“Here’s my plan, Anneliese.” He sat on their bed, while she laid down with her head atop his legs, watching the ceiling. They were growing numb, but the moment was too serene for him to mind. “I think the youth are the future.”
“That tends to be the way of things,” she answered back tiredly.
“I’m serious. The youth of Mundi going to be the key that we need to convince the senators to lend us aid in extracting the magma from Vysenn.”
Anneliese looked intrigued, and Argrave took that as his signal to continue.nove(lb-1n
“Where dwarves are shorter, their lives are a little longer. Living to one hundred isn’t uncommon, even without the aid of magic talent. Dwarven society greatly values philosophy, intelligence, experience, and wisdom. Having someone like Alexius, the current Head of Senate, be someone so young is quite the unusual circumstance. And by ‘so young,’ the guy is fifty years old.”
“Then it sounds like youth is quite the opposite of what we need to focus on,” Anneliese noted.
“I think you’ll change your mind soon enough.” Argrave ran his hand through her hair. “I’ll give you that the senate is mostly wizened elders. Most dwarves work until they die. But there’s a large consequence to their aged workforce. Namely, younger people have some difficulty in earning their place in this society. Anestis left Mundi searching for dwarven metal. I imagine if he had a steady job, none of this would’ve happened... but alas, he didn’t. And he’s not a lone wolf.”
Anneliese was starting to put the pieces together, he could tell, but Argrave kept going nonetheless.
“There’s a huge bulk of young dwarves who work at the very bottom rung of craftsman and artificer guilds in apprenticeships, earning the wisdom that their people value very slowly. And an even huger bulk have no work to do at all. The city of Mundi was meant to be populated over a long period of time. There are stretches of the city that are partially built and unclaimed, yet with things as they are the senate finds no need to expand when there’s no demand for land or food. There’s a lot of discontentment that we can use to get our way.”
Anneliese nodded, impressed. “So you intend to call upon this class of people to pressure the senate?”
“Just so,” Argrave nodded. “We have all of the variables for rapid political unity. We have a common enemy—Gerechtigkeit. We have a demographic that wants change—the youth of their society. And we have a foreign element bringing new ideas—us. With it, we can form a faction within their nation that can push for their help in Vysenn.” He tapped her nose. “The unfortunate tragedy of the scenario is that democracy is slow-moving. Say what you will about monarchies, but decisions can be made rapidly and enacted much the same. If you ignore all the bad stuff about dictatorships, they’re not bad.”
“In times like these, I am reminded of where you are from,” Anneliese mused. “But there is one key part of this that you neglect. You need another group that might operate in your stead. Even if by some miracle you manage to convince the dwarven youth that you are one of them, to the rest of the populace, you will be seen as what you are—a busybody, sticking your nose in politics where it does not belong. And this faction of yours would die.”
“There’s always a fly in the ointment.” Argrave peered into her eyes. “Got ideas?”
“No. But I am certain that I will have them, when the time comes.” Anneliese looked deep in concentration. In times like these, alone with her, he was reminded why he fell in love with this woman.
#####
Argrave and Anneliese entered the dwarven nation midway through the next day. While en route, he had to veritably tear Anneliese away from the machines operating the magma moat. Even then, her curiosity had been lit, and she bombarded Argrave with half a thousand questions on the walk to join up with Melanie and the Alchemist. They were promptly shadowed by dwarven guards, who had been awaiting their return.
When they did arrive, Melanie was waiting out front to receive them. She’d just returned from a meal with a senator, and when she heard the magma moat operating, elected to wait for them out front of Therapont’s estate.
“Got a little bit of good news for you, and some that might be disastrous,” Melanie said after they exchanged greetings. They hung within the roofed alcove just out front Therapont’s estate, warded to prevent sound from leaking. “The good news is this—the dwarven senate seems to be having difficulty procuring one of the main ingredients of dwarven metal. Namely, spirits. That run I did, scrounging their contraptions that harvested them, turned out to be very beneficial indeed. I don’t think there’s any way they can make enough dwarven metal without relying on us, or fighting a god and extracting it of spirits on their lonesome.” She hefted her black blade. “They’re fresh out of weapons like these, and I’m told their magma weapons only really function down here, in the bowels of the earth. In other words... we’ve a very unwilling trade partner.”
“That is a rush of good fortune,” Anneliese nodded, then looked at Argrave pointedly. “And it might give us a point of attack upon which we can use to create the faction of youths.”
Argrave tried not to slip into joy as he asked, “But the bad news?”
“It’s half bad, half good. Just like you asked—didn’t get caught,” Melanie said subtly. “Went into Julius’ home—he was the one protecting Dario. From all I could learn, Dario quite literally brought the little fellow back from the brink. Solved so many of his problems it’d take a scroll to write it out. Julius is the type that likes to return favors, much to Dario’s fortune. And to our misfortune, I think he’s done something that could be a problem.” She reached into her gauntlet, retrieved a slightly bent paper, and held it out to Argrave.
Argrave took the paper, unfolding it. On it... something was drawn. It was an orb, and had some strange attempts to replicate markings. Or were they pipes? Argrave couldn’t tell.
“That was by the smithy in the basement,” Melanie said direly. “I’m sure you know... this is bad, right?”
“I don’t know what this is,” Argrave confessed plainly. “A circle? It has lines, too. Am I supposed to make sense of this?”
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