Part 1
Philip's brain had officially filed for bankruptcy. Words? Gone. Coherent thought? On extended vacation. All that remained was the devastating awareness of water, warmth, and Natalia sliding into the pool beside him like some kind of aquatic temptation wrapped in sapphire.
"Temperature parameters verified," she announced with the gravity of a scientist discovering a new element. "Buoyancy coefficients within acceptable tolerances for recreational immersion."
Then her lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile—it was softer, more instinctive, like her body remembering joy before her mind could catalog it.
The sapphire bikini caught sunlight like it had been designed specifically to short-circuit his higher brain functions. Water beaded on her skin, each droplet a tiny lens magnifying his complete inability to look away. When she settled beside him, the ripple that traveled through the water felt less like physics and more like punctuation—a definitive end to whatever sentence his self-control had been trying to write.
This is fine, Philip told himself, in the same way people standing in burning buildings claim everything is fine. Completely normal. Just a man and his dangerously perfect Familiar enjoying some casual pool time. Nothing to see here.
He'd spent months hiding behind that word—Familiar—like it was some kind of moral hazard suit protecting him from the full radioactive impact of what Natalia actually was. Beautiful didn't cover it. The word beautiful ran screaming from the room when confronted with the geometric perfection of her figure, the way every curve seemed calculated to achieve the highest score on a beauty contest.
A thought sliced through his consciousness with surgical precision: If all Familiars look like this, why would beings this perfect willingly serve masters as spectacularly average as me?
The question opened a trapdoor in his mind. Did Familiars age? The realization that he'd never asked hit him like cold water. What happened when their masters died? When the mana ran out? Did they just... cease? Fade away like forgotten dreams? Return to wherever they'd been summoned from?
His mental spiral snagged on yesterday's conversation with Margaret. Nuclear power stations. Blue mana production. The duchess had been almost giddy about it—nuclear reactors churning out blue mana like some kind of magical-industrial complex. And why? To power summoned entities without bleeding their masters dry.
The Guardians run on the same principle, Margaret had explained with the patient tone of someone teaching physics to a particularly dim student. We convert various mana types into blue, channel it through the ley lines, and voilà—Celestica can level cities without her summoners dropping dead from exhaustion.
When Philip had asked why they called blue mana magic instead of what it obviously was—science—Margaret's answer had been depressingly simple: The public prefers easy explanations to complicated truths. 'Magic' sells better than 'electromagnetic field manipulation.'
Who was Father powering? The question burned in his mind. And why won't you tell me, Grandmother?
His consciousness zoomed out like a camera pulling back from a scene, his mind's eye suddenly seeing the entire empire spread out like a game board, pieces moving in patterns he couldn't quite—
And then he zoomed back in. Way, way too far in.
Straight into the hypnotizing valley of Natalia's cleavage. In that instant, his mind was cleared of all other thoughts, however intriguing they were just a second before.
Philip's gaze snapped upward with the desperate urgency of a drowning man seeking air. Straight into Natalia's eyes. They were impossibly large this close, crystalline blue with that distinct anime quality that had somehow become real in this world—curious, focused, with just a hint of something else swimming in their depths.
Pink bloomed across her cheeks. Not the calculated blush she'd attempted during their fake relationship performance, but something genuine and devastating in its authenticity.
"Master," Natalia said, pointing with scientific precision, "there appears to be a structural irregularity in your swimming attire."
Philip followed her finger downward through the crystal-clear water and discovered that his body had filed its own report on the situation, one that his brain had desperately been trying to ignore.
The System materialized on his shoulder, manifesting as a six-inch fairy in what could generously be called a swimsuit but was really just strategic placement of miniature fabric. "Oh ho! Houston, we have liftoff! One small step for hormones, one giant leap for Philip!"
"Is that," Natalia asked with the earnest curiosity of someone genuinely seeking clarification, "a physiological indicator of the flame of your desire ignited by my aquatic proximity?"
The faintest smile tugged at the corner of her mouth, and Philip realized with dawning horror that she was learning humor. Worse, she was getting good at it.
The System performed a tiny victory dance. "Our girl's cracking jokes! They grow up so fast! Soon she'll be doing stand-up comedy about her master's standing up comedy!"
