Chapter 102: Suitors
Jack sat alone in his chambers two nights after the interrogation, surrounded by the detritus of governance.
Reports and maps of Sorne’s districts lay scattered across his desk like fallen leaves, marked with notations of things needed to be done.
His fingers traced the edge of a report Octavia had left him labeled "Marcus Thorne/Phallanax Solutions."
The spy had broken completely under his mother’s touch.
Jack had watched a man’s mind shatter like glass dropped on stone. The terror into his eyes was real. Whatever exactly Jack’s mother did, it made a grown man want to kill himself.
And it left Jack feeling hollow.
’When did I become someone who stands in a room while a man screams?’ he wondered.
He thought of Caelen’s oath. The priest kneeling in that stone chamber, offering his life with the quiet dignity of a man who’d found his true calling. That had felt clean. A choice made in light, witnessed by honor.
The interrogation had felt like something else entirely.
Jack rose and walked to the window, pressing his palm against the cool glass.
Simple things that made him feel full. Things that people needed to live life comfortably. That’s what Jack had set out to do.
But, what his mother did was on another level.
’I guess it makes sense. Those in power determine everything. And if I’m not willing to do the same, one day someone will do those things to me.’
The weight of it pressed against his shoulders like a mantle made of lead.
’Is this what ruling actually means?’ Jack thought. ’Trading pieces of your soul for pieces of power until you can’t remember which you started with?’
Caelen’s voice echoed in his memory: "I have had time to count the nights I took terror for prudence."
Perhaps that was the real question. Not whether the methods were clean, but whether the choices were made from fear or from something better.
The spy would have sold Sorne’s secrets to Marcus Thorne. Thorne would have used those secrets to choke the city’s prosperity, to make citizens pay twice for water that should flow freely.
Sometimes mercy was just fear wearing noble clothes.
Jack picked up a quill and began writing orders for the morning.
--
The final day of the grand banquet passed like a whirlwind.
Merchants circled like well-dressed vultures, each hoping to secure exclusive contracts for grain silos, Jack’s products or bathhouse blueprints.
Jack received them in the great hall with Octavia at his side, her ledger open and her smile sharp as winter steel.
Terms that favored Sorne’s long-term interests over short-term profit.
"But Lord Kaiser," protested a silk merchant whose rings could have fed a village, "surely a man of your vision understands the value of strategic partnerships?"
"I understand the value of competition," Jack replied pleasantly. "My blueprints will be available to any house that meets our standards and pays our prices. Excellence should be accessible, not hoarded."
The man left disappointed but contractually bound.
Envoys gossiped in corners about the Aurora and Jack, if they were actually engaged or not. Jack ignored the gossip because he could care less who knew.
The minor nobles tested him with small intrigues.
Hints about grain shortages that might require emergency purchases. Whispered concerns about foreign merchants undercutting local suppliers.
Suggestions that certain trade routes needed "protection" from bandits who coincidentally operated near their lands.
Jack deflected each probe with the skill of a master swordsman, acknowledging their concerns while committing to nothing that would give them leverage over Sorne’s independence.
By the final evening, patterns had emerged. Alliances had been offered and declined. Contracts had been signed and witnessed. The political landscape around Sorne had shifted in subtle but significant ways.
Jack stood on his balcony watching everyone who pressed him leave through the estate gates, returning to their own lands with stories to tell of the young lord Kaiser.
The late afternoon sun painted the courtyard in shades of gold and amber when Jack found his sister holding up men beneath the flowering trees.
Five suitors had arranged themselves around Octavia, each trying to appear casual while clearly having spent hours preparing for this moment.
Lord Garrett, heir to a shipping fortune, spoke earnestly about trade routes while gesturing with hands that had never touched a rope.
Sir Marcus, a knight whose armor looked suspiciously new, recited poetry about her eyes like a man who’d memorized verses the night before.
A young baron whose name Jack hadn’t caught brought rare books, a foreign envoy offered spices from distant lands, and a merchant prince’s son displayed a necklace that looked like night stars.
Octavia received each offering with gracious politeness and the kind of smile that revealed nothing while acknowledging everything.
"How thoughtful," she said to the knight, accepting a scroll of his verse. "I’ll treasure this always."
The knight beamed. Octavia’s eyes found Jack’s across the courtyard, and he caught the slight lift of her eyebrow that meant rescue me before I die of boredom.
[I think your sister is annoyed.]
’It looks that way.’
Jack approached with the casual stroll of a protective brother who’d been sharpening knives.
"Gentlemen," he said warmly, "I hope my sister is entertaining you appropriately."
"Lord Kaiser," the baron stuttered, "we were just admiring Lady Octavia’s... that is, discussing the finer points of..."
"Literature," Octavia finished smoothly. "These gentlemen have such fascinating perspectives on poetry."
"Poetry," Jack repeated in a serious tone.
[Potential alliances detected!]
[Marriage contracts could increase the influence of the Kaiser name.]
’She’s my sister, not a bargaining chip,’ Jack told the System firmly.
"Lord Garrett was just talking about something ti di with shipping. I didint quite understand it though." Octavia continued in a sweet subtle tone.
"Were you?" Jack asked with genuine interest. "That sounds complex."
Lord Garrett opened his mouth, closed it, and began to sweat despite the cool afternoon air.
"Perhaps," Jack suggested gently, "you gentlemen might join my father for wine in the hall? He’d love to hear more about your various expertise."
The suitors recognized a que to leave her alone. They made their gracious farewells to Octavia, who accepted each with the same radiant smile.
When the courtyard had cleared, Jack settled onto the bench beside his sister.
"Enjoying yourself?" he asked.
"Immensely," Octavia replied dryly. "Nothing quite like watching grown men compete to demonstrate their ignorance in increasingly creative ways."
"The books were nice," Jack offered.
"The books were expensive," she corrected. "Nice would have been if he’d actually read them first."
"And my brilliant sister, pretending not to understand the relationship between trade logistics and poetry?" Jack’s mouth quirked in amusement. "You might as well have claimed the moon was made of cheese."
Octavia’s laugh was like sound of silver bells. "They expected intellectual frailty. I simply gave them what they were looking for."
They sat in comfortable silence, watching servants clear away the scattered gifts and flower petals.
"Any of them interesting enough to consider?" Jack asked eventually.
Octavia gave him a look that could have cut glass. "Brother dear, if I wanted a pet, I’d choose something with better conversational skills. Perhaps a horse."
"You’re terrible," Jack said, grinning.
"I learned from the best," she replied sweetly.
Jack rose to continue his rounds, wondering what other mischief his sisters might be orchestrating.
’Oh my... what have you done Celeste.’