The Remington estate sat on a hill overlooking the capital, its towers and walls deliberately positioned to project both wealth and power. The main hall was a testant to generations of prosperity: vaulted ceilings supported by carved oak beams, tapestries depicting the family’s rcantile triumphs, and windows of colored glass that cast rainbow patterns across polished marble floors.
But tonight, the hall’s beauty was lost on the four n gathered around Duke Remington’s private study table. They sat in a room deliberately chosen for its distance from servants’ quarters and its thick stone walls that muffled sound. Guards stood outside, but far enough away that voices wouldn’t carry.
Duke Marcus Remington was a man of fifty years, his dark hair shot through with silver, his fra still solid despite a rchant’s life rather than a warrior’s. He wore fine clothes but not ostentatious ones... wealth displayed through quality rather than excess. His eyes, sharp and calculating, swept over his three unlikely guests.
Lord Edmund Fairfax, forty-two, lean and intense, paced near the window despite having already checked it twice for eavesdroppers. His family had served the Winters for three generations, and his loyalty to them ran bone-deep. His clothes were practical rather than fashionable, the garb of a man who valued function over form.
Lord Aldous Blackwood sat perfectly still in his chair, his weathered face betraying nothing. At sixty-one, he was the eldest, a widower whose children had grown and whose years had taught him caution. His family’s lands bordered the eastern mountains, and they had learned survival through careful observation and asured action.
Lord Thomas Harring was the youngest at thirty-four, his boyish face making him look even younger. His family had only risen to prominence in his father’s generation through fortunate investnts and strategic marriages. He shifted uncomfortably in his seat, clearly unaccustod to such clandestine etings.
"Thank you for coming," Remington began, pouring wine into four cups. "I know this is... irregular. Under normal circumstances, we’d have little reason to et privately like this."
"Under normal circumstances," Fairfax said sharply, still pacing, "we’d be competitors. My family serves Winters, yours controls southern trade routes, Blackwood manages eastern timber, and Harring..." He glanced at the young lord. "No offense, but your family made its fortune undercutting all of ours at various points."
"None taken," Harring replied quietly. "My father was ruthless in business. I’m trying to be less so, though apparently I’m still making enemies."
"The enemy," Blackwood spoke for the first ti, his voice a low rumble, "is not in this room. The enemy is whoever maneuvered us into this position at today’s council eting."
That brought a mont of silence as all four n considered the implications.
Remington set down the wine decanter. "Let’s be frank about our situations. The crown has ordered our four houses to raise ten thousand troops... two thousand five hundred each... within one month. Additionally, we’re responsible for initial equipnt, recruitnt fees, and training. The crown promises sixty percent reimbursent, but we all know how long treasury paynts can take."
"If they arrive at all," Fairfax muttered. "My family’s comptroller says the last reimbursent request we filed took eleven months to process. Eleven months."
"Can each of you et the requirent?" Remington asked bluntly. "Financially and logistically? No posturing, no pride. I need to know the truth."
Fairfax stopped pacing and leaned against the wall. "My family can do it. It’ll hurt. We’ll have to pull resources from other projects, delay so planned investnts. But we have enough liquid capital and enough connections to recruiters. We’ll manage."
Blackwood nodded slowly. "Sa. It will strain us, but we can bear it. My eastern holdings produce steady inco, and we’ve been conservative with expenditures. I can raise the troops and equip them adequately."
Harring’s face paled slightly. "I... I cannot. Not without crippling my family’s operations entirely. We’re already heavily invested in the new trade contracts with the eastern settlents. If I pull that capital to raise troops, those contracts fail. We default on agreents. Our reputation suffers."
He looked around the table, embarrassnt and fear warring on his young face. "My father left the family prosperous but overextended. I’ve been trying to consolidate, but it takes ti. Ti I apparently don’t have."
"And the Harring lands?" Remington asked. "Could you mortgage them? Secure loans against future inco?"
"Already partially mortgaged," Harring admitted. "My father used them as collateral for the eastern expansion. The banks won’t extend further credit without crippling interest rates."
