Palace of Versailles, France
Emperor’s Office
Early Autumn 1837
The letter did not arrive with any urgency.
There was no announcent in the halls, no sense of movent that would draw attention. It passed through the palace the sa way most important things did, quietly and without disruption, moving from one set of hands to another until it reached the inner offices.
By the ti it arrived, the Emperor’s office was already in order.
Napoleon II stood near the window when the door opened. He had been there for so ti, looking out across the gardens. Everything outside remained the sa as it always had. The paths were clean, the fountains steady, and the layout unchanged. It was a place built on control and careful design.
Inside, things were less certain.
"Your Imperial Majesty."
Charles-Louis stepped in, holding the sealed docunt.
Napoleon turned slightly. "You have it."
"Yes."
Charles-Louis approached the desk and placed the letter down carefully.
"It cos from Joseon."
Napoleon looked at it for a mont without touching it. The seal was unfamiliar, the material different from anything used in Europe. Even so, the purpose behind it was clear.
"They answered," he said.
"Yes."
Napoleon moved to his seat and sat down, still looking at the letter. He did not open it imdiately. For a brief mont, he simply let it sit there.
Then he reached forward and broke the seal.
The paper unfolded smoothly. The characters written across it were not ones he could read, but the translation had already been prepared.
Charles-Louis stepped closer. "I’ll read it."
Napoleon gave a small nod.
The room grew quiet.
"To the ruler of France," Charles-Louis began.
"We have received your ssage and understand its intent."
Napoleon’s expression did not change.
"We acknowledge your presence within the region and your stated desire for peaceful exchange."
Charles-Louis paused briefly before continuing.
"We value the stability of our kingdom and the order we have maintained."
Napoleon leaned back slightly in his chair, listening.
"We do not act without careful consideration."
The tone was steady and controlled, exactly what one would expect from a court that asured its words carefully.
"If your nation seeks to establish communication, it must be done with clarity, structure, and respect for the boundaries of our state."
Napoleon’s gaze sharpened slightly at that line.
"We request that further correspondence be conducted through defined channels, with interpreters and agreed terms."
Charles-Louis continued to the end.
"We will consider what is presented with care, as we expect the sa in return."
When he finished, the room fell silent.
Napoleon reached out and took the letter himself, reading through it again in silence. He did it once, then again, slower, as if weighing each part of it.
"They didn’t refuse," he said.
"No."
"They didn’t accept either."
"No."
Napoleon set the paper down.
"They chose to keep control of the situation."
Charles-Louis nodded. "Yes."
Napoleon leaned back slightly, his attention shifting to the map laid out across the table.
China.
Japan.
Joseon.
"They’re careful," he said.
"Yes."
"They’re deliberate."
"Yes."
He paused.
"They understand enough to know what’s at stake."
Charles-Louis hesitated for a mont before replying. "They understand enough to act cautiously."
Napoleon gave a faint nod. "That’s enough."
He stood and walked slowly toward the table, hands resting behind his back.
"They didn’t close themselves off," he said.
"No."
"They didn’t provoke anything either."
"No."
"They asked for structure."
"Yes."
Napoleon stopped.
"That’s not weakness."
Charles-Louis agreed. "No."
"It’s discipline," Napoleon said.
There was a shift in the room at that point. Not tension, but clarity.
"And that can be worked with," he added.
Charles-Louis waited.
Napoleon turned back toward the desk.
"We move forward," he said.
"In what form?" Charles-Louis asked.
Napoleon glanced once more at the letter.
"We formalize the next step."
Charles-Louis understood imdiately. "A diplomatic mission."
"Yes."
Not another limited contact.
Not a controlled landing.
Sothing official.
"We send an envoy," Napoleon said. "Recognized and with full authority."
Charles-Louis nodded. "With structure."
"Yes."
Napoleon’s tone remained steady.
"They asked for clarity. We give them that."
The decision settled, but Napoleon continued.
"This isn’t only about Joseon," he said.
Charles-Louis listened closely.
"It’s about our position in the region."
Napoleon gestured lightly toward the map.
"China has already been forced open."
"Yes."
"Japan is adapting."
"Yes."
"Joseon is deciding what to do."
Charles-Louis nodded.
"And we guide that decision."
Napoleon did not correct him.
Because that was the reality of it.
"Prepare the mission," Napoleon said.
"Yes, Your Imperial Majesty."
"I want experienced diplomats," Napoleon continued. "Not just negotiators. n who understand how to work within limits without losing direction."
Charles-Louis noted it. "Understood."
"And interpreters."
"Already arranged."
Napoleon gave a small nod.
"They won’t respond well to pressure," he said.
"No."
"They will respond to consistency."
"Yes."
Napoleon paused, then added,
"We don’t rush them."
Charles-Louis looked at him. "We move at their pace?"
Napoleon shook his head slightly.
"No. We move at a pace they can accept."
That distinction mattered.
Charles-Louis nodded. "Understood."
Napoleon returned to the desk and rested his hand lightly near the letter.
"They’ve made their move," he said.
"Yes."
"And now we answer."
The preparations began that sa day.
Orders moved through the palace quietly, without announcent. Nas were discussed, positions assigned, and docunts prepared with care. There was no public declaration, but within the structure of the governnt, everything began to shift.
This was no longer simple observation.
It was diplomacy.
Formal.
Deliberate.
Recognized.
By evening, Charles-Louis returned with a list.
"The candidates have been selected," he said.
Napoleon looked up. "Who?"
Charles-Louis placed the docunt on the desk.
"François Guizot will lead the mission."
Napoleon nodded. "He’s already worked in Japan."
"Yes."
"He understands the situation."
"Yes."
Napoleon reviewed the rest of the nas. Supporting officials, interpreters, and naval officers.
"Approved," he said.
Charles-Louis inclined his head.
"They’ll depart once preparations are complete."
Napoleon nodded.
"Make sure the ssage is clear."
"Yes."
"No force."
"No."
"No submission."
"No."
"Structure."
"Yes."
That word remained at the center of everything.
Because it was what Joseon had asked for.
And what France would now offer.
The sun began to set over Versailles, softening the sharp lines of the gardens and dimming the light across the fountains.
Inside the office, the work did not slow.
Napoleon stood by the window again, looking out over the sa ordered landscape.
He did not look back at the letter.
He didn’t need to.
He had already understood it.
They were cautious.
They were disciplined.
They were paying attention.
And that ant the next step would matter.
Behind him, preparations continued.
Ships would sail.
Envoys would travel.
Not as conquerors.
Not as strangers.
But as sothing harder to refuse.
A presence that was steady, asured, and impossible to ignore.
Far to the east, Joseon had given its answer.
Now, France would respond.
And the distance between them would begin to close.
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