Time/Date: Late Evening, TC1853.01.07
Location: Metropolitan Police Station - 4th Ring, Lobby
Three figures arrived at the police station's lobby like they owned the place. Which, in most circumstances, they basically did.
Lord Garrick Brenner stood at the center with his walking stick, striking the marble floor. Rhythmic. Demanding. That particular brand of authority that came from ninety years of getting what he wanted.
Lady Isolde Montague had claimed one of the lobby chairs like it was a throne. Never mind that it was standard-issue government furniture that probably predated the current Emperor. She sat with a rigid posture. Pale blue eyes surveying the institutional surroundings with obvious distaste. Her expensive silk gown created its own bubble of elegance. Made everything around her look cheap by comparison.
Edmund Brenner couldn't seem to stand still. Pacing near the reception desk with that restless energy of someone used to solving problems. Fast. His weathered face showed the strain—decades of business negotiations hadn't prepared him for this particular crisis.
"This is intolerable," Lord Garrick announced to the desk sergeant. Voice carrying that assumption of immediate compliance. "My granddaughter and step-granddaughter are being held without formal charges. My daughter-in-law is being interrogated based on what can only be described as politically motivated accusations."
The desk sergeant was a veteran. He'd seen this performance before. Rich families showing up. Making demands. Acting like the law didn't apply to them.
He maintained professional composure while calculating how fast he could kick this upstairs.
"Sir, I understand your concern. But the investigation is being conducted according to proper procedure. Commissioner Wu has ordered—"
"Commissioner Wu," Lady Isolde cut in. Ice in her voice. "Is a member of the Wu clan. Their animosity toward the Xuán imperial family is well-documented. Their eagerness to use any excuse to embarrass Lord Kael is transparent to anyone with basic political awareness."
Edmund stepped forward. Trying for diplomacy. "Sergeant, we're not here to interfere with legitimate police work. We just want to ensure our family members are being treated fairly. That their rights are being respected. Given the political implications—"
"The political implications," came a new voice from across the lobby, "are precisely why this investigation will be conducted with absolute adherence to the law."
Commissioner Tianlong Wu emerged from the corridor. His entrance shifted everything. The man was in his fifties with a controlled bearing. Military background showing in every movement. Dark eyes, sharp. Someone who understood this moment could define careers. Reshape alliances.
His timing was perfect. Not rushed. Not delayed. Calculated to show he was completely in control.
"Lord Garrick, Lady Isolde, Mr. Brenner." Wu gave a formal bow. Acknowledged their status while maintaining his own authority. "I understand your concerns. However, I must inform you that all three individuals currently being interviewed—Amara Brenner, Selene Brenner, and Mara Brenner—are here voluntarily. They've been advised of their rights."
Lord Garrick's weathered face flushed. Barely contained anger. "Voluntarily? You expect me to believe seventeen-year-old girls understand the legal implications of speaking with police without legal representation?"
"They've waived their right to counsel." The desk sergeant consulted his notes.
Silence.
That particular kind of silence that meant everyone was thinking the same thing, but nobody wanted to say it out loud.
Why would Amara and Selene waive their right to legal representation?
Why would Mara—of all people—choose to speak with police without family support?
Lady Isolde stood. Fluid grace despite her age. Pale eyes fixed on Wu with winter frost intensity. "Commissioner, I hope you understand the gravity of making false accusations against members of families with imperial connections. The consequences for your career... and your clan... could be quite severe if this investigation proves to be motivated by political rather than criminal considerations."
Wu smiled. Didn't reach his eyes. The expression of someone who'd been waiting for exactly this moment. "Lady Isolde, I appreciate your concern for my career prospects. However, I'm confident that when this investigation is complete, the only people facing severe consequences will be those who have actually broken the law."
Challenge unmistakable.
The lobby fell silent as three generations of Brenner authority found themselves facing something they rarely encountered. A bureaucrat who couldn't be intimidated. Couldn't be bribed. Couldn't be politically maneuvered.
