By the next morning, Trafalgar had already told Selara what Cynthia had found.
He kept it brief: Lower Conservatory, close to the Glass Atrium, open during the morning, public enough to enter without forcing a door and private enough to have staff passages guarded by men who did not smile for tourists. Selara listened without interrupting, which meant she cared. When he finished, she only asked two questions: who had heard it, and whether Cynthia understood the importance of the name.
Trafalgar answered both honestly.
Cynthia had heard enough to be useful, not enough to be dangerous.
