My Yandere Tamer System: Every Beast Becomes a Sexy Goddess
Chapter 49: Joan Told Me She Burned Her Own Career And Then Poured Herself A Drink
Joan’s office at two in the morning looked the same as it always did except for two things.
The glass of something amber on her desk, and the unsigned resignation letter next to it.
Soren closed the door behind him.
His arms were still wrapped in the field bandages Selah had applied before he left, white gauze over burns on the right and frostbite treatment on the left.
He sat down across from her without being invited because Joan had stopped expecting formality from him three weeks ago.
"You purged the file," he said.
"I did."
"The auto-report on Maren’s combat readout. The spectral data from the training yard."
"Yes."
"And you overrode the auditor’s preliminary detention order before she could file it through Bureau channels."
Joan picked up the glass and took a drink. She set it down without any change in her expression. "I delayed it. I didn’t override it. The distinction matters legally, at least for another forty-eight hours."
"Why?"
"Because the Fracture Seed was placed by someone inside the Bureau."
She said it the way she said everything but the content was different this time. Soren watched her face.
"The filing patterns match internal access codes," Joan said.
"The containment protocols that failed, the monitoring gaps that let the Seed germinate under the academy for months without detection. None of that happens without someone with Bureau-level clearance building the blind spots on purpose."
"How long have you known?"
"I started suspecting six days ago. I confirmed it last night while you were busy fusing ice and fire through your skeleton." She looked at his bandaged arms. "You’re aware that what you did should have killed you." 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
"The seal held."
"The seal tied itself to your bond with Cole. If the Council’s review severs that bond, the academy’s Fracture reopens."
Joan finished her drink.
"I’m telling you this because you need to understand what I’ve done. Every action I took tonight is career-ending. Purging a file is obstruction. Delaying an auditor’s order is interference. If the Bureau runs an internal review on my terminal activity for the past week, I’m finished."
"Then don’t get reviewed."
"That isn’t how the Bureau works, Kane."
Soren looked at the resignation letter on her desk.
She’d written it but hadn’t been able to sign it, which told him something about where she actually stood.
He reached across the desk, picked up the letter, folded it twice, and put it in his jacket pocket.
Joan stared at him. "Did you just pocket my resignation?"
"You’re not resigning. You’re too useful."
"Give that back."
"You can have it back when you’ve earned the right to quit."
Her mouth moved about a quarter inch. She caught it and it stopped. "Get out of my office, Kane."
"In a minute." He leaned back in the chair, arms aching through the bandages.
"You didn’t purge the file because you believe in me. You purged it because the evidence points to the Bureau being compromised, which means your own institution is the threat, not my bonds."
"Don’t tell me what I believe."
"I’m telling you what the data says. You chose to protect my people over your career because the alternative was handing them to an organization that someone has already corrupted from the inside."
Joan was quiet for a while.
She opened her desk drawer, pulled out a second glass, and poured something into it from a bottle that didn’t have a label.
She pushed it across the desk toward him.
Soren picked it up.
The smell alone was strong enough to make his eyes water but he drank because Joan had poured it and refusing would change the dynamic.
"There’s something else," Joan said.
She reached deeper into the drawer and pulled out a second folder.
The tab read: AUTHOR — WORKING THEORY.
"The data chip I gave you last week was raw intelligence. Unprocessed." She set the folder on the desk between them.
"This is my analysis. Three hundred years of Fracture placement data cross-referenced with Bureau internal access logs."
"Three hundred years?"
"Every documented Fracture event since the Continental Bureau was founded. Their locations, their timing, the access patterns in the Bureau’s monitoring system before each one. Someone has been building Fracture points across the continent in a pattern. The same signature that’s under this academy appears at seven other documented sites."
Seven?
Soren had known about two, the Western Continental and the academy. Five more meant a network.
"The Bureau didn’t notice the pattern because the events were spread across decades," Joan said. "No single analyst ever looked at all of them together. I only caught it because I pulled historical access logs for an unrelated case and the timestamps matched."
"Who has access to place Fracture Seeds inside Bureau monitoring blind spots?"
"Three people." Joan’s voice didn’t change pitch. "Bureau Director-level or above. Continental Council with a Class 7 clearance or someone who built the monitoring system in the first place."
She let that sit.
"You haven’t shared this with anyone?" Soren asked.
"I shared the raw data with you last week and this folder is the analysis. Nobody else has seen it."
"Why me?"
Joan looked at him for a long time.
"Because you’re the only person in this building whose bonds give them something to lose, everyone else is working for a paycheck or a rank. You’re protecting people." She paused. "I trust people who protect things more than people who serve institutions."
Soren put the glass down.
"Keep the folder for now. If you give it to me and someone searches my room, we lose everything."
"You’re leaving the intelligence with me?"
"You’ve had it for three hundred years’ worth of data without anyone finding out. I trust your security more than mine."
Joan looked at him. She put the folder back in the drawer and closed it.
"The auditor’s review clock started when she filed the Classification Report. If the Council designates your wolf’s source entity as a Primordial threat, they can sever every bond you have."
"I know."
"If they sever the bond with Cole, the Fracture seal fails."
"I know that too."
"Then get stronger." She picked up her glass, saw it was empty, and set it back down. "Get out of my office."
Soren stood up and walked to the door. He stopped with his hand on the handle.
"Joan."
"What?"
"The resignation letter stays with me."
Then Soren left.