"Now," Wu continued. Deadly calm. "We'll need to take fingerprints from all parties for evidence comparison. Standard procedure in cases involving physical evidence."
Lord Garrick's walking stick struck marble with sharp finality. "We'll provide fingerprints only with our legal counsel present."
"That's your right," Wu agreed. Smooth as silk. "Though I should mention that refusal to cooperate with evidence collection could be seen as obstruction of justice. Particularly in a case involving potential crimes against a minor."
The words hung there.
Sharp. Legal implications cutting through all political considerations.
Edmund's face went pale as understanding hit. This wasn't about family reputation. This wasn't about political maneuvering. This was about criminal charges. The kind that destroyed lives. Ended careers.
"Edmund." Lady Isolde's voice cut like broken glass. "Call the lawyers. Now."
Edmund fumbled for his communicator. Hands shaking slightly. Lord Garrick's ancient eyes swept the lobby. Taking everything in. The desk sergeant's carefully neutral expression. Wu's satisfied smile. Those closed doors leading to interview rooms where his family members were being systematically questioned.
For the first time in decades, Lord Garrick Brenner felt something he hadn't experienced since his youth.
Fear.
Real fear.
"How long," he asked quietly. Voice stripped of bluster. "How long have they been in there?"
Wu consulted his pocket watch. Deliberate precision. "Two hours and forty-seven minutes, Lord Brenner. My officers are very thorough."
Two hours and forty-seven minutes.
Long enough to tell a story.
Long enough to make mistakes.
Long enough for truth to start bleeding through carefully constructed lies.
Lord Garrick's grip tightened on his walking stick. Knuckles going white. Around him, he could feel it. The careful edifice of their family's reputation beginning to crack. Tiny fissures spreading through marble that had seemed solid just hours before.
Edmund finally got his communicator working. "This is Edmund Brenner. We need immediate representation at the 4th Ring Metropolitan Police Station. Yes, urgent. Multiple family members being questioned about... allegations I don't fully understand yet. Get here fast."
He ended the call. Turned to his father. Expression mixing confusion with dawning horror. "Father, what exactly are they accusing us of? The sergeant mentioned crimes against a minor, but surely—"
"Shut up, Edmund." Lord Garrick's voice came out low. Venomous. "Don't say anything else. Not here. Not now."
Too late.
The damage was done. Words spoken. Implications hanging in the air.
Crimes against a minor.
Lady Isolde's aristocratic composure faltered. First time all night. Pale eyes widening as she processed what that might mean. She turned to Lord Garrick. Voice dropping to urgent whisper. "Garrick, what have they done? What has Selene done?"
The old man's jaw worked. Competing instincts warring inside him. Protect his family. Protect himself. Ninety years of political maneuvering told him that sometimes—sometimes—the only way to survive a sinking ship was being first in the lifeboat.
But not yet.
Not until he knew exactly how bad this was.
Door opening. Sound echoing through the lobby.
All eyes turned.
Lieutenant Holt emerged from the corridor. Scarred face professionally neutral. Didn't quite hide his satisfaction at what he'd just witnessed.
"Mr. Brenner." Addressing Edmund with careful formality. "Your wife has requested to speak with you. However, I must inform you that any conversation you have will be monitored. Anything said can be used as evidence in ongoing investigations."
Edmund's face went pale. "Selene wants to see me? Is she... is she alright?"
"She's becoming increasingly agitated during questioning, sir. Emotionally distressed, perhaps. To be expected given the nature of the allegations being discussed." Holt's tone suggested the distress was entirely warranted. "If you'd like to speak with her, I can arrange a brief meeting in one of our consultation rooms."
"Yes." Edmund moved toward Holt before his father could stop him. "Yes, I need to see my wife."
