Home / Werewolf / You Will Regret Rejecting Me / Volume 2, Chapter 37 — The Continuation of Authorization

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Volume 2, Chapter 37 — The Continuation of Authorization

Author: Nyra Veyne
last update publish date: 2026-06-11 20:57:21

The ratification calendar had been restructured twice in the past ten days. The third restructure was now sitting in draft form on the working table in the Varkas administrative suite, unsigned, because no one had yet agreed on what to call the problem that necessitated it.

Not disagreement. That was too clean. The problem had not yet acquired language stable enough to survive a formal annotation.

Kaela read the draft calendar without marking it. She had learned, in recent weeks, that her first
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  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 51 — The Weight of Anticipated Continuance

    The memo arrived in the third category of the morning's correspondence, neither urgent nor flagged, simply administrative. Kaela read it twice before she understood why it had unsettled her.It was from the Joint Staffing Coordination Office, a body she had interacted with perhaps four times in her tenure as sovereign. The memo outlined a proposed secondment arrangement: two senior analysts from the Territorial Adjacency Division would be embedded with the review body's preparatory secretariat for a period of ‘not less than eighteen months, contingent on review process duration’. Standard language. The kind of memo that arrived, got initialed, and disappeared into the operational filing.Except that the review had not yet formally opened. The constitutional review process was still in its preparatory phase: consultation architecture not yet finalized, observer access protocols still being drafted, the full scope of evaluative jurisdiction still formally undecided.Eighteen months assu

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 50 — Prior Condition

    The scheduling packet arrived at 6:47 in the morning, before Kaela had finished her first review of overnight correspondence. She almost set it aside. The header read 'Preliminary Logistics — Constitutional Governance Review’, and preliminary logistics had, in her experience, the texture of documents that answered no real questions while generating seventeen new administrative dependencies.She opened it.The review had been assigned a proposed timeline: eleven weeks, beginning from a ratification-readiness threshold that the packet defined as ‘completion of current synchronization cycle, plus fourteen-day stabilization window’. The language was careful. Neutral. The phrase ‘synchronization cycle’ appeared four times in the first two pages without a single footnote directing a reader unfamiliar with the term towards any clarifying documentation.Kaela read the phrase again: ‘completion of current synchronization cycle’.The constitutional review — whose function, in principle, was to

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 49 — Necessary by Default

    The request came through Mira's office at half past eight, routed as a standard archival coordination query. Kaela almost missed the embedded flag, which was a small procedural annotation beneath the filing timestamp, noting that the query had been escalated twice before reaching archival because two other departments had declined to process it independently.Declined to process. Not referred upward. Declined.The originating request was unremarkable: the Territorial Boundary Commission had proposed a minor reclassification adjustment: moving three districts from provisional coordination tier to standard coordination tier, shifting their compliance reporting cycle by eleven days. Administrative realignment with governance precedent. The kind of thing that crossed her desk several times a month without comment.What had not happened before: the request had gone first to the Commission's internal compliance office, which flagged that the timing shift would place the three districts outs

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    The request arrived formatted as a timeline inquiry.Kaela read it twice before she understood what it actually was.The Northern Territorial Compliance Office had submitted a coordination brief — twelve pages, properly stamped, routed through the standard interoperability channels — asking the layer to confirm projected continuity windows for three regulatory review cycles that their own planning committee had already scheduled around assumed layer availability. They were not asking whether the layer would be available, assuming it would be, and asking for confirmation of the precise windows so they could finalize their internal calendar.She set the brief aside and pulled up the current coordination queue.Forty-seven items. Three weeks ago it had been nineteen.She did not mention this to anyone. She opened a side document and began mapping the intake dates against the origin points, tracking which departments had begun routing procedural questions through the layer that six months

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 47 — Constraint Propagation

    The memo from Territorial Infrastructure had been sitting in the shared review queue for eleven days before anyone flagged it as requiring cross-departmental attention. By then, three other departments had read it, and each had drawn different operational conclusions from the same paragraph.Kaela noticed this first because she tracked the queue manually, which was a habit Mira had once described as unnecessary, given the interoperability layer's reasonably accurate priority flagging. Kaela had not argued the point. She had simply continued tracking it manually.The paragraph in question concerned forward-planning timelines. Territorial Infrastructure, drafting regional staffing projections for the next eighteen months, had recorded an assumption in plain administrative language: that interoperability classification standards would remain substantively stable across that period. Not legally guaranteed. Not formally ratified. Merely stable, the way a road is stable — the kind of assump

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  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Rejection

    "Say it again," Kaela said, her voice shaking — but not with fear.The words hung over the Wolfe Pack's great hall like smoke that wouldn't clear. Three hundred wolves had gone perfectly still. The ceremony torches threw long shadows across the flagstone floor. Nobody moved. Nobody breathed.Adrian

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   What You Are

    What You AreThey ran.Not blind. Lucien moved with direction, taking angles through the dark that suggested he'd already mapped this forest, already chosen a route before tonight. That should have been reassuring. Instead it made the back of Kaela's neck prickle, because a man who had pre-planned

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   The Letter

    She took the envelope.Later, she would not be able to fully explain why. Survival instinct, maybe. Or the simpler, more humiliating truth: her mother's handwriting had always been able to make her do things logic could not.The wax seal was dark red. Unmarked. She turned the envelope over once and

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   The Man in the Dark

    She didn't run.That was the first thing Kaela decided, standing at the tree line with her palm still cold and a stranger watching her from the dark. Running was what prey did. She was not, regardless of what this evening had proven, prey."You've been watching me," she said. Not a question."Yes."

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