Reborn as the Queen's Captive: The Shadow Courtier System
Chapter 34: A witness
Joric Thane shook the entire way back to the palace.
Elara had wrapped him in a torn brown cloak taken from one of her ghosts. It covered the bruises on his face and the blood dried against his collar, but it did nothing to hide the fear. He walked between two servant girls through the lower streets with his head lowered and his shoulders hunched as if he expected every shadow to open and swallow him.
The city around them had entered what the people still called morning, though there was no sunrise beneath Ravena’s veil. The same cold violet gloom pressed over the rooftops. The same dim twilight clung to the market stalls and wet stone roads. Bells rang from the upper district to mark the hour, but the sky did not brighten. It never brightened. The Sunless Throne woke under a stolen sky and pretended that was normal.
Silas watched the streets as they moved.
Bread prices had already returned to two copper in most stalls.
That was good.
It meant fear of the Shadow Advisor had spread faster than the rumor of the burned convoy. For now, hunger would wait. But hunger was patient. It did not need swords or banners. It only needed time and bad information.
Lyra walked close to him with her cloak pulled low over her face. Her voice was quiet when she spoke.
"We cannot take Joric directly to Ravena."
Silas did not look at her. "No."
"If he says the order carried your seal in front of the Queen, the council will fracture before you can explain."
"Yes."
Elara glanced over from Joric’s other side. "Then where are we taking him?"
"Somewhere he can stay alive long enough to become useful."
Joric made a weak sound.
"I told you what I know," he whispered. "Please. I just want to go home."
Silas stopped walking.
The others stopped with him.
They were in a narrow street between a candle shop and an old tailor’s house. A violet lantern flickered above them. Somewhere nearby, a woman was shouting at a child for dropping a basket of onions.
Silas turned to Joric.
The young guard was barely older than twenty. He had sandy brown hair matted with sweat, a narrow face, and frightened grey eyes. His hands shook even when he clenched them. He looked nothing like a traitor. He looked like a boy who had worn armor because armor made him feel older than he was.
"Home is the first place they will look," Silas said.
Joric swallowed. "Who?"
"Everyone."
The boy’s face twisted. "I did not betray anyone."
"No," Silas said. "But someone needs the world to believe you did. Or that I did. Either version ends with you dead."
Joric’s breath hitched.
Elara’s expression softened slightly. She had always been vulnerable to frightened people who reminded her of what she used to be.
Lyra was less gentle.
"If you run, you die," she said. "If you speak to the wrong person, you die. If you hide badly, you die. Your best chance is to obey him."
Joric stared at her with miserable disbelief.
"That was meant to comfort me?"
"No," Lyra said. "It was meant to save time."
Elara looked at her.
Lyra shrugged faintly. "What? It is true."
Despite the danger, one of Elara’s ghosts gave a quiet nervous laugh.
Silas continued walking.
They entered the palace through a servant gate near the old laundry wing. Elara’s network carried them inside without ceremony. No guards asked questions because servants moved in groups all the time. Laundry bundles hid faces. Food carts hid weapons. Fear hid everything else.
Silas did not take Joric to his office. Too visible.
He took him to an unused record room behind the grand library.
The chamber was small, windowless and lined with broken shelves. Old tax records from dead provinces sat in rotting stacks against the walls. Dust coated everything. The air smelled of paper mold and cold stone.
Lyra lit a crystal lamp and placed it on the central table.
Joric sat down heavily.
Elara closed the door and barred it.
Silas removed his glove and looked at the silver ring on his hand.
The seal of the Shadow Advisor.
Someone had copied it. Or used it. Or forged an order convincing enough to move convoy guards.
That was not a small thing.
It meant the enemy had access to royal channels, City Guard procedure, or both.
Silas looked at Joric.
"Tell it again."
Joric’s face crumpled. "I already told you."
"Tell it better."
The boy flinched.
Elara stepped forward. "Silas."
He glanced at her.
She held his gaze for one brief moment. Not defiant. Not disobedient. Just reminding him that terror could break a useful witness before truth came out clean.
Silas looked back at Joric and adjusted his tone.
"Start from the moment the convoy left the eastern granary."
Joric gripped his knees.
"We left before first bell. Thirty four escorts. Six wagon drivers. Captain Merrow commanded the route. The road was supposed to go through Blackreed Crossing and then south toward the capital road."
"Who changed it?"
"The captain said new instructions came from the palace."
"Did you see them?"
Joric hesitated.
