Dastramik March.
13 January 2165 AST.
56 J'ina I.Y. 618.
It was the last day of their deployment. They had proved able to function as a cruiser-carrier in fine form, and was well. The ship's replacement, an older battlecruiser, had arrived at the squadron and Drishalras had just completed the mustering out ceremonies. There would now be a leisurely cruise back home, for an extended period of leave and a chance for the yards to go over the battlecruiser and do improvement work after the list of sundry errors which had been catalogued, inevitably, on the ship's first deployment.
There was another letter. Drishalras had ceased writing, and expected Jhayka to explain herself, and she finally had. The letter was not on paper as those before it, but rather it was a series of photographic copy-plates of a letter written on paper scrolls, very well done, and if anything it was gentle in its acknowledgements of the situation, and very welcome to read.
My darling wife,
Danielle has been here for about half a month and all is well. We have kept to our vows and religion—and I understand you know that she now professes the Farzian faith, which is no doubt so important of a matter to you—and the matter of my addiction to the combat drugs has been suitably dealt with, thanks to her magnificent aid. You will have an opportunity to help with the matter of the painkillers; I have some continued strain from the wounds taken at the siege, and cannot shake them yet.
We recently had a dinner with Her Serene Grace the Archduchess Leluno. She is apparently concerned with an issue of passports—this is a predominantly human subject which you have like as not never heard of before—documents which many human powers use to control the movement of individuals. I am aware that similar mechanisms exist for matters like admittance to space elevators and clearance for travel on luxury liners and so on, but the information from these is collected by the contracting company one is traveling with and is based on bank records; so it's no dice for us in solving the matter.
Though Danielle thinks it silly I stand with the Convocate: We have our freedoms and they have their's, and if we adopted their information laws we would oppress our people as surely as their people would be oppressed if an ambitious man was to take power by demagoguery and bayonet. Unfortunately the matter has serious implications for international trade and so the horns must be gripped sooner or later and a functional compromise found. The other nations will likely follow whatever policy the Alliance and the All-Highest Empress agree to.
As for the other matters, the summer has been beautiful and there seems to be good prospects for the harvest this fall. The revenues of the Princely demense should be very fine indeed, and the better for it, as we're spending quite a lot of specie in developing Eleutheria. As of this time I am seriously considering a trip—with YOU, and under no other circumstance!--to the Alliance and Gilead to arrange all matters of the immigration to Eleutheria which will take place, and personally appeal to those poor and proud warriors of the clans who have been so mightily humbled by the strength of democracy rampant. I owe this to Trajan, and now everything is ready for the exodus! We shall have tens of millions on Eleutheria within a fairly short period of time, and I am very confident of the elevation of Priscilla to rule autonomously under me as the Duchess. It seems the prospects of her restoration in Devenshire are, from Danielle's accounts, utterly insignificant if not entirely nonexistant, and she seems to have accepted this, so I will make sure that she is compensated suitably in the form of Eleutheria.
It is a sad matter, indeed, in the principle of it, but we all suffer from the evils of Idenicamos, of whom her father was a rampant and unredeemed servant, and her title has suffered for it even if she is entirely deserving not only of a grand province of an interstellar polity rather than a single rude colony world, but also of the sobriquet of “the Faithful”. She has never failed me, no matter the supreme effort so far beyond her previous experiences that I have put against her, both planned and, due to my illnesses, unplanned. For someone raised in the lightness of the yeoman's path, the coolness of her disposition in crisis cannot be lauded enough.
As for what is, I imagine, the more pressing matter, you know that I love Danielle. But we have done nothing, and she seems, especially over the last few days, very content in this. I have high hopes for the future accordingly and I imagine a relationship of a platonic nature is now quite reasonable. My feelings for you are undiminished; I have certainly realized that you hold a second place in my heart; you are content with this; but that second place is great indeed, and above all others. At any rate I've had more thoughts toward starting a family at late and I imagine in that... Our accomadation together will offer the promise of a happy future for us both.
