corner of his mouth ruined it.
Behind them, slightly out of the main projection field and therefore somehow more threatening, stood Edward Stanford.
Hands folded.
Face composed.
Judgment immaculate.
The man had the presence of a household official and the moral authority of a guillotine.
Arik looked at him first.
Edward looked back.
Nothing was said.
Everything was communicated.
"You look well," Gabriel said.
Arik turned his attention to him. "Thank you."
"No visible blood loss. No immediate signs of poisoning. No evidence that Wrohan has managed to embarrass itself more than expected in the last hour." Gabriel tilted his head slightly. "And yet your ether signature has changed so dramatically that the imperial grid briefly assumed a sovereign-level bond event had occurred."
Damian’s mouth did not move.
His eyes did.
Arik noticed.
"It did occur," Arik said.
Gabriel’s smile widened just slightly, which was enough to qualify as violence.
"Yes," he said. "We noticed."
"I assumed."
"You assumed correctly. It was difficult not to, considering the eastern grid sang for nearly twelve seconds."
Arik paused, betrayed by nature and the misfortune of having loving parents in this life.
Mezos, standing beside the sealed door, became very interested in the wall.
Edward’s expression did not change.
Kamal, who stood quietly near the rear of the room after being dragged into this family matter under the excuse of his "old position," lowered his gaze with heroic discipline.
Damian finally spoke. "Twelve seconds?"
Gabriel glanced at him. "Eleven point eight."
"Gabriel."
"What? I was being generous."
Arik’s expression did not change. "Mother."
"Oh, don’t mother me in that tone. You bonded in hostile territory before finalizing the treaty structure, altered your ether wavelength, acquired a Wrohan engineer with a civilian grid and Canmore blood, and apparently thought a morning meeting would remain limited to diplomatic consequences."
Damian looked at Arik. "Did you think that?"
"No," Arik said.
Gabriel’s eyes narrowed in immediate suspicion.
Arik lifted his coffee mug. "I thought it would be worse."
For one pristine second, silence held.
Then Gabriel laughed.
The sound was soft, delighted, and so thoroughly pleased that Kamal felt the hairs at the back of his neck rise in warning.
That, he realized with the slow horror of a man who had served several courts and survived them by learning when to breathe quietly, was not the laughter of a parent offended by his son’s recklessness.
It was the laughter of an imperial strategist who had found the report entertaining.
Damian, worse, only looked at Arik for another long moment before asking, "Is he stable?"
The question cut cleanly through the amusement.
Arik’s hand tightened once around the mug.
"Yes."
Gabriel’s expression softened.
Only slightly. Only enough that an untrained person might have missed it.
Kamal did not.
He had spent too many years watching Felix Canmore from the shadows while deciding which branch of the family tree could be pruned without public inconvenience. He knew what false softness looked like. He knew what performance looked like. He knew the polished compassion of nobles who used concern as a leash.
This was not that.
Gabriel Lyon’s amusement did not disappear, but something beneath it shifted, deep and immediate.
"Good," Gabriel said. "Then we can make jokes."
Arik exhaled through his nose. "That was your threshold?"
"My threshold is whether my son and his mate are alive, conscious, medically coherent, and not currently being held at ceremonial gun point by Wrohan’s collection of inherited disasters." Gabriel paused. "After that, yes. We can make jokes."
Damian’s gaze moved briefly toward Mezos. "Report."
Mezos straightened as if the room had dropped ten degrees. "The bond mark has been dressed. Lord Liam’s condition is stable. No signs of coercion, ether shock, pheromone destabilization, or delayed collapse. Marin was not deployed."
"Yet," Gabriel said.
Mezos did not blink. "Yet."
Arik looked at him.
Mezos stared forward.
Traitor, Arik thought.
Loyalist, Mezos’s silence seemed to reply.
Gabriel leaned back in his chair, visibly pleased. "I was told there was threatening involved."
"There was discussion," Arik said.
"There was Mezos threatening to bring Marin to Wrohan faster," Damian said.
Arik looked at his father.
Damian looked back, calm and merciless. "I have known Mezos longer than you have been alive."
"That does not make this less invasive."
"It makes it predictable."
Gabriel’s smile returned with sharper edges. "Besides, Arik, if you did not want medical threats involved, you should not have bonded a dominant omega in hostile territory while every poisoner, opportunist, and fossilized patriarch in Wrohan is trying to decide whether you are an inconvenience or an omen."
Kamal’s gaze flicked up before he could stop himself.
Fossilized patriarch.
No one in Wrohan said such things aloud about Felix Canmore. Not cleanly. Not casually. Not with the lazy disdain of someone discussing a stain that had been allowed to set into expensive fabric.
Gabriel noticed.
His eyes shifted toward Kamal through the projection, and Kamal felt the full, crisp attention of the Empress of Agaron land on him like a blade laid flat against the throat.
"You are Kamal," Gabriel said.
Kamal bowed. "Your Imperial Majesty."