Silas leaned forward.
"Do not decide what matters. Speak."
Joric nodded quickly. "I saw the parchment from a distance. It had black wax. Silver mark pressed into it. I thought it was your seal. Everyone did."
Lyra’s eyes narrowed. "Black wax?"
Silas looked at her. "Problem?"
"The Shadow Advisor’s office uses dark red wax. Royal military orders use black wax. If someone used black wax with your seal, they were mixing authorities."
"Would common guards notice?"
"No," Lyra said. "But a trained officer should."
Silas looked back at Joric. "Captain Merrow should have noticed."
Joric’s lips trembled. "Maybe he did."
Good.
There was the next crack.
"What happened after the route changed?"
"We reached the crossing. The road was clear. No flood. I heard Captain Merrow arguing with one of the wagon masters. Then arrows came from the trees. But they did not hit the six of us near the rear."
"Convenient," Lyra murmured.
Joric nodded miserably. "Men in grey cloaks came out. Some wore City Guard armor underneath. I recognized one."
Silas went still.
"Name."
Joric looked at the floor.
"Name," Silas repeated.
"Sergeant Odran Pell," Joric whispered. "He served under Draven."
Elara’s eyes sharpened.
Silas remembered the Blood Moon Banquet. Draven dragged away in shadow chains. His military faction decapitated but not erased. A fallen general always left teeth behind.
"Where is Odran now?" Silas asked.
"I do not know. He saw me recognize him. That is when they took us."
"The other five missing guards?"
Joric’s eyes filled with tears.
"They separated us."
Silas did not need to ask what that meant.
Lyra’s voice softened slightly. "Why did Mother Kaelith have you?"
Joric shook his head. "I woke up in the cellar. She asked me questions. She wanted me to say the order came from the Shadow Advisor. She said the city needed to know the Queen’s new monster was feeding on its own people."
Elara looked disgusted. "They tortured him into a story."
"No," Silas said.
Everyone looked at him.
Silas watched Joric carefully.
"They tortured him into telling a partial truth."
Joric went pale.
Silas continued. "The order did carry my seal. Or something close enough. Palace men were involved. Draven’s remnants were involved. Aurelia’s people found Joric afterward and shaped the testimony toward me."
Lyra’s face became grim. "So there are at least two factions moving inside the same event."
"Three," Silas said.
Elara frowned. "Three?"
"Draven’s loyalists. The First Eclipse. And whoever forged the authority."
Lyra looked at the silver ring on his finger.
"Someone inside the palace."
"Yes."
The record room fell silent.
That was the dangerous part.
Enemies outside the walls could be watched. Enemies inside the palace ate at the same table and smiled beneath the same chandeliers.
A soft knock came at the door.
Elara drew her dagger instantly.
Silas raised one hand.
Three knocks followed. Then two.
Elara relaxed slightly. "One of mine."
She opened the door a crack.
Nessa slipped inside, breathing hard. Her cropped hair was damp with sweat and twilight mist. She bowed quickly to Silas.
"My lord, Vaneer’s estate is moving wagons tonight."
Silas’s eyes sharpened.
"Tonight?"
"Yes. Not three nights. Tonight. Six covered wagons through the western service road. Heavy wheels. Extra guards."
Lyra cursed softly.
Elara looked at Silas. "He panicked."
"No," Silas said. "He was warned."
Joric looked between them, confused and terrified.
Silas turned to the dusty shelves.
The board had shifted again.
Vaneer was moving the swords early. The convoy attack had implicated Silas’s office. Draven’s loyalists were alive. Aurelia’s cult was turning witnesses into weapons. Someone inside the palace had access to seals.
And Seraphina had not made a move yet.
That worried him most.
Silas pulled his glove back over the silver ring.
"Elara, hide Joric somewhere even I cannot find him easily."
Joric looked alarmed.
Elara nodded. "I know a place."
"Lyra, find every record of Sergeant Odran Pell. Service history, family, debts, punishments, loyalties."
"And you?"
Silas walked toward the door.
"I am going to intercept Lord Vaneer’s wagons before they disappear."
Lyra stepped after him. "With whose soldiers?"
Silas smiled coldly.
"Not soldiers."
Elara understood first.
Her pale green eyes brightened.
"Ghosts."
Silas opened the door.
"Exactly."
Above the palace, the twilight sky remained unchanged. No sun rose. No dawn came. Only Ravena’s stolen dusk stretched over the capital like a held breath.