Her family has been so evil to her, however, something I must touch on when I speak of Danielle! I know that human customs are many-varied and curious, but the obscene nature of this hate is something I do not understand, especially since Danielle thinks it would not, in the case of her mother, find celibacy acceptable, when it seems such a reasonable and even sanctioned option for those professing the Catholic faith, which has always seemed grand to me, and civilized, though it holds to innumerable fallacies of theology and social custom. Yet for all that they know the One God, the Lord of Justice, as we do, and I would think a better spirit of charity would prevail.
Alas, such matters should be worked out better in time, I suppose. I am going to take Danielle into the Great Rift Desert to the religious school were the Adept Ilavna Lashila is studying so they can be reunited. Ilavna will certainly be very pleased at Danielle's conversion, and a chance to converse with her. I believe that she secured in all nearly a sixteen of converts on Gilead, plus Danielle and Rodaka and the serving girls she brought back from Ar, which is a very fine start which I hope our missionaries can build on in due time.
In all I've been thinking much of you despite everything, and I know that unquestionably I am now on the path of adherence to the laws and customs of our faith and people regardless of the impulses of my heart. It is a pity they do not precisely coincide, but life was never meant to be easy—as Leluno put it to me, 'we nobles are born to suffer'--and that is that. My love for you comes regardless of such sentiments, I assure.
Dearly Your's,
Jhayka.
“You're going to be carrying our daughter,” Drishalras spoke aloud with a snort. “My career is the more stressful one by far.” Those were words she'd not put down in the reply, however, as she would rather tell them to Jhayka when they were alone. And Jhayka couldn't escape without agreeing.....
Laughing softly and her ears flexed with humour she turned her attention to the letter she'd immediately wanted to write in return to the words of her wife. It would be simple and electronic as the others, and the sooner it got back, the better, for shortly the last parties of MP's dragging the stragglers out of the dockyard pubs would return and the Slashahkimmar would cast off for home, to arrive back in the Talora system in three weeks.
She put her fingers to the keyboard and began to hammer out her reply to Jhayka with an acceptant sort of happiness. Her wife was right; the future was looking to be a good one. With that in mind, the letter was composed with no small amount of both hope and confidence.
My heart's love,
The love between two souls is a powerful thing. For me, I have come to love you so dearly that I gladly accept being only second place in your heart. To me that is quite sufficient, and I do not begrudge you a platonic relationship with Danielle Verdes, ever. She seems a nice enough person from her letter to me, which I regret not replying to, but the whole affair was simply to emotional at that time.
In no small part we're together precisely for raising a family, so that our daughters together shall hold power over the Principality of the Lesser Intuit. It is the most good thing that we can possibly do together and probably in only a few years' time, too, once the colonization of Eleutheria has been settled, which I will devote all my leave to aiding you with in the organization thereof.
I don't begrudge your continued use of painkillers. You suffered some serious injury from the systemic infection that came so soon after the implant of the artificial leg and finger, and plenty of nerve damage on your flank where you were riddled by shrapnel. I remember how in some areas, my love, I can touch you and you'll feel nothing and in others it is uncomfortable or painful. Your injuries and subsequent illness—and your overexertion in that period—are certainly a legacy you cannot easily escape. I do think that you should look into having a bit of the leg and the stub of the finger removed and new cybernetics attached at a fresh point; that would probably eliminate enough of the pain that I could help you off the painkillers as well.
Please take Danielle to our hunting lodge on Ytalla. You wanted her to see it; I am not bothered by the prospect of you two there. My love includes trust, and this is a delicate matter, but I am confident in your self-control. She'll enjoy herself there and the air there will make you happier now that you're feeling much better and are more able to function. I know the affairs of state are many, particularly with the colonization of Eleutheria almost upon us, but let's remember that you deserve some rest, also.
I'm glad to hear that the prospects for the harvest are so grand. I regret that our distance with my professional service will limit how much of the role for the commoners that I can play of the Princess Consort of the Lesser Intuit, but their prosperity is near to my heart and I've been regularly subscribed to the government and Quesadi reports on the economic activity of the Principality.
As for the disturbing matter of these passports—you seem entirely to enamoured of human government at times!--and I don't think we should yield an inch. I can't understand how people can seriously believe that elected governments make up for that kind of control over the movement of free individuals. The average person has no interest and no capability in government, but, by the Lord of Justice, how is it moral to force them to obtain documents and present these to officials when they are off to perhaps see family or work at the trade for which they are best suited? Sentient beings should be free to do whatever pleases them, even if it sends them straight to the slave-army of Idenicamos. I have heard other things out of human territory like the fact that they engage in surveillance of their own populations which I cannot imagine as anything other than a gross tyranny...
It seems astonishing for me that most foreign humans think the ability to elect their leaders somehow compensates them for the ability of the government to seize their property at any time, so that they don't really own it! Everything is owned by the state in those countries—it is like they are all one big feudal demense of the Supreme Government, so cold and bureaucratic and impersonal—and anyone who resists the seizure of their land will become a demonized minority and so on while the majority, hungry for the largesse of whatever government plan involves the seizure of property, will vote for the people who did it, no matter how immoral and odious it is. The same is true of surveillance and false search and seizure, restrictions on travel, and so on, and it seems to push the limits of the imagination that they have convinced themselves that their rulers will ever be punished for this. As long as the oppressed part of the population which suffers under these laws is 49%, the other 51% shall never fail in electing leaders who behave in this fashion over and over again.
So I think, my love, that you should not let the natural affections of Danielle sway you in at least this case!, and that you should join with the vocal opposition of the Convocate and maybe join a few sessions for that purpose, since I know you rarely attend. Certainly, let's find a compromise, but do not dare think of sacrificing an ounce of the feudal rights and privileges of our class and of all the classes under us by allowing the Imperial government the power to engage in this kind of data surveillance. Perhaps birth records could be accepted? Those powers where people are not born into the Church tend to have more government—I think of our humans—than we do within the Empire, and so can provide such information without new laws. I think the humans will be willing to compromise much for the sake of trade with our markets.
With all this done and considered, please keep yourself safe and well! I often worry about you and the intensity with which you do things, though I imagine without the combat drugs you are at least getting enough sleep, which is a very good thing indeed. Please get more, and hopefully some rest will help with the pain. I will pray that another round of surgeries is ultimately unnecessary and you can dispense with the painkillers without resource to such.
All my love,
Drish.
She looked over the letter, and then, smiling, quickly tapped out the command which would send it through the dockyards' communication system for transmission back to Talora Prime through the jump-energy transmission relay system, before they started their own trip back where high speed communication would be more difficult. That arranged her personal matters... And the chrono on the wall informed her that the MP parties should be back with the stragglers by that point.
Sure enough, Lieutenant Rihkani paged from the navigation bridge a moment later. She was the officer of the watch at the moment...
“Your Highness, we've secured the crew aboard. Four drunk and disorderlies, no other problems. Central control is giving us permission to commence umbilical release and will guide us out on station tractors. Do you have any further instructions and do you wish to come to the bridge?”
“Direct the ship clear of the station, Lieutenant. You're cleared to do undocking operations so I'll leave it to you to handle. Follow all station instructions precisely and once we're clear of station tractor control start the military impellers and bring us out of the system while ticking us up to full speed at 80% military thrust, then switch over to the cruising impellers. You know the jump schedule astrogation plotted for us. Implement it at the points the computer has designated and maintain standard cruising watch.”
“Understand, Your Highess,” the young officer paused a moment, “and thank you, Captain, for letting me guide her out.”
“You're very welcome, Lieutenant. You know what to do if a problem develops. I'm out, then.” She cut the comm line, preparing to go to bed. The gasses which would be added to the atmospheric mixture made it entirely possible to sleep comfortably through a jump, and they were only going to be jumping every four hours anyway since there was no need to strain the drives on the cruise home. