Part 1
The imperial train carved through the verdant landscape like a blade of black steel and gold, its mana-engines generating heat waves that shimred against the May afternoon air. Twenty cars long, each one a testant to Arussian engineering supremacy, the convoy carried enough firepower to level a small city. The lead car bristled with experintal mana-cannons, while summoned tal birds circled overhead in perfect formation, their crystalline eyes scanning for threats that would never materialize—not because they didn't exist, but because any assassin foolish enough to attack would need to penetrate seventeen layers of magical shielding first.
Inside the seventh car—traditionally reserved for the Emperor but commandeered for this occasion—Prince Vlan of Arussia stood before a window that stretched from floor to ceiling, watching his holand blur past at two hundred kiloters per hour. The glass had been enchanted to show multiple spectrums simultaneously: the physical world in its spring awakening, the mana flows that powered the empire's infrastructure glowing like arteries beneath the fresh earth, and the heat signatures of every living thing within five kiloters.
"Your Highness," his aide, Colonel Dmitri Voldinsky, cleared his throat nervously. "The morning briefings await your attention."
Vlan didn't turn, but his reflection in the window smiled—that particular smile he'd perfected over years of practice, warm enough to disarm, distant enough to maintain authority. "Tell , Dmitri, what do you see out there?"
The colonel joined him at the window, uncertain. "The countryside in bloom, Your Highness. The village of Krestnov, if I'm not mistaken. Population eight hundred. Primary export: spring wheat resistant to mana-blight."
"I see twenty-three heat signatures in houses that should hold forty. I see mana-flow interruptions suggesting three transforrs have failed in the last month. I see prosperity's facade over poverty's foundation." Vlan's smile never wavered. "The morning briefings, you said?"
"Yes, Your Highness. Intelligence reports from the peace conference preparation committee, treasury analysis of the economic impact of continued conflict, and..." Dmitri hesitated, "a personal ssage from Lady Woterbatch."
At Rosetta's na, Vlan's expression shifted subtly—a softening around the eyes that would have convinced any observer of his genuine affection. He turned from the window with fluid grace, every movent calculated to project an air of reluctant duty wrestling with romantic distraction. "Ah, Rosetta. Has she sent another of her charming attempts to civilize through Osgorreich poetry?"
He moved to the car's center, where a workspace had been arranged with military precision. Maps covered one wall, showing troop movents along the Vakerian border. Another displayed economic data—the empire's military production operating at 140% capacity while civilian goods remained rationed. A third held newspaper clippings from across the world, each one analyzing Prince Vlan's potential as a reforr.
"Young Prince Represents Hope for Peace" read a Continental Republic headline.
"Vlan's Democratic Tendencies Worry Traditionalists" proclaid an Avalondian paper.
"The Playboy Prince: Passion or Politics?" asked Osgorreich's most popular gossip magazine, accompanied by a photo of him and Rosetta at last month's charity gala.
Vlan studied them with the sa attention he'd give battle plans. Every article, every photo, every quoted word had been orchestrated as carefully as a military campaign. The democratic powers wanted so desperately to believe in a reforr within the Arussian court that they had constructed one from wishful thinking and carefully staged appearances.
"Shall I read Lady Woterbatch's ssage, Your Highness?" Dmitri offered.
"Please do. Her words always brighten these tedious journeys." Vlan settled into a chair upholstered in white bear fur—a gift from eastern tribal leaders who still practiced the old magics. As he listened, he reviewed the intelligence reports with chanical efficiency, his mind processing multiple streams of information simultaneously.
"My dearest Vlan," Dmitri read in a carefully neutral tone, "I hope this letter finds you well as you undertake this journey for peace. The newspapers here speak of nothing but the conference, and I confess my heart races at the thought of what you might accomplish..."
Peace. Vlan's smile deepened as his pen marked corrections on a logistics report. Rosetta spoke of peace while facilitating the economic entanglent she believed would prevent escalation. She thought herself so clever, persuading Arussian nobles to invest in Osgorreich markets, creating financial incentives for de-escalation. She had no idea that every transaction had been secretly reviewed and implicitly approved by Vlan personally, that every "deceived" noble was rely playing along following his orders, that the entire operation served his purposes far better than hers. He wanted capital outflow, ensuring friendly capital could operate outside the oversight and reach of his brother. Rosetta and her attempts provided a perfect cover for personal deniability of intent should issues subsequently arise.
"...Oh, Vlan, to think our love might serve not just our hearts but the world..."
"She writes beautifully," Vlan murmured, signing execution orders for three high-ranking deserters without his expression changing. "Such passion, such naive faith in love's power to heal the world. Reply that I am, as always, enraptured by her words and eagerly await our reunion."
"The exact phrasing, Your Highness?"
"You know my style by now, Dmitri. Sothing about moonlight and yearning. Perhaps compare her to Tatiana—she adores literary references." He set aside the execution orders and picked up the treasury report. "And ensure the letter is intercepted by at least three intelligence services."
Dmitri made notes, professional despite the cynicism of the task. He'd served Prince Vlan for five years, long enough to understand the performance but not the purpose. Like everyone else, he saw what Vlan permitted him to see: a brilliant prince torn between duty and desire, using his romance with a foreign princess to moderate hostilities.
The truth was far more intricate. Every public appearance with Rosetta, every leaked letter, every staged mont of passion served multiple purposes. To his enemies at court, it suggested weakness—a prince compromised by foreign honey. To foreign powers, it reinforced his image as a romantic reforr. To Rosetta herself, it provided the illusion of influence she craved.
But the masterstroke was yet to co. Vlan had carefully orchestrated their appearances to maximize dia coverage in Osgorreich. Soon, very soon, her own people would brand her a collaborator. The patriotic fervor she felt, the conviction that she was saving her nation through her efforts—all of it would crumble when faced with public condemnation. The psychological pressure would be exquisite. Either she would break entirely and beco his creature in truth, or she would flee in disgrace. Either outco suited his purposes.
"Your Highness," another aide appeared at the car's entrance. "Prince Mikhail has sent a communication."
Vlan's smile didn't waver, though sothing cold flickered in his eyes. His dear brother, the crown prince. Mikhail, whose mother ca from the ancient princely bloodline of Yulenov. The Yulenovs owned more land than so nations, their wealth asured not in money but in the percentage of the empire's mana production they controlled.
"Let guess," Vlan said pleasantly, accepting the sealed ssage. "My brother wishes luck in the negotiations while reminding that failure would reflect poorly on our father's judgnt in sending ?"
He broke the seal with one elegant motion and scanned the contents. As predicted, veiled threats wrapped in fraternal concern.
"Reply that I am touched by my brother's concern," Vlan instructed, feeding the letter into a small furnace. "Assure him I will endeavor to bring honor to the family na, as he does through his admirable managent of dostic affairs."
Dostic affairs. Mikhail's supposed domain, where he'd proven remarkably effective at enriching his own supporters while maintaining the fiction of imperial service. The crown prince possessed all the subtlety of a bear and twice the greed. His vision for Arussia extended no further than ensuring the elites' wealth and dominance continued to grow, which was exactly why Vlan was certain that Mikhail would turn a blind eye to the foreign investnts, given that the free capital flow lay at the heart of his supporters' personal interests.
"The briefing materials, Your Highness?" Dmitri prompted gently.
"Yes, of course." Vlan turned his attention to the peace conference preparations, though his mind continued processing other threads. "What is our esteed General Staff's assessnt of the situation?"
"They classify the current engagent as a 'contained conflict,' Your Highness."
At this, Vlan actually laughed—a genuine sound that transford his face montarily into sothing almost boyish. "Contained conflict. Only in Arussia could a war involving forty-seven divisions, sixteen hundred tanks, and deaths approaching two hundred thousand be considered 'contained.'"
"The classification guidelines are quite specific, Your Highness," Colonel Voldinsky offered carefully. "Any conflict not requiring total mobilization—"
"I'm aware of our classification system, Dmitri. I wrote the current version." Vlan rose and moved to the map wall, tracing the front lines with one finger. "Tell , what do you know of the War of Justice?"
