Argrave once again stared upon a figure heâd hoped to forget. It was Sophiaâs creation, Castroâthe dim echo of the man that heâd taken the name from. Even today, he repeated things.
âI have a robust succession plan, Argrave,â her creation said.freeweb(n)ovel.co(m)
Argrave looked upon his form with some unease. Anneliese was here as well, standing off to the side. But today, this thingâs creator joined themâSophia. She stood just beneath him, hiding behind his legs in utter fear of what sheâd made alive. Argrave kneeled down to look at Sophia in the eyes.
âDoes he frighten you?â he asked her.
Sophia nodded.
âIâll admit⊠he scares me, too, a little. Do you know why that is?â Argrave looked at Sophia, but she only tilted her head without an answer. âLet me put it this way. Do you know why he makes you uneasy? Say what you will, but he looks like a walking, talking person.â
âBut heâs⊠heâs not,â Sophia said quietly. âHeâs just⊠what I remembered of him. He canât⊠he doesnât have a voice inside his head. And he canât hear us, understand us.â
As Argrave nodded, âCastroâ continued to repeat some of his final words heâd given before his death. Sophia managed to look at him. âI donât know⊠I donât know how to fix him, Argrave.â
Argrave nodded. âHonestly? I donât, either.â He picked her up. âBut thatâs why we came here, today. To think about what needs to be done. To think about how we can do it. And then, to make everything right again. One day, each of us can look upon the life you made and think it belongs. We have to change this so it can be a point of pride, rather than something to forget.â
Sophia gazed at âCastroâ thoughtfully, then buried her head in Argraveâs shoulder. âWhat if I canât think of anything? What if he stays like that? What if I canât fix him?â
Argrave comforted her. âAnneliese and I are here. You donât need to do all the thinking. But I can guarantee you thisâyou can fix him.â
Sophia looked up at Argrave, then flicked her gaze to Castro again. She looked at Anneliese, too, who gave her an encouraging nod. Sophia tightened her grip around Argraveâs neck and declared, âOkay. Iâll try.â
Stain was milling around in a room, staring at a machine as he tapped the side of his leg idly while disguised. He kept casting small glances at the bird in the corner of the room that was watching him. Suddenly, he heard a noise, and when he looked the machine thatâd been empty was now full. He pulled back the lid, and a bamboo tube awaited.
He collected the bamboo tube with a self-satisfied smile, then walked through Governor Zenâs mansion. He popped the lid off the tube, reading it as he walked, and his smile only widened. Arriving at his destination, he looked around the courtyard where the governor often read. The man was absent. Stain asked some people nearby where the governor was, and they were only too happy to oblige him, as he was disguised as one of them.
Soon enough Stain came to the man in his study, kneeled obsequiously, and offered up the message.
Governor Zen was very distracted reading half a thousand reports, but did eventually pry the message from Stainâs hands. He opened the letter and read it. As he did, Stain shut the door, and Zen looked up as he started to recognize incongruities. Stain undid his disguise, staring there plainly, and Zen rose to his feet in alarm.
âWhat you see in that letterâŠâ Stain pointed, Elenore using him as a mouthpiece. He had become practiced at reciting exactly what she said. âItâs our doing, I hope you know.â
âYou infiltrated my staff?â the governor asked firmly.
âJust for today,â Stain shrugged, walking closer. âWe knew this message would reach you today. And wouldnât you know? Itâs been a week.â
Governor Zen didnât look like his grievance wasnât fully settled, but he held up the letter. âCare to explain how this is your doing, this army strike?â
Elenore launched into a long speech, and Stain relayed it sentence-by-sentence, taking small pauses between each. âCommander Yuanâthe commander who was direly injured after fighting off assassinsâis one of our men. The imperial court dismissed him from service. Now, weâve taken it upon ourselves to make several commanders protest against the imperial courtâs extended regency. The army answers only to the emperor, after all, not his court. Meaning they either need to pick a new emperor, which we both know is untenable, or relinquish control of the army. And the invaders havenât moved an inch after taking their footholdâwhy canât the armies afford to remain still?â
Zen nodded, then set the letter down. âI see. I thought weâd speak after I investigated the Palace of Heaven.â
Elenore said gloatingly, âThatâs what youâre reading, isnât it?â Stainâs conveyance was less gloating, but still somewhat so.
