Time/Date: Early Morning, TC1853.01.08
Location: Metropolitan Police Station - 4th Ring, Interview Room One
They'd moved Imperial Heir Kael to the station's largest interview room. Partly for his status—though that's what they'd told him. Mostly because Morrison figured they'd need space for what was coming. The room's walls were lined with screens for surveillance footage, and someone had cleared the large table down to bare surface.
When Morrison entered with Commissioner Wu, Kael sat the way imperial training demanded—spine straight, shoulders back, every inch the heir. His golden eyes held this mix of arrogance and barely leashed fury that probably worked wonders in court politics. The expensive silk robes practically radiated authority, the kind that had opened doors his entire life.
His lawyer—sharp-faced guy whose features carried the permanent tension of someone always calculating angles—looked up from his notes. Professional wariness flickered across his expression, though Morrison could see the man still believed imperial privilege would protect his client.
The atmosphere felt charged. Dangerous in that pre-storm way.
"Your Highness." Morrison's voice carried measured respect, though you could hear steel underneath if you listened. "Thank you for your patience. I've completed my review of all the evidence in this case, and there are—" He paused, choosing words carefully. "Significant inconsistencies between your statement and the physical evidence."
Kael's jaw tightened, but he kept that imperial composure. "I've told you everything I remember about that night, Inspector. If your investigation has revealed additional information about Mara's deceptions, I'm prepared to hear it."
There it was—that absolute certainty in his voice. The conviction of someone who'd already decided the truth and was just waiting for everyone else to catch up.
Morrison set his first evidence folder on the table. Deliberate. Careful. "Let's start with this." He placed down a high-resolution photograph of the crystal glass, marked with different colored indicators showing where prints had been lifted. "This is the glass that contained the Amber Kiss—the substance you claim Mara used to drug you."
"Yes, obviously. She prepared it and forced me to consume it."
"Interesting." Morrison's voice carried that neutral tone people use right before they're about to point out a problem. He placed a second photograph beside the first—this one showing the fingerprint analysis overlay. "The forensic analysis shows three sets of prints on this glass. Selene Lin's on the base and stem. Amara Brenner's on the upper rim. And Mara Brenner's positioned where someone would hold it to drink."
He paused, let that sink in. "Your prints aren't on this glass at all, Your Highness."
The silence stretched, but instead of shock, Kael's expression shifted through rapid calculations. Like he was running through explanations, finding ones that fit what he already believed.
"She must have tampered with it afterward," Kael said, though his voice held a thread of uncertainty now. "Removed my prints somehow to make it look like she was the victim. It's exactly the kind of manipulative—"
"How?" Morrison interrupted, gentle but firm. "How would a seventeen-year-old servant girl remove fingerprints from evidence without leaving traces of the tampering? And why would she bother, when she could simply have disposed of the glass entirely?"
Kael's hands clenched on the table. "I don't know the technical details of her deceptions. But I know what happened to me. I remember drinking something that tasted wrong. I remember the effects."
His lawyer leaned forward. "Inspector, absence of fingerprints doesn't prove my client wasn't drugged. Perhaps the glass was wiped clean by hotel staff before these prints were added. Perhaps—"
"The prints were preserved immediately after the incident," Morrison cut in. "Mara Brenner brought this glass directly to the station as evidence. No hotel staff touched it. No cleaning occurred." He pulled out another document. "The positioning of these three sets of prints is consistent with collaborative preparation by two people—Lin and Amara Brenner—with Mara as the intended target."
"No." Kael's voice rose slightly, imperial authority straining against doubt. "This is wrong. You're reading the evidence incorrectly. Mara drugged me. I know she did."
Morrison pulled out his tablet. "Your Highness, according to hotel surveillance and multiple witness statements, Mara Brenner never came within ten feet of you the entire evening. She never approached any server in your area. She deliberately stayed on the opposite side of the ballroom."
He displayed the first clip—timestamped footage showing the ballroom layout, Kael in one section, Mara carefully maintaining distance in another.
"So I need to understand—how did someone who never approached you manage to drug your drink?"