"It was the most recent formal war requiring total mobilization, Your Highness. Eighty years ago, with seventeen million under arms, the entire civilian economy redirected to military production. Our victory, though at severe cost, ensured Arussia's ascendancy to superpower status."
"Seventeen million." Vlan's voice carried a strange mixture of admiration and lancholy. "My great-grandfather commanded the Third Army. He used to tell stories—how the sky turned black from smoke, how entire cities were reduced to rubble. That was war. What we have now?" He gestured dismissively at the map. "This is an elaborate form of violent negotiation. It is the preferred type of diplomacy by the imperial chancellor, my brother's ntor. Though I suspect our Osgorreich friends might hold such thods in disdain."
He returned to his desk, picking up a report on industrial production. The numbers told their own story: military output increasing by double digits annually while civilian goods stagnated. The empire produced so of the most advanced weaponry in the world but couldn't manufacture enough washing machines for its citizens. The irony wasn't lost on him—a nation that had mastered the art of destruction while failing at the basics of civilization.
This was what his brother would inherit and perpetuate. More weapons, more corruption, more stagnation disguised as strength. Mikhail saw the empire as a resource to be exploited, its people as subjects to be controlled. Vlan sneered at the thought. Mikhail lacked the vision to understand that true power ca from a strong state, not greater exploitation.
"Your Highness seems troubled," Dmitri observed carefully.
"Do I?" Vlan's expression smoothed back into its default pleasant mask. "Perhaps I'm simply contemplating the burden of peace negotiations. So much depends on finding the right words, the right compromises. Though between us, Dmitri, I suspect this conference will accomplish exactly what it's designed to accomplish—nothing of substance. The real negotiations happen in boardrooms and bedrooms, not conference halls."
A soft chi indicated an incoming priority communication. The seal belonged to General Konstantin, commander of the Southwestern Military District. Vlan opened it personally, scanning the contents with growing interest.
"It seems our 'contained conflict' has produced unexpected innovation," he murmured.
"Shall I alert our delegation, Your Highness?"
"No need. Let them present their toy. We have our own surprises." Vlan's mind was already calculating responses, counter-strategies, ways to turn this revelation to his advantage. "Though I admit, I admire the innovation. It's precisely the sort of creative thinking our own military lacks."
This was the crux of the empire's decline—not lack of resources or power, but absence of imagination. The General Staff thought in terms of traditional warfare while the world evolved around them. They built ever more destructive weapons while others developed precision instrunts. They asured strength in gatons while others counted economic influence.
His vision for Arussia transcended such limitations.
"Your Highness," another aide appeared. "We're approaching the station. Protocol requires—"
"I know what protocol requires." Vlan straightened, and his entire deanor shifted. The contemplative prince vanished, replaced by sothing altogether more imperial. "Signal the advance guard. Ensure the station is secured to Category Seven standards. And inform the local governor that Prince Vlan requires no ceremony. Just competence."
The last word carried an edge that made both aides stiffen. They'd glimpsed, for just a mont, the steel beneath the silk.
As the train began to decelerate, Vlan moved to his private compartnt to change. The uniform waiting for him was a masterpiece of psychological warfare—military in cut but adorned with civilian honors, traditional enough to respect Arussian sensibilities but modern enough to suggest reform. Every dal had been chosen for its symbolic value, every detail calculated to send specific ssages to specific audiences.
While his valet worked, Vlan's mind drifted to a mory he rarely permitted himself. A winter night twenty-two years ago, in the palace gardens. He'd been eight, escaping the suffocating void left by a mother he'd never truly known. The moon hung low and bloated in the sky, casting the palace grounds in shimring hues of silver and shadow.
He had first noticed her as an unexpected presence by the frozen fountain—a figure that should not have been there. Palace security was infallible; even mice couldn't slip through without alerting the wards. Yet there she was, sitting elegantly at the fountain's edge, humming a lody soft and rhythmic, as if it could lull the very stars to sleep.
