Time/Date: Dawn, TC1853.01.07
Location: Grand Imperial Hotel → Sixth District Apartments → Emberhall Estate
Talla Venn slipped through the service corridors of the Grand Imperial Hotel as dawn's first light bled through the tall windows. Gold and crimson painted the opulent hallways—colors that should've been beautiful but just made her stomach turn. Her servant's cap was pulled low over tear-streaked cheeks, the stained apron bundled under her trembling arm as she moved with the desperate quiet of someone who knew exactly how much trouble she was in.
Room 623.
She couldn't think about it. Wouldn't let herself remember silk sheets and that sweet incense smell, or hands that took without asking, or the voice slurred with—no. Stop.
The young man had been as lost as she was. That much she knew. Drugged beyond sense, his golden eyes glazed over even as he—
Her bare feet made no sound against marble floors. The Grand Imperial catered to nobles and wealthy merchants, which meant its staff knew how to be invisible. Appear, disappear, like ghosts tending to their betters' needs. That training served her now as she slipped past early workers preparing for the day's breakfasts and meetings.
But who'd believe a servant girl from the outer districts?
The main entrance was suicide—too many witnesses, too many questions about why she was leaving at this hour. She made for the kitchen delivery entrance instead, where trucks would already be rolling in with fresh bread and supplies. In the bustle of commerce and pre-dawn darkness, one more figure hurrying through the streets wouldn't register.
Cold morning air hit like a slap when she stepped onto the cobblestones of the Fourth District's commercial area. Around her, the city was waking up. Bakers lighting ovens. Merchants cranking open their shops. Early workers heading to factories and offices. Normal sounds that should've been comforting but just felt threatening now—each voice might belong to someone who'd recognize her, someone who'd ask questions she couldn't answer.
She pulled her shawl tighter, quickened her pace. The transport station that'd carry her back to the Sixth District wasn't far. Back to the cramped apartment she shared with Ilyne. Back to safety.
If such a thing still existed for someone like her.
***
The narrow apartment building where Talla lived crouched between a metalworking shop and a textile mill like some forgotten afterthought. Brick walls stained with decades of industrial smoke. She climbed creaking stairs to the third floor, heart hammering against her ribs with each step.
Apartment 3C's door stood slightly ajar. Warm light spilled through the gap along with the porridge smell and brewing tea. Ilyne was up—she always rose early for her job at the district's largest bakery, starting before dawn to have fresh bread ready.
Talla pushed through without ceremony, composure finally cracking.
"Talla?" Ilyne looked up from the tiny stove where she stirred a pot of thin gruel. Year older than Talla, with dark hair already streaked with premature gray from constant heat and flour dust. A round face that usually smiled creased with immediate concern. "What in the Light's name—"
"I have to leave." Talla's voice cracked as she threw her meager possessions into a worn canvas satchel. Hands shaking as she grabbed her spare dress, grandmother's prayer beads, and the small knife she used for eating and protection. "If I stay, I'm dead."
Ilyne set down her wooden spoon carefully. Baker's instincts told her sudden movements might spook her friend further. "Dead? Talla, you're scaring me. What happened at the hotel?"
"You don't understand!" Talla whirled to face her roommate, tears streaming. "Those guests at the banquet—they were nobles. Real nobles, not just rich merchants. Something happened in that room, something I can't even—" Her voice broke. Hands pressed against her stomach like she could physically hold herself together. "If they find me, if they need someone to blame..."
Color drained from Ilyne's face as understanding dawned.
Everyone in the outer districts knew the truth that upper rings preferred to ignore. When crimes involved both nobles and commoners, it was always the commoner who faced consequences. A servant girl found in compromising circumstances with nobility would be painted as an instigator, seductress, or criminal—regardless of what actually occurred.
"By the Codex," Ilyne whispered. "How do you know he was nobility?"
Talla's hands shook as she shoved possessions into the satchel, movements increasingly frantic. "Because I've seen him before. In newssheets. At public ceremonies." Her voice dropped to barely a whisper, like saying it too loud might summon judgment. "Golden eyes like molten amber. Imperial bearing, even drugged senseless. He was—" She choked on the words.
The weight of unspoken truth settled between them.
In the empire's justice system, different laws for different classes. Talla would be painted as having drugged a nobleman, seduced him, committed crimes that'd see her executed in the public square as an example to others who might dare reach above their station.
Ilyne crossed the small room in two quick strides, seized Talla's arms. Forced her to meet her eyes. "Listen carefully. You said he was drugged—that means someone else set this up. Someone used you." Fingers tightened. "But that won't matter to them. If there's even a chance you could be blamed, you need to run. Don't look back, don't send word, don't let anyone know where you've gone."
