Palace of Versailles, France
Spring 1846
Eight years changed people quietly.
Not in the dramatic way stories often liked to describe. There was no single mont where everything beca different overnight. Most of the ti, change settled into people slowly, little by little, until one day they realized they no longer carried themselves the sa way they once had.
It showed in posture.
In voice.
In the pauses between words.
Even silence changed with age.
Versailles had changed too.
The palace remained magnificent, of course. Marble halls still stretched endlessly beneath painted ceilings, and sunlight still poured through towering windows during the day. Servants moved through the corridors with the sa polished discipline they had maintained for generations, and guards still stood watch with rigid posture and unreadable expressions.
But the Empire filling those halls no longer resembled the France of eight years earlier.
It had grown larger.
Heavier.
More confident.
Factories now spread across the country in numbers unimaginable a decade before. Entire districts near major cities had transford into industrial centers filled with steelworks, machine shops, locomotive yards, and smokestacks that never seed to stop burning.
Rail lines stretched farther every year.
Towns once isolated by distance and terrible roads now connected directly to Paris through iron tracks. Steam locomotives crossed the countryside daily carrying coal, steel, timber, passengers, weapons, and machinery at speeds that still unsettled older generations who rembered when travel took weeks instead of days.
The military had evolved with that growth.
Modern rifles.
Steel artillery.
Industrial supply chains.
Steam-powered warships.
France no longer rely looked powerful.
It was powerful.
And the rest of the world knew it.
Napoleon II stood near the tall windows of his office, one hand resting behind his back as he looked out over the gardens below.
Spring had finally settled over Versailles after months of cold rain and lingering frost. The trees had regained color, and sunlight reflected softly across the fountains outside. Workers moved through the gardens trimming hedges and cleaning pathways while the afternoon breeze carried movent through the leaves once more.
The palace looked peaceful.
The world beyond it was not.
A knock ca at the door.
asured.
Familiar.
"Enter."
The door opened, and Charles-Louis stepped inside carrying several folders tucked beneath one arm. His expression already suggested this was not a simple update.
Napoleon turned slightly.
"You look busy."
Charles-Louis walked toward the table.
"The Atlantic is becoming expensive, Your Imperial Majesty."
That imdiately caught Napoleon’s attention.
Charles-Louis placed the folders down carefully before opening one of them.
"The United States and xico," he said. "The situation is deteriorating faster than expected."
Napoleon walked toward the table.
"How close?"
Charles-Louis exhaled quietly before answering.
"Close enough that both embassies contacted us within the sa week."
Napoleon stopped beside the table.
"That bad?"
"Yes."
Charles-Louis unfolded several papers across the surface.
Maps covered most of them, marked with borders, supply routes, troop estimates, and diplomatic notes gathered from French observers overseas.
"The Aricans continue pushing the Texas issue," Charles-Louis explained. "xico still refuses to fully recognize the annexation. Border clashes have increased along the Rio Grande region, and both sides are reinforcing positions."
Napoleon lowered his gaze toward the map.
"The Aricans want expansion," he said calmly.
"Yes."
"And xico?"
"They believe yielding now will only invite further demands later."
Napoleon nodded slightly.
Reasonable.
Dangerously reasonable.
Charles-Louis continued.
"The Aricans are confident," he said. "Their industrial growth accelerated during the last decade. Rail developnt continues expanding through the eastern states, and dostic manufacturing has improved significantly."
"But not enough," Napoleon replied.
Charles-Louis gave a faint nod.
"Not enough for prolonged industrial warfare."
That mattered.
Napoleon studied the reports carefully.
The United States had grown quickly, but France still remained ahead in nearly every major industrial category. Steel production. Rail capacity. Artillery manufacturing. Naval construction.
Arica was rising.
But it had not yet reached the point where it could sustain a truly modern industrial conflict without strain.
"And xico?" Napoleon asked.
Charles-Louis opened another folder.
"Smaller industrial base," he said. "Limited heavy manufacturing. Political instability remains a constant problem."
"But?"
Charles-Louis glanced toward him.
"They are desperate enough to spend heavily."
There it was.
Napoleon leaned lightly against the edge of the table.
"So both sides are requesting support."
"Yes."
Charles-Louis pulled two sealed diplomatic requests forward.
"One from Washington."
He placed it on the left side.
"One from xico City."
He placed the other on the right.
Napoleon stared at both for several monts.
"They understand what our weapons an now," he said quietly.
France’s military exports had changed global politics over the last decade.
Modern breech-loading rifles.
Steel artillery systems.
Rail logistics equipnt.
Steam-powered naval engines.
Advanced manufacturing tools.
Even experintal armored concepts had begun attracting foreign attention despite remaining highly restricted.
Most nations still lacked the industrial capability to produce such systems themselves.
So they bought them.
From France.
Charles-Louis stepped closer to the map.
"The Aricans primarily want artillery systems and industrial contracts," he explained. "xico is requesting direct military assistance packages."
Napoleon looked at him.
"Direct?"
"Yes."
"That’s bold."
Charles-Louis allowed himself a dry smile.
"They’re worried."
Napoleon walked slowly around the table.
"And what do you think?"
Charles-Louis paused briefly.
Not because he lacked an answer.
Because he had several.
"The Aricans are the stronger long-term economic partner," he said carefully. "Large population. Expanding industry. Significant natural resources."
