Argrave was higher ranked, and so had access to higher-ranked druidic magic. With it, he could create a temporary bond with a tamed creature only. For this purpose Argrave used a messenger pigeon, and with it, he examined the most important city in all the Great Chu.
The capital city of the Great Chu, Ji, had no peer. Argrave could say so fairly confidently while viewing it from above. He had been to Mundi, Dirracha, Sethia, and even founded a city of his own, Blackgard, but nothing could quite compare to Jiâs radiant beauty. To begin with, it had no roads at all. The whole of it was navigable by wide canals upon which boats traversed in tremendous numbers. Beautiful gardens lined these canals, with walkways of impeccable gray stone connecting the whole city.
No building seemed poor or run-down. Most all had clean white walls and gray-blue pyramidal roofs that hung over the side of the building. Gold and silver decorated wealthier homes, and children abounded, many of them playing with kites made in the image of eastern-style dragons. The crescent moon symbolizing their nation could be seen in noble palaces all over the city, each estate containing elaborate gardens and statues with a history Argrave couldnât begin to guess.
Looming at the far north of Ji was the imperial palace. Argrave had thought the Sea Dragon massive, but the imperial palace was a gigantic complex of buildings in the same style of architecture throughout the rest of the city. One puny wing of it was as large as the entire parliament hall and all accompanying buildings in Blackgard. The imperial court did its business within, running the whole of this nation.
Closely positioned by the palace, straddling the wall between the palace and the city itself, was Argraveâs focus: the main branch of the Grand Imperial Bank in the Great Chuâs capital city of Ji. It was neither showy nor ostentatious, blending in with much of the city relatively harmlessly. But below, the heart of this nation beat. Metaphorically speaking, that bank was the moon that governed the tides of the economy.
And they were no closer to it today than they had been before.
Now that Argrave had seen it, he broke the connection with the bird and once again sat in his quarters within the Sea Dragon. The past few days were both a relief of some pressures and the application of others on a whole new level. The fact theyâd compromised not one or two, but eight enemy commanders in such a timely fashion meant that the strain faced by their invading force lessened immediately. At the same time, this lessened strain enabled their scouting efforts to begin in earnest.
With druidic spells, they scouted army locations and geographical features, much of which they already had thanks to Lira. But with insider information, they began to map out how the power structure in the Great Chu had changed in the wake of Ji Mengâs absence. This was the most important information, yet also the hardest to manage. It was so tremendously difficult that Argrave found himself at a loss in merely three days.
Anneliese slid open the door, and Argrave turned his head to her.
She walked in and closed the door. Only then did she disclose, âCommander Yuan was attacked. He survived, yet⊠he lost a limb. Iâm told this is likely to relieve him of duty.â
Argrave lowered his head upon hearing the news, but was not surprised. The past few days, heâd had to accept that heâd bitten a honeyed apple that was poisoned on the inside.
Three of the commanders that theyâd managed to contact had been assassinated. Now, Commander Yuan was direly injured and likely to be removed from service. Some of the attacks had been blamed on Argrave and his forcesâthe commanders were âambushedâ by raiding parties that Argrave never sent out. Two had utterly vanished, and were presumed dead. Worst case, they were captured and tortured by the imperial court. Argrave couldnât be sure what information they leaked. All eight seemed steadfast, but anyone could break under duress.
âI shouldâve known that things were too good to be true. This must be the imperial courtâs move. Rather than place men they know are loyal to them in the frontlines, they placed ones they knew were steadfast.â Argrave scratched at his cheek. âThen, when we reached out⊠damn it all. But these men each and all had S-rank guards. How could they so easilyâŠ?â Argrave began to raise his voice, but calmed himself. He nodded quietly. âItâs done.â
Anneliese walked closer to Argrave to sit beside him. âThe other four are far too busy preserving their own lives to be of any genuine use. Iââ
The door opened, and Elenore stood there, shadowed by Melanie and Orion. Argrave rose to his feet at once. âElenore. Why are you here? This place isââ
âMelanie and Orion arenât enough protection for me?â She walked in briskly, then the two shut the door behind her. âI had to come in person. I was getting a headache from these constant mental barrages of conversation you people send me.â She walked with unusual vigor and grabbed a vacant chair, placing it before the table Argrave sat at. âSit. Everyone.â
Argrave slowly acquiesced from the sheer force of her approach. Only Orion stayed standing.
âThree days. Three high-level informants attacked,â Elenore summarized, her voice rapid and sharp.
âFour, as of minutes ago,â Anneliese cut in. âHe survived, yet was injured badly.â
âFour, then.â Elenore tapped the table. âWe were naĂŻve. These people are more advanced than ours in every which wayâwhy did we believe ourselves their betters in espionage?â
âDurran tells me he did a good job of making things seem naturalâthat he made it seem like he fought them, then got pushed back,â Argrave shrugged. âAnd the commanders themselves⊠I donât think they were indiscreet. So how couldââ
âThe âhowâ doesnât even matter,â Elenore interrupted him. âThe imperial court may not even have knownâthey could have simply purged those they suspected. Iâve certainly done such things before. We should move forward with the assumption the imperial court knows of our intent to target the Grand Imperial Bank, and the fact the emperor is in our hands.â
Anneliese nodded in agreement, then asked, âShould we change ourââ
âNo, we wonât change our target,â Elenore interrupted herâher mind seemed to be moving far faster than they could speak, at present. âThe bank is their biggest vulnerability, Iâm sure of it. Despite that, weâre fighting our equalsâno, our betters at subterfuge in the heart of their territory, and theyâre amply aware of our attempts to infiltrate and undermine their position. Itâs no wonder out first attempt failed. The first battle is lost, but it was enough to bring me here. And I refuse to lose any war.âfreewebnov(e)l
Argrave took a deep breath with a smile on his face. His sister, it seemed, had gained some rather extreme motivation. There was nothing more reassuring than that.
