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Volume 2, Chapter 58 — The Shape of What Cannot Be Proposed

Author: Nyra Veyne
last update publish date: 2026-07-02 20:30:26

The packet arrived mid-morning, routed through the standard jurisdictional submission channel. It had eleven policy suggestions from seven territorial courts, each formatted according to review protocol, each carrying the correct administrative header.

Kaela read the first three before her tea had cooled.

They were good. Not merely competent, but genuinely thoughtful. Two jurisdictions had independently arrived at similar coordination recommendations, though through different reasoning. A third
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  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 61 — What Adair Left Behind

    The gate at Kesh's perimeter was already open when they rode in, which told Kaela something before anyone spoke a word.Open gates meant either welcome or emergency. The two enforcers stationed there weren't smiling.Ren swung down first, boots hitting frozen ground hard. "Where's Tamsin?""Inside." The taller enforcer didn't look at Ren so much as through her. His eyes went to Lucien, then Kaela, cataloguing. "She know you brought company?""She knows I brought help.""Didn't ask for a King."Lucien dismounted without hurrying. "Didn't wait to be asked."The enforcer's jaw worked. He didn't have an answer for that, so he turned and led them in silence towards the low stone building at the compound's centre, and Kaela caught the way his shoulders stayed rigid the whole walk, a man escorting people he hadn't agreed to escort.*****Inside, the smell hit first: antiseptic laid over something else, something sour and electric, like a room after a storm that hadn't fully passed.The two e

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 60 — The Place Reserved for Revision

    The knock on Kaela's office door came sharp. It neither administrative nor scheduled.“Kaela," saidVoss, already inside before she'd answered, and behind him was a woman she didn't recognize, dressed in Kesh travel leathers still damp from the outer courtyard. "This is Ren Sabel. She says she's part of the Kesh coordination group. She says the proposal isn't procedural anymore."Kaela stood. "Isn't procedural how?"Ren didn't sit. "Because two nights ago, our stronghold's resonance cycle overlapped with Adair's, exactly like the proposal warned it eventually would. Nobody had authorized recalibration scheduling to accommodate it, because nobody had approved the mechanism yet." Her jaw tightened. "We didn't get an administrative delay, Sovereign. We got a resonance bleed. Half of Kesh's junior enforcers went down cognitively disoriented for six hours. Two are still not right."The room went very still."Define not right," Kaela said."Difficulty distinguishing their own thoughts from s

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 59 — The Proposal Without a Category

    The packet was eleven pages, and Kaela read it twice before she understood why it unsettled her.It came from the Kesh Territorial Office, unsigned by any single author, credited instead to a "working coordination group." The proposal itself was modest: a mechanism allowing adjacent territories to jointly petition for recalibration scheduling when their strongholds' resonance cycles overlapped. Nothing radical. Nothing that challenged sovereignty law.She flagged it for Voss and moved on.By Thursday it was back on her desk, rerouted twice."Procedural Standards bounced it to Cross-Territorial Affairs," Voss said, setting the folder down. "Cross-Territorial bounced it to us. Nobody's rejected it. They just don't know what to do with it.""What's the objection?""There isn't one. That's the problem."*****Corren arrived at eleven, carrying his own copy, already annotated."I've been through the routing codes," he said. "Twice.""And?""It's not a stronghold petition: those go through

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 58 — The Shape of What Cannot Be Proposed

    The packet arrived mid-morning, routed through the standard jurisdictional submission channel. It had eleven policy suggestions from seven territorial courts, each formatted according to review protocol, each carrying the correct administrative header.Kaela read the first three before her tea had cooled.They were good. Not merely competent, but genuinely thoughtful. Two jurisdictions had independently arrived at similar coordination recommendations, though through different reasoning. A third had produced a careful argument for expanded local discretion in implementation sequencing that accounted for population variance in ways the current framework did not. A fourth proposed revised intervals for the recalibration review that Kaela herself had considered at an earlier stage of the process.She kept reading.By the sixth document she had stopped annotating. By the ninth she had set her pen down entirely.The proposals disagreed with one another on nearly every specific point. Timeli

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 57: The Blind Spot of Competence

    The review session had been running for two hours before Kaela noticed the first instance.It was minor. Corren had been summarizing the precedent basis for a jurisdictional transfer: a routine matter, two territorial claims overlapping along a boundary that the review architecture had already addressed in three prior cycles. He cited the relevant documentation without hesitation, cross-referenced the interpretive framework, and arrived at his recommendation with the kind of quiet efficiency that had made him indispensable to the working group."This aligns with established interpretation," he said, not looking up from the file. "The transfer priority is clear."No one disagreed. Kaela did not disagree. The recommendation was correct.She wrote it down anyway. ‘Established interpretation.’ The phrase sat at the edge of her attention for the remainder of that agenda item, not quite demanding examination.It came up again twenty minutes later. Mira was walking the group through a compar

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 56 — The Horizon of the Thinkable

    The morning's first session had ended without resolution, which was not itself unusual. What was unusual was that no one had noticed.Kaela sat with that observation before the afternoon convening began, tracing back through two hours of procedural exchange that had been, by every visible measure, competent. The Territorial Standards subcommittee had moved through three items on the consolidated review schedule with practiced efficiency. No one had argued. No one had needed to.The problem, she was beginning to understand, was precisely that.She'd flagged a concern during the morning session regarding the reclassification of certain boundary advisories from provisional to standing operational guidance: whether the reclassification had been through appropriate interpretive review before formalization, or whether it had moved directly from administrative consolidation to operational standing on the assumption that sufficient review had already occurred at the drafting stage.Two respon

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Volume 2, Chapter 27 — The Interpretation Moves First

    The briefing document was six pages. Kaela had read it twice before the car reached the territorial boundary, and she was reading it a third time not because she had failed to understand it but because she was trying to identify which parts of it were already wrong.The Old Court's release had gone

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Chapter 26 — Terms

    The sovereign chamber opened before she touched the door. She had stopped expecting that to surprise her. She went in, set the satchel on the desk — her mother's section beside the map weights, the preserved documents on the old wood — and crossed to the iron boxes on the shelves. Mira had catalogu

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Chapter 24 — The Practice of Choosing

    "Three hours," Davan said.Enough to matter. Not enough to be comfortable about.Lucien was already calculating. She could see it in the way he held the phone, the quality of stillness that preceded a sequence of decisions. "We can be at the ridge in four if we push the route. Davan, take the secon

  • You Will Regret Rejecting Me   Chapter 23 — Terms of Consent

    The recess lasted fourteen minutes and changed the room's alignment by something she couldn't measure precisely but felt.When Halverson called them back, three of the wolf pack bloc had moved seats. Not dramatically — just repositioned by a chair or two, enough to break the tight formation they'd h

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