Napoleon nodded slightly.
"But."
Charles-Louis looked back toward the map.
"If they industrialize too quickly, they eventually beco competition."
There it was.
Not imdiate competition.
Not tomorrow.
But soday.
"And xico?" Napoleon asked.
Charles-Louis folded his hands behind his back.
"xico is weaker," he admitted. "But weaker nations tend to beco more dependent."
Napoleon looked toward the xican request again.
"aning influence."
"Yes."
The room fell quiet for a mont.
Outside the windows, Versailles remained peaceful beneath the warm spring light.
Inside, the future of another continent was being weighed like a business arrangent.
Napoleon finally spoke again.
"What are the British doing?"
Charles-Louis almost looked amused.
"Watching nervously."
That drew the faintest smile from Napoleon.
"Good."
Britain disliked instability in the Aricas almost as much as it disliked growing French influence anywhere on earth.
And France understood that perfectly.
Charles-Louis moved toward another section of the table.
"There’s another issue," he said.
Napoleon looked up.
"If war begins, both sides will require repeated resupply," Charles-Louis explained. "One contract will not be enough."
Napoleon understood imdiately.
Long-term demand.
A modern war consud industry endlessly.
Ammunition.
Replacent weapons.
Steel.
Coal.
Rail components.
Locomotives.
dical supplies.
Communication systems.
Modern warfare no longer depended purely on armies.
It depended on factories.
And France possessed the largest industrial machine on the continent.
Napoleon looked down at the Arican request again.
"They approached us first?"
"Yes."
"And xico followed after learning that."
"Yes."
Napoleon exhaled quietly through his nose.
"So now both fear the other gaining French support."
Charles-Louis nodded once.
"Exactly."
That changed the situation entirely.
France did not even need to send soldiers to influence the conflict.
Its industry alone could decide the balance.
Napoleon walked back toward the windows.
The sunlight had shifted lower now, stretching longer shadows across the gardens.
"Neither side wants us fully committed to the other," he said.
"No."
"Good."
Charles-Louis studied him carefully.
"You already have a solution."
Napoleon remained looking outside for several monts.
"Yes."
Charles-Louis waited.
"We sell to both," Napoleon said calmly.
Charles-Louis did not react imdiately.
Not because he was surprised.
Because he expected it.
"In controlled quantities?" he asked.
"Yes."
Napoleon turned back toward the table.
"Enough to maintain leverage," he continued. "Not enough to guarantee dominance."
Charles-Louis nodded slowly.
"That keeps both dependent."
"Yes."
"And prevents either from aligning fully against us later."
Napoleon gave a small nod.
"Exactly."
Charles-Louis looked toward the Arican request again.
"The Aricans will dislike us supplying xico."
"Yes."
"And xico will dislike us supplying Arica."
"Yes."
Napoleon walked toward the map once more.
"But both will continue buying if they fear the other receiving more."
The room grew quiet again.
It was cold logic.
Practical logic.
Imperial logic.
Charles-Louis finally spoke again.
"There is still risk."
"There is always risk."
"If the war escalates too far, Britain may intervene diplomatically."
Napoleon nodded.
"They will complain long before they act."
Charles-Louis allowed himself a faint smile.
"Probably."
Napoleon rested one hand against the table.
"Britain fears influence more than war," he said. "Especially French influence."
"And if Arica wins decisively?" Charles-Louis asked.
Napoleon looked toward the map.
"Then we ensure they rember who supplied the machinery that helped them do it."
Charles-Louis nodded slowly.
"And if xico survives longer than expected?"
"Then they beco even more dependent."
Silence settled again.
Outside, the gardens remained bright beneath the afternoon sun.
But across the Atlantic, tension was already building.
Soldiers gathered near borders.
Factories prepared contracts.
Rail companies prepared routes.
Politicians delivered speeches to cheering crowds.
Newspapers fueled outrage on both sides.
War had not officially begun yet.
But it was close enough that everyone could already feel it approaching.
Napoleon walked slowly around the table again, his eyes lingering over the Atlantic routes drawn across the maps.
Eight years ago, France had focused on securing its position.
Now it shaped positions for others.
That difference mattered.
Charles-Louis watched him quietly.
"The Aricans believe they can dominate the continent eventually," he said after a while.
"They probably can," Napoleon replied calmly.
Charles-Louis looked slightly surprised by the honesty.
"But not yet," Napoleon added.
That mattered more.
Timing always mattered more.
A nation growing too quickly could still be guided.
Influenced.
Bound through dependency before it fully realized its own strength.
xico, anwhile, feared survival more than pride now.
And desperate nations paid well.
Napoleon finally stopped near the edge of the table.
"Prepare responses for both governnts," he said.
Charles-Louis straightened slightly.
"Yes, Your Imperial Majesty."
"Separate negotiations."
"Yes."
"No direct commitnts."
"Understood."
"And make sure neither side learns the full extent of the other’s requests."
Charles-Louis nodded once.
"Of course."
Napoleon looked once more toward the western side of the map.
Arica.
xico.
Two nations approaching conflict.
Two future custors.
Two future opportunities.
And France stood between them.
Not as diator.
Not as peacekeeper.
But as the industrial power both sides now needed.
The Empire had changed in eight years.
The world had changed with it.
And increasingly, every road seed to lead back to Versailles.
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