Talla nodded frantically, terror giving way to desperate determination. "Eighth District. I can lose myself there, find work in food processing plants or grain mills. Places that don't ask too many questions."
"Good." Ilyne pressed what little money she had into Talla's hands—a handful of bronze tigers and copper coins representing days of backbreaking work. "Take this. Not much, but it should get you transport and lodging till you find employment." She paused, voice softening. "Talla... this wasn't your fault. Whatever happened in that room, you were used. You're not the villain."
But Talla couldn't meet her eyes. Shame sat too heavy on her shoulders, mixing with fear and anger and grief for the life she was leaving. She wasn't sure she believed Ilyne's words. Wasn't sure she ever would.
Within the hour, Talla was at the transport station clutching a one-way ticket to the Eighth District. Locomotive's whistle cut through morning air like a blade as she boarded, satchel containing everything she owned in the world. As the train pulled away, she pressed her face to the window and watched the Sixth District disappear, carrying with it any semblance of the life she'd known.
Twenty-two years old. Alone. Running from consequences she'd never chosen to face.
But alive. For now, that'd have to be enough.
Back at the Grand Imperial Hotel, chaos bloomed like a poisonous flower in dawn's aftermath.
Amara Brenner's fists pounded against the polished oak door of room 623. Each strike sent tremors through expensive wood. Her voice, normally modulated to perfection, had risen to a shrill pitch that carried down the carpeted corridor.
"Mara! Mara! Open this door immediately!" Hysteria in her tone carefully calculated—loud enough to draw attention, desperate enough to suggest genuine distress. "Where is Kael? What have you done?"
Inside, Kael Xuán stirred to wakefulness like a man drowning in molasses. Head felt like someone had filled it with broken glass. Each slight movement sent lances of agony through his skull. Mouth dry as desert sand, throat raw, and his memories of the previous evening existed only as fragments.
A toast. Wine that tasted strange. Stumbling through corridors that seemed to shift. Falling onto silk sheets that smelled of exotic incense.
And a woman. There'd been a woman in this bed, he was certain. Soft skin beneath his fingers. Gasping breaths. The weight and heat of—
Pounding on the door registered slowly through his drug-addled consciousness. He blinked at empty space beside him in the enormous bed. Confusion gave way to cold dread that cut through fog in his mind like a blade.
Alone. Completely, utterly alone.
The implications crashed over him. Whatever happened last night, whoever'd been in this room with him—gone. Vanished without a trace, leaving him to face the consequences of a night he couldn't even remember.
"Damn her," he growled, voice rough from whatever substances had been forced into his system. Rage that followed was like fire in his veins, burning away the last vestiges of confusion. "That witch drugged me. I'll kill her for this."
He swung his legs over the side of the bed, body protesting every movement, and stalked toward the door. Golden eyes, normally sharp with imperial authority, burned with anger that had toppled kingdoms and ended bloodlines.
Someone would pay for this humiliation.
He yanked the door open with enough force to send it crashing against the inner wall.
The corridor beyond erupted into chaos.
Amara stood frozen in the doorway, amber eyes wide with what appeared to be genuine devastation. Perfectly arranged hair disheveled, silk nightgown wrinkled like she'd dressed hastily. Tears streaked her cheeks—real tears, summoned through sheer force of will and years of practice.
"Kael..." she whispered, hands trembling as she reached toward him. Gesture perfectly pitched—intimate enough to suggest deep feeling, hesitant enough to convey wounded trust. "What happened? Where is she? I've been looking everywhere..."
Behind her, the corridor had filled with an audience that couldn't have been more perfectly arranged if she'd hired them. Servants pretended to go about morning duties while straining to catch every word. Nobles who'd attended last evening's banquet emerged from their rooms, drawn by commotion. Hotel staff appeared with timing of a well-rehearsed performance, expressions suggesting professional concern mixed with barely concealed fascination.
Kael pulled Amara into his arms. Embrace fierce enough to suggest both protection and possession. "She's gone," he murmured against her hair, voice carrying just far enough for gathered witnesses to hear. "She drugged me and fled like the coward she is."
Whispers began immediately. Rippling through the crowd like stones cast into still water.
***
Lady Selenne Varros was among the first to add her voice to the growing chorus. She stood in the doorway of her own suite, silk morning robe perfectly arranged despite the early hour, dark eyes glittering with malicious pleasure.
"Typical of a baseborn," she drawled, voice carrying the authority of someone born to judge others. "No, baseborn is too kind a word. She's clayspawn—you can smell the dirt in her blood from a mile away."
Lady Miraya Drosven laughed from across the corridor. Jeweled fan fluttering like poisonous butterfly wings. Blonde hair artfully arranged to suggest she'd just awakened, though every strand was perfectly placed. "Still, worth the ruin of her bloodrite, don't you think? Catching Kael Xuán in her bed? Even mudborn filth would risk everything for that prize."
