Shadow Unit Scandal: The Commander's Omega-Chapter 37: Consequences
Damian read the report twice.
Then he leaned back in his chair, one boot hooked around the leg of the desk, and laughed low, surprised, and genuinely impressed.
"Twenty-four," he said, tapping the screen. "And he rerouted an imperial demographic acknowledgment without tripping a single alarm. Cleanly. During a suspension window." His eyes flicked up, bright with something like pride. "That takes nerve."
Across the room, Gabriel reclined on the chaise with a glass of cold tea cradled in both hands, seven months pregnant and deeply done with the day. He looked tired in the exact way of someone who had already reorganized half an empire before noon.
"It takes anxiety," Gabriel corrected mildly. "And an introvert with too much access."
Damian’s mouth curved. "It reminds me of someone."
Gabriel did not look up. "If you say ’an omega who faked an alpha mark to keep his family off his back,’ I am throwing this tea at you."
Damian grinned wider. "I wasn’t going to say it out loud."
"You were thinking it loudly," Gabriel replied. "And yes. It was me."
Gregoris stood near the window, posture loose but alert, a datapad in his hand displaying layered security schematics. His report on potential infiltrations into the diplomatic delegations sat open, annotated and brutal.
"I want him," Gregoris said, as if discussing logistics rather than people. "I should have recruited him earlier."
Damian arched a brow. "To the Shadows?"
"Yes."
Gabriel laughed, soft and unmistakably fond. "No, you can’t. I won’t give him to the Shadows."
Gregoris frowned. "He has the aptitude."
"He has the temperament of someone who would fake his own death just to avoid training," Gabriel replied. "Rafael would rather flee the continent than become a Shadow."
Gregoris considered that. Then, begrudgingly, nodded. "He’d run."
"Immediately," Gabriel agreed. "And he’d do it with a resignation letter, three loopholes, and a contingency plan that somehow implicates House Vale."
Damian glanced back at the report, thoughtful. "Still. It’s impressive."
"It is," Gabriel said, sipping his tea. "Which is why he’s being presented and he won’t pull anything this time."
Gregoris’s gaze drifted to the window, to the city beyond. "He won’t like it."
"No," Gabriel said, fond and firm all at once. "But he’ll survive it."
Damian set the tablet down, shifting his golden gaze to Gregoris. "What are you going to do about it?"
Gregoris looked confused. "Should I execute him? I thought Gabriel was saving him."
"I was talking about the courting; after the formal recognition, he can retire from the system."
Gregoris went still.
Not tense. Not angry. Just... recalibrating.
"Retire," he repeated slowly.
"Yes," Damian said. "Once he’s formally recognized, the system no longer routes through Delphine. Rafael can withdraw cleanly. No more administrative ambushes disguised as romance."
Gabriel watched Gregoris over the rim of his glass. "Which is why I’m insisting he goes through with the ceremony. It closes the last leverage point anyone has over him."
Gregoris’s jaw set. "And if he does?"
Damian shrugged lightly. "Then you lose the excuse."
Silence stretched.
Gregoris looked back at the city, then down at the datapad in his hand, the infiltration layers forgotten. "I don’t need an excuse."
Gabriel smiled faintly. "You absolutely do."
Gregoris huffed once, something like reluctant amusement. "He’s already decided, hasn’t he."
"Yes," Gabriel said. "He accepted with grace and a contingency plan."
Damian chuckled. "Naturally."
Gregoris’s mouth curved, sharp and unreadable. "Good. Then I’ll wait."
Gabriel’s brow lifted. "That’s new."
"I can adapt," Gregoris replied. "Besides..." his eyes flicked briefly toward Damian, then back to Gabriel, "if he’s choosing freely afterward, it will mean more."
Damian studied him. "You’re taking this seriously."
Gregoris didn’t deny it. "I always do."
Gabriel shifted on the chaise, settling more comfortably. "Just remember," he said mildly, "if you scare him into fleeing the continent, I will personally intervene."
