Chapter Two: Depth
Depth began with a pallet.
That was how Lydia later described it, when people asked when the audit stopped being strange and became hostile. Not with the vampire in the stairwell. Not with Mrs Casimir’s complaint form. Not with the old framework schedules or the voicemail from a man who knew too much.
Those were revelations.
The pallet was evidence.
It appeared on a goods-receipt extract from a refrigerated depot outside Avonmouth, buried among six thousand lines of ordinary logistics: insulin pens, wound dressings, nutritional shakes, enteral feeding tubes, palliative-care syringes, vaccine fridges, continence bulk supply, hospital-grade disinfectant, specimen containers, and one line coded:
SRP-IMPERIAL-DEPTH / mixed red class / 96 units / controlled transfer / no visual confirmation / no return route
Lydia read the line once.
Then again.
Then she copied it into the exception log.
The word Imperial bothered her.
Not because it sounded grand. Procurement language often sounded grand when it was trying to disguise something wet and badly stored. The public sector had named software platforms after mountains, Roman gods, birds of prey, moral virtues and abstract weather. But this was different. Imperial did not sound aspirational. It sounded old. It sounded like an instruction that had survived several governments by pretending to be a brand.
She searched the contract file.
No result.
She searched supplier catalogues.
No result.
She searched invoice attachments.
One result, in a PDF scanned at an angle:
Imperial Depth Protocol — to be invoked only where ordinary sanguine logistics are insufficient to maintain continuity, silence, and Crown-adjacent obligations.
The sentence had been redacted, but badly. Someone had used a translucent box instead of a proper burn-in. Lydia adjusted the contrast until the words came through.
She sat in her office at 06:40 with the blinds closed and felt the audit grow teeth.
Her draft report had changed the building.
People noticed.
Not dramatically. Nobody shouted. Nobody threatened her in corridors. Local government did not usually announce fear by slamming doors. It did it with meeting invites.
By Tuesday morning she had received:
Urgent Scope Alignment Discussion
Clarification of Intended Findings
Pre-Report Language Review
ASC-RCL Stakeholder Sensitivity Workshop
Informal Catch-Up re: Tone
Meeting Without Prejudice
She declined all of them except the last, which she accepted and then did not attend.
At 10:12, Legal asked her not to use the word vampire.
At 10:19, Lydia replied asking which statutory term they preferred.
At 10:23, Legal withdrew the comment.
By lunchtime, Martin Phelps appeared at her desk holding two coffees and the expression of a man attempting de-escalation with insufficient training.
“I brought you one,” he said.
“Did I see the kettle boil?”
He looked hurt.
“It’s from the machine.”
“Then no.”
He placed both coffees on the corner of her desk anyway and lowered his voice.
“You need to slow down.”
“I’m within audit plan.”
“You wrote the audit plan.”
“Yes.”
“After expanding the scope.”
“Because the evidence expanded.”
“Lydia.”
He said her name the way officers said names when preparing to become human shields for systems they privately hated.
She looked up.
“What is Imperial Depth?”
Martin went grey.
That was useful.
“You saw that?”
“I saw a line item. Ninety-six units. No visual confirmation. No return route.”
“Where?”
“Avonmouth.”
He sat down without being invited.
“You shouldn’t have depot data.”
“I requested all cold-chain logistics records.”
“You requested supplier assurance.”
“Logistics is part of assurance.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Yes,” Lydia said. “You mean I followed the evidence into the part where everyone hoped I would get bored.”
Martin rubbed his face.
“Imperial Depth isn’t local.”
“Nothing is local anymore. That’s the point of frameworks.”
“It isn’t council business.”
“It is if we pay for it.”
“We don’t pay for it directly.”
“Then why is it in our goods-receipt extract?”
He looked at the coffee cup as if considering whether it could answer.
“Because our depot is a node.”
There it was. A useful word.
Node.
Not supplier. Not partner. Not provider. Node meant network. Network meant architecture. Architecture meant design.
