Roads and Revelations
When Leilani finds herself at a major crossroads in her life, she takes a chance by reaching out to
She had read the letter three times and still hadn't answered it. That was how Commander Ysabel Crane lived now-on a northern estate with a collie and a drawer full of things she was going to return to. Later. There was always a right time.
Then the sealed packet arrived.
At fifty-one, Ysabel is the empire's most decorated retired commander-spent by an institution that used her brilliance to end a war and then quietly set her aside. For seven years, she has read intelligence dispatches she cannot act on, tended a garden she doesn't fully understand, and told herself the quiet life is sufficient.
She is still telling herself this when a young courier arrives at her gate with a mission signed by the one person Ysabel has not spoken to in eleven years: Dael Inveran-spymaster, architect of the peace, and the woman whose single classified decision dismantled Ysabel's career without explanation.
The mission is urgent. The peace accord that ended a generation of war has been secretly forged-a precise, patient falsification running nine years deep, hidden inside the very institutions built to protect it. If the substituted treaty is ratified at the upcoming council review, the border arrangements holding eleven nations and forty million people will collapse. They have fifty-eight days. And Dael has sent for Ysabel specifically.
What unfolds is less a race against the clock than a long reckoning-with institutions that consume the people who serve them, with the price of correct decisions paid by the wrong people, and with the specific discipline of two women who have spent twenty-three years filing the most important thing they have to say under later.
The Second Arrangement is a slow-burn sapphic fantasy of espionage, sacrifice, and the particular courage it takes to stop deferring the truth-for readers who believe that what two people don't say to each other can be just as devastating as any act of war, and that some things, once deferred long enough, become their own kind of emergency.