Blackwood cleared his throat. "I’m in a similar position, though not quite as dire. I can raise the troops, but doing so will exhaust my reserves entirely. If anything unexpected happens... a bad harvest, a trade disruption, unexpected repairs to holdings... I’ll have nothing to fall back on."
He t Remington’s eyes. "I’m sixty-one years old, Duke. I’ve spent four decades building my family’s stability through careful resource managent. This single requirent could unravel all of that work. One ergency, one crisis, and we’re ruined."
Remington poured himself wine and drank deeply before responding. "Then we have a problem. Because if either of your families fails to et the crown’s demand, it reflects badly on all of us. The council will say we’re putting personal interests above the kingdom’s defense. And whoever orchestrated this..." He gestured vaguely toward the capital beyond his walls. "...will have exactly the leverage they want."
"Which brings us to the real question," Fairfax said, resuming his seat. "Who did orchestrate this? Because I don’t believe for one mont that today’s council session was natural political process. We were targeted. Deliberately."
"Walk through it," Remington said. "What specifically makes you suspicious?"
Fairfax pulled out a small notebook, flipping through pages of hastily scrawled notes. "First, the ssages themselves. I’ve read military dispatches before. My family’s close relationship with the Winters ans I’ve seen how the Countess writes. Those ssages today... they were wrong."
"Wrong how?" Harring asked.
"Too vague. Too... sanitized. ’Acceptable casualties’? ’Situation stable’? Countess Winters is precise in her communications. She would specify numbers, tactical assessnts, specific resource needs. These ssages read like soone took real reports and stripped out all the detailed information."
Blackwood leaned forward. "You’re suggesting the ssages were altered?"
"I’m suggesting sothing’s not right," Fairfax said carefully. "Whether altered or... I don’t know. But they don’t match what I know of how our commanders communicate."
"Second," he continued, "the speed and coordination of the council’s response. Severus had detailed proposals ready imdiately. Exact troop numbers, specific financial arrangents, distribution of responsibility. That level of preparation suggests he knew this was coming."
"He’s Master of Coin," Remington pointed out. "It’s his job to be prepared for military expenditures."
"True. But why was he so specifically prepared to burden our four houses? Out of all possible distribution sches, why this exact configuration? And why did Lord Castellan, Lady Thornbury, and the Archbishop all support it so quickly and uniformly?"
"Thirteen votes in favor," Blackwood noted. "A comfortable majority. Almost as if they’d coordinated beforehand."
"Exactly," Fairfax said. "Now, I’ve done so... discreet inquiries over the past few hours. Called in favors, talked to people who talk to other people. And I’m hearing interesting things."
He flipped to another page in his notebook. "Lord Castellan has massive gambling debts. Debts that should have ruined him years ago, but sohow they keep getting extended or forgiven. Lady Thornbury’s son... her precious only child... studies at a private academy. An academy with very particular instructors and very exclusive admission standards. The Archbishop receives generous donations for his charitable works from anonymous sources that my contacts trace back to shell companies and interdiaries."
"You’re describing leverage," Remington said slowly. "Soone has leverage over council mbers."
"I’m describing a pattern," Fairfax corrected. "Debts forgiven. Children placed in exclusive institutions. Anonymous donations. Favorable treatnt in business disputes. All small things individually, but collectively they paint a picture of influence being purchased and maintained."
"By whom?" Harring asked, his voice barely above a whisper.
Fairfax hesitated. "That’s where my information gets... thin. The money trails are complex, deliberately obscured. But there’s a na that keeps appearing in the margins. Never directly, always through interdiaries and proxies. A family na that most people have forgotten or assu is irrelevant."
"Arass," Blackwood said flatly.
The silence that followed was profound.
Remington set down his wine cup carefully. "The Arass family was destroyed thirty years ago. Purged by the Church for practicing dark arts. Their holdings were seized, their mbers executed or exiled. They’re... they’re not a factor anymore."
