Time/Date: TC1853.01.14 (Morning through Evening)
Location: Evidence Facility, Ring 4 → Lower Districts, Ring 6 → Long Estate, Ring 2
Senior Lab Technician Marcus Webb had worked in the Imperial Evidence Repository for twenty-three years. Long enough to know the difference between normal sample degradation and something that shouldn't be happening. Long enough to recognize when the universe was trying to tell you that your nice, quiet Tuesday morning was about to become a bureaucratic nightmare.
The DNA samples from case 1853-017-B should've been pristine. They'd been collected less than a week ago—TC1853.01.08, according to the intake logs—stored under optimal conditions, handled with proper protocols. Temperature-controlled preservation that cost more than most citizens made in a year. Chain of custody documentation thick enough to choke a horse. Everything by the book, because this particular case had SIS flags all over it, and you didn't cut corners when the Sanctum Intelligence Service was watching.
So why the hell did they look like they'd been sitting in someone's basement for six months?
Marcus leaned back in his chair, which creaked in protest. (Twenty-three years in the same chair. Same desk. Same fluorescent lights buzzing overhead like angry insects. Some days he wondered if he'd eventually fossilize here, become part of the furniture, just another fixture in this temple to bureaucratic precision.) He rubbed his eyes—too many late nights, too much staring at data that didn't want to make sense—and pulled up the preliminary analysis for the fourth time.
The numbers hadn't changed. They never did, no matter how much you wanted them to.
Genetic markers breaking down at an accelerated rate. Molecular structures fragmenting in patterns that violated every principle of proper evidence storage. It was like watching a time-lapse of decay that should've taken months, maybe years, compressed into days.
His stomach dropped. That particular sensation you get when you realize the problem isn't equipment failure or human error. When you realize someone did this deliberately, and you're about to become very unpopular for noticing.
"Isla," he called across the lab, keeping his voice level. Professional. The tone that said this is routine even when it absolutely wasn't. "You need to see this."
Isla Kwan looked up from her workstation with the casual curiosity of someone expecting another routine equipment malfunction. She was younger—only five years in the Repository, still fresh enough to believe most problems had simple solutions. Still optimistic enough to think that following protocols meant good outcomes. Marcus envied that, sometimes. That innocence. He'd lost his around year seven, when he'd discovered his first case of evidence tampering and learned exactly how many different ways the system could fail you.
She crossed the lab, lab coat swishing slightly, and peered at his screen. Her expression shifted—confusion giving way to concern, concern hardening into the kind of professional alarm that meant she'd just realized their day was about to get complicated.
"That's impossible." She breathed the words, leaning closer as if proximity might change what the data said. "The preservation protocols would prevent this kind of degradation. We'd have to be storing them in direct sunlight with the containers unsealed for—" She stopped. Looked at Marcus. "This isn't natural, is it?"
"No." Marcus pulled up the facility's environmental logs, because you always ruled out the simple explanations first, even when you already knew the answer. Perfect temperature control. Proper humidity. Zero breaches in containment protocols. Everything exactly as it should be, a beautiful symphony of regulatory compliance. "Someone accessed these samples and contaminated them."
Isla's face went pale. Actually pale—that particular loss of color that came from understanding the implications. "Do you know what case this is?"
Marcus did. Everyone in the facility knew about case 1853-017-B. The one involving the Imperial Heir. The one with SIS oversight. The one that had agents checking in daily for status updates, their voices carrying that particular edge of people who didn't make empty threats.
The one you definitely didn't want to be the technician reporting sabotage on.
"We need to call it in." Isla's voice had gone tight, professional detachment starting to crack around the edges. "Protocol requires immediate notification for evidence tampering."
Marcus was already reaching for the secure communication line. The one that bypassed normal channels and went straight to whoever had flagged the case for priority handling. His hand shook slightly as he picked up the receiver. (Twenty-three years. Never once had to make this particular call. You heard about evidence tampering in training, read about it in case studies, but it was always something that happened to other people in other facilities.)
Two rings. Three. Then a voice that sounded like winter given human form answered—cold, precise, and absolutely merciless.
"Agent Venn."
Marcus's throat went dry. "This is Senior Technician Webb at the Imperial Evidence Repository. We have a situation with case 1853-017-B." He paused, because there was no good way to say this. "The DNA samples show signs of deliberate contamination."
The silence on the other end lasted exactly three seconds. Long enough for Marcus to wonder if the line had cut out, short enough that he knew the agent was simply processing implications at terrifying speed. Calculating. Analyzing. Probably already three steps ahead of whatever Marcus was about to say.
"Secure the evidence immediately." Venn's voice carried the kind of authority that made you want to salute even though he couldn't see you. "No one enters or exits that storage area until I arrive. How degraded are the samples?"
