Prince Reagent Ambrose Halfauhst Valecario's eyes darted over the waxy pages that he held gingerly in his hands. Torn from a book, they should have been nothing more than tattered leaflets to be burnt on a pyre. Yet, these pages were old, taken from a book that was published at the height of the Lost Ages. They spoke of the Underhen Wall and its creation to ward against the raiding barbarians from the north. The haunted truth of it, the one written in those pages, was that it was formed from a mixture of stone and bones. Bones taken from the barbarian's ritual burials. A resounding piss in their face. Ambrose knew this was all inconsequential to his current rule. Yet, the Mistress of Masks and Ruler of Spies, a woman only known as Traveller, delighted in bringing him things from their collective past. Neither of them could stand the scholarly types, and so they relished the infrequent times that they could speak of history in candid tones without being corrected.
At that moment, the doors to his audience chamber burst open. The Arbiter of Balance, Grand Inquisitor Seraphine, stood in the entrance. Her pale hair contrasted brightly with her dark skin, and those haunting lavender eyes fell on Ambrose. "Everyone out," she barked. The chamber always held the courtly hangers-on, Ambrose didn't mind them. It reminded him of the times at his aunt's court, except there was more light, and the conversation was far more pleasant. The members of the court glanced around as if Seraphine was talking to anyone but them. She narrowed her gaze. "I said everyone out." They scrambled out, ducking their heads as they passed by the statuesque woman. Ambrose handed the papers back to Traveller, who bowed and probably smiled behind her porcelain mask before excusing herself as well. Seraphine glared at the woman as she left.
"I do not know why you consort with her, she's Old World danger." The Arbiter said as she turned, shutting the doors and barring them from the inside. Ambrose chuckled, watching what might have been a diminutive woman in some people's eyes hoist up a massive slab of wood and slide it into the holder.
"What do they say about keeping your enemies closer?" Ambrose asked. He shifted in his seat, the worn velvet padding having lost its luster in its hasty trip across the sea. He tugged at his waistcoat, the fanciful fabric barely clinging to his prominent midsection. The dress shirt underneath was displayed in diamond-shaped gaps between the pearl buttons.
"Just don't," Seraphine snapped as she briskly approached him. "But this conversation is neither here nor there. I come with important news."
"Obviously. Didn't think you'd lock us in for the weather report."
"Your humor is not the armor that you think it is." There was only a beat before she began again. "Your aunt's ship has arrived in the harbor."
Whatever smile that had been plastered on Ambrose's face quickly died. He ran a hand through his coifed blond hair. "The Empress's ship? Was thereโ"
Seraphine shook her head. "Not to our knowledge. Captain Renalt Highfield caught sight of last night during his patrol. He managed to latch onto it and tow it out of sight of the rest of the harbor. And in all that time, he said he didn't see a single body or light. It's assumed that there's no one on board."
Ambrose propped his elbows upon the armrests and rested his softened jaw in his hand. His eyes went to the numerous paintings that adorned the walls of the audience chamber. Many were of royalty and heroes long gone. There was one of his family, and next to it was one of the Empress Nova Valecario. Her jet black hair was pulled away from her face in a severe manner, adorned with a gold crown that looked as if the sun was cresting just over her head. Her eyes were gold, and her face was fair with a dark smile. She was an intimidating figure, even on painted canvas. His eyes may have drifted to his own portrait, painted when he was known as the Hero of the Last War. He'd held the line against the Blighted as the mass exodus had been underway. Long blond tresses, a crown, and a svelte form holding a golden sword. "Well, if she was truly on that ship. They'd plowed into the harbor and demanded that I abdicate whatever inkling of power I had to her. So, it doesn't take a prophet to know that she's dead."
"Or in a state that wouldn't allow her to command the ship," Seraphine added cautiously.
"As if the Empress would be incapacitated. She'd rather die than see herself rendered useless. I know my aunt. Nova was impossibly stubborn. Unnaturally bullheaded." He sighed. "But we had expected as such when she didn't show up within the first few years. Now, that just brings to question why the ship has arrived now?"
Seraphine, garbed in the red and blacks of the noble houses of the Empire, shifted. "That was my thought. It could be a trap. It could be a blessing. What I do know is that whatever lost vaults of information that were aboard the ship need to be recovered, immediately, before the Blighted have a chance to infiltrate it."
"I agree. And it will be hard to achieve something on that scale without the Blighted being alerted and planting their own people in the rescue crew. That's why we need to find a way to do this swiftly and without the inclusion of those that we don't trust." He straightened up, eyes sliding across the stained glass windows of the building. "Which, I hate to say, is everyone. The oligarchy is so disrupted that it's a hat toss as to who is truthful. These are no longer the clandestine rulers of old. This is new and unknown territory."
"Are you implying, Prince, that we not use the soldiers we have our disposal? That we hire mercenaries? It would still be quite easy for the Blighted to place themselves in those ranks as well."
Ambrose smiled. "My dearest, Arbiter. I've had quite the idea." He straightened up in his chair and interlaced his fingers, resting them on the swell of his belly. "Where's the one place that the Blighted couldn't infiltrate on short notice? A place filled with people that the Empire wouldn't mourn if they were lost on this mission? That would give anything to prove themselves whether it be for glory, coin, or otherwise?"
Seraphine raised a pale brow and placed her hands on her hips, her claw-like nails biting into her clothing. "Are you saying what I think you are saying? My Prince." She frowned. "Ambrose. That is a foolish idea."
"But it is a good one."
The arbiter rocked back and forth on her heels before turning away sharply. "I'll let the Warden of Iron Spike know that we will be borrowing a few of her prisoners."