Kael stared at the footage, golden eyes reflecting growing confusion. "She's cunning. She must have paid someone. Bribed a server to—"
"With what money?" Morrison's question hit like a hammer. "Mara Brenner has no access to family funds. No allowance, no servant wages—according to household records, she wasn't even provided basic necessities like food or proper clothing. She had to work outside jobs just to eat and pay for her own schooling." He paused. "How would a seventeen-year-old with literally no resources bribe hotel staff at one of the most exclusive establishments in the empire?"
The question hung there. Logic was warring with Kael's need to believe what Amara had told him.
"She... there has to be an explanation. Some way she managed—" Kael's voice cracked slightly before he forced it steady. "Are you suggesting I'm lying about being drugged? That I imagined the entire thing?"
"Not at all," Morrison replied carefully. "The toxicology report confirms trace amounts of aphrodisiac compounds in your system." He placed the medical report on the table, watching Kael's reaction closely. "But here's what's interesting—the levels detected suggest you consumed something designed to enhance experience and lower inhibitions, not to incapacitate you. The confused memories you describe? Those likely came from the Celestial Union Incense."
He pulled up another forensic report. "The incense creates a euphoric, dream-like state that makes memory formation unreliable. Combined with mild aphrodisiacs and the power of suggestion, it would be very easy for someone to plant false memories—to tell you what happened while you were in that altered state, and have you believe it completely."
Morrison leaned forward slightly, his weathered face showing the weight of three decades reading people. "Your Highness, you weren't drugged into unconsciousness. You were drugged into suggestibility. Someone positioned you in that room with just enough impairment to make you vulnerable to manipulation, then filled in the blanks of your fragmented memories with whatever narrative suited their purposes."
He activated the wall-mounted screen. "Furthermore, Your Highness, I need you to watch this footage carefully. This is from the Grand Imperial Hotel's security system."
The timestamp read 11:47 PM. Clear footage showed Kael entering the hotel lobby, speaking with the doorman, and proceeding toward the elevators. His movements were confident. Speech clear. Coordination perfect.
"Do you see any signs of severe impairment in this footage?"
Kael stared at the screen. His jaw worked, golden eyes wide. "I... that can't be right. I was drugged. I remember feeling disoriented—"
Morrison advanced to the next clip. Kael in the elevator. Then, walking down the sixth-floor corridor. "This footage shows you proceeding directly to room 623 with a clear purpose. No stumbling, no confusion, no obvious signs of incapacitation."
"The drugs were subtle!" Kael's voice rose with something approaching desperation. "They affected my judgment without affecting coordination. That's how these substances work—making you want things you wouldn't normally—"
"That's possible," Morrison acknowledged. "But it contradicts your earlier statement that you were so impaired you couldn't form clear memories or make rational decisions." He paused. "Which is it, Your Highness? Were you mildly affected but fully aware, or were you incapacitated?"
Kael opened his mouth. Closed it. The contradiction was obvious even to him.
His lawyer jumped in. "My client was under the influence of substances without his consent. The exact degree of impairment is difficult to quantify in retrospect—"
"And yet he's certain enough to make specific accusations," Morrison countered. "Certain it was, Mara Brenner. Certain, she drugged him. Certain she was in that hotel room." He placed another photograph on the table. "Surveillance shows a woman leaving room 623 just before daybreak. Face concealed, wearing a hotel staff uniform, very aware of camera placement."
The figure in the image was clearly not Mara—different build, different height, movements showing familiarity with the hotel layout that a guest wouldn't have.
"This woman is not Mara Brenner, Your Highness."
"That's..." Kael's voice cracked. "That's impossible. I saw her. I remember her face—"
"Do you?" Morrison leaned forward slightly. "Or do you remember what you were told you saw? What someone convinced you that must have happened?"
The question struck something deep. Kael's breathing quickened despite imperial training.
"Furthermore," Morrison continued, "there's a critical timeline issue we need to address. According to our records, Mara Brenner arrived at this police station at 12:47 AM on the night of the incident. She filed a formal complaint about attempted poisoning, provided evidence, and gave a detailed statement about the conspiracy to drug her."
He pulled up the station logs. "She was here, Your Highness. In this building. Giving her statement to our officers. At the exact time you claim she was in that hotel room with you."
The silence that followed was deafening.
