Shadow Unit Scandal: The Commander's Omega-Chapter 153: Settling
The imperial office was built to intimidate.
High ceilings that made even confident men feel smaller, tall windows that let in cold light, shelves lined with documents capable of overthrowing governments, and a desk carved from old dark wood that appeared to have survived fires on principle.
Modernity existed here, of course. It had simply been forced to behave.
A thin etherline ran along the baseboard like a vein of pale glass, feeding the room’s wards and the faint humming panels set behind carved molding.
A console sat discreetly to the side of the desk, linked to the palace grid that kept communications stable, kept intrusion spells from biting, and kept the Emperor’s private wing sealed even when the rest of the building breathed with visitors.
And still, despite the ether that powered the palace like blood, paper ruled the desk.
Some things remained stubbornly old, because the world had taught the Empire that ether could be stolen, corrupted, or falsified. A signature in ink on vellum did not glitch. It did not desync. It was not replaced by a skilled hand in a distant room. The original seals, pressed in wax and marked with imperial runes, conveyed authority that even the most advanced ether-printer could not safely replicate.
Damian sat behind that desk as if it had been made for his bones.
A stack of reports waited at his left. Another at his right. Ink, seals, cipher sheets, and the neat, controlled sprawl of a mind that never truly stopped working. His pen moved in smooth strokes, while a thin ether-screen hovered above the paper at a respectful angle, projecting troop movement overlays and border pings in faint light that didn’t touch the vellum.
His golden eyes flicked from parchment to projection with predatory speed. Every few seconds he marked something - an approval, a correction, a name underlined - then tapped the edge of the paper with a ring that held a ward-stone, and the signature locked, unforgeable, into the document’s rune thread.
The room smelled faintly of paper, sharp black coffee, and ether.
Gregoris stood before the desk like a man carved from the concept of inevitability. He wore the Shadows’ uniform with no insignia visible unless you knew where to look. The ether-fiber in the fabric caught the light when he moved, threads designed to resist low-grade tracking spells and blunt the bite of hostile wards. His hands were behind his back, posture relaxed in the way soldiers were relaxed only when they were ready to kill at a breath’s notice.
He had already given half the report without Damian needing to ask, because this was how their conversations worked: efficient, precise, and built on the assumption that the other man could keep up.
"Donin dispatch," Gregoris said, voice level. "Two squads to the border corridor. One to the city perimeter. The fourth remains mobile, rotating between points. If we show a pattern, they’ll map it."
Damian didn’t look up. "They already are."
"They’re trying," Gregoris corrected.
Damian’s pen paused. One corner of his mouth lifted, not quite a smile, but the shape of amusement. "And?"
Gregoris’ eyes sharpened slightly. "And they’ll fail."
Damian’s pen resumed. "Good."
Gregoris stepped closer and placed a folder on the edge of the desk. It contained maps, patrol routes, casualty projections, and information that didn’t belong outside this room - some printed with ether-ink that shifted under light to reveal hidden layers, others stubbornly hand-drawn in graphite because ether mapping could be jammed.
Damian flipped it open with one hand.
He read in silence for a moment, eyes scanning, mind calculating. A faint pulse rippled along the etherline in the wall as the palace wards adjusted to the presence of Shadow command authority.
Then, without warning, Damian spoke like he was commenting on the weather.
"Max has a child."
Gregoris didn’t react outwardly. He didn’t blink more than necessary. "Yes."
Damian turned a page. "And you do too."
"Yes."
Damian’s pen tapped once against the vellum. "In a year and a half."
Gregoris’ expression stayed neutral, but his shoulders carried the faintest shift only someone who had survived Damian’s attention for years would notice in himself. "The timeline is correct."
Damian finally looked up.
Golden eyes, bright with that particular brand of amusement that meant he was about to be insufferable on purpose.
"I’m amused," Damian said, tone mild.
"That is not a question," Gregoris replied.
"No," Damian agreed. "It’s an observation."
Gregoris held his gaze with the patience of a man who could endure torture and had, and yet somehow still found this worse. "We have more pressing matters."
Damian’s mouth twitched. "We do."
He glanced back down at the folder, then, without bothering to pretend he was not doing this intentionally, asked, "How’s the infant?"
Gregoris exhaled through his nose. He gave a controlled sigh, as if he’d rather storm Donin alone. "Alive."
Damian’s brow lifted. "High praise."
"She’s healthy," Gregoris corrected, as if his own mouth had betrayed him into softness and he needed to sand it down. "Loud."
Damian’s pen paused again, hovering. "Loud."
Gregoris’ eyes narrowed. "Yes."
Damian leaned back in his chair with the relaxed cruelty of a man who had already won. "That sounds like punishment."
Gregoris didn’t rise to it. "Infants communicate."
"Do they," Damian murmured, and the amusement deepened. "And how do you communicate?"
Gregoris stared at him.
Damian stared back, perfectly calm, like this was an important strategic query and not a personal attack.
Gregoris’ jaw flexed once. "I am here for Donin."
Damian nodded. "You are."
Then he slid the folder a fraction to the side, as if making room on the desk for something far more dangerous than border movements.
"And," Damian added, "you are also here because you cannot escape."
Gregoris’ expression did not change, which was impressive considering the urge to commit treason was visibly building behind his eyes.
He tried again, with the desperation of a man attempting diplomacy with a wildfire. "The dampeners."
Damian signed the authorization without looking, ink scratching across the vellum in a clean, decisive line. He tapped the page with the ward-stone ring, locking the signature into the rune thread. The ether-screen mirrored it instantly, sending an encrypted copy down the palace channels.
"Granted," Damian said.
Gregoris didn’t move. He knew better than to believe it was over.
Damian looked up again, pleased with himself. "Now," he said softly, "tell me why."







