Chapter 21

SELENE

When the chamber reconvenes, it no longer pretends to be neutral.

It has crossed some invisible threshold in the last hour and emerged meaner, brighter, and more afraid of itself.

The overhead crystal panels pour down tribunal light so clean it feels surgical, every polished surface throwing back a version of the room that looks more orderly than the reality moving inside it.

The air is warmer than it should be from packed bodies, hot projection rigs, and the sheer friction of too many people trying not to lose control at once, yet beneath the warmth there is that familiar antiseptic chill, the scent of institutions trying to smell sterile while they panic.

The gallery is fuller than before. Civilian Oversight Board members occupy a newly designated bench near the central aisle, their presence signaled by fresh credentials and the brittle self-importance of people who have been granted emergency relevance and know it.

Senators sit rigidly in faction clusters, robes immaculate, eyes bright with outrage or calculation or both.

Security has thickened around the chamber perimeter, officers spaced closer, shoulders squared, weapons sealed but visible, as though the building expects truth itself to become a physical threat.

Maybe it already has.

My bench is positioned beside the archival console, and the projection field above it glows in standby mode, soft and pale, waiting for a command that will either expand the case or get me thrown out of it.

I set my compad on the console and feel the faint warmth of its casing against my palm.

My nausea has settled into a low, sour pulse somewhere beneath my ribs, not enough to stop me, just enough to remind me that my body has become a second secret threaded through the first. I breathe through it.

Cold air. Antiseptic. Warm circuitry. Stone.

Sweat. The whole chamber smells like fear dressed for court.

Across the room, Rhyx stands under guard with his wrists bound in that faint blue glow the tribunal seems so attached to, and even from here I can see the shift in him after his statement before recess.

He is not calmer. He is simply done pretending restraint and surrender are cousins.

There is a steadiness in him now that feels less like discipline and more like decision, like something old and self-punishing has finally cracked and let a sharper thing through.

Drax calls the session back to order, her voice carrying that hard metallic resonance tribunal acoustics lend to authority.

She looks exhausted in the tiny ways only people accustomed to high pressure can read—the slight strain around her eyes, the economy of her motion, the stiffness in the line of her mouth—but none of that softens her.

If anything, it makes her look more dangerous.

“This tribunal,” she says, “will address pending evidentiary issues arising from recently introduced strategic materials and cross-jurisdiction submissions. Scope remains under review. Order will be maintained.”

That last sentence lands like a warning flare.

Thane is already on his feet by the time she finishes. Of course he is. Men like Marris Thane live in the first half-second after a crisis, when the story is still liquid enough to shape.

“High Arbiter,” he says, smooth as lacquer, “before we proceed further into speculative expansion, the prosecution requests reaffirmation that this remains a negligence case. The defendant’s recent rhetoric, however dramatic, does not magically convert theory into causation.”

Theory.

The word hangs there, dry and bloodless.

He turns slightly toward the gallery and the drones in one motion so polished I could scream.

“The tribunal has seen metadata references to strategic doctrine materials. Metadata is not implementation. Framework is not order. We caution this chamber against mistaking abstract wartime modeling for direct operational command.”

Abstract.

I feel something cold and sharp slide into place inside me. Not anger exactly—anger is too messy and wide for this moment. This is narrower. Cleaner. The shape of a decision.

I rise before I can second-guess myself.

“High Arbiter,” I say.

The room notices immediately. You can feel it, the slight turn of collective attention, the shifting of weight, the soft reorientation of broadcast drones.

My name has already been fed to the public enough times that I have become, unwillingly, one of the chamber’s focal points.

Compromised liaison. Grieving daughter. Leak suspect.

Scope risk. Pregnant woman no one officially knows is pregnant.

The labels stack without canceling one another.

Drax’s gaze cuts to me. “Liaison Ardent.”

“I request formal permission,” I say, voice steady, “to introduce supplemental strategic documentation tied to convoy shielding protocols and wartime command doctrine under Transparency Reform contextual review provisions.”

Thane turns so quickly the edge of his robe snaps. “Objection.”

