Downfall Instant
But Caelus could not be brought. He had been found in his quarters an hour before the tea ceremony, slumped over a half-written letter. His heart, worn out from a lifetime of perfect service, had simply stopped.
Lukewarm.
One by one, the pillars of his empire turned to sand. The food synthesis plants reported ninety-eight percent efficiency, but the raw material stockpiles were at twelve percent—diverted to black markets run by provincial governors he himself had appointed. The military academies were producing officers who had never seen combat, only simulation scores that could be bought. The communication relays that tied the hundred worlds together were running on century-old backup systems because the replacement parts had been sold to mining colonies. Downfall
The defense grid, he then discovered, had been quietly decommissioning its outer sentry stations for twenty years. The reasoning was sound on paper: no external enemy had threatened Solaria for centuries. The real reason, buried in a private message cache he had to crack with his own emergency override, was that the sentries’ maintenance costs were being funneled into the construction of a new pleasure barge for the Admiralty. But Caelus could not be brought
“Replaced?” Valerius set the cup down. The tink echoed again, louder this time. “I gave no such order.” Lukewarm
Not like a tyrant, with executions and edicts. He began to dig like a frightened old man, in secret. He summoned the palace’s chief archivist, a ghost of a woman named Lyra who had served under three emperors. He asked her for one thing: the daily maintenance logs of the eastern aqueduct.