"Are they?" Blackwood asked. "I’m old enough to rember the purge. I was thirty-one when it happened. And I rember thinking at the ti... they didn’t get everyone. Couldn’t have. The Arass family was too large, too well-connected. So survived."
"Survived and went to ground," Fairfax added. "Changed their nas, married into other families, built new identities. What if they’ve been rebuilding all this ti? Placing people, accumulating influence, waiting for the right mont?"
"That’s... that’s speculation," Harring protested. "Conspiracy theory."
"Is it?" Fairfax challenged. "Then explain today’s council session. Explain how thirteen votes materialized perfectly to burden our four specific houses. Explain why the ssages from our commanders read like sanitized versions of what they should say. Explain the pattern of influence I’m seeing across multiple council mbers."
"Even if you’re right," Remington said slowly, "even if the Arass family sohow survived and is now manipulating the court... why target us? What do they gain from forcing our houses to raise troops?"
"Financial strain," Blackwood suggested. "Weakening potential opposition."
"But we’re not opposition to anyone," Harring pointed out. "We’re not a unified faction. We barely know each other."
"We’re not aligned with whoever’s pulling strings," Fairfax said. "That makes us potential problems. And here’s another thought... what if it’s not just about us? What if the real targets are the Winters and Snowe armies?"
That brought everyone up short.
"Think about it," Fairfax continued, warming to his theory. "We’re sending token reinforcents to armies that might actually need massive support. If those ssages were altered... if the real situation in the east is desperate... we’re not sending enough help. The commanders will receive five thousand troops each and think the crown simply underestimated their needs. They’ll stay in the field, keep fighting, keep bleeding resources."
"And eventually fail," Blackwood finished grimly. "Two of the kingdom’s most powerful military families, crippled in the field. Leaving a power vacuum that..."
"Soone fills," Remington completed. "Soone who’s been positioning themselves for exactly that opportunity."
The implications settled over the room like a cold fog.
"This is insane," Harring said, but his voice lacked conviction. "We’re talking about a conspiracy spanning three decades, involving dozens of people, all to... what? Take revenge on families that supported the purge?"
"Yes," Blackwood said simply. "That’s exactly what we’re talking about. And if we’re right... if even half of what we’re suspecting is true... we’re all in danger."
"Danger we can’t even properly prove," Fairfax added bitterly. "Everything I’ve found is circumstantial. Patterns and suggestions. Nothing concrete. Nothing we could take to the king without sounding paranoid."
"Then we work with what we have," Remington said, his voice taking on a decisive edge. "We can’t fight shadows and speculations. But we can ensure our families survive this imdiate crisis. And in surviving, we buy ti to investigate further."
He stood and moved to a cabinet, retrieving a leather-bound ledger. "Lord Harring, Lord Blackwood. You’ve both been honest about your financial situations. I appreciate that honesty. Here’s what I propose."
He opened the ledger, revealing pages of detailed accounts. "The Remington family controls the southern trade routes. We have... considerable reserves. More than we publicly acknowledge, for various strategic reasons. I can provide financial assistance to both your families."
"Duke Remington," Harring began, "I can’t possibly..."
"You can and you will," Remington interrupted firmly. "This isn’t charity. This is strategic alliance. If whoever’s behind this succeeds in crippling your families, they’re one step closer to having free rein over policy. Every house they weaken or destroy makes them stronger."
He pulled out a sheet of parchnt and began writing. "Lord Harring, I’ll provide you with fifty thousand gold crowns. That should cover your recruitnt costs entirely and leave enough to maintain your eastern contracts. Consider it a loan at minimal interest... say, two percent annually, with repaynt beginning in three years."
Harring’s eyes widened. "That’s... that’s extraordinarily generous, Duke."
"That’s self-preservation," Remington corrected. "Lord Blackwood, you’re in slightly better position. I’ll provide thirty thousand to supplent your reserves. Sa terms. This way, both of you can et the crown’s demands without destroying your families’ stability."
Blackwood studied Remington with his weathered eyes. "And what do you get from this, Duke? Beyond the satisfaction of thwarting whoever’s plotting against us?"
