LOGINThe drive home was quieter than the drive to Jamal's hearing had been.No Kade commentary in the back seat. No performed celebration. Just people sitting with what had happened and letting it be what it was.Miriam was in the second car with Kweku's transport. He had arranged for her to travel back with us rather than alone, a small kindness that I suspected was not accidental.We stopped an hour out of the central territory at a place that had food and warmth and let everyone breathe for twenty minutes.Miriam sat across from me with tea.She had not said much since we left the compound. Just walked beside me and gotten in the car and looked out the window at the passing landscape with the expression of someone processing something large.I did not push.She talked when she was ready."I have been carrying this for twelve years," she said. "Since I found my grandmother's medical file in my mother's things after she died." She wrapped both hands around the cup. "My mother never spoke
The round room was full.Not just the twelve council members. Additional seats had been brought in. Pack representatives from three territories. Legal advocates. Scribes for the official record. The particular density of a formal session that everyone understood was going to matter beyond the room.Mensah was already seated when we arrived.He had brought two advocates and three witnesses of his own. He was dressed with the careful precision of a man who understood that appearance was its own argument. He looked at me when I came through the door and his face did the pleasant thing.I looked back and did not perform anything.Charlotte was beside me. Nana on my other side with Adaeze behind her. Kade to the left. Dane at my back. Miriam had come in separately with Kweku's arrangement and was seated in the witness area across the room.We sat.Kweku opened proceedings without preamble.The matter before the council. Article Nineteen invocation. Western territory. The disputed validity
Monday Adaeze pushed Nana harder than the previous sessions.Not unkindly. Just with the particular efficiency of someone who understood that seven days was not much time and that kindness without urgency was not actually kind.By the end of Monday Nana was holding the shielding for four minutes clean.By Wednesday it was eight.By Friday it was fifteen and Adaeze sat back and said that was enough to manage a council chamber with preparation and Nana said she was not stopping at fifteen and Adaeze looked at her and did not argue.Charlotte trained alongside her every morning.Not the same techniques. Her own work. The secondary sensitivity exercises Adaeze had developed specifically for her. But the proximity helped both of them. Charlotte's frequency acting as the anchor Adaeze had described. Nana's sensitivity orienting toward it naturally and settling faster when Charlotte was in the room.They ate every meal together.By Thursday they had stopped being careful with each other the
The summons arrived Friday morning.Official council paper. Heavy seal. The kind of document that had weight in the physical sense as well as the procedural one. Dane brought it to the kitchen where I was eating breakfast with Nana and Charlotte and set it on the table without comment.I read it while I finished my tea.A formal council session had been called. Seven days from now. The matter of Article Nineteen invocation in the western territory. The matter of Alpha Jude Mensah's formal objection. The matter of thirty years of documented suppression in the western pack's internal records.All of it going before the full council.Mensah had moved in less than twenty four hours.I had expected fast. This was faster than fast.Nana was watching my face from across the table."It is the council," I said. "A formal session. About what happened yesterday.""About me," she said."About the Article Nineteen invocation," I said. "About Mensah's objection to it. About the full history." I pau
Nana slept for the first hour.Not the heavy medication sleep I suspected she was used to. Something lighter. The particular rest of a body that has been holding itself tightly for a very long time and has been given permission to release slightly.She was in the back seat between Adaeze and Kade. Kade had given her the window seat without being asked and had shifted himself to the middle which for Kade, who was not a small man, was a genuine sacrifice.I watched her in the mirror sometimes.Her face in sleep was younger than twenty one. The particular softness of a person whose guard had come down for the first time in a long while.Adaeze had her eyes closed too. Not sleeping. Working through something internally the way she did sometimes.Kade was looking out his window with that slightly unfocused quality that meant the tracking sensitivity was running.I turned back to the road.Dane drove. His hand came across to mine on the seat between us. I held on."He will move fast," Dane
We had forty minutes.Adaeze worked fast. Not rushing. Fast in the way of someone who understood exactly how much time they had and used every second of it properly. She gave Nana the first shielding technique. The breathing. The foundation. The one thing that could begin to give direction to something that had been running without it for two years.Nana learned it in twenty minutes.Not cleanly. Not held for long. But the click happened. That moment of engagement I recognised from my own first session and from watching Efua and from watching Charlotte. The moment when the technique stopped being an instruction and started being a sensation.When it happened Nana went very still.Then she breathed out slowly."The noise," she said."Yes," Adaeze said."It is quieter," she said."Yes," Adaeze said. "That is what the shielding does."Nana looked at her hands. "Two years," she said quietly. "Two years of that noise and it takes twenty minutes.""It takes the right twenty minutes," Adaeze







