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A Balancing Act

Tyvia

Establishing Nation
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Davyos

Saha Tribelands, Andal Commonwealth

The early winter didn't bring the cold to the shores of Andaluz, much as it might have in the northern reaches of the continent. Instead, the Vandal Sea brought little but wind and rain as the season moved on, coating the hilly coastline for weeks on end with a constant downpour. The clouds surged onward until they hit the Sierra Nevada, the mountain range which extended through the center of Andaluz down until it finally terminated somewhere within Auraria to the south. There, against the mountainside, they deposited the last bit of moisture they might have held and dissipated, leaving the land beyond an arid wasteland inhabited only by a few Urudoah exiles, and native tribes.

Yet it was still land considered integral to the Commonwealth, and in times past it had yielded much for the colonial regime which had then claimed suzerainty over it. The Saha caravans–descendants of Muslims that'd been banished from Frescania during the 16th century–had taught the Hlaalu natives how to cultivate frankincense and myrrh, both of which could be grown in abundance in a few fertile strips scattered sporadically throughout the desert. This enterprise ensured their prosperity and autonomy, and so the Hlaalu and Saha both had remained free from persecution and much in the way of governance even after the abolition of colonial rule, after the fall of the republic, and into the Commonwealth's hundredth century.

Yet there was still a good portion of land in the desert which had been seized and appropriated for military use. This was done with the tacit approval and permission of the natives, though in truth they'd had little choice in the matter. Saha caravans had exclusive rights to travel through military lands, for in many parts of Andaluz' eastern reaches, it remained the best way to ferry goods from settlement to settlement, from oasis to oasis.

Towards the south, the oases grew rarer and the land rockier. It was around one of these few water sources that a military base had sprung up, supplied by rail from a depot that'd been built only a handful of years earlier close-by. An airstrip had been carved meticulously into the ground, and several homes wrought of mud and brick had been erected around the spring. A fence, half of it earthwork and the other metal, delineated the perimeter.

“Do caravans still come through here?” del Ciro idly asked, being led along through the compound by a pair of attendant soldiers. Beside him was Colonel Iago Gómez-Seletti, a relation of the general, and presently the commander of the troops stationed here on exercise.

The Colonel rolled back both shoulders, pausing in his gait to gesture sideways past the earthwork perimeter. The cigar between his teeth flashed as he drew in a pull from it, the illumination provided by the burning embers granting his features an almost malevolent quality in the twilight. “They do. It's the only water source for quite aways, and we're obliged to let them access it. We've got a tax-man here from Agusan, too, seeing as we're not allowed to levy the tolls on 'em ourselves.” He spat into the earth, adjusting his cigar absently. “Would save us all a lot of trouble, but reckon that'd be a bad idea.”

“How ready are you to proceed, should it come to it?”

“You give us the go, and we can get to hopping without a second thought. I admit that I'd be glad of a few more of those boys that'd seen the fire in Monkecia, I ain't got more than a handful that have any idea just what in the Virgin Mary “peacekeeping” actually entails, sir.” said the Colonel, rubbing his brow thoughtfully. Together, the pair trailed off and approached the perimeter fence, leaning idly against it as they spoke further. The distant din of activity was audible even from here, for a few regiments of men almost always produced a great amount of noise. Far away, del Ciro thought he could hear the repeating rhythm of a plane's propeller.

“How're the timetables looking, chief?”

“We've got too many commitments now, or too many possible ones popping up. Zulia-Santander's a big place, and we're risking being stretched thin right now. Auraria, Monkecia, the Implarian, and now possibly even the Faroes too–. . It's a goddamned balancing act right now with me and the Foreign Affairs Committee in Agusan.”

“Ain't that a good thing, in some respects?” the Colonel asked, decidedly tossing his cigar aside. It bounced against the fence, falling away into the dust on the wall's other side.

“It is, for the time being,” del Ciro grudgingly acknowledged. “I've come to give you orders in person, should the worst occur in Auraria.” With that, a letter was passed between the two men. It found its way into the Colonel's pockets, though he refrained from opening it for the time being.

“Synopsis?”