"Who are you?" he'd demanded, attempting authority despite his trembling voice. "Guards! There's an intruder!"
She turned toward him, and his breath caught sharply. The woman appeared perhaps twenty or twenty-five years old, perfectly sculpted and unmistakably regal. Her long, pristine white hair frad a face of flawless beauty, skin smooth as polished marble, and eyes deep as winter lakes.
"They can't hear you," she'd replied gently, her voice serene and steady. "I put them to sleep."
"That's impossible," he insisted.
"Sleep is easy to induce," she said calmly, her perfect features softening. "Tell , little prince, why do you weep alone in the cold?"
"I wasn't crying," he lied.
"The frost on your cheeks says otherwise."
He was hesitant at first, but after a few more encounters, he had opened up. She was always so attentive, drawing forth his hidden truths with patient compassion. He spoke of his absent mother, deceased three years past, of the palace that felt more like a gilded cage, and of courtiers who smiled to hide the knives behind their backs. She listened quietly, filling the aching emptiness he felt, becoming in that mont the maternal warmth he'd desperately needed. He knew her simply as Cyberia.
She returned faithfully every full moon for six years, always appearing quietly in the sa place. Her presence was a balm to his young heart, her beauty captivating, yet it was her kindness that anchored him, filling the void that nothing else could touch.
Over the years, trust and longing mingled within him, but sothing shifted on their last night together. He was fourteen then, the winter particularly bitter. They sat quietly by the fountain, an air of finality between them.
"I won't co again after tonight," she announced softly.
"Why?" Desperation filled him.
"You don't need anymore," she said, gentle but firm. "You must not seek again, Vlan. Forget , and live your life."
"But why?" he pleaded.
"Because you're no longer the child who needed comfort. You're strong enough now."
"I won't forget you," he promised fiercely.
She smiled sadly, shaking her head. "You must."
"Please," he whispered.
She leaned down, kissing his forehead softly. Her touch was cool but gentle. He watched her leave, heart heavy with loss, yet he couldn't accept her command to forget. He spent years discreetly searching for her.
Eventually, what his agents uncovered shook him to his core. Cyberia was not human. She was the Snow Queen, the very Realm's Guardian of the Empire that kept all other nations trembling in fear. The entity that ensured no matter how impoverished and weak the Empire beca, no nation dared invade it. But the exact nature of the Guardian was only accessible to the Emperor and his imdiate circle. He'd inadvertently triggered alarms with his relentless inquiries, leading him before the Emperor.
He still vividly rembered that confrontation, his father's suspicion and disappointnt heavy in the room. The explanations and accusations filled him with disbelief. He couldn't understand how simply searching for information on the Snow Queen could trigger such an alarm. He also couldn't reconcile how the most beautiful, kind, and caring woman he'd ever known in his childhood was, in fact, the empire's deadliest weapon.
From that mont, Vlan beca obsessed with understanding military strategy, information warfare, and power dynamics, initiating his journey into becoming the brilliant military mind he now was. But it wasn't re ambition driving him—it was the unyielding need to see her again.
"Your Highness," Dmitri's voice intruded, pulling Vlan back to the present. "We're approaching the station."
Vlan adjusted his collar calmly, his appearance immaculate. "Tell , Dmitri," he asked casually, "what security has my brother arranged?"
"Crown Prince Mikhail personally oversaw the arrangents. The Yulenov Guard will provide primary security, supported by local units."
"Of course." Vlan's smile remained enigmatic. "And auxiliary asures?"
Dmitri hesitated slightly. "I'm sure all proper asures have been taken, Your Highness."
"Naturally." Vlan knew exactly what this ant—carefully planned vulnerabilities for a convenient assassination.
"Dmitri," he said quietly, "activate Protocol Winter Rose."
Dmitri nodded sharply. "At once, Your Highness."
Winter Rose was Vlan's private contingency, ticulously prepared against Mikhail's traps.
He erged from the compartnt every inch the imperial prince. His entourage straightened, greeted by his confident smile.
"Gentlen," he said warmly, "let us not disappoint expectations."
User Comments
0 comments from readers