Lydia opened a fresh page in her notebook.
“Explain.”
Martin shook his head.
“I can’t.”
“Then I’ll infer.”
“That may be worse.”
“For whom?”
He looked at the blinds.
“For you.”
The office heating clicked on. Somewhere behind the ceiling, old pipes began to complain.
Lydia said, “Martin, I’m going to ask plainly. Is Imperial Depth a national blood logistics system for vampire clients?”
He flinched at the word but did not correct it.
“It is not just national.”
That stopped her.
Martin closed his eyes.
“I didn’t say that.”
“You did.”
“No. I said something stupid because I haven’t slept.”
“Imperial.”
“Don’t.”
“Former imperial territories?”
“Lydia.”
“Military stock?”
“Stop.”
“Crown obligations?”
“Stop.”
“Colonial extraction?”
His eyes opened.
The room changed.
Not physically. The ceiling remained stained. The printers remained sullen. Someone outside laughed near the photocopier. But something colder entered the space between them.
Martin’s voice dropped.
“Do you think this started with councils?”
Lydia did not answer.
He stood.
“Be careful with history. It doesn’t like audit.”
After he left, she opened the logistics map.
It was supposed to show regional movements of refrigerated clinical stock. It showed more than that.
Avonmouth. Tilbury. Felixstowe. Liverpool. Portsmouth. Rosyth. Belfast. Old airbase depots. Private medical cold stores. Two former MOD sites. One pharmaceutical warehouse. Three hospitals with unexplained night dock access. A data layer marked Community Need. Another marked Special Handling. Another that required a password she did not have.
She requested it.
Access denied.
She requested again under audit authority.
Access denied.
She sent the denial to Legal, Governance, Procurement, Adult Services and the Monitoring Officer with the subject line:
Control failure: supplier data layer withheld from statutory audit review.
The password arrived four minutes later.
The hidden layer appeared.
Routes.
Not current routes only. Historical ones.
Lines spread across the map in red, darkening where volumes were high. They ran from ports to depots, from depots to hospitals, from hospitals to care providers, from care providers to unmarked facilities, from unmarked facilities to private estates, old monasteries, secure psychiatric units, basement wards, embassies, and houses with no visible care registration.
The map looked less like logistics than circulation.
A bloodstream.
At the top of the dashboard, in a grey banner, was the system name.
SANGUINE RANGE PARTNERSHIP — DEPTH OPERATING PICTURE
Beneath it:
Maintaining quiet need since 1887.
Lydia stared at the date.
1887 matched the charitable undertaking in the folder. Queen Victoria. Empire at full arrogance. The administrative mind of Britain extending outward with ledgers, warrants, shipping schedules, quarantines, charitable trusts and hunger wrapped in law.
Imperial Depth was not a metaphor.
It was the old machinery below the modern contract.
It had moved blood the way the empire moved tea, cotton, opium, soldiers, bones, specimens, bodies, prisoners and paperwork: through routes, exemptions, flags, sealed crates, dockside silence, and men who could say necessity without blinking.
Now it moved through framework agreements.
Lydia exported the map.
The export failed.
She took screenshots.
The screen went black.
White text appeared.
UNAUTHORISED DEPTH EXTRACTION DETECTED.
She did not move.
A second line appeared.
PLEASE IDENTIFY BUSINESS PURPOSE.
Lydia typed:
Statutory audit.
The system paused.
STATUTORY AUDIT NOT RECOGNISED AT DEPTH.
She typed:
Public money. Public risk. Public duty.
The pause was longer.
PUBLIC NOT RECOGNISED AT DEPTH.
That was when Lydia understood that the logistics layer was not merely software.
Not sentient, perhaps. She disliked that word outside bad consultancy decks. But responsive. Old. Conditioned by use and secrecy until it behaved like an organism defending vascular integrity.
A system can become a monster without waking up.
It only has to protect itself.
The map vanished.
Her desktop returned.
An email arrived from an address she did not recognise.