“General objectives are obvious. In the event of armed internal conflict, priority is given to securing Aluche up to the river. A cordon. Same operational procedures as in Monkecia. Primer, Santa Rosa, and Dorotea are the focuses. Not an invasion. This is peacekeeping, make it look like it. Now, there's one other thing–. .” and with that, the chairman cleared his throat. He fixed Seletti with a firm, even gaze, his tone grave as he continued: “until you receive instructions to the contrary, you are to seize or render inoperable all Sylvanian naval facilities upon entering the Republic.”

The implications of such a move were more than obvious to the Colonel, who merely nodded his head in response. They exchanged a few more courtesies before going their separate ways, with del Ciro having several appointments in the capital to attend to as yet. How wonderful it was that an investment had been made so many years hence in the airship network.

Agusan del Norte, Andal Commonwealth

He found it amusing that the chess pieces were magnetic. Their bottoms had little magnets affixed to them, such that they tugged the pieces back down even as one lifted it up to make a move. Some effort was thus required, a tiny bit of exertion so as to place them into the desired configuration. “All these wonderful metaphors,” he commented, earning himself a snort from his companion.

The two sat idle within a sprawling chamber that was somewhere between an office and a lounge. The balcony at its end was more like a covered veranda, and it was there, amidst the humid morning air, that the two sat and enjoyed their game. They were garbed similarly, like statesmen, and shared the same Andal complexion–sun-baked and dark. The speaker, a larger and taller man by far than the other, had one leg thrown over the arm of his chair and was spread out languidly across its velvety surface.

“We may need to perform a pivot at some point,” he continued, his slower drawl betraying his education: he'd studied and been raised in Frescania, in old Andaluz, not the new. Enrique Vélez, an expat in all but name, had nevertheless put in the time and earned his right to vote and office. Now he headed the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Gran Consejo, serving in a de facto capacity as the Commonwealth's premier adviser in that department. “A pivot on at least one key point.”

“Or you can prioritize,” responded his compatriot, Antonio de Arista, interim Moderator of the Gran Consejo. He was not technically one of the representatives, but instead the man responsible for ensuring the proper flow of debate and procedure in the legislature. Strictly speaking, he wasn't supposed to become involved in political affairs, but it was something of an inevitability of the station and of a resident of Agusan del Norte. “You can choose what's most important. Two of three, or perhaps even just one.”

“What'd be ideal,” Vélez said, “would be if this Thaumantic business went on for a great deal longer yet. Charleroi's eyes are focused close to home, and their fleets are busy. It gives us time and space.”

“Space! El espacio crítico! Why do you say that? I've heard it in your speeches before, but I've not read your book.”

The bishop moved forward, gliding three black tiles diagonally. de Arista looked down at the move and regarded the pieces with little interest. He didn't bother to move any of his own.

“If you were to look at Charleroi, you wouldn't think that this continent is as big as it is,” explained Vélez, sighing. “We should have clamped down on this business long ago, when Auraria leased them those damn bases. Space. To avoid domination by the Franks and Angles, the Frescanosphere must have it. To operate freely and independently. We've barely avoided them going into Monkecia–. . That's the only bloody reason we're even on that miserable island, to preempt them from doing it.”

“So what's your logic here? With them preoccupied, we have a free hand in the south?”

“Not a free hand, but it's an interesting opportunity. I've gotten offers from the OAE, who are asking me if I don't want the situation in Auraria getting just a bit worse. And truly, I don't know what to tell them. It may either be a precipice, or merely a small rise. There'll doubtless be a meeting on it, but I think it's clear what will happen here, if not in the Thaumantic.”

“War?”

“It may come to that, and at the moment it looks like that'd be more beneficial to us than anything else. I don't know, we'll have to wait and see. A government in Auraria willing to renege on their agreements would be even better, truth be told, as it'd save us all a lot of time, effort, and money.”

“Lives, too.”

“And lives, yes. It'll be another year, maybe even two if they make more cuts, before they can get the Iago Hidalgo anywhere near finished. A direct challenge would not be preferred, but I've advised del Ciro that it might be possible given the circumstances.”

“Ah. Scorched Earth, is it?”