Gregoris met his gaze, unflinching. "I won’t."
Damian leaned back, satisfied. "Well. This should be entertaining."
Gabriel took another sip of tea. "For us."
Somewhere else in the palace, Rafael sneezed again, stared suspiciously at his tablet, and added a third line to his reminder:
Avoid Gregoris. Temporarily.
—
Delphine discovered the truth late in the afternoon, when the palace finally grew quiet enough for real work to resume.
She sat at her desk with the composure of a woman who had negotiated inheritances, wars of influence, and three generations of impossible men. The tablet in her hand displayed the registry extract Gabriel had authorized for senior family review. At first glance it looked innocuous. At second, it did not.
She read it carefully.
By the time she reached the administrative trail, her mouth had thinned into a tight line. Disappointment had always come before anger, colder and far more dangerous.
Rafael had not simply failed to attend the ceremony. He had altered the system so that his absence would not register as a violation. The acknowledgment had been deferred, rerouted during the suspension window, and quietly buried among legitimate reinstatement anomalies. Clean work. Elegant, even.
Her son’s work.
Delphine closed her eyes and rested two fingers against her temple. She did not breathe deeply or dramatically. She did not summon servants or call for an explanation. She simply sat there, absorbing the realization that Rafael had gone to considerable effort to make sure she never saw this.
"You hid from me," she murmured, not loud enough to be overheard. "That was unwise."
She lowered the tablet again, already deciding how and when she would address this. There would be a conversation. A very controlled one. Later.
The chime came before she could lock the file.
Delphine opened her eyes.
New correspondence.
Diplomatic priority. House Alamina.
Her expression sharpened at once. She opened the message without hesitation.
The proposal was formal, concise, and unmistakably aggressive in its timing. Duke Alamina requested the legal hand of Rafael Rosenroth in marriage, contingent upon the completion of Rafael’s Coming of Age recognition. The language was restrained, the tone respectful, but the subtext was unmistakable.
Gregoris. Of course it was Gregoris.
Delphine leaned back in her chair, incredulous laughter threatening to surface before she forced it down. The man had the audacity to move now, of all moments, when Rafael’s status was exposed and in flux. When she herself had just learned how far her son had gone to stay unclaimed.
Her instinctive reaction was pure, unfiltered disdain.
Then she opened the attachment.
The contract unfolded across the screen in clean, brutal detail. Financial autonomy guaranteed. No relocation clauses. No compulsory Shadow integration. Explicit protections for Rafael’s professional independence. Oversight provisions that heavily favored the Rosenroth side. Even a clause limiting the Duke’s authority over any shared household matters.
It was, quite frankly, obscene.
Delphine blinked once.
Then she read it again, slower this time.
This was not a conquest contract. It was a concession. A declaration written by a man who knew exactly how much leverage he lacked and how much he was willing to surrender to compensate.
Her displeasure shifted, reorienting itself into something colder and more dangerous.
Gregoris Alamina did not offer terms like this lightly. He offered them because Rafael mattered, and because he knew Delphine would read every line meticulously.
She tapped the edge of the tablet thoughtfully.
"So," she said to the empty room, "you provoke me in the morning, and by afternoon the Duke I despise most hands me a contract that benefits my son almost excessively."
Delphine considered Rafael again. His clever evasion. His refusal to step into visibility. His choice to hide rather than confront her directly.
Her disappointment sharpened.
Perhaps, she thought, he needed to learn what happened when he removed himself from the board and let others move in his place.
She did not accept the proposal.
Not yet.
But she did not reject it either.
Instead, Delphine drafted a single, polite response acknowledging receipt and requesting a private discussion after the Coming of Age ceremony. She sent it with perfect calm, then set the tablet down beside her untouched tea.
Somewhere in the palace, Rafael was organizing seating charts and convincing himself the worst was over.
Delphine smiled thinly.
"No, my dear," she murmured. "This is simply where the consequences begin."