From: depth.no-reply@sanguinerange.uk
Subject: Route Correction Notice
The body read:
Dear Ms Venn,
Your current line of enquiry has created avoidable exposure across several continuity pathways. To protect vulnerable persons, logistical stability, and historical obligations, your audit route has been corrected.
Please attend Avonmouth Controlled Cold Store at 23:30 tonight for evidence inspection. Transport has been arranged.
Do not bring witnesses.
Do not bring recording equipment.
Do not bring religious, reflective, silvered, salted, legal, journalistic, parliamentary, ecclesiastical, military, folkloric or sentimental objects.
Failure to attend may result in escalation.
Lydia read the prohibited list twice.
Then she forwarded the email to everyone.
Not discreetly. Not cleverly. To everyone.
Legal. Governance. Monitoring Officer. Martin Phelps. The external audit partner. Her union rep. The council’s generic fraud mailbox. Her private archive. A journalist she had once disliked but trusted to be annoying. A scrutiny chair with a taste for bloodsport. And Mrs Casimir, whose email address had appeared in her inbox that morning as:
margaret.casimir@kindredlegacy.care
The reply from Mrs Casimir came first.
Dear auditor,
Bring a mirror anyway. They hate confidence.
M.
Lydia printed the route notice.
Then she printed it again.
By 16:00, the council had become fully afraid.
A director appeared. Then an assistant director. Then someone from Corporate Risk who had clearly been briefed only enough to panic incorrectly. At 16:40, the Chief Executive’s office asked Lydia to pause all outbound communications pending “senior alignment.”
She replied:
No.
At 17:05, she was invited to the Chief Executive’s office.
She went because hierarchy was also evidence.
The Chief Executive, Angela Rhodes, sat behind a desk large enough to imply capital funding. She was a disciplined woman in her late fifties with short iron-grey hair and the contained rage of a person whose job consisted of inheriting disasters from men who had retired with honours.
Martin sat beside her, looking ill.
A woman from Legal sat near the window. She had brought two folders and no hope.
Angela pointed to a chair.
“Lydia. Sit.”
“I’d rather stand.”
“Fine. Stand imperially if you must.”
The word struck oddly.
Imperially.
Lydia looked at her.
Angela noticed.
“Oh, don’t look at me like that. I read the email.”
Legal said, “Angela—”
“No. Enough. I am tired of adults pretending euphemism is containment.”
Martin stared at the carpet.
Angela turned to Lydia.
“You have opened a Depth layer.”
“Yes.”
“You have triggered logistics response.”
“Yes.”
“You have used vampire in written material.”
“Yes.”
Legal made a pained sound.
Angela ignored it.
“Good.”
That surprised Lydia.
Angela leaned back.
“Do you know what an auditor is, in this context?”
“A nuisance.”
“No. A sovereignty problem.”
Lydia said nothing.
“The arrangement predates most democratic controls. It has survived monarchy, empire, war, nationalisation, privatisation, austerity, integration boards, outsourcing and digital transformation. Every generation renames it so they can keep using it. Charity. Public order. Health. Security. Care. Logistics. What it has never tolerated is ordinary public accountability.”
“Because ordinary public accountability would stop it?”
Angela shook her head.
“Because ordinary public accountability would have to own it.”
The room went quiet.
Angela opened a folder.
“I have been briefed on this contract twice. Both times I was told there were historical sensitivities, high-risk cohorts, national pathways and personal danger if the model destabilised. I was advised not to ask folkloric questions. I did not. That is on me.”
Martin whispered, “Angela—”
She raised a hand.
“No, Martin. It is.”
She slid a document across the desk.
It was old but not ancient. Heavy paper. A scanned warrant, reprinted. Crown crest. Dense language. Several signatures. At the top:
Office for the Maintenance of Quiet Dependents — Delegated Local Instruments
Lydia read the operative clause.
