Arik's first thought after crossing the Wrohan border was that he still hated this country.
His second was that hatred, apparently, could survive death, rebirth, diplomacy, and twenty layers of imperial restraint without losing any of its sharpness.
Wrohan still deserved to burn.
The thought settled in his mind with the same cold certitude it always had, unsoftened by time, unaffected by reason, and amplified by the ugly gold and red-eyed owl brooch pinned to the right side of his crisp white shirt collar.
Wrohan still felt like a thorn in the side of history.
And Arik, unfortunately for everyone involved, had a very good memory.
The train cut through the outer districts of the capital under a white-gray sky, its windows tinted against glare and ether interference, offering fractured glimpses of the city as if Wrohan itself could not decide what face it wanted to wear today. Steel towers rose beside older stone facades carved with the remnants of dynastic vanity. Elevated etherlines glowed in pale blue veins between districts, carrying power, data, warding, surveillance, and all the other things modern empires liked to pretend made them superior to the bloodier versions that came before.
Arik looked out the window and thought, with perfect clarity, that Wrohan had simply learned how to hide its rot under better lighting.
Across from him, Noah Claymore had the look of a man who had long since accepted that all his life choices were punishment for something unforgivable done in a previous incarnation.
"That expression," Noah said without lifting his deep green eyes from the tablet in his hand, "is exactly why people keep mistaking diplomatic visits for military threats when you're involved."
Arik said nothing.
Noah glanced up, met his eyes, and sighed. "There it is. Silence. Always a promising sign."
"I am thinking," Arik replied.
"That," Noah said, setting the tablet down with the weary caution of a man about to negotiate with a natural disaster, "is exactly what concerns me."
Arik did not look away from the window.
The train had begun to cut deeper into Alexandria now, leaving behind the more controlled government corridors and entering one of the commercial arteries feeding the evening districts. The light outside had changed with the hour. The city, which had looked merely expensive before, was beginning to cross the line into the theatrical.
Ether lanterns bloomed to life along the elevated walkways. Glass-fronted towers reflected ribbons of blue-white current from the transit lines above. Lower in the streets, whole sections of the district were brightening in layers, not with the disciplined glow of infrastructure, but with the warm, cluttered, deliberately festive sprawl of a public celebration.
Arik's gaze sharpened.
Below, a long avenue had been partially closed to traffic and turned into a night market.
Temporary canopies stretched in rows over the street in black, gold, and deep red, their edges stitched with cheap light charms that flickered in uneven but energetic waves. Food stalls crowded one side of the avenue, their signs lit in mixed ether and neon, smoke rising from grills and open burners in fragrant coils. The other side had been given over to street performers, small artisan stands, children darting between adults with glowing toys in their hands, and portable stages where musicians were setting up under suspended strings of light.
It was modern, crowded, loud, and offensive in precisely the way public joy often was when attached to a kingdom Arik despised.
He continued looking.
Then he said, with calm finality, "I want to get out."
Noah closed his eyes for one full second.
When he opened them again, there was no hope left in them at all. "No."
Arik finally glanced at him. "That wasn't a discussion."
"Yes, I gathered that from the tone, which is unfortunate, because it should be." Noah picked up the tablet again as if paperwork could somehow shield him from this conversation. "The route was already agreed upon. Extensively. Painfully. In triplicate. We arrive, go through the receiving line, endure the station formalities, and proceed directly to the guest residence assigned by the Crown Council. That was the arrangement."
"I find that arrangement uninspiring."
Noah stared at him. "It is diplomacy. Inspiration is not one of its core functions."
Arik turned his attention back to the avenue below. A burst of sound rose faintly even through the train's insulated glass as some section of the crowd erupted into applause. "I want to see whether Wrohan actually has the power to fuel that."
Noah's brow furrowed. "What?"
"That market." Arik nodded once toward the street below. "I want to know if this is ordinary indulgence or if they lit up an entire district simply because an imperial delegation happened to pass through it."
Noah followed his gaze and immediately regretted it.
The night market stretched farther than either of them had first realized, occupying not merely one avenue but bleeding into two adjoining streets and a lower plaza beyond them. Lantern frames, ether screens, lit signs, cooking stations, decorative wards, and performance lighting all made the place look bright enough to suggest either real abundance or planned excess.
In Wrohan, the distinction mattered.
"You want to investigate their municipal sincerity," Noah said flatly.
"I want to investigate whether they are wasteful liars in public as well as in policy."
"They are," Noah said. "We know that already."
"I prefer evidence."
Noah pressed two fingers to the bridge of his nose. "Of course you do."
Arik rose.
That, more than the statement itself, made Noah sit up straighter. "Absolutely not."
The movement was elegant, unhurried, and therefore infinitely more threatening than if Arik had done something dramatic. He adjusted the dark cuff of his coat and looked again toward the bright artery of the district below with the interest of a man spotting something entertaining on the horizon.
Noah also rose, because staying seated while Arik made decisions like this felt irresponsible on a moral level. "Arik."
"Hmm."
"The route," Noah said, with thinning patience, "was already cleared. Security was arranged. Timing was coordinated. Wrohan already has our expected arrival, our escort, and our designated destination."
"And now they can practice flexibility."
"That is not how host kingdoms enjoy being treated."
Arik's expression remained unchanged. "Then tonight will broaden their horizons."
Noah looked at him for a long moment, perhaps measuring whether there remained any amount of reason still alive in the room. Apparently dissatisfied with the findings, he reached for his comm device instead.
"Fine," he said. "I'm calling Mezos."
Arik's mouth shifted very slightly. "You say that as though Mezos is an instrument of order."
"He is, at minimum, another voice."
"A deeply optimistic interpretation."
Noah ignored him and opened the line.
There was a short pause, then Mezos's voice came through, clean and mildly distorted by the connection. "This had better be urgent, because I'm currently reviewing the final station security layering, and one of Wrohan's men just lied to me with enough confidence to make it personal."
Noah looked at Arik. Then at the window. Then back at Arik. "Your prince has decided he wants to get off the train before arrival."