As Edmund was led away, Lord Garrick and Lady Isolde stood alone in the lobby. Surrounded by quiet efficiency. Police station nighttime operations continuing around them. Desk sergeant back to his paperwork. Other officers moving through with purposeful strides. No one paying particular attention to two aristocrats frozen in the center of the room.
"Crimes against a minor," Lady Isolde whispered. Voice tight with barely controlled panic. "Garrick, what could that mean? What has Selene done?"
"We don't know yet," Lord Garrick said. Firm. Though his voice lacked its usual conviction. "Could be nothing. A misunderstanding. Some legal technicality."
"A technicality?" Lady Isolde's voice rose before she caught herself. Glancing around. Making sure nobody was listening. "They're requesting fingerprints. They've separated everyone for questioning. The Wu clan is personally overseeing this. That's not a technicality, Garrick. That's—"
"Enough." Lord Garrick cut her off. Walking stick striking the floor. Sharp finality. "We don't know what they have. Don't know what's been said. When the lawyers arrive, we'll assess the situation. Respond appropriately."
But even as he spoke, Lord Garrick felt the weight. Decades pressing down. He'd built an empire through careful calculation. Knowing when to push. When to retreat. Understanding the delicate balance of power that governed imperial society.
Standing in this institutional lobby with harsh lighting and bureaucratic efficiency, he realized something unsettling.
He'd given Selene too much autonomy. Trusted her to handle family matters. Never asked too many questions about how she managed things.
And now that trust might destroy them all.
Perhaps he'd finally pushed too far.
The consultation room door opened.
Edmund emerged. Face ashen. Walking with mechanical movements. Someone in shock. Not meeting their eyes.
"Well?" Lord Garrick demanded. "What did she say?"
Edmund's voice came out barely above a whisper. "She said... we need to leave. Now. Before they formally arrest anyone. If we stay, if we're here when they present the evidence..."
Couldn't finish the thought.
"Evidence of what, Edmund?" Lady Isolde pressed. Composure cracking further. "What evidence could they possibly have?"
"Fingerprints," Edmund said it hollowly. "On a glass. Something about hotel surveillance footage. And..." He swallowed hard. "Four missing hotel workers. Selene said we need to get Amara out before they connect her to... to..."
The sentence died unfinished.
Lord Garrick felt the floor tilt.
Fingerprints. Surveillance. Missing witnesses.
He didn't know what crime had been committed. But he knew what missing witnesses meant.
The kind of evidence that couldn't be explained away. Not with money. Not with political connections.
The kind that destroyed families.
"We're not running," Lord Garrick said. Firm. Though his grip on the walking stick had tightened until ancient knuckles showed white beneath papery skin. "Running implies guilt. We stay. Wait for the lawyers. Handle this properly."
But even as he spoke, he saw truth reflected in Edmund's haunted eyes. Lady Isolde's pale face.
Whatever Selene and Amara had done, it was bad.
Bad enough for Selene to panic. Bad enough to involve imperial blood. Bad enough that people had disappeared.
They were trapped.
Not by what they knew.
By what they didn't know.
The lobby settled into tense waiting. Officers moving through on their routines. The desk sergeant's pen scratching across forms. The quiet hum of fluorescent lights overhead.
Lord Garrick stood with his walking stick. Ninety years of political maneuvering. Ninety years of knowing exactly what to do.
But you couldn't maneuver around evidence you couldn't see. Couldn't calculate moves when you didn't understand the game being played.
All he could do was wait.
Wait for the lawyers.
Wait for the evidence.
Wait for whatever truth was about to emerge from behind those closed doors.
The weight of it pressed down on him. Heavy. Suffocating.
He'd built an empire through careful calculation. Through understanding power's delicate balance. Through always—always—knowing more than his opponents.
Standing in this institutional lobby with its harsh lighting and bureaucratic efficiency, one thought kept circling through his mind.
For the first time in ninety years, he was operating blind.
And that terrified him more than any crime could.