Marcus looked at the data again, hoping he'd somehow misread it. Hoping the numbers would be better this time. They weren't. They never were. "Approximately seventy percent degradation across all genetic markers. We might recover partial profiles, but nothing that would hold up in court or confirm parentage definitively."
Another pause. This one felt dangerous—like standing too close to a cliff edge, like realizing you'd just stepped into something far deeper than a routine evidence review.
"Understood." Venn's voice had dropped to something even colder, if that was possible. Ice with a razor edge. "Seal the room. I'll be there in fifteen minutes with Agent Drax. And Webb?" The name came out sharp, precise. "If anyone asks why you're sealing that storage area, you tell them there's a routine maintenance issue. Nothing more. Are we clear?"
"Crystal clear, Agent."
The line went dead.
Marcus looked at Isla, whose expression suggested she was rapidly regretting her career choices. Every decision that had led her to this moment—this lab, this case, this particular Tuesday morning that had just become infinitely more complicated.
"Well." He forced lightness into his voice, even though his hands were shaking. "This day just got interesting."
Isla was already moving toward the storage room, pulling up the security protocols on her tablet with the mechanical efficiency of someone who'd rather focus on procedures than think about implications. "Interesting is one word for it. Catastrophic is another." Her fingers flew across the screen. "Someone tampered with evidence in an SIS-flagged case. Do you know what the penalties are for that?"
Marcus did. Which was why his hands shook slightly as he initiated the lockdown sequence. The storage room's magnetic seals engaged with a heavy thunk—that particular sound of finality, of doors closing, of no going back. The security system logged the action with a timestamp that would be scrutinized by people far more frightening than any administrator.
TC1853.01.14, 09:47.
"Whoever did this," Isla said quietly, watching the sealed door as if expecting someone to come bursting through it, "they had access. Credentials. Knowledge of our systems." She turned to Marcus, and her eyes held something close to fear. "This wasn't some random break-in."
That was the part that made Marcus's stomach twist. The Repository's security was designed to be virtually impenetrable—the kind of multilayered protection that paranoid governments dream about. Three checkpoints. Biometric scans. Spiritual signature verification. The works. The kind of security that required either significant technical expertise or inside knowledge to bypass.
Or both.
"The access logs." Marcus said it suddenly, the thought hitting him like cold water. "We need to pull the access logs for that storage room."
They worked quickly, knowing they had maybe ten minutes before the SIS agents arrived. (Ten minutes to figure out what happened. Ten minutes to have answers. Ten minutes before their quiet government jobs became something else entirely.) The terminal displayed the data with cold efficiency: every person who'd entered the storage area in the past week, complete with timestamps and authorization codes.
Most of it was routine. Technicians conducting regular inventory checks. Junior staff members filing new evidence. The normal rhythm of a facility that processed hundreds of cases, thousands of samples, the endless machinery of imperial justice grinding along.
Nothing suspicious.
Until Marcus saw the entry from four nights ago.
TC1853.01.11, 23:47.
Medical consultation. Lin family authorization. Dr. Caelia Lin's credentials.
But...
"That's not right." Isla murmured, leaning closer to the screen, her breath fogging slightly against the display. "Medical consultations don't happen at midnight. And why would the Lin family need access to these specific samples?"
Marcus felt something cold settle in his chest—that particular sensation when pieces start clicking together, when the pattern emerges from chaos, when you realize the answer and wish you hadn't. "Because one of these samples belongs to someone who might be related to the Lin family. If the DNA results prove a connection, it changes everything about this case."
Isla's voice had gone flat. That particular tone that came from understanding you'd just uncovered something that could get people killed. "So someone with Lin family credentials accessed the evidence and destroyed it before results could be confirmed." She looked at Marcus, and the fear in her eyes was naked now, unhidden. "That's not just evidence tampering. That's conspiracy."
The sound of approaching footsteps in the corridor outside made them both straighten. Rapid, purposeful footfalls that suggested people who didn't waste time on unnecessary movement. People who'd probably made this walk before, to other facilities, other crime scenes, other moments when the careful machinery of law had been sabotaged from within.
Agent Venn swept into the lab like winter personified—crisp dark suit, severe expression, cold gray eyes that took inventory of everything in approximately three seconds. Agent Drax followed, his weathered face set in lines that suggested he'd seen this kind of thing before and hadn't enjoyed it the first time either. Or the second. Or the fifteenth.
"Show me." Venn said it without preamble. No greeting. No pleasantries. Just the expectation that you'd already anticipated what he needed.
Marcus brought up the data, explaining the degradation patterns and contamination evidence with the clinical precision of someone who'd rather be dealing with routine equipment failures. (Routine equipment failures didn't involve conspiracy. Didn't involve people with celestial family credentials committing felonies. Didn't involve becoming a material witness in whatever nightmare was unfolding.)