"Mudborns have no honor," Lady Cariss Veylor added with a theatrical sniff. Nose wrinkling like she could detect some offensive odor. "What kind of manifestation could trash like that possibly produce? Probably something as twisted and dirty as she is."
Lady Alenya Korre frowned from her doorway, expression troubled. Unlike her companions, she possessed something resembling a conscience—though it was often overwhelmed by social pressure. "We cannot say such things without proof. Mudborn or not, she is still a Brenner ward. Perhaps there are circumstances we don't understand."
Cariss's laugh was sharp as breaking glass. "Proof? Did you not see her eyes? Muddy brown, dull as river clay. Even peasants have proper black eyes. Only mudborns are cursed with that stain."
The gossip spread like wildfire. Each retelling added new details, fresh venom. By the time the story reached the main lobby, Mara Brenner had transformed from victim to predator. Innocent girl to calculating seductress who'd drugged an imperial heir and fled to avoid consequences.
***
In a shadowed alcove near the grand staircase, Thalia and Katrin Brenner huddled together like shipwreck survivors. Faces pale with shame that could destroy a family's reputation for generations.
Katrin clutched her cousin's arm with white-knuckled desperation. Voice barely above a whisper. "How could Mara do this to us? Our family name—our standing in society—dragged through the mud by a servant girl's ambitions." Voice cracked with genuine distress. "Brenners will be the laughing stock of the Prosperous District. No one will want to do business with us. No one will want their children to marry into our line."
Thalia's gaze remained fixed on the closed door of room 623. Expression thoughtful rather than horrified. Unlike her cousin, she possessed a mind that questioned rather than simply accepted. Something about this entire situation felt wrong.
"I don't believe she would do this," she said quietly, voice cutting through Katrin's hysteria. "Not like this. Mara lacks the courage for such calculated recklessness. She's always been timid. Frightened of her own shadow." She paused, sharp mind working through logistics. "And how would she even accomplish it? She has no access to such substances. No connections to procure them. No knowledge of their use."
Katrin gave a sharp laugh bordering on hysteria. "A mudborn can do anything when cornered. No depths they won't sink to when they see an opportunity to climb above their station."
Thalia's eyes narrowed. When she spoke again, her voice carried the ice-cold authority of someone raised to command rather than follow. "Careful, cousin. I think I need words with Third Uncle about your growing naivety. It's unbecoming of a Brenner to parrot servants' gossip like some tavern wench." She turned back to the scene unfolding before them, mind cataloging inconsistencies. "This feels orchestrated. Too perfect. Too public. Someone wanted this scandal, but I'm not convinced it was Mara."
Katrin flushed and shrank back, properly chastened.
But damage was already done. Whispers of disgrace had taken root, winding through the halls of the Grand Imperial Hotel like poison ivy. Choking life from Raven's reputation with every retelling.
And through it all, Raven's absence screamed louder than any defense she might've offered. To gathered nobles and servants, her flight was proof of guilt. Her silence an admission of wrongdoing.
***
Far from the hotel, in a modest manor on Fifth District's quieter streets, Selene Lin paced before the morning fire in her private sitting room. She'd returned home hours ago, leaving the banquet's aftermath to unfold without her presence. Edmund dozed in his chair nearby, still wearing evening clothes. Snoring softly with a wine-heavy breath of satisfied celebration.
She permitted herself a small, cold smile.
The plan had gone perfectly—Amara confirmed as much with a brief message before dawn. By now, Mara would be ruined beyond redemption. Reputation destroyed, future prospects eliminated. The girl would have no choice but to accept whatever arrangement Selene deigned to offer. Quiet marriage to some forgettable merchant. Life of subjugation far from the spotlight.
And Kael would be free. Free to pursue Amara without the distraction of some mudborn pretender catching his eye at inconvenient moments, and she could stop worrying about the dangers that wretched girl could bring her.
She settled into her chair with tea and morning newssheets, already anticipating delicious gossip that'd fill social columns in days to come. Let the nobles whisper. Let the scandal spread. It'd only make their family's eventual triumph sweeter when Amara married into imperial power and elevated Brenners to heights Selene had only dreamed of.
What Selene didn't know—couldn't know—was that her carefully orchestrated scheme had already shattered in ways she couldn't imagine.
Pieces scattered across the city like broken glass. Talla fleeing toward the Eighth District. Evidence sitting in the police station with Raven's fingerprints preserved alongside her own. Kael waking in empty room with memories that'd contradict every claim he'd soon make.
Trap had been sprung, but not in the way anyone expected.
While Selene sipped morning tea in blissful ignorance, the machinery of justice Raven had set in motion was already beginning to turn.
The game had changed. But players were only beginning to understand the new rules.