***
{Outside The Projection}
The moment IT was mentioned, the hall shifted.
Not in any way one could point to and say, âAh, see, thatâs changed.â
Yeah, no. This was different.
Like a soft whisper in the wind, something stirred in their minds.
A ripple of memories, blurred and distorted, came and went so fast it might as well have never been there.
Yet they all felt it.
A prickling at the nape.
A tightness in the chest.
A moment of weightlessness.
They felt like mortals standing on the edge of a great height with no railing to catch them.
And thenâgone.
Like a breath exhaled.
Like nothing had happened at all.
There was no, ââŠThe fuck was that?â
No. It was gone.
All it took was a beat.
The hall snapped back, pulling them away from the abyss and into the moment.
âGuess Iâm in the war business now.â
âPfftâhahaha!â
Azeem snorted, shaking his head.
âA break, huh? Oh, he just walked right into that one.â
Duban smirked on-screen, mirrored by the older one standing nearby.
âYeah, well, the bastard was never good at staying out of trouble.â
âI donât get it.â
One of the younger spectators frowned.
âWhy would he just accept? Isnât it kinda⊠I dunno. Stupid? Aligning himself with them would only make him more enemies.â
âYeah? So, what did you want him to do? Leave empty-handed? No gold, no favors, just a wasted meeting and a new enemy? Ainât no way he was gonna let that happen. Itâs a better path for him, even if itâs reckless.â
âReckless?â
A scoff.
âItâs the Sultan. Thatâs basically his middle name.â
âAnd YOU think he had a choice?â
Another voice cut in, laced with amusement.
âNasir practically cornered him.â
âPsh, please.â
The scarred womanâwho had clearly seen far too muchâraised both hands in exasperation.
âThat wasnât a corner. That was a damn throne wrapped in silk and studded with rubies.â
A ripple of agreement spread through the hall.
âI still say he got the better end of the deal.â
âOh? And howâs that?â
âTwenty-four gold pieces, my friend. That ainât chump change.â
âYeah, but a war, man. A war. You think goldâs worth all that?â
âTo him?â
The silver-bearded man tilted his head.
âMaybe.â
âBesides! Do you lot really think this Nasir fellow would let him go with just that?â
Azeem, clearly enjoying the Hell out of thisâenough to forget everything that went down for a momentâinterjected.
âIf he walked away, Nasir wouldâve found another way to keep him in the loop. Might as well be upfront about it.â
âSmart man.â
âDangerous man.â
âSame thing.â
A lull.
Thenâ
âOkay, but real talk?â
Another of the younger ones leaned forward.
âThat whole âBanĆ« SulaymÄnâ thing? Gave me chills.â
âYou too?â
A third shuddered.
âIt just⊠I dunno. It felt old. Like, older than anything else weâve seen so far.â
âWell, yeah.â
Someone gestured broadly.
âThe Sun ainât just a title, you know. Solomon wasâhe was something else. To claim his bloodline ainât light talk.â
âMm. Makes you wonder.â
âWonder what?â
âHow much of that legend is real.â
âTch. More than youâd like to know.â
âYou think the Sultan is a BanĆ« SulaymÄn, too?â
âNo way. His bastard father? Nah, no way.â
âI dunno, he seems more like an Al-Assad to me.â
âHeh, I see it. A family somehow even older than the Sun.â
What followed those words was laughterâno one there could even pretend to take that seriously. The banter kept rolling, and just like that, the weight of earlier moments faded, buried under easy conversation.
âYou know, I kinda respect it.â
âWhat, the deal?â
âNo. The whole thing. Sultan knew the game, and he played it well. He ainât some clueless Jinn taking scraps. He sees the board.â
âAnd he moves.â
âDamn right he moves.â
Someone else clicked their tongue.
âYeah, but the real question isâwhat made him kill them this time?â
The thought settled among them.
The projection was paused.
The tragedy was not.
âGuess weâll find out soon enough.â
Safira internally begged for that âsoon enoughâ to arrive quickly.
Sheâd skip to it if she could, ignore the build-up, jump straight into tragedy.
Thatâd have her better off.
Honestly, anything to act like that didnât happen.
She could not have the world see any of it.
Shame would be the least of her troubles.
***
{Inside The Projection}
As a beggar, Malik had been in plenty of war rooms beforeâso many, in fact, that he considered himself something of a veteran. Strategic discussions, tactical debates, the weight of life-and-death decisions⊠all of it deeply familiar.
Of course, in reality, those âwar roomsâ had been nothing more than a bunch of pissed-off bastards huddled around a dying campfire, arguing over whose turn it was to slit a throat, burn a house, or rob a traveling merchant blind.
The only battle plans they made were about who got first pick of the loot and how fast they could get away before the Faraja came looking.
Malik had never been one of them, not really.
He always sat at the edges, listening, memorizing, learning who was about to get hit next. Because the only thing worse than starving in the streets was getting caught in the middle of a raid, and Malik had made damn sure that the âsomeoneâ whose night was about to get ruined was never him.
It hadnât always worked. Heâd taken his share of hits, gotten caught up in more messes than he cared to count. But he was still here, wasnât he? And them? WellâŠ
Theyâd have likely died by now, or perhaps they had finally struck gold.
Either way, those slavers and their kin werenât on his mind right now.
Theyâd pay their price eventually. Of that, he was sure.
But today?
Today, there was a different war room in front of him.
One that actually mattered.
âAlright.â
Nasir clapped his hands.
âLetâs get this shit over with. Oh, and Stranger, youâll have the first floor of Last Stand for yourself; donât annoy the neighbors too much.â
A few chuckles resounded in response.
One guyâthe biggest in the room, scars all over his armsâjust grunted.
Malik smirked.
âSounds cozy.â
Nasir snorted.
âEnjoy it while you can. The warâs picking up pace.â
That wiped the smirk right off his face.
One of the older guysâgray beardâleaned forward and tapped the map.
âWe both got numbers and weapons. But the Holy Kingdomâs got two things we donât.â
âMoney and glass.â
Malik guessed, and Graybeard nodded.
âExactly.â
Another guy, younger, impatient, waved a hand.
âThe glass mines are the real issue.â
Malik turned towards him.
âExplain.â
Nasir cut in:
âYou ever fought against a bastard holding a knife to a kidâs throat?â
Malik shook his head, and Nasir leaned forward.
âYou move too fast? They cut. You push too hard? They cut. You do anything they donât like, andââ
He made a slicing motion across his neck.
âGone. Just like that.â














