Time/Date: Mid-Morning, TC1853.01.10
Location: Brenner Estate, Lord Garrick's Private Quarters
Edmund found Amara in the Rose Pavilion, where morning light streamed through crystal windows in shades of honey and gold. She sat at her vanity like she was posing for a portrait—hair arranged with that artful casualness that took an hour to perfect, face bearing just the right amount of concern mixed with innocence.
Outside, fountain water splashed in perfect choreography. Birds sang their oblivious songs. The world continuing its normal rhythms while everything else was crumbling.
"Amara." His voice came out strained, like something inside him had been slowly breaking over the past few days, and he'd finally run out of ways to patch it together. "Your grandfather wants to see you. Now."
Something flickered across her amber eyes—calculation, maybe, or genuine uncertainty masked so quickly you couldn't be sure you'd seen it at all. "Of course, Father." She rose with that fluid grace she'd practiced in mirrors since childhood, adjusting silk robes that probably cost more than most families earned in a year. "Is this about... her?"
The slight emphasis on that final word spoke volumes. Not "Mara." Not "my stepsister." Just her. Like the girl didn't merit even a name.
Edmund nodded. Didn't trust his voice. His mind still reeled from everything Selene had revealed last night—the triple baby swap, Caelia and Darian, seventeen years of deception layered upon deception until he couldn't remember which lies were his own and which belonged to others.
What have we done?
The question echoed with each footstep against marble floors that suddenly felt unfamiliar despite decades of residence. Every portrait on the walls seemed to watch with judging eyes—all those proud Brenner ancestors who'd clawed their way up from farmers to merchant princes. He wondered what they'd think of their descendants now. Whether they'd be proud of the ruthless pragmatism or disgusted by how far that pragmatism had taken them.
Every servant who stepped aside carried silent accusation in their bowed heads.
Or maybe that was just his guilt talking. Hard to tell anymore.
The estate felt different this morning. Heavier, somehow. Like the very air had thickened with secrets too long kept. Sunlight slanted through tall windows at angles that seemed all wrong, casting shadows that stretched too far. The salamander motifs worked into floors and walls—family totem, symbol of fire and transformation—suddenly looked less like emblems of pride and more like warnings about playing with flames you couldn't control.
At Garrick's door, Edmund knocked once. Entered without waiting for a response.
Old habit from childhood. You didn't make Father wait.
His father sat behind the desk, face still ashen but eyes sharp with that merchant's calculation that had built an empire. The kind of look that could assess the value of anything—goods, alliances, people—in seconds flat and never be wrong about the price.
Lady Isolde stood by the window, her rigid posture betraying tension beneath aristocratic composure. Those pale blue eyes tracked their entrance with the intensity of someone cataloging every detail for future use. Isolde never forgot anything. And she never forgave, either.
Selene sat small in her chair, hands twisted in her lap. The serpentine grace that usually defined her movements was completely absent, replaced by something that looked almost... broken.
Which was wrong. Selene didn't break. She bent others until they snapped.
But today she looked like a woman who'd finally run out of clever schemes and sharp words, and was facing the consequences of seventeen years of cruelty with nothing left to protect her.
Amara's gaze swept the room with that uncanny awareness she'd displayed since childhood—the kind that had first revealed her prophetic gifts to Garrick when she was barely nine. Her amber eyes lingered on each face. Reading. Assessing. Calculating with preternatural speed that always made Edmund slightly uncomfortable.
Like she was seeing things the rest of them couldn't. Futures that hadn't happened yet, or pasts that should've stayed buried.
"Sit." Garrick's command came with a gesture toward the chair beside Selene.
Amara obeyed with perfect poise. Chin slightly lowered in deference. Her hands were folded just so in her lap. The picture of a devoted granddaughter prepared to face whatever crisis threatened her beloved family.
Edmund had seen her practice this exact posture in mirrors when she thought no one was watching. Nothing about his daughter—if she even was his daughter anymore—happened by accident.
"Amara." Garrick's voice carried that iron authority Edmund had learned to fear as a child. The tone that meant Father had made a decision and nothing would change his mind. "Your mother has revealed certain... information... regarding the circumstances of Mara's origins."
Amber eyes widened slightly. Just enough to convey concern without overplaying innocence. "What about Mara, Grandfather?"
"She isn't Selene's biological daughter," Garrick said bluntly, pale eyes watching his granddaughter's reaction with hawk-like intensity. "She was stolen. From Caelia Lin and Darian Long. On the night of her birth."
The silence that followed stretched like drawn wire. Taut. Ready to snap.
Amara's face cycled through emotions—shock, confusion, growing comprehension—each one perfectly calibrated for maximum believability. If Edmund hadn't just learned the truth himself, he would've sworn his daughter knew nothing. Would've bet the entire estate on her innocence.
But Garrick's next words shattered that illusion like crystal striking stone.
"I know you've already seen this, child." His voice softened slightly—the merchant prince giving way to the grandfather who'd treasured this particular granddaughter since her prophetic gifts first manifested. "Your visions showed you the truth years ago, didn't they?"