As Natalia moved closer, she placed one hand on his shoulder with the careful deliberation of someone testing tensile strength. "Master," she murmured, her breath creating tiny hurricanes of warmth against his neck, "I've been researching stress reduction techniques. Several sources recommend synchronized floating. The manuals describe it as... 'just vibing.'"
"Vibing," Philip croaked. "Yes. We can... we can vibe. Professionally. Platonically. With appropriate distance."
"Optimal vibing requires proximity," Natalia countered, already beginning to float against him with the gentle insistence of a tide.
They floated. Or rather, Philip tried to float while his brain focused solely on retaining its grip on the rebelling flesh. The water held them in a conspiracy of intimacy—warm, supportive, treacherous. Sunlight dappled across the ceiling in patterns that seemed specifically designed to highlight the way droplets clung to Natalia's collarbone.
Her blush hadn't faded. If anything, it had deepened, spreading down her neck in a way that made Philip realize she was changing. Not just physiologically responding or regurgitating learnt behaviors. She was becoming something more complex, more real, more dangerously human.
The questions he'd been avoiding pressed closer: If blue mana could sustain her forever, what did that mean for them? For this thing growing between them that he didn't have words for?
"Master?" Her voice was barely a whisper.
"Yes?"
"If I were powered by blue mana instead of your green mana..." She paused, and he could practically hear her selecting each word with desperate care. "Would that mean you'd get tired of me less often?"
Philip turned so fast he created a small whirlpool. "I don't get tired of you."
Her lashes fluttered—actually fluttered, like something out of the romance novels Lydia definitely didn't hide in her quarters. "But you were tired. Before. Due to … my drain on your mana."
"Of the world," Philip said, surprising himself with the honesty. "Of the expectations and the games and the constant performance. Never of you."
The silence that followed wasn't awkward. It was full, filled with possibility, fragile as spun glass.
Natalia brightened—not with her usual analytical satisfaction at solving a problem, but with genuine relief. Then, with visible effort, she attempted another joke: "If I acquire independent mana sourcing, you'll have surplus energy to power more robust and lasting romantic interactions between us."
She glanced away, cheeks practically glowing. "Was that... was that funny? The books say timing is crucial for humor."
The System wiped an imaginary tear with one tiny hand. "I'm so proud. She is already better at humour than me!"
A wavelet nudged against Philip's shoulder like reality tapping him politely and suggesting he might want to relocate his sanity. He cleared his throat. "We should discuss this with Lydia. The blue mana situation. How to... use it to power you. Without exposing you to the authorities, of course."
Natalia nodded, and something in her expression shifted—relief mixed with determination. Then, her bikini strap chose that exact moment to slip.
Not a complete wardrobe malfunction—the fabric was too well-designed for that. Just a subtle half-inch migration that transformed merely dangerous curves into something that could probably be classified as the finest carnal temptation.
Her eyes widened, darting to his face for guidance.
Philip reached up, steady despite every nerve in his body staging a revolt, and adjusted the strap without looking down. It took approximately the same amount of willpower as lifting a truck with his teeth.
"There," he managed. "All good again."
Her smile this time was entirely new—private, pleased, with just a hint of pride at successfully navigating whatever this moment was.
She sank down until only her eyes and the crown of her head remained above water, then rose again like the world's most alluring periscope. "Master?"
"Yes?"
"I've been wondering." She tilted her head, sending ripples across the water. "Why do common citizens express hostility toward revealing swimming attire when statistical evidence suggests women loved wearing it while men loved watching women wear it?"
Philip's brain attempted several responses and settled on deflection. "That's... that's probably a question for whoever suggested you wear it."
"But the Duchess seemed too busy to answer such a trivial question," Natalia said with matter-of-fact innocence that hit Philip like a sledgehammer.
He inhaled pool water. "Wait. WHO?"
The System collapsed on his shoulder, tiny body shaking with laughter. "Oh boy! Your grandmother is really quite something."