âIâm bringing the vast majority of my agents to bear, here,â Elenore looked at everyone in turn. âWe need to attack in ways that cannot be anticipated. Iâve thought of one, for now: weâll capture the pets of prominent figures and imbue them with druidic bonds to spy. Liraâs connections should be capable of that much. Even one or two successful plants could open up the world for us. As for the four commanders remaining⊠weâll change our strategy. Drastically. We face a proactive foeâbut by moving, theyâve already given us a vast amount of information. We have to force their hand.â
Elenore nodded intensely as her brain worked, then she refocused. âCommander Yuanâis he reliable?â She looked at each Anneliese and Argrave.
Argrave nodded. âProbably the most steadfast.â
âThe fact he was injured suggests otherwise, but it works in our favor nonetheless,â she nodded firmly. âIf the imperial court acts as they likely will, Yuan could become extremely important. His removal from service might be the legitimate grievance that allows us to protect and empower the four people that are our informants.â
Elenore rose and walked to a shut window, then opened it up. Orion watched the outside uneasily as she peered across the land. âKill our informants without consequence? I donât think so. Their information is conveyed by pipes beneath the canals, right? We need to get at that, intercept letters. Itâll be difficult to do so without arousing suspicion, but the rewards will be immense. As for assassination⊠it wonât be ours alone who have to die. We can stage killings of our own, pin the blame, just as theyâve done.
âMayors, governors, prominent merchants, local heroes⊠weâll rattle their cage until the rats come scurrying out. Then, weâll burn them from beneath until they squeal the names of their masters. Weâll reach around the empire, too. Ji Meng talked about barbarians on the opposite edge of the borders. If we tell them about the internal conflict⊠if we tell them about us, here at the shores, liable to strike at the heart of the empââ
âThat might be a bit much, Elenore,â Argrave stood, walking up to her. âThe whole reason weâre targeting the Grand Imperial Bank is to minimize bloodshed, remember? Iâm not opposed to assassinations. Better for a few to die than both our armies, but that? Provoking invasions?â
Elenore closed her eyes and stepped away from the window. âI suppose it may be⊠extreme. But Argrave, tell meâdo you expect it to be easier to raise Ji Meng as a claimant if the Great Chu is stable and prosperous, or if chaos erupts in his absence?â
âYou know the answer,â Argrave said, non-judgmentally.
Elenore pursed her lips, looking to debate things. ââŠthere are other ways. We could sabotage the intercity canals, for instance.â
âI think there are routes we forget.â Anneliese also stood, and came to join the three of them. âRook is present. Heâs agreed to help. Heâs already involved in some way.â
âI canât fathom what heâll askâŠâ Elenore closed her eyes and rubbed them. âHe agreed to help in war against the Qircassian Coalition. This borders on something beyond that, but perhaps if we phrase things properlyâŠâ
âDidnât Rook bless some guy you know? Some noble of house Jast, got disinherited?â Melanie chimed in. Everyone looked at her, and she cocked her head back in alarm. âWhat? Am I wrong?â
âNo, youâre very right.â Argrave pointed at her, acknowledging the merit of her suggestion. âI kind of wrote him off because he took service with House Parbon. I figured Elias would help him land on his feet. But Stain⊠he does have Rookâs blessings.â
âI donât know...â Elenore crossed her arms. âHeâsâŠâ
âHeâs what?â Argrave looked down at her.
âHeâs been a bit of an annoyance. Melanie somewhat mitigated that annoyance when she claimed the Low Way of the Rose. She loves making money, so I just route trade with the Burnt Desert through there, give her a percentage.â Elenore gestured. âBut House Parbonâs been buoyed by that disinherited upstart. I suspect heâs a fair bit different from how you remember him, now. Heâs grown into his role as Rookâs champion, suffice to say.â
âYouâre giving him a rather ringing endorsement, I think,â Melanie noted. âThinking back, Rook wanted me to be his champion. His blessings⊠canât he change his face with Rookâs powers? Weâd have someone reliable on the inside!â
âYeah, he can. Stain⊠Veladrien of Jast⊠god, itâs been two years, I think,â Argrave looked up at the ceiling reminiscing on memories long ago. Stain was actually one of the protagonists of Heroes of Berendarâhe was a pure rogue. Theyâd met him in the city of Jast, and he helped broker an alliance between the count and the margrave. âI hope heâs still scared of me. Itâs worth talking to him. If heâs unreasonable, we go to Rook, ask for his aid.â
âVery well,â Elenore conceded. âMaybe I can integrate him into my network. If not, youâll kill him for me, right, brother? He annoyed me,â she said with a sarcastic, childish pout.
Argrave smiled and touched her shoulder affectionately. At the same time, he didnât want to ask Anneliese if Elenore was actually being serious. It seemed the deaths of these commanders had sent the Bat-Signal, and now the Bat herself came down to the Great Chu. It was greatly heartening.
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