âIs this some attempt at intimidating me, cajoling me into taking your offer?â Zen sat back down in his desk. âTelling me that you could get at me anywhere?â
âOf course not. Ji Meng says youâre not as harmless as you present yourself. Weâre inclined to agree with his caution.â Stain relayed Elenoreâs words, crossing his arms. âSoâwhatâve you learned?â
Governor Zen stared up at Stain. âSeeing as you know everything, why donât you tell me?â
âI think whatâs most telling is that you havenât learned anything at all.â Stain leaned up against the wall, listening to Elenore carefully. âSomeone like youâyouâve strings laid out across the whole of this empire. But you canât even get so much as a rumor about who commands the Palace of Heaven.â
âTrue enough. I could get direct answers, Iâm sure. But Iâd have to exercise some authorityâmoving in the open, which would draw the eye of the imperial court.â Zen tapped the desk, lost in thought.
âItâs supposedly a major fortificationâthe last line of defense for an emperor,â Elenore kept pressing, and Stain kept delivering. âSuch a thing wouldnât exactly change command quietly. What else have you found?â
âNothing. Our enemy is good. But Iâve found other proof the imperial court is compromised.â Zen pulled open a drawer, grabbed some papers and set them down. âThis was an independent investigation of mine, but it bore fruit. Grand Eunuch Hao, the de facto regent in control of the court, is working with an ancient god by the name of Erlebnis. He isnât in the Qircassian Coalition, butââ
Elenore yelled at Stain to interrupt, and eventually he called out, âHold.â Governor Zen stared in confusion as Stain waited for Elenore to convey her message. Once she was far enough along, he began repeating, âErlebnis has allied with Kirel Qircassia. Thatâs the main reason gods were able to succeed where theyâve failed countless times before. His vast knowledge, information networks, in tandem with the Qircassian Coalitionâs vast resources spelled doom for the court.â
Governor Zen stroked his sharp goatee. âThat⊠that does make sense. But itâs also concerning. It means that the Heavenly Arrays beneath the palace have been compromised. Do you know what those are?â
Stain shook his head.
âWell, thatâs not information for you,â Governor Zen shook his head. âYour betters may trust you with much, but I believe Iâve had enough of speaking through a proxy. Iâm ready to head south. Iâm ready to speak with your leader in person. Itâs the only way that weâll come to any arrangement.â
âStall,â Elenore commanded simply. âI need time to think.â
âUhhâŠâ Stain bumbled, drained of any articulacy he mightâve been displaying. âWonât you be missed here?â
âI am capable of disguise. It may not be to your standards, but Iâve my ways of travelling covertly. OhâI should mention two things.â Zen rubbed his tired eyes as he explained, âMy grandchildren will be coming with me. I hope that King Argrave will bring his family, too.â
âYouâre not done pushing that, are you?â Stain shook his head. âIâll give you a secret, no charge. Kingâs rather madly in love with his wife. Theyâre young and dumb. Maybe in a couple years a second partner will be on the table, but not now. Itâs called the honeymoon phase. The emperor is the only choice weâ"
âThe emperor is a brute!â Governor Zen shouted gutturally in a rage, but his next words were eerily calm. âHe cannot be trusted to sit upon the throne again. If he assumes his position, there will be no court, no governor that can check him. And that man, with absolute power over the Great Chu and all its armies⊠I canât stomach it. I wonât stomach it. Use him, I will. But welcome him back as emperor? Never again. There needs to be change, and you people give me the opportunity to enact it,â Zen insisted, tapping his finger against his desk loudly. âIâm willing to work something out. But like I said, I need to meet with King Argrave and all his family. Iâm talking about his father-in-law Patriarch Dras, his brother Orion, his sister Elenore and her husband, the King of the Burnt Sands⊠all of them, everyone. Except his nieceâSophia, I think her name was. I have no need of her presence.â
Even Stain was shocked as Governor Zen rattled off names there was no good reason he had to know.
âYou look shocked. Do you think youâre the only ones with skills?â Governor Zen leaned back. âIf youâll notice, I never asked for the emperor to be hereâmatter of fact, Iâd prefer he wasnât. Why? Iâll put it simplyâthereâs a lot that the emperor doesnât know about what Iâm capable of. Thereâs a lot the court doesnât know. These things run deeper than you possibly know. Even if the emperor hadnât gone off like a fool attacking your lands, I had some rather⊠different, shall we say, plans for the future of this nation. Iâm not opposed to playing a supporting role, so long as what I want can get done. You say you can speak for your leaders, so I ask againâwill they agree to a meeting?â
Silence stretched as Stain waited for word from Elenore. It came in the form of one wordâa simple command for Stain.
âAgree.â
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