Venn and Drax studied the screens in silence, their faces revealing nothing except growing calculation. The kind of silence that felt heavy, oppressive, like atmospheric pressure building before a storm.
"The access logs." Drax said it quietly, his voice carrying that weary authority Marcus had learned to associate with people who'd spent decades dealing with humanity's worst impulses. "You pulled them?"
"Yes, sir." Isla stepped forward, her tablet already displaying the relevant entry. Professional. Composed. Only the slight tremor in her hands betraying the fear underneath. "Midnight access on TC1853.01.11. Medical consultation flagged under Dr. Caelia Lin's credentials."
Something shifted in Venn's posture. Not visible, exactly—the man probably played poker with a straight face through earthquakes—but Marcus had learned to read the subtle tells after twenty-three years. The slight tension in the shoulders. The fractional narrowing of the eyes. The predator catching a scent.
"Dr. Caelia Lin." Venn spoke the name with careful precision, as if tasting each syllable for meaning. "Head of Lin family medical authority. Renowned healer. Wife of Darian Long." He paused, and something cold flickered across his features. "Interesting timing—Lin family credentials used to compromise evidence in a case where one of our primary suspects also carries the Lin surname. Could be coincidence."
His tone made it crystal clear he didn't believe in coincidences. Had probably stopped believing in coincidences around the same time he'd joined the SIS and learned how the world actually worked.
"She has legitimate medical authority," Marcus offered, trying to provide context even though he suspected it wouldn't help. Wouldn't change whatever was unfolding here. "Lin family physicians have access to evidence samples for hereditary analysis. It's standard procedure for bloodline verification cases."
"At midnight?" Drax raised an eyebrow, and there was something almost amused in his expression. Dark humor from a man who'd seen every variation of human stupidity. "When was the last time you saw a Lin family physician conducting standard hereditary analysis at midnight?"
Marcus had no answer for that. Neither did Isla, who'd gone very still beside him—the stillness of small prey hoping the predator's gaze would pass over.
Venn's mind was clearly racing through possibilities, his eyes distant with calculation. Why would someone with Lin family credentials destroy DNA evidence at midnight? The question spun through his thoughts with crystalline clarity.
What could these samples prove that's worth this level of risk?
He'd read the case file. Knew the basics. Mara Brenner—the supposed victim, though Venn was increasingly convinced she was far more than that—had provided samples during the initial investigation. The case involved allegations of poisoning, attempted sexual assault, conspiracy. Serious crimes. The kind that destroyed careers and ended bloodlines.
But DNA evidence didn't prove poisoning. It proved parentage.
Which meant someone was terrified of what these samples would reveal about bloodline connections. About who was related to whom. About identities that didn't match official records.
And the Lin family was involved.
Dr. Caelia Lin. Wife of Darian Long. Mother of Serenya Long, the celebrated celestial heir. The perfect family portrait of celestial nobility.
Except...
What if the samples prove that Mara Brenner is actually Caelia and Darian's biological daughter? The thought crystallized with sudden, terrible clarity. What if Serenya Long isn't who she claims to be?
That would explain everything. The midnight access. The sophisticated knowledge of evidence protocols. The desperate need to ensure the DNA results never saw daylight. Because if Mara was the real Long heir, and Serenya was an imposter...
The implications spiraled outward like cracks in ice. Baby swapping. Identity theft. Seventeen years of fraud at the highest levels of celestial society. Crimes that carried death penalties not just for the perpetrators but for everyone who'd helped maintain the deception.
But why would Caelia Lin destroy evidence of her own daughter's identity? That part didn't fit. Unless...
Unless Caelia wasn't the one who'd accessed the facility. Unless someone had stolen her credentials. Used her authorization to commit felony evidence tampering while implicating the Lin family matriarch.
Venn's eyes sharpened. "The surveillance footage. Show me everything you have from that midnight access. Every angle, every timestamp, every frame."
Marcus and Isla exchanged glances—the kind of silent communication that came from working together in high-stress situations—and pulled up the security feeds. The Repository's surveillance system was comprehensive, paranoid, the kind of coverage that left almost nothing to chance.
Almost.
The footage flickered onto the large display screen mounted on the lab wall. TC1853.01.11, 23:35. Exterior cameras first.
A figure approached the Repository's main entrance. Medical consultation attire—the formal robes that Lin family physicians wore for official business. The kind of clothing that commanded automatic respect, that opened doors, that said I belong here and you don't question me.
But the face...
"Freeze that," Venn commanded.
The image paused. The figure stood at the first security checkpoint, credentials extended toward the guard's scanner. But the angle—the camera angle was wrong. Not wrong. Deliberately avoided. The person had positioned themselves with surgical precision to minimize facial exposure.
"They knew where the cameras were," Drax observed quietly. "Knew exactly how to stand to obscure identification."
"Next checkpoint," Venn said.