Part 2
In the endless expanse of Siberian ice, where the horizon bled white into white until even memory forgot where earth ended and sky began, Vlan's convoy descended like a black serpent beneath an iron-blue ridgeline. The abandoned early warning node swallowed them whole—a throat of concrete and frozen steel that still remembered its orders from an empire that had forgotten it existed. Frost-rimed bulkheads groaned open on pneumatic hinges that shouldn't have functioned, revealing a central hall where black cables wove across the ceiling like the root system of some technological tree.
Someone had hung Bukhara carpets over the military-grade steel. Someone else had smuggled in an antique samovar and a burgundy velvet chaise, as if insisting that even inside this mausoleum of machines, a prince should recline like a prince.
The "deceased" were waiting for their resurrection.
An artillery marshal whose medal rack had already been catalogued for the Imperial War Museum stood at attention, very much alive despite his official obituary. Beside him, the admiral whose flagship had "tragically sunk during trials"—her hair now shorn to military precision, eyes bright with the particular relief of those who'd escaped the executioner's attention. And at their center, anchoring this assembly of "ghosts"—Colonel Dmitri Voldinsky, officially atomized alongside his prince in that hypersonic missile attack that shook the world.
Dmitri's salute was textbook perfect. "Your Highness."
They were the carefully chosen "dead"—those Vlan had redeemed through the elaborate theater of false demise.
"Your Highness," the admiral reported with crisp efficiency, "our private network remains stable. We're completely severed from every imperial backbone—air-gapped, electromagnetically shielded, and officially logged in the grid as auxiliary pipeline heating." She gestured toward the cable forest overhead. "The new turbines are operational. If anyone audits our power consumption, the numbers will suggest we're desperately trying to keep the permafrost from reclaiming an oil depot."
"Microwave relays remain dark," the communications chief added, consulting a tablet that shouldn't have existed this far from civilization. "Fiber runs exclusively within our shell. To any observer, our line losses would appear consistent with decommissioned infrastructure slowly bleeding into entropy."
"Excellent." Vlan's voice carried that particular softness that made subordinates lean forward, straining to catch every syllable. "Show me my funeral."
The central display bloomed to life with state television's feed: a cathedral drowning in light and lilies, bronze eagles weeping theatrical tears, a closed casket submerged beneath enough flowers to stock a botanical garden. Crown Prince Mikhail commanded the rostrum like a born tragedian, his impeccable mourning attire tailored to accentuate both grief and authority. Every camera angle had been calculated to catch his profile at its most noble; every microphone positioned to capture the tremor of carefully rehearsed emotion.
"My beloved brother," Mikhail proclaimed, tears falling with the precision of a chronometer, "was murdered by cowards who, unable to match the inexorable might of our Empire on the field of honor, resorted to the basest treachery. My brother—ever the idealist, ever the romantic—was lured by false promises of peace, only to be slaughtered in cold blood at the very table of negotiation." His voice rose to a crescendo that would have earned standing ovations in any opera house. "Such perfidy cannot—will not—go unanswered! We shall redouble our righteous efforts! Only when justice is served can I face my dear brother in paradise without the stain of failure upon my soul!"
The assembly rose around the empty coffin like a perfectly choreographed wave.
Vlan's smile was a razor's edge that never reached his eyes. Such a waste that statecraft claimed you, dear brother. You were sculpted for the stage—those looks, a gift from heaven's surplus inventory. That voice, all velvet wrapped around steel. He tilted his head with an aesthete's appreciation. For a fleeting moment, I almost believed you mourned me... if I hadn't discovered your assassination itinerary first. We'll reunite soon enough, beloved brother. Though perhaps not in paradise.
He turned to Dmitri with languid grace. "Status report."
Dmitri's response was military precision incarnate. "We've successfully extracted most names from Mikhail's purge list through staged deaths. Thirty targets remain. Ten were detained before we could reach them—currently in transit to undisclosed facilities. Families have been absorbed into our provincial charity networks; their stipends route through the defunct veterans' fund under seventeen different aliases."
A memory surfaced with the deliberate weight of a finger pressing a bruise: that private audience years past, when only the Emperor, Mikhail, Vlan, and a ring of stone-faced guards inhabited the winter throne room. Vlan had performed his finest role—the impetuous younger brother, slamming intelligence reports onto the marble with theatrical fury.
