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The Children of Kings: A Study in Useful Men

The Temporary Arrangements Series, Book 2

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The Children of Kings: A Study in Useful Men

By: Ralph Clayton
Narrated by: Kurt Ringer
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Summary

Some men inherit power. Others inherit the damage.

The Children of Kings is the second book in The Temporary Arrangements Series, a dark, unsentimental novel about how men are shaped, renamed, and repurposed inside systems that no longer need to announce themselves with violence.

Set against the residue of old hierarchies—money, fear, loyalty, appetite—the story follows the quiet mechanics of recruitment, obedience, and usefulness. What once relied on intimidation now relies on compliance. What once broke bodies now processes people.

Here, power does not roar. It schedules.

Across industrial backrooms, private compounds, waiting rooms, and administrative corridors, men learn the same lesson in different forms: survival is not freedom, and usefulness is not dignity. Names change. Roles harden. What feels like choice is often alignment happening slowly enough to seem voluntary.

Violence appears, but it never resolves anything. Tradition lingers, but it no longer decides outcomes. The real work happens in delay, procedure, and the moment when a man realizes he is being maintained rather than protected.

This is not a redemption story. It is not a power fantasy.

Written in a stark, noir-inflected style with dark humor and procedural calm, The Children of Kings continues the series' examination of modern authority, masculinity, and inheritance—where silence carries more weight than spectacle, and nothing is explained away.

Nothing ends. It just keeps processing.

©2026 Ralph Clayton (P)2026 Ralph Clayton
Genre Fiction Political Witty Royalty
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