The footage advanced. Interior cameras now. The figure moved through the facility with confident familiarity—not rushed, not hesitant, but purposeful. Someone who'd either been here before or had studied the layout extensively. At the second biometric checkpoint, they angled their body just so, keeping their face turned away from the overhead camera while presenting their palm to the scanner.
Sophisticated. Professional. The work of someone who understood security systems intimately.
"Third checkpoint," Venn's voice had gone very quiet. Very dangerous.
The final security station. The one that required retinal scanning, spiritual signature verification, DNA trace analysis. The ultimate barrier. Here, the figure couldn't avoid completely—had to present their eye directly to the scanning apparatus.
But even here, even at the moment of maximum exposure, the camera angles revealed only partial features. The curve of a jaw. A glimpse of pale skin. Nothing definitive. Nothing that would hold up in court or confirm identity.
Except...
Venn leaned forward, studying the frozen image with predatory intensity. "Height approximately five-foot-seven. Slender build. Medical consultation robes from the Lin family's formal wardrobe." His eyes tracked every detail, cataloguing, analyzing. "This isn't Dr. Caelia Lin."
"How can you tell?" Marcus asked, then immediately regretted the question. Agents like Venn didn't appreciate being asked to explain their deductions.
But Venn answered anyway, his voice carrying the certainty of someone who'd studied thousands of case files, hundreds of suspects. "Dr. Caelia Lin is five-foot-nine. Broader build. This person is younger, lighter, moving with the physical confidence of someone in their late teens or early twenties rather than fifties."
He pulled out his communicator—one of the high-end secure models that cost more than Marcus made in a year—and activated it with precise efficiency. "Commissioner Wu. We have evidence tampering in case 1853-017-B. DNA samples have been deliberately contaminated using Lin family medical credentials. We'll need warrants for access records and formal statements from Dr. Caelia Lin and anyone else with authorization under her credentials."
A pause while Commissioner Wu responded, his voice too low for Marcus to hear through the device.
"Understood. Yes, we'll need fresh samples from all parties involved. No, the current samples won't hold up in any legal proceeding." Another pause. Venn's expression remained perfectly neutral, but something hardened in his eyes. "Schedule it for TC1853.01.18. That gives us four days to locate the witnesses and arrange proper security for the collection process."
Four days. Marcus felt that timeline settle in his stomach like lead. Four days until fresh samples. Four days for whoever had destroyed the evidence to... what? Flee? Destroy more evidence? Eliminate witnesses?
Are Isla and I witnesses now? The thought arrived with cold certainty. We discovered the tampering. We can testify about the access logs. We're material witnesses in a conspiracy involving celestial families.
His hands started shaking again.
Venn ended the call and turned to Marcus and Isla with an expression that suggested their day was about to get significantly worse. (If that was even possible. Marcus was starting to think the day had reached terminal velocity in the "worse" department and was just accelerating toward some inevitable catastrophic conclusion.)
"You two just became material witnesses in a conspiracy investigation." Venn spoke with the kind of finality that brooked no argument. "That means restricted communication, limited movement, and absolutely no discussion of this discovery with anyone outside authorized personnel. Clear?"
"Crystal clear," Marcus and Isla said in unison. The words came out automatically—twenty-three years and five years respectively of following protocols, of understanding that when someone with SIS authority told you how things were going to be, you didn't argue.
"Good." Venn's gray eyes swept the lab, taking final inventory. "Now show me every piece of security footage you have from that midnight access. Every angle, every timestamp, every detail. Someone with Lin credentials walked into this facility and committed a felony. I want to know who, how, and what else they might have compromised while they were here."
As they pulled up the surveillance feeds—all of them, every camera, every angle—Marcus couldn't shake the feeling that he'd just stepped into something far more dangerous than routine evidence processing. This wasn't just about contaminated DNA samples or procedural violations.
This was about people powerful enough to access secure facilities destroying evidence that could prove crimes against a minor. People who moved at midnight with stolen credentials and sophisticated knowledge of laboratory protocols. People who wouldn't hesitate to eliminate anyone who became inconvenient.
The kind of people who made twenty-three years of quiet government service feel suddenly, terrifyingly inadequate as protection.
Marcus watched Agent Venn's face as he studied the surveillance footage—frame by frame, angle by angle, hunting for the smallest detail that might reveal identity—and felt marginally better. If someone was going to stand between him and whatever nightmare was unfolding, at least it was someone who looked like they'd stared down worse and walked away.
Small comfort. But comfort nonetheless.
On the screen, the figure in medical consultation attire moved through the storage facility with practiced ease. Knew exactly where to stand. Exactly how to obscure their features. Exactly which samples to contaminate and how to make it look like natural degradation.
This was going to be a very long investigation.
And Marcus had the sinking feeling that four days until TC1853.01.18 was going to feel simultaneously too long and not nearly long enough.