The Reborn Sovereign of Ruin, Bound by His Star
Chapter 31: A genius under rot.
"It feeds half the civilian districts Felix and George were ignoring," Liam said, because attack was better than defense and data was always a respectable weapon. "The eastern blocks, the south canal tenements, the outer heating grid, the old medical quarter, and seventeen municipal water pressure relays that were operating on ration cycles because the official budget kept pretending poor people only needed infrastructure on alternating days."
Rex’s expression flickered.
Liam folded his arms. "You signed the permission to route overflow through emergency civilian channels."
"I signed permission for a conversion station."
"This converts."
"I thought it was in the abandoned service level under the municipal grid."
"It is under the municipal grid."
"It is under a chasm."
"The chasm is also under the municipal grid."
Rex closed his eyes.
Liam waited.
Rex remained silent for a long, heavy minute, the only sound being his breathing and the low-frequency thrum of the Vanguard.
"You found a vein of raw red," Rex said finally, his eyes still closed. "You didn’t report it. You didn’t call for a containment team. You... you decided to put a saddle on a disaster and use it to heat the slums."
"Reporting it meant Felix would have sealed the sector, cleared the tenements, and probably used a tactical collapse to bury the evidence," Liam said, his voice dropping the defensive edge for something more grounded. "Red ether is unstable because it’s high-pressure and unfiltered. If you respect the pressure instead of trying to choke it, it behaves... Mostly."
Arik stepped closer to the glass railing, his gold eyes tracking a particularly violent surge of crimson ether as it was sucked into the Vanguard’s intake. Most men looked at Red and saw death, the kind of unstable energy that leveled city blocks and left nothing but glass and ash behind.
Arik looked at it and saw the raw, pulsing heart of a world that Wrohan was too small to deserve.
And then he looked at Liam.
The focus on Arik’s gaze had shifted. It was no longer a Prince’s idle curiosity about a skilled technician, nor was it the fateful pull of the "Star" prophecy. It was the intense, focused hunger of a Sovereign who had discovered a miracle.
Liam was standing amidst the hum of his illegal engine, his coat rumpled, his face marked by his grandfather’s violence, and his mind clearly three steps ahead of the laws of physics. He was exploiting a Grade-5 hazard to keep the ’unimportant’ parts of the city alive, and he was doing it with a genius that bordered on the divine.
Arik understood then, with a clarity that settled deeper than interest.
Liam was not only brilliant but also impossible.
No ministry had built this. No royal institute had sanctioned it. No academy had polished it into something acceptable enough to present beneath chandeliers and polite applause. Liam had taken a condemned project, a raw red vein, discarded components, private money, and the sort of spite that could apparently be refined into civic infrastructure, and he had turned all of it into power. 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
Clean enough to heat homes.
Stable enough to feed water relays.
Hidden enough to survive Felix.
That last part mattered most.
Because genius could be bought. Talent could be recruited. Engineers could be persuaded with funding, laboratories, titles, and the occasional tasteful threat.
But Liam had built a miracle under a tyrant’s nose and used it to save people who would never know his name.
Arik did not say any of that.
He only looked at the turbine.
Noah and Mezos did not say anything either, which was how Liam knew the situation had become dangerous.
Liam turned slowly. "Why are all three of you being quiet?"
Arik spoke first, his eyes still following the vast, measured rotation of the Vanguard. "We were considering how this helps us with the brooches."
Neither Noah nor Mezos added anything.
That was an answer in itself.
Rex might have been an ally, and perhaps even something close to a friend of Arik’s, but Agaron would not allow someone like Liam to remain buried under Felix Canmore’s rot in Wrohan. Not after seeing this. Not after standing on a bridge above a raw red vein while Liam’s illegal turbine fed half the civilian districts Felix and George had neglected into misery.
Liam snapped his fingers, as though he had just remembered that the world had problems beyond the magnificent crime currently spinning beneath them.
"Yes. That. Sorry. Minor distraction."
"Minor," Rex repeated, looking into the abyss.
Liam ignored him and crossed to a secondary panel built into the right side of the bridge console. He pressed his thumb to a brass reader. The panel clicked, rejected him, clicked again after he hit it with the side of his fist, and finally unfolded with the reluctant dignity of equipment that knew it deserved better maintenance.
Another console lit up.
"This area doesn’t register properly with the brooches," Liam said. "The turbine interference masks active ether fluctuation. The brooches remain technically operational, so they don’t trigger any tampering alarms, but their restriction net is confused by the Vanguard’s conversion field."
Noah looked down at the owl brooch pinned to his coat. "So they think they’re working?"
"They are working." Liam tapped the console twice, and a schematic appeared in the air, showing the bridge, the turbine, and three marked zones. "They are just working badly. There is a difference."
Mezos’s eyes narrowed. "And the usable zones?"
"Here." Liam pointed to a yellow rectangle on the ether-glass floor near the center of the bridge. "And there, closer to the west stabilizer line. Ether can be used inside those fields. The turbine adjusts its load according to consumption, so don’t be shy."
Rex gave him a flat look. "That is not a sentence you say beside a chasm."
"It is a very accurate sentence beside a chasm."
Noah stepped toward the yellow rectangle with visible interest.
Mezos caught his sleeve without looking at him.
Noah stopped. "I was not going to do anything dramatic."
"You were breathing like a man preparing to do something dramatic," Mezos said.
Arik’s gaze moved from the marked floor to the far seal, where Felix’s gold veins still pulsed faintly through the lead. "If we use ether here, what answers?"
Liam’s fingers paused over the console and titled his head, brows furrowing. "The turbine? I don’t understand what you are asking."
Arik’s gaze did not move from the far seal. "Felix built that door."
"Yes."
"And the turbine is waking it."
Liam blinked once, then looked past him.
The gold veins in the lead door pulsed faintly in the dark beyond the turbine, almost swallowed by the blue-white glare of the Vanguard. Liam stared at it for three seconds too long.
Then his expression changed. Annoyance sharpened into comprehension.
"Oh," he said.