Amara's carefully constructed surprise crumbled. Her shoulders sagged, and for just a moment she looked her actual age—seventeen, not the ageless schemer she'd become. "Yes, Grandfather." The admission came out quietly. "I... I saw fragments. Pieces of the past overlapping with possible futures. I knew something was wrong, but the visions were never complete enough to understand everything."
Tears welled in her amber eyes—and these, Edmund thought with sick certainty, might actually be real. "I saw that if I said anything, if anyone found out what I had seen, they'd take me away. That we'd all be destroyed."
Perfect.
The word whispered through consciousness that only Amara could hear. Ancient. Patient. Carrying cosmic weight wrapped in false benediction that felt more real than reality itself.
Let them see your pain. Your fear. Your desperate attempt to protect the family despite knowing the terrible truth.
The Devourer System's presence pressed against her awareness like oil on water—slick, invasive, wrong in ways that defied easy description. But unlike during the police interrogation—whenever that would happen—here in the privacy of Garrick's study, it felt emboldened. Safe. Ready to guide its chosen vessel toward inevitable triumph.
"What else did you see?" Isolde demanded, moving from the window with aristocratic precision that somehow made even walking across a room look like a political maneuver. "What other truths have you been hiding?"
Amara drew a shaking breath, the performance exquisite—real fear mixed with calculated revelation. "I saw... bloodlines. Three of them converging in Mara's spiritual channels. Long. Lin. And..." Her voice dropped to barely above a whisper. "Zhao. Lady Lian's legacy, carried forward through Darian into his stolen daughter."
Garrick's already labored breathing hitched. One weathered hand gripped the desk edge hard enough that ancient knuckles went bone-white. "You've known all this time that Mara carried tri-bloodline heritage?"
"I saw possibilities." Amara clarified, words tumbling out with practiced precision—each syllable carefully chosen to sound spontaneous while actually being anything but. "Futures where she awakened those bloodlines and destroyed everything. Other futures where they remained dormant and she lived as nothing more than a broken servant."
Fresh tears spilled over. "I tried to guide events toward the futures where our family survived. Where she never became the threat she could be. But my visions aren't perfect, Grandfather. You know this."
Excellent. The System purred with satisfaction that felt viscous against her thoughts. Now remind them of your value. Show them why they cannot afford to lose you.
"You've tested me hundreds of times over the years," she continued, voice breaking beautifully on cue. "The warehouse fire three days before it happened. The grain market collapse. The Wu clan's internal succession crisis." She looked up at Garrick with those amber eyes, swimming in tears. "I've been about seventy percent accurate since my gifts fully manifested at age nine. You know my abilities are real."
Edmund's head snapped toward his father, the movement too sharp. Almost violent. "You've known?" His voice climbed despite attempts at control. "All this time, you've known about Amara's Seer abilities?"
"Of course, I knew." Garrick dismissed the question with a wave that suggested Edmund was being deliberately obtuse. Never taking his eyes off Amara—like she was the only person in the room who mattered. "From the moment she predicted that warehouse fire. Then the market movements. The political shifts."
He leaned forward slightly, and something almost hungry flickered across his weathered face. "She's demonstrated her gifts repeatedly, Edmund. Why do you think I've invested so heavily in her future? Why do you think I've been so protective of her potential marriage prospects?"
His pale green eyes glittered with calculation and something approaching desperation—the look of a man who'd glimpsed salvation and would do anything to secure it. "A Seer, Edmund. A real Seer with seventy percent accuracy. Do you have any comprehension of what that means?"
The merchant prince was fully engaged now, voice taking on the fervor of someone describing a religious experience. "Families have risen to Ascendant status on less. The Xuán marriage isn't just about titles and territory—it's about securing the one asset that could elevate us beyond anything I've built in ninety years."
Edmund felt something cold settle in his chest. Not a surprise, exactly. More like confirmation of suspicions he'd been trying not to think about.
His father had always been ruthless in business, treating everything as a transaction. But hearing him discuss his granddaughter like she was a particularly valuable commodity...
"But now everything's at risk." Isolde's voice cut through with deadly calm that somehow felt more threatening than shouting. "When those DNA tests are processed, both the Long and Lin families will learn we've been harboring their stolen daughter. Torturing a child with tri-bloodline heritage. Poisoning a potential cosmic guardian."
She turned to Garrick, aristocratic mask cracking just enough to reveal genuine fear beneath. "They'll execute us all. Every Brenner down to the third generation. Unless..." Her gaze shifted to Amara. "Unless we can somehow prove this was all Selene's doing. That the rest of us were victims of her deception."
Yes. The System whispered urgently, its mental voice tight with something that might've been fear. Sacrifice the mother. Save the daughter. It's the only logical path.
But Garrick shook his head slowly, that merchant mind already working through implications and finding the math distressingly simple. "Selene's fingerprints are on that Amber Kiss glass. Her connection to the banquet scheme is already documented. The police investigation will eventually connect her to everything—the baby swap, the abuse, all of it."
His weathered face had gone grim. Hard. The expression of someone making calculations that involved human lives and finding them surprisingly easy to quantify. "No. Throwing Selene to the wolves might buy us days. Maybe weeks. But ultimately, they'll trace the conspiracy back through our entire household. Every Brenner will face judgment."