Kael stared at the timestamp. His face went through several colors—white, then red, then something approaching gray. "No. That's... she must have come here after. After she fled the room—"
"The hotel surveillance shows you entering room 623 at 12:02 AM," Morrison said quietly. "Mara Brenner walked into this station at 12:47 AM. That's less than an hour later. Even if she had been in that room with you, fled immediately, she couldn't have reached this station, composed herself, and provided the detailed, coherent statement our officers documented."
He placed the interview transcript on the table. "This is a thirty-page statement, Your Highness. Detailed descriptions of the poisoning attempt, names of conspirators, timeline of events, and a list of witnesses. This took over two hours to document. She was here from 12:47 AM until nearly 3:00 AM."
Morrison paused, let the math sink in. "You remained in that hotel room until approximately 6:00 AM, when Amara Brenner discovered you. So I'll ask directly—how could Mara Brenner be in two places at once?"
Morrison leaned back, studying Kael with the careful attention of someone who'd spent decades reading people. "Your Highness, I need to ask you something directly. Why?"
Kael blinked. "Why what?"
"Why are you so determined to destroy Mara Brenner?" Morrison's voice was quiet but relentless. "You've made serious accusations against a seventeen-year-old girl who has a documented alibi, no resources to commit the crimes you describe, and every piece of physical evidence pointing to her as the victim, not the perpetrator."
He spread the evidence across the table. "Yet you persist. Even when confronted with proof that contradicts your story, you search for alternative explanations rather than accept the obvious—that you've been lied to about who's responsible."
Morrison fixed Kael with a steady gaze. "So I have to ask—what has Mara Brenner ever done to you to warrant this level of persecution? What did she do that makes you hate her enough to ignore evidence, logic, and reason?"
The question hit like a physical blow. Kael's jaw worked silently.
"Because from where I'm sitting," Morrison continued, "this looks personal. This looks like someone with a grudge using false accusations to destroy a powerless girl. And that raises some very concerning questions, Your Highness."
Commissioner Wu stepped forward, his voice carrying cold authority. "Questions like: Did you arrange that hotel room yourself? Did you participate in this conspiracy willingly? Are these accusations revenge for something Mara did—or didn't do—that wounded your pride?"
Kael's face went white. "That's—I would never—"
"Then explain it to me," Morrison pressed. "Explain why you're so committed to believing she's guilty despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. What is it about this girl that makes you refuse to see the truth?"
The silence stretched. Kael's hands clenched and unclenched on the table.
"I..." His voice came out strained. "She's always watching me. With those eyes. Judging. Like she knows something—" He cut himself off, realizing how it sounded.
"She watches you?" Wu's voice carried dangerous skepticism. "Your Highness, the surveillance footage shows you watching her throughout the banquet. Multiple instances where your attention tracks her movements even when she's nowhere near you. If anyone was obsessed, the evidence suggests it was you fixating on her."
Morrison placed the surveillance compilation on the table—clip after clip showing Kael's gaze finding Mara across the ballroom.
"Furthermore," Wu continued, "there's the matter of false accusations. Making knowingly false statements to police in a criminal investigation is a serious offense. Filing false charges against a minor carries additional penalties under the International Children Protection Act."
He paused, let that sink in. "If we determine that you knowingly lied about Mara Brenner drugging you, that you fabricated this entire narrative to harm her reputation or for revenge, you'll face criminal charges regardless of your imperial status."
Kael's breathing came faster. "I didn't lie. I was drugged. I remember—"
"What do you remember?" Morrison asked quietly. "Really? Or what were you told to remember?"
The question hung there, exposing the core weakness in Kael's certainty.
Morrison pulled out another report. "There's also the matter of the hotel room itself. It was prepared with Celestial Union Incense—a sacred substance used exclusively for celestial family wedding ceremonies. Highly restricted, requiring authorization from the highest levels."
He fixed Kael with a steady gaze. "How would Mara Brenner—a servant girl with no connections, no money, no access to celestial family resources—obtain and use something that requires bloodline verification and official documentation?"
The question struck home. Kael's golden eyes widened as implications crystallized.
"Someone with extraordinary access prepared that room, Your Highness. Someone with resources far beyond what a servant could ever possess. And that someone wasn't Mara Brenner."