"Allies," Remington said bluntly. "The four of us have been competitors, sotis antagonists. But this situation has shown us we have common enemies. Common interests. I’m proposing we formalize that understanding."
He looked around the table. "We pool our intelligence resources. Share information about court activities, unusual financial movents, suspicious appointnts. We coordinate our positions in council etings. We watch each other’s backs."
"An alliance," Fairfax said. "A secret one."
"The only kind that matters when your enemies work in shadows," Remington replied. "Gentlen, we’re fighting blind right now. But four pairs of eyes see more than one. Four families’ resources and connections give us reach we wouldn’t have individually."
"There’s risk," Blackwood noted. "If this alliance becos known, we could all be accused of conspiracy ourselves."
"There’s greater risk in doing nothing," Remington countered. "We’ve been targeted. That’s clear. Whether we’re secondary targets or the real focus, we’re in soone’s crosshairs. Better to face that together than separately."
Fairfax leaned back in his chair. "I’m in. My family’s connection to Winters makes us natural targets anyway. And if the Countess is in danger from this conspiracy, I want to do sothing about it."
Harring nodded slowly. "Duke Remington’s offer saves my family from ruin. The least I can do is commit to this alliance. Besides, I’m young and inexperienced in court politics. I could use the... guidance."
All eyes turned to Blackwood. The old lord sat silent for a long mont, his expression unreadable.
"I’ve spent six decades learning to be cautious," he said finally. "To avoid entanglents, to maintain neutrality, to watch and wait. That caution has kept my family safe through political upheavals that destroyed others."
He paused, then: "But sotis caution is just another word for cowardice. And I’m too old to die a coward. I’m in."
Remington smiled, genuine relief crossing his face. "Good. Then let’s discuss specifics. First, intelligence gathering. Lord Fairfax, you ntioned contacts who provide information. Can you expand that network?"
"Easily. My family’s relationship with Winters ans we have connections among military personnel, quartermasters, ssengers. I can activate those contacts, start asking careful questions about communication patterns, supply requisitions, deploynt orders."
"Lord Blackwood," Remington continued, "your eastern holdings put you in contact with rchants traveling from all over the kingdom. Could you leverage those connections?"
"rchants hear everything," Blackwood confird. "They know who’s buying what, who’s moving where, who’s suddenly flush with coin or desperately short. I can have my factors pay particular attention to unusual transactions, especially anything connected to council mbers or their associates."
"Lord Harring, your eastern contracts... who are the main parties involved?"
"Grain rchants, mostly. So mining interests. They operate near the orcish territories, so they hear news from that region before it reaches the capital. I could ask them to report anything unusual about troop movents, supply caravans, orcish activity."
"Perfect. And I’ll use my southern trade network to track financial movents," Remington said. "Banks, money lenders, rchant houses. If soone’s moving large amounts of coin, especially through shell companies or interdiaries, we’ll hear about it."
He pulled out fresh parchnt and began sketching a rough organizational chart. "We need to compartntalize. Each of us maintains our own network, but we et regularly to share information. Say, once a week initially, then adjust frequency as needed."
"Where?" Harring asked. "eting here regularly would draw attention."
"Rotate locations," Blackwood suggested. "My estate this week, Fairfax’s next, then Harring’s, then back to Remington’s. Always late evening, always in private rooms with trusted guards. We vary the days slightly, never establish a clear pattern."
"And communication between etings?" Fairfax asked.
"Coded ssages," Remington said. "Simple rchant correspondence that seems innocuous but contains information in prearranged phrases. I have a code system my family uses for sensitive trade communications. I can adapt it for our purposes."
He wrote rapidly for several minutes, then passed sheets of parchnt to each lord. "Here’s the financial arrangent for Blackwood and Harring. Sign these, and I’ll have the funds transferred through private banking channels within three days."
As the two lords signed, Fairfax spoke up. "There’s one more thing we need to discuss. The troops themselves. We’re raising ten thousand soldiers and sending them east. What if... what if those troops beco targets too?"
"How do you an?" Harring asked.
