The Reborn Sovereign of Ruin, Bound by His Star
Chapter 45: -A.
"Dates," she said.
Liam blinked at her. "What?"
"Dates," Mirelle repeated, each word precise enough to cut. "The stabilizer coil. The scaffold. The lock. I want the dates, Liam. Every malfunction, every failure, every so-called accident that happened after you refused him."
Liam shifted in his seat. "Mirelle, the Lab V logs are encrypted under Felix’s private server. Even if I could remember half of them, memory is not proof."
A sharp digital ping cut across the room.
All three of them turned toward the center table.
Enia’s private communication channel was activated with a soft gold pulse, a type of notification reserved for secure channels. For a moment, no one moved. Then Enia reached for it, slow and deliberate, her expression tightening as she drew the device into her hand.
She pressed her thumb to the screen.
The encryption unraveled instantly.
Layer after layer of Wrohan security peeled back without resistance, overridden by a clearance level that should not have existed inside the kingdom’s domestic network.
A single file opened.
Enia’s eyes moved down the screen once, twice, and all remaining color drained from her face.
Liam was already halfway out of his chair. "Mother?"
She said nothing. She turned the screen toward Mirelle.
Mirelle stepped closer and took the comm from her hand. Her gaze sharpened as she scanned the contents.
It was not a simple list of incidents. It was a synchronized comparison of records.
On one side sat the official Lab V maintenance logs: equipment failures, temporary shutdowns, structural faults, and safety breaches. On the other sat private Canmore command authorizations, each one time-stamped seconds or minutes before the incident it matched.
The stabilizer coil surge. The west-shaft scaffold collapse. The biometric lock override that sealed Liam inside a live testing corridor.
Each of them had an initiating command. Each of them traced back to Felix.
Dates, times, access points, and command signatures aligned with brutal, methodical clarity.
"The scaffold," Enia said at last, and her voice no longer sounded like her own. "West shaft, lower maintenance level. He triggered the magnetic decouplers remotely from his private office."
Liam crossed the room and looked down at the screen.
Below the data logs sat another folder: surveillance captures. High-resolution stills taken from a covert drone angle. Felix in his study. Felix seated behind his terminal. Felix’s hand above the command panel. Felix looking perfectly composed while authorizing the collapse that could have killed Liam.
At the bottom of the dossier, beneath the last image, one line appeared in a stark, formal script marked with Agaronian sovereign encryption:
"Efficiency is only a virtue when the machine isn’t designed to kill the engineer. The chasm is deep, but the betrayal is deeper. - A."
Liam stared at it for a second too long.
Then he sat back down because his knees had stopped asking permission.
"Arik," he said quietly.
He had given the prince the Vanguard’s light.
In return, Arik had sent him proof.
"Arik Oberon Lyon," Enia said, and the full name landed in the room with the finality of a verdict.
She looked at Mirelle.
Mirelle looked back.
Nothing theatrical passed between them. The decision was already there, cold and complete.
"He sent it to my private channel," Enia said, gripping the comm so tightly her knuckles blanched. "He saw enough in that lab to know what to look for, and then he went into systems none of us could touch."
Mirelle kept reading, her expression flattening with every line. "It carries a sovereign’s seal," she said. "He is telling us, very politely, that if we choose to act, Agaron will not object to the aftermath."
Enia turned to her. "Send the information about Ray Canmore being one of George’s sons to the media studios we use. Start with the gossip channels. I want Felix and George to mistake it for scandal before they realize it is a warning."
"Mother..." Liam said, trying to stop her from provoking the old viper. "What about Rex? His position as Crown Prince would be questioned, and knowing Felix, he will use my pushover father to claim the throne."
Enia did not even look at him. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚
"Then let it be questioned."
The answer fell into the room with such effortless finality that Liam went still.
Mirelle, who had already opened a second secure channel on her tablet, did not pause either. Her fingers moved with brisk, elegant precision, sorting recipients, arranging release order, tagging the first drop for the smaller gossip studios that thrived on illegitimate bloodlines, noble affairs, and quiet ruin disguised as entertainment.
"Mother," Liam tried again, more sharply this time, "Rex—"
"Rex," Enia cut in, finally turning to face him, "has had years to intervene."
Liam opened his mouth.
Closed it.
Because that was the ugliest part of it: not that Rex was cruel, and not that he had ever stood beside Felix in intent. Rex had been busy keeping Wrohan standing while half its nobles watched from the sidelines and called themselves statesmen for surviving the view. He had been fighting for civilians, for infrastructure, for shortages, for every fragile thing that kept the kingdom from splitting open.
They all knew that.
Enia knew it too.
She was simply too furious, in this moment, to be generous with the distinction between a man who had not known enough and a man who had not looked closely enough.
Her red eyes did not soften.
"If Agaron knows," she said, each word stripped clean of sentiment, "then Wrohan knows."
"Yes, Mother, Rex probably knew, but..." Liam said, running his hair in frustration. "At the very least, give him a heads-up."
Enia held his gaze for one long moment.
The fury in her face did not ease. It only shifted, tightening into something colder, more deliberate.
"You are asking me to warn the Crown Prince," she said.
"I am asking you not to blindside the one person who has been holding this kingdom together while Felix poisons it from the walls," Liam said. He dragged a hand through his hair again, already looking exhausted by the argument. "Rex is not the enemy here."
"No," Enia said. "He is not."
Mirelle said nothing, but her hands stilled above the tablet for the first time since the dossier had arrived.
Liam took that for what the opening was. "Then warn him."
Enia’s jaw worked once.
She did not like yielding when she was angry. Liam had known that since childhood. It was not pride, exactly. It was the simple fact that when Enia reached a conclusion, she preferred the rest of the world to adjust itself accordingly.
But this was not the rest of the world. This was Rex.
And worse, this was Liam asking.
"Fine," she said at last, each letter clipped. "He will get a warning."
Liam exhaled.
It was not relief, exactly, but it was close enough to pass for one.
Enia lifted one finger before he could speak again. "Do not mistake me. I am warning Rex because he has earned that much. I am not sparing Felix, and I am certainly not sparing George."
Mirelle’s mouth curved, small and sharp. "Good. I was beginning to worry motherhood had made you merciful."
Enia did not even glance at her. "Mirelle."
"Yes?"
"Prepare two messages."
Mirelle adjusted the tablet in her hands. "Go on."
"The first goes to Rex on his private line." Enia’s voice was precise now, stripped of heat only because the heat had condensed into purpose. "No written details. No names. Tell him a succession-adjacent media leak is about to break and that if he wants to get ahead of it, he should move immediately."
Liam nodded once. That was enough. More than enough, considering the mood she was in.
"The second," Enia continued, "goes to the gossip studios exactly as planned."