Where a local authority, successor body, health authority, charitable trust, or contracted provider is materially engaged in the maintenance, restraint, feeding, concealment, residential placement or community support of Quiet Dependents, duly appointed auditors and officers of account shall be empowered to inspect all ledgers, stores, routes, obligations, exclusions and subordinate arrangements pertaining thereto, without hindrance by supplier, dependent, family, estate, Crown servant, ecclesiastical body or logistical intermediary.
She read it again.
Angela said, “Congratulations. You found the one piece of imperial machinery still useful to an auditor.”
Lydia felt something settle around her.
Not power in the glamorous sense. Not courage. Something colder. Authority, perhaps, but not the modern kind with leadership behaviours and wellbeing statements. This was older authority. Ugly, narrow, procedural, and sharpened by the fact that it had once been designed for empire.
It made her skin crawl.
It also fit.
Legal said, “We are not entirely certain this instrument remains valid.”
Angela said, “No, but neither are they. That is enough.”
Lydia looked at the warrant.
“Why wasn’t I given this?”
“Because nobody wanted you to become imperial.”
“I don’t want to become imperial.”
“Good,” Angela said. “That improves your chances.”
Martin finally looked up.
“You don’t understand. Depth logistics will treat her as a hostile actor.”
“It already has.”
“No. It has noticed her. That is different.”
Lydia folded the warrant carefully.
“What does hostile look like?”
Martin’s voice was flat.
“Misrouting. Isolation. Invitations. Evidence contamination. Witness withdrawal. Cold-chain failure attributed to your interference. Clients destabilised in your name. Accidents. Character material. Old debts surfacing. Family members getting phone calls. People you trust offered promotions. People you don’t trust offered you.”
Legal whispered, “Offered you?”
Martin looked at her.
“To hungry stakeholders.”
No one spoke after that.
At 23:30, Lydia went to Avonmouth.
Not alone.
She brought Angela Rhodes, two external auditors, a union observer, a police liaison who had been told only that it involved controlled medical stock, and Mrs Casimir in a wheelchair because she had insisted on being a service-user representative and nobody had found a policy that could stop her quickly enough.
Martin came too.
Pelham was waiting at the depot gate.
Of course he was.
He stood beneath sodium lights in his dark overcoat, immaculate among lorries, fencing, cameras and refrigerated trailers. Behind him, the warehouse hummed with cold machinery.
Mrs Casimir looked at him from her wheelchair.
“Pelham.”
“Margaret.”
“You look smug.”
“I am experiencing proportionate confidence.”
“You look like a funeral director who married a knife.”
He smiled.
“Your rhetoric has improved in residential.”
“Your face hasn’t.”
Lydia stepped forward.
Pelham’s eyes moved to the folder under her arm.
“You brought paper.”
“I brought authority.”
“That is often worse.”
She handed him a copy of the warrant.
He read it.
For the first time since she had met him, Pelham’s expression lost its ease.
“Where did you get this?”
“Records management.”
Mrs Casimir snorted.
“Monsters always forget filing.”
Pelham folded the paper.
“This instrument is obsolete.”
“Then note objection.”
He looked at her.
There it was again: the shift. The system recognising a change in her shape. She was not just an auditor now. She carried an old right of inspection written in the language of empire and accountancy, and that made her offensive to every hidden route in the country.
Lydia hated the feeling.
She used it.
“Open the depot.”
Pelham said nothing.
The gate clicked.
Inside, the cold store was vast.
Rows of refrigerated chambers. Barcode scanners. Loading bays. Red route markings on the floor. Pallets wrapped in black film. Pallets wrapped in clear film. Pallets with NHS labels. Pallets with no labels. A whole wall of locked cages, each with a different symbol: crescent, crown, chalice, mirror, thorn, tower.
The air smelled of coolant, plastic, metal and something beneath refrigeration that would have been sweet if allowed to warm.
Angela whispered, “How much of this is ours?”
Martin said, “Not ours. Through us.”
“That distinction dies tonight.”
They began the inspection.
Lydia became imperial by increments.