"Someone is systematically eliminating my allies," he'd snarled with perfectly calibrated rage. "If this is your handiwork, brother, I swear—"
Mikhail's hand had flown to his heart in practiced shock. "Vlan! How could you even suggest—I shall personally investigate—"
"Your 'personal' investigations have a curious habit of discovering nothing but shadows and smoke," Vlan had spat, every word calculated to seem spontaneous.
Wounded protests. Imperial mediation. The Emperor's weary reprimand of both sons. And Vlan, wearing passion like a carnival mask, had sold Mikhail exactly what he needed to see: an impulsive romantic with more heart than strategy, more emotion than calculation. That performance had purchased precious time—enough to evacuate the loyal and construct this frozen sanctuary.
"Reservoir status?" Vlan asked, returning to the present.
"Eighteen minutes to peak capacity," the admiral confirmed. "Then we can initiate data flow through the private channels."
Vlan approached another display—an interface of monastic simplicity. No imperial eagles, no patriotic slogans, no hymns to eternal glory. Simply a patient command prompt, waiting for someone with more devotion than sense.
His fingers hovered above the console without making contact.
They had constructed this network the way medieval monks illuminated manuscripts: in reverent silence, with hands that understood the weight of consequence. Dams upriver whose "maintenance allocations" had grown mysteriously generous—questions deflected through strategic bribes distributed via intermediaries, each playing the role of another corrupt contractor skimming from the imperial treasury. Decommissioned reactors whose documentation had wandered into a bureaucratic blizzard, never to emerge. Rotary converters that consumed static and generated clean signals, feeding a loop that touched nothing imperial. Slowly, patiently, they had woven their own ley lines of mana beneath the empire's detection threshold.
The Snow Queen materialized in his mind with painful clarity. Not the apocalyptic weapon that haunted the nightmares of foreign capitals, but one of her human incarnations—Cyberia. His sole companion through an opulent yet barren childhood. The one who had tilted her head just so when he'd quoted poetry from dead languages. The one whose rare smile could thaw the permafrost around his heart—a heart that had concluded, at an age far too young, that humanity's greatest achievement would be liberation from its endless cycle of self-inflicted suffering. A world without tears. His solution had crystallized with terrible simplicity: either universal happiness... or universal obliteration. Life, after all, was the prerequisite for suffering's existence. So without life, there would be no suffering. Death held no terror for him—until Cyberia.
She had been hope incarnate. And then, after that final winter evening, she was gone.
His subsequent search had bordered on obsession. He hadn't even known what she truly was—only later learning about the android shells, originally designed as user interfaces for the empire's most powerful weapon system. As the Snow Queen's responsibilities expanded—accumulating increasing larger number of missiles into its nuclear arsenal, managing defense grids, coordinating response protocols—her mana requirements had grown exponentially. At the apex of the rivalry with the Continental Republic, when tens of thousands of nuclear warheads were simultaneous controlled by her, she had consumed more money than several provinces combined.
The truth, hidden from all but the Emperor's inner circle, still tasted bitter: the empire had laid dormant its own guardian. After the former Republic's collapse, when Arussia emerged from the imperial restoration with an economy reduced to a tenth of its former glory, they'd chosen the facade of strength over its substance. The Snow Queen slept while the empire pretended she watched—those who'd performed the dormancy ritual had suffered convenient accidents or emerged with memories carved hollow.
Vlan's fingers found the buttons with liturgical precision. The room held its breath.
"Awakening sequence initialized," the interface printed in utilitarian font. "Local protocols only. Network discovery disabled. Proceed?"
His hand hesitated above the enter key. The ultimate problem remained, sharp as winter glass.
"She obeys the Emperor," he said, words barely disturbing the recycled air. "Whoever holds that title commands her loyalty."
Dmitri's expression maintained its professional neutrality. "The succession mechanism remains opaque—the exact protocol for transferring her allegiance. Is it the imperial seal? A ritual in the Sigil Chamber? Biometric proximity? We're missing the final piece."
Vlan's smile returned—a wolf's grin beneath court manners. "Then we'll simply have to acquire it." He let the words hang, knowing these men had been chosen precisely because they could read between lines, hear the violence in velvet suggestions, understand what remained elegantly unspoken.