I don’t wait for him.

While he breathes in to dress up the objection, I hit the console and unlock the projection.

The chamber lights shift automatically, not enough to darken the room but enough to make the display bloom bright and unavoidable above us.

The Sacrificial Stabilization Doctrine header fills the air in clean tribunal font, too elegant for what it contains, and beneath it the signatory chain unfolds in pale gold and white.

SACRIFICIAL STABILIZATION DOCTRINE

Strategic Civilian Exposure Framework

Flag-Level Authorization: Vol, Caedrin

The chamber inhales.

I hear it as a sound—not one person, but the aggregate intake of a room realizing the ugly name they hoped would remain theoretical is now projected twenty feet tall over the tribunal floor.

Thane lunges toward the prosecution console. “Cut that feed.”

Security officers near the wall shift instantly, and two of them start toward my bench.

I keep going.

“This doctrine file,” I say, voice amplified now because the console has routed me through official chamber audio, “contains strategic modeling tables that assign acceptable civilian casualty thresholds under convoy shielding scenarios.”

Thane’s voice crashes over mine. “High Arbiter, classified doctrine exceeds the active negligence charge scope. This display is unauthorized—”

“Unauthorized by whom?” I fire back, and I don’t look at him because I want the words aimed at the room, not the man. “By the same people who closed the breach inquiry?”

A murmur breaks loose in the gallery.

I scroll.

The first table appears, suspended huge and merciless above the chamber.

Acceptable Casualty Thresholds Under Convoy Shield Prioritization Conditions

– Civilian Density Index

– Strategic Asset Priority

– Retaliation Probability

– Narrative Volatility Range

– Recommended Exposure Adjustment

– Casualty Band: Acceptable

Acceptable.

This time the public can see it with me.

Gasps ripple through the gallery. One senator actually says, too loudly, “No,” and then looks around as if denying vocabulary can undo projection.

I drag the doctrine table beside the Kirell orbital grid and overlay the reroute window. Then I add the casualty comparison model I built from municipal telemetry, shuttle correction paths, and artillery exposure bands.

“Under the original evacuation vector,” I say, my voice steady despite the way my pulse is slamming against the inside of my throat, “projected civilian exposure remains within survivable variance. Under the altered route, with convoy shielding enforced, exposure increases by forty-three percent. The doctrine’s own modeling language anticipates precisely this kind of adjustment. ”

The security officers reach the front of my bench.

“Step back from the console,” one says.

I don’t.

“Liaison Ardent,” Thane snaps, voice gone sharp enough to show the metal underneath, “you are exceeding your authority.”

I swipe again, and a case-study reference appears beneath the doctrine table—partial, because I only have headers and indexed cross-references, but enough.

KIRELL ORBITAL CORRIDOR — CASE STUDY

Execution Window: 14:00–14:06

Convoy Shield Priority / Civilian Traffic Clearance Adjustment

Now the room truly comes apart.

Not chaos—tribunal people are too well-trained for full chaos—but that more dangerous thing, a fracture in which every pocket of power begins arguing at once.

Senators turn to aides. Oversight board members lean forward so fast their robes bunch at the shoulders.

Security hesitates because dragging me bodily from the console while the words civilian casualty thresholds hover above the chamber would look a hell of a lot like panic.

Thane points at me as if pointing can make me less right. “This is prejudicial. This is unauthenticated doctrinal material presented without evidentiary vetting. Cut the projection now.”

I turn to Drax and cite before they can physically mute me.

“Transparency Reform Provision Twelve,” I say clearly, loudly, every syllable aimed like a nail, “requires full contextual review of reopened wartime archives where summary prosecution framing omits related strategic materials necessary to interpret causation, chain of command, or civilian impact.”

Drax’s expression hardens into something almost unreadable.

I keep going because if I stop, they’ll stop me.

“Provision Twelve also states that reopened records cannot be artificially severed from associated classification frameworks when those frameworks materially affect public understanding of wartime casualty events. The doctrine is not a separate matter. It is context.”

The officers reach for the console override.

I hit the lock command first.

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