Not by shouting. Not by commanding in the theatrical sense. By asking for ledgers and receiving them. By requesting cage manifests and watching men hesitate. By saying, “Under warrant,” and seeing doors open. By making an ancient logistics system cough up route maps because somebody in 1887 had assumed empire would always need auditors and had accidentally armed a woman from municipal finance.
She inspected Red Class units.
She inspected wastage logs.
She inspected “unallocated historical demand.”
She inspected the register of clients whose community packages had been reduced after supply variance.
She inspected emergency diversions.
She inspected Lower Level transfer triggers.
Every table was worse than the last.
Names appeared where anonymisation failed. Some she knew. Mrs Casimir. KLS-VALE-001. Pelham. Others were coded by estate, by prison, by hospital, by old military unit, by shipwreck, by parish.
There were notes.
Client destabilisation acceptable within corridor tolerance.
Staff attrition factored into provider resilience model.
Public discovery risk lower than unmanaged hunger risk.
Complaints from dependent persons to be retained but not actioned unless operationally useful.
Angela read that one and said, very softly, “Bastards.”
Pelham said, “Logistics is not morality.”
Lydia turned.
“No. It is morality with routes.”
He smiled faintly.
“You are beginning to sound like them.”
“Who?”
“The ones who built this.”
That landed.
The cold store seemed to listen.
For a moment Lydia saw herself from outside: standing in a refrigerated warehouse at midnight, holding a Victorian warrant, compelling records from men and monsters under a power that had once serviced empire. She was investigating harm using a tool forged by larger harm. There was no clean instrument. Only contaminated leverage.
She looked at Mrs Casimir.
The old vampire sat under a blanket, watching her carefully.
Not with admiration.
With warning.
Lydia lowered the warrant.
“Then we write new authority.”
Pelham laughed.
“You think systems relinquish themselves because you draft better clauses?”
“No.”
She turned to Angela.
“We suspend the framework.”
Martin said, “You can’t.”
“We suspend new placements under Imperial Depth pending emergency governance review.”
“You cannot remove supply.”
“I am not removing supply. I am freezing discretionary transfers, requiring named authorisation for every Lower Level movement, opening complaints review, and separating client safety from logistics convenience.”
Martin stared.
Angela said, “Can we?”
Legal looked as if she wanted to be sick.
“Possibly. Badly. With litigation.”
“Good,” Angela said. “Litigation creates disclosure.”
The cold store lights dimmed.
Every scanner in the depot beeped once.
A voice came from the tannoy.
Not human. Not machine. A layered voice built from route confirmations, dispatch notices, customs declarations, ward orders, shipping manifests and whispered instructions at locked doors.
DEPTH STABILITY THREAT DETECTED.
Nobody moved.
The voice continued.
AUDITOR HAS EXCEEDED INSPECTION TOLERANCE.
Mrs Casimir gripped the arms of her wheelchair.
Pelham looked upward, irritated and wary.
Lydia raised the warrant.
“I am within authority.”
The tannoy clicked.
AUTHORITY ACKNOWLEDGED. THREAT STATUS MAINTAINED.
The locked cages began to open.
One by one.
Crescent.
Crown.
Chalice.
Mirror.
Thorn.
Tower.
From inside came the shifting of old bodies waking in cold places.
Angela said, “Martin.”
Martin said, “This is not standard.”
Mrs Casimir snapped, “Pelham.”
Pelham removed his gloves.
His hands were very pale.
“Depth is forcing exposure.”
“Why?”
Lydia knew.
“To make the audit dangerous.”
From the first cage, something stepped out that had been stored as a client and handled as inventory. Tall, naked under a grey clinical sheet, its face covered by a transit mask. From the second came a child-shaped thing with adult eyes. From the third, an old woman with silver restraints on her wrists. From the fourth, a man in a hospital gown whose reflection remained inside the cage after he left it.
The police liaison reached for his radio.
It produced only static.
The tannoy spoke again.
UNMANAGED DEPENDENTS RELEASED UNDER AUDITOR INTERFERENCE EVENT.