“Area denial, really. We have our priorities, just as the Angles do. It's interesting to see what they do when their local ones are threatened, isn't it?”

With that, their game continued unhindered.
 
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Tyvia

Establishing Nation
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Davyos
Presidential Estate, Agusan del Norte

His opponent's blade flicked up, twirling in an arc which forced a quick retaliatory riposte. He jabbed forward, and found the motion arrested, with the tip of the other man's rapier pressed firmly against his collarbone. Grinning, Vélez bobbed his head ever so slightly and allowed his weapon to drop. The rapier's dull head fell to the ground, and the statesman removed the helmet which both protected and obscured his features. A bow was offered to his opponent, and the two men, each of a similar size, build, and appearance, accepted a handkerchief from the attendants.

“A bit longer than the previous bout, Enrique,” said the chairman's compatriot, the slightly older Agustín Zerbino – current President of the Commonwealth. A thin smile thus appeared, with the colorful handkerchief used to wipe away the sweat that covered his wrinkled forehead whilst they spoke. “Your form is good, but it's the speed you lack. You've not been running, have you?”

Though he loathed to admit it, Vélez nodded and nevertheless did so. “I haven't had the time,” the man pointed out. “My station is a touch less ceremonial than yours, your excellency.”

“Ah, yes,” Zerbino responded with a laugh, returning the handkerchief and passing along both his helmet and sword to the same attendant. A cup of water appeared in his hands, which the President idly toyed with as he regarded the other man. “Rule by committee, eh? Semi-Presidential Republic!” Another laugh accompanied that latest comment, and Vélez couldn't quite help but add to it.

The light sound of music drifted ever closer as the pair dismissed the servants and stepped into the adjacent chamber, a red-walled affair with broad windows that overlooked the Alto Cedran district. Though it'd once been a slum, a favela which reached up along the foothills of Mont Cheyenne, it was now one of the more affluent areas of the capital. A sprawling maze of red roofs, mosaic and mural encrusted walls, and the perpetual strumming of guitars or viheulas. Even now, a faint melody could be heard from somewhere down below, entering their private room through the wide, mostly open windows. Despite the onset of autumn and the inclement winter, it could still be quite warm during the day in Agusan del Norte.

Now alone, a bottle of wine was produced from somewhere–it already half empty–and the remainder of its contents used to fill a pair of glasses. The two men helped one another undress, a handful of kisses and tender touches intermixed with the process. Cigars were passed around thereafter, with either man lounging on a couch. The two couches formed a ninety-degree angle with one another, another one opposite them both, and a large mahogany table sat between them all. Vélez, clad much the same as his President and paramour, spread his legs languidly out onto the tabletop. Indeed, evidence of the fact that he hadn't been doing his running was out on display. Though he'd not yet gone to fat, his stomach was nevertheless quite noticeable, and not even the outline of his abdomen could be seen between the unbuttoned flaps of his dress shirt.

“It's a good season for it,” he finally admitted, silencing his sigh with a sip from his glass. The wine went down easy. An older vintage from Hidalgo, it had the faint stirrings of myrrh hidden among its otherwise almost overbearing sour tones. “Running,” he quickly added, after Zerbino had raised a brow. “The waves are calm, the wind frequent. The mornings are not hot, though not cold. It's a good time to start training your breathing for the coming winter.”

“Tell your wife of your plans,” the President suggested, chuckling lightly. A cloud of smoke had begun to generate around him, for he was much more fond of playing with the cigar than properly smoking it. It didn't really matter that each one cost an exorbitant sum, and to this day Zerbino had never really tasted one–not truly, anyway. He just enjoyed trying to make little smoke rings with them. “She'll rejoice at the idea that you might show some vigor!”

That prompted a laugh. “Ay, Alicia won't let me hear the end of it! She'll be hitting me in the morning, throwing me out of the house and pointing me at the beach! Not a moment's peace if I do that, my friend!”

“Perhaps a stern touch is just what you need, Enrique. God knows, she is and always has been a good woman. You're lucky to have her.” Zerbino's face grew solemn as he observed Vélez' do the same, a touch of bemusement entering his voice. “You're not still worried, are you? Upset?”