"Then who?" Kael's question emerged desperate, his absolute certainty finally showing cracks. "If not Mara, then who would go to such elaborate lengths?"
Morrison placed one final piece of evidence on the table—the blood analysis report. "The sheets from room 623 show blood evidence indicating loss of virginity. Type AB-negative—relatively rare. It doesn't match Mara Brenner. Doesn't match Amara Brenner. Doesn't match Selene Lin." He paused. "Doesn't match anyone currently in custody."
The implications crashed over Kael. His breath came shallow, quick. "The woman in the surveillance footage," he whispered. "The one in a hotel uniform..."
"One of four hotel workers who disappeared after that night," Morrison confirmed. "Three servers from the banquet, one morning shift worker. All vanished without collecting wages, without notifying supervisors. Either they're dead, or they're hiding from whoever used them."
He leaned back, let the weight of evidence settle. "Your Highness, I believe you were drugged. I believe someone positioned you in that hotel room deliberately. But I also believe you've been led to blame the wrong person—perhaps by the actual conspirator."
Kael sat frozen. Everything he'd believed, everything Amara had told him, every accusation he'd made—all of it crumbling under the weight of timestamps, fingerprints, surveillance footage that couldn't lie.
But accepting that meant accepting he'd been manipulated. That the woman he loved had used him. That he'd spent days destroying an innocent girl's reputation based on lies.
His pride, that imperial arrogance, wouldn't let him fully believe it. Not yet.
"This doesn't prove Mara's innocence," he said finally, voice strained. "It raises questions, yes. Creates doubts. But there could be explanations we haven't considered—"
"Like what?" Morrison asked quietly.
Kael had no answer. Just the desperate need to believe his version of events, because the alternative was too devastating.
His lawyer cleared his throat. "Inspector, my client has cooperated fully with your investigation. If you're not filing charges—"
"We're not filing charges against His Highness at this time," Commissioner Wu interjected, speaking for the first time in minutes. "But we strongly suggest he remain available for further questioning. And we suggest he consider very carefully who has been shaping his perceptions, and why."
Wu stood, military bearing radiating authority. "Furthermore, Your Highness, there's the matter of room 623 itself. You proceeded there with clear purpose and coordination. Yet that room wasn't registered under your name. Can you explain why you were entering a hotel room you didn't arrange?"
The question struck like a blade. Kael's face went white.
"Who told you to go to that specific room? And why would you follow such instructions?"
Kael closed his eyes. Tried desperately to remember. Had there been a message? A note? Or had Amara simply whispered something, planted suggestions that his drug-hazed mind had accepted as his own decisions?
"I..." His voice came out strangled. "I can't remember clearly. Everything is confused."
"Convenient," Wu observed coldly. "Confused enough to excuse your actions, but certain enough to make specific accusations against Mara Brenner."
He moved toward the door. "Think carefully about your next steps, Your Highness. Because right now, the evidence suggests you're either a victim of manipulation or a willing participant in the conspiracy. And the International Children Protection Act doesn't care which—if you were intimate with that missing servant girl, if she was underage, if consent cannot be proven..."
He let the threat hang. Life imprisonment. Disgrace. Everything Kael had ever worked for, destroyed.
"We'll be in touch," Morrison said, gathering his files. "In the meantime, I suggest you ask yourself why Amara Brenner was so quick to tell you it was Mara. Why did she supply that narrative before your memories could clear? And why are her fingerprints on a glass containing illegal substances intended for her stepsister?"
As the door closed behind them, Kael sat in stunned silence. His lawyer began speaking—something about legal strategy, damage control—but the words washed over him.
The evidence contradicted everything he'd believed. The timestamps proved Mara couldn't have been in two places at once. The surveillance showed him moving with clear purpose to a room he claimed not to remember arranging.
But accepting that meant accepting he'd been played. Used. Turned into a weapon against an innocent girl while the real conspirator watched and smiled.
His pride wouldn't let him fully believe it. Not yet. There had to be another explanation. Somehow, Mara had managed to orchestrate this despite every piece of evidence suggesting otherwise.
Because if it wasn't Mara, if Amara had lied to him, if he'd spent days destroying an innocent girl's reputation based on manufactured memories...
Then he was something far worse than a victim.
And Kael wasn't ready to face that truth.