Angela said, “It’s building a narrative.”
“Yes,” Lydia said.
The warehouse temperature rose one degree.
Then another.
The Red Class pallets began to sweat.
Pelham hissed.
Mrs Casimir whispered, “If those units warm, they’ll smell it.”
Lydia looked at the cages. The waking clients. The sweating pallets. The cameras in every corner. The logistics system had made its move. If violence happened here, it would be documented as audit-triggered destabilisation. Her investigation would become the cause of the harm it revealed.
A perfect institutional defence.
She took out her phone and called the number from the route notice.
It answered immediately.
No voice.
Just cold line noise.
Lydia said, “This is Lydia Venn, authorised auditor under the Quiet Dependents inspection instrument. Log this as a formal instruction.”
The tannoy clicked.
STATE INSTRUCTION.
“Restore cold-chain temperature.”
Pause.
AUDITOR INTERFERENCE—
“Restore cold-chain temperature or record deliberate supplier-side compromise of nutritional material under active inspection.”
The lights flickered.
“Reseal cages unless individual release is clinically required.”
DEPENDENTS RELEASED BY—
“Record current release as logistics-initiated exposure event.”
A long pause.
Pelham looked at her with something like respect and dislike.
Lydia continued.
“Maintain supply. Maintain containment. Maintain evidence. Any further system action will be treated as obstruction.”
The tannoy said nothing.
Then, across the warehouse, the cage doors stopped moving.
The refrigeration deepened.
A warning alarm ceased.
The released figures stood uncertainly under the lights.
Mrs Casimir exhaled.
Angela said, “How did you know that would work?”
“I didn’t.”
Pelham put his gloves back on.
“You have become imperial after all.”
“No,” Lydia said. “I have become a problem with authority.”
He smiled.
“That is what imperial means, to those below it.”
She did not answer because he was not wrong.
By dawn, they had seized enough evidence to ruin several careers, frighten several departments, and inconvenience things that had been hungry since before Victoria.
They did not solve it.
Systems like Depth were not solved in one night. They were mapped, constrained, exposed, renamed back into truth, and forced to show which parts were care, which parts were predation, and which parts had been pretending not to know the difference.
As Lydia left the depot, Mrs Casimir called her over.
The old vampire looked smaller in the early grey light, wrapped in a council blanket, eyes hidden behind dark glasses.
“You did well,” she said.
“I nearly released a warehouse full of hungry historical dependents.”
“Yes. Don’t make a habit of that.”
“I don’t know how to do this cleanly.”
“You can’t.”
“That’s not comforting.”
“It isn’t meant to be. Clean is what they sell you when they want you to stop looking at the pipes.”
Lydia glanced back at the depot.
Pelham stood by the gate, watching her.
The logistics system had seen her now. Noticed her properly. Classified her. She could feel it in the quiet of her phone, in the careful absence of new emails, in the way the morning delivery lorries waited for her to pass before moving.
Depth would not try to scare her next.
It would route around her.
It would offer helpful data. Remove awkward witnesses. Deliver small victories. Promote compliance. Starve dissent. Feed friends. Make her responsible for consequences she had not chosen. Turn every act of scrutiny into a pressure point.
That was what logistics did.
It moved need until someone else carried the risk.
Lydia opened her notebook and wrote the next audit finding.
Finding 2: Depth logistics operates as an autonomous risk-preservation layer, prioritising continuity of hidden supply over client welfare, staff safety, democratic oversight, and truthful classification.
Then she added, after a moment:
The system now recognises audit as a threat. Proceed accordingly.
Her phone buzzed.
Unknown number.
She let it go to voicemail.
The message was not Pelham, or Mrs Casimir, or Martin, or the voice from Depth.
It was Leah Marsh.
A young woman’s voice, tired and steady.
“Ms Venn? I got your number from Margaret. I work for Kindred. I think you need to see the app from the inside.”
Lydia saved the message.
Then she looked at the rising sun over the cold store and understood that the audit had left procurement.
It had entered care.