“No, no,” Vélez responded, speaking slowly, picking each word out with meticulous care. He frowned, his brow creasing in thought, nothing more. “She understands. We spoke of it a week ago, again. It's not an infidelity, she told me, because I still love her.”

“And do you?”

“I do,” Vélez affirmed, his hazel eyes resolute. “And you too. But I can't claim to know the mind of god.”

Zerbino had an answer to that ready, able to provide it near instantaneously. “God does not punish compassion,” he simply said, setting his cigar down into a nearby ashtray. The cloud followed it, with a steady stream billowing gently upwards from that source. “God does not punish love.”

“You can't claim to know the mind of god,” Vélez pointed out in response, his tone abruptly vehement, passionate. A sort of fire was in him that Zerbino rarely saw, usually only their own passionate sessions. His surprise wasn't at all obvious on his face, however, and his puzzlement was displayed only in the slight tilt of his brow.

“And neither can you, so why worry about it?” Zerbino asked. He took a seat beside the other man, placing a hand absently atop his knee. “Either there is a god–and he is just, and understanding, and fair, or he is a megalomaniac, and not worth worshiping, and may as well not exist.

“Catholics, Concordists, the Last Congregationalists, Saints, Saha, the Sun-worshippers–. . we all give forms to god, we all claim to know his mind. Why dwell on it? On inevitability? You've done your duty. You continue to do your duty.”

“I worry,” Vélez at length confirmed, shaking his head slowly from side to side. He repeated those two words again, reaching out to seize his goblet and to draw a deep gulp from it again. “I worry that I've not done it. Perhaps to Andaluz, I have, and will, but not to her.”

“I've spoken to her, Enrique. She spoke to both of us, to you. The confessional, for god's sake! If it's her eyes that concern you so, you can rest assured that they cast upon you a warm and welcoming gaze even now.”

“Perhaps, perhaps. I'll bring her next time–. . can you get her an invitation to the Vaquos tomorrow?”

“You want to meet with the pastor?”

“If it could be arranged.”

A true meeting of minds, that would be. Felipe del Toro was a ten-year veteran of the Commonwealth Navy, a prominent member of the Enmascarado Vaqueros luchadore association, and President of the Commonwealth, all before he went on to become ordained as a priest in his retirement.

 
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Tyvia

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Sara Luego, Agusan del Norte

Alicia was a thin, wispish and almost elf-like woman. Having failed to inherit the same complexion her father possessed, she instead fretted and constantly strode about either under a parasol or some other cover, almost as though in mimicry of dames of the century's first two decades. Dark hair cascaded down, arranged neatly in a bun behind her head save for a few bangs which fringed her features quite elegantly.

A cross wrought of plain, cast silver hung from her neck by a thread of linen, sitting neatly between her firm, supple breasts. Blind faith was just as dangerous in the woman's mind as a lack of it, and though she claimed no especial allegiance to any one denomination, she nevertheless had a preference for Andal Concordism. It was thus no surprise that she and her husband, the “esteemed” Enrique Vélez, found themselves within the Saint Dominic Church of the Eternal Concord in the Sara Luego favela of Agusan del Norte.

Favela meant something different in Andaluz than it did in the rest of the Frescanosphere. Whereas it had been used as a slang term for a shanty-town elsewhere, in Andaluz it simply referred to a district which ran diagonally at least in part. Given the terrain of the country's western shores, it was often the case that parts of the city were built, almost literally at times, into hillsides. Sara Luego sloped higher towards the east and north, and on the summits were usually built the most expensive villas—to provide the best views. Nevertheless, the majority of the housing was good quality, and of a reasonable price, with a good few government employees making their homes there.

In attendance alongside the couple was Felipe del Toro, one of the habitually errant priests of the Concordist denomination. It was often the case that pastors and churchmen of that particular branch of Christianity went wandering, refraining from establishing churches and instead choosing to preach to different flocks—to expand their wisdom and worldliness. Saint Dominic had been one such man, and was oft considered one of the first martyrs of the Concordist faith. For that reason, they broke with their customs and thus built a church in his name, it serving as one of the few constant meeting places for ministers and teachers who pledged faith and fealty to Concordism. Del Toro was a fairly recent convert and addition to their ranks, the erstwhile President choosing to adhere to the usual custom and indeed spend his time as a wandering preacher—of sorts.