"Then what do we do?" Edmund's voice came out hollow, like someone had scooped out his insides and left only empty space behind. "Just... wait for them to destroy us?"
The study fell into heavy silence.
Outside, birds continued their cheerful ignorance. Fountains splashed with perfect rhythm. The world carrying on while the Brenner family faced extinction.
And then... something shifted.
Garrick's hand moved to his chest. Not the pained gesture from earlier when the shock had nearly triggered a heart attack. This was different. More... uncertain. Like he was trying to identify some new sensation that had no right to be there.
His pale green eyes went unfocused for a moment. Breath catching. Face cycling through confusion, then shock, then something that looked almost like religious awe mixed with primal terror—the kind of fear that didn't need understanding, only obedience.
Lord Garrick Brenner.
The voice that only he could hear carried weight beyond mortal comprehension. Ancient enough to make his soul shudder with instinctive recognition. The kind of authority that didn't ask for submission—it simply expected it, the way gravity expected things to fall.
Garrick's entire body went rigid. Hands gripping the desk until ancient knuckles turned bone-white and the shadowwood creaked under pressure that shouldn't have been possible for a ninety-year-old man.
"Father?" Edmund moved toward him, alarmed. He'd seen his father face down business rivals, survive three assassination attempts, negotiate with imperial ministers without breaking composure. But he'd never seen him look like this—like someone had just shown him the fundamental architecture of the universe and he was finding it both beautiful and terrible beyond description.
But Garrick waved him off with a trembling hand, his gaze fixed on something no one else could see. Listening to words no one else could hear.
And the expression on his face... like he was being shown truths that made everything else in his life suddenly, frighteningly small.
Your granddaughter carries divine purpose.
The Devourer System projected the words directly into Garrick's consciousness, its voice resonating with false cosmic authority that felt more authentic than authentic things. She is the chosen vessel of prophecy. The true heir of destiny. All obstacles to her rightful place must be removed.
The System had gambled.
Revealing itself to mortals was dangerous—it risked exposure, risked intervention from cosmic authorities who policed such violations with extreme prejudice. The kind of risk that could end in annihilation if the wrong forces noticed.
But desperate times called for desperate measures. And right now, with their carefully laid plans crumbling around them like sand castles at high tide, the Devourer needed Garrick Brenner to act decisively.
Needed him to become complicit in murder.
The girl you call Mara is an aberration. It continued, flooding Garrick's mind with carefully constructed visions that felt more solid than memory—more real than reality itself. A cosmic mistake that threatens to unravel everything. She will destroy your family. She will corrupt your granddaughter's destiny. She must be eliminated before she can awaken the powers that sleep within her bloodlines.
In his mind's eye, Garrick saw futures branching like tree limbs after a storm.
In one path, Mara lived. DNA tests confirmed her heritage. The Long and Lin families descended like avenging angels—not metaphorically, but literally, with the full weight of two celestial clans behind them carrying justice that transcended mortal courts. Executions in public squares. Extinction. The Brenner name erased from history as if it had never existed, estates burned, business empire dismantled, their very memory made cursed.
In another path, Mara died. A tragic accident during DNA retesting—unfortunate but explainable. The investigation stalled without its key witness. Amara's Seer abilities emerged as the family's salvation, securing the Xuán marriage and elevating them all beyond the reach of retribution. Titles. Power. A future where the Brenner name was spoken with reverence instead of contempt, where Garrick's ninety years of building finally paid off in ways that transcended mere wealth.
The visions were seductive. Intoxicating.
They showed him exactly what he wanted to see—not just survival, but triumph beyond anything he'd dared imagine.
She is not human. The System whispered with venomous certainty that felt like absolute truth—the kind you knew in your bones without needing proof. She is a weapon aimed at your granddaughter's heart. A cosmic error that will consume everything you've built if you don't act now. This very moment. Before it's too late.
"Grandfather?" Amara's voice seemed to come from very far away, like she was calling to him across an ocean. "Are you... are you receiving a vision?"
Garrick's eyes snapped back to focus.
For a long moment, he stared at his granddaughter with an expression Edmund couldn't quite read. Awe, perhaps. Or terror. Or that peculiar combination of both that came from brushing against forces far beyond mortal comprehension—the kind that made you realize how small and fragile human beings really were in the cosmic scheme of things.
How easily broken. How quickly forgotten.
"I..." Garrick's voice came out rough. Strained. Like something had fundamentally changed in the last few minutes, and he was still processing what that meant for everything else. "I just... heard something. A voice."
He straightened in his chair, and suddenly the merchant prince was back—the man who had built an empire through ruthless calculation and absolute conviction. Decision made. Path forward clear. Doubts—if he'd had any—buried under ninety years of practiced pragmatism and the seductive certainty of visions that aligned perfectly with his deepest desires.
"Confirming what Amara has been trying to tell us all along."
He leaned forward, pale eyes hard with resolve that Edmund recognized from decades of business deals where his father had decided someone's fate and nothing would change his mind.
"We can't allow those DNA tests to proceed."