"If there’s a conspiracy to destroy the Winters and Snowe forces, would they stop at just withholding information? What if the reinforcents we’re sending are sohow... compromised? Misdirected? Deliberately weakened?"
Remington’s expression darkened. "You’re suggesting we might be unwitting accomplices to whatever’s being planned."
"I’m suggesting we need to be very careful about how we recruit, equip, and deploy these troops. If possible, we should ensure our own people lead the contingents. n we trust, who will report back to us directly about what they find in the east."
"That’s wise," Blackwood agreed. "Each of us appoints a trusted officer to command our portion of the reinforcents. Soone loyal, competent, and aware that they’re to observe and report as well as fight."
"I have just the man," Fairfax said. "Captain Marcus Dane. Served with the Winters forces before, knows the Countess personally. If anyone can get an honest assessnt of what’s really happening in the east, it’s him."
"Similarly, I’ll assign Knight-Commander Willem," Remington said. "Veteran campaigner, utterly loyal to my family. And importantly, he knows how to send ssages that won’t be intercepted."
The other two lords nodded, each making ntal notes about which of their officers could be trusted with such a sensitive assignnt.
"Gentlen," Remington said, standing, "we’re embarking on sothing dangerous. If we’re wrong about this conspiracy, we’ll look like paranoid fools. If we’re right but fail to stop it, we could all be destroyed. But if we’re right and we succeed..."
"We save the kingdom from hidden enemies," Fairfax finished. "And probably save our own lives in the process."
"To unlikely allies," Blackwood said, raising his wine cup.
"To survival," Harring added.
"To truth," Fairfax said.
"To justice," Remington concluded. "And to bringing whoever’s behind this into the light."
They drank together, sealing an alliance born of necessity but strengthened by shared purpose.
*****
Two miles away, in the shadows beneath the Arass manor, Elena Arass received a report from one of their watchers.
"The four lords t tonight," the watcher said. "At the Remington estate. They were there for three hours."
Elena’s eyes narrowed. "Interesting. Did you hear what was discussed?"
"No, my lady. They t in a secure room, away from servants. Guards were positioned to prevent eavesdropping."
"That level of security suggests they suspect sothing," Elena mused. "Or at minimum, they’re unhappy about being burdened with the troop recruitnt."
"Should we be concerned, my lady?"
Elena considered. "Monitor them more closely. I want to know every eting, every ssage, every unusual contact. But don’t interfere yet. Four minor lords playing at conspiracy won’t stop what we’ve set in motion. They’re gnats buzzing around a collapsing building."
She dismissed the watcher and descended deeper into the manor, where Lord Marius was reviewing the latest reports from the east.
"The four lords t tonight," she inford him. "Remington, Blackwood, Fairfax, and Harring. Three hours in a secure room."
Marius looked up from his papers. "Concerning?"
"Potentially. They’re clearly comparing notes, possibly pooling resources."
"Can they actually threaten our plans?"
Elena shook her head. "Unlikely. They have no proof of anything, and even if they suspect conspiracy, they can’t know the scope or the players involved. At worst, they’ll raise their troops slightly more carefully, maybe send trusted officers with the reinforcents. None of that changes the fundantal reality that the Winters and Snowe forces are dood."
"Still," Marius said thoughtfully, "it shows they’re more clever than we gave them credit for. We should adjust our approach. Nothing major, just... ensure they don’t stumble onto sothing important."
"Agreed. I’ll have our people watch them closely. If they get too close to anything sensitive, we can always... redirect their attention."
"Or eliminate them," Marius said casually. "But that’s a last resort. Better they remain useful fools raising troops for us."
He returned his attention to the reports. "The first supply caravans depart in eight days. The troop movents begin in three weeks. Everything proceeds according to schedule. A few suspicious lords won’t change that."
Elena nodded and left him to his work.
But as she walked the dark corridors of the manor, a small worry nagged at her. The four lords were minor players, yes. Inconsequential in the grand sche.
But minor players who banded together could sotis surprise you.
She made a ntal note to ensure extra surveillance was in place.
Just in case.
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