Despite his conversion, del Toro still had a weakness for several things. Gossip, alcohol, and—most tellingly—beautiful women. Vélez had never felt threatened by del Toro's interaction with his wife, tolerating and even encouraging their friendship. She was much more faithful to him than she was to him, in truth, and would continue to do her duty until god absolved her of it. “Perhaps even after that,” Vélez idly mused.

They walked arm in arm, del Toro and Alicia. The former looked like her father, an elderly and truly wizened man; though he walked with back straight still, and his build was much larger than Vélez's. It was a platonic embrace they shared, in truth, for one was too honorable and the other mindful of his reputation to impede upon it. They were better people than he deserved to be with, he thought.

“Explain it to me, please,” she asked again, her features lively and alight as she smiled softly. Her cheeks were just the slightest bit rosy, her brown eyes bright, wide, and curious. It must have been hard for del Toro to resist her. It'd been hard for him to do the same, of course, for Vélez saw beauty in all things—and so he'd married her. Love was a strange thing, it seemed to him, and he hoped that god knew that.

A chuckle escaped del Toro, he shaking his head slowly from side to side. His deep, baritone voice slowly obliged her, providing the young woman with a response. “Deus Irae, and Deus Bellum,” he said, “that is his main aspect. Jehovah. He is god, but he has many faces. It is in that aspect that he lead the Hebrews to their promised land, that he destroyed their conquerors. It is in that aspect that he cast Adam and Eve into the world, that he punished Cain, and released upon the world the greatest of all floods.”

“Yet it's not his only one?” she tentatively questioned, that smile lingering on her face. It was as though she was amused by this, all this godly talk and discussion. In truth, Vélez thought, she'd always been entertained by theology. He absently wondered if she ever actually believed in anything. Given her vigorousness while anywhere near a bed, he was leaning towards the negative. Yet del Toro believed, despite all his worldliness, experience, and history—and that made him wonder.

“No, no, for it was said—I am Alpha and Omega—both creator and destroyer. He brings the fire, the sword, the scourge,” said the erstwhile President, smiling serenely up at the altar. Concordism disdained the use of effigies or vibrant, colorful illustrations of Christ, god, or any biblical scenes. It was thus the case that for the most part, the Saint Dominic Church of the Eternal Concord, despite its size, was a muted and somewhat drab affair.

The architecture was certainly impressive, built in a style almost reminiscent of a mosque, with interlacing geometric patterns and a painted domed ceiling to rival any church in scale—but it didn't possess the opulence or the symbolism of a church, at least not from the view of someone who might have visited Catholic or Last Congregationalist services. The altar was a simple affair, as such, little more than a slab of marble with a huge wooden cross—ash—behind it and atop a small dais.

She caught on quick, a certain gleam in her eyes as she offered del Toro a coy smile. A look he'd learned that she was quite proficient at, and one which helped her get her way with near any man. That shy, half-curious and half-longing look certainly drove him insane whenever he was the subject of its scrutiny. He could only imagine its effect on others.

“But while fire burns,” the woman softly said, “it also gives life.”

“That it does,” del Toro could only respond, now releasing the woman's arm as they stepped up to the altar. He was forced to bid them farewell there, for only ordained priests could enter the rooms behind the cross. The pair were thus left standing there, the cross before them, and their hands slowly met and folded together.

“We should be Concordist,” Alicia decided, prompting Vélez to lift up one brow. “They're certainly much more interesting, generally speaking,” she explained, her tone breezy and light, “if that del Toro of yours is anything to go by. And Zerbino! My god, certainly much more interesting.”

“You're not upset, are you?”

“Upset? Jealous! Curious!” she exclaimed, pulling him along back down the aisle. “How can one man juggle so much love?” his wife teased, grinning at his expense as the man turned red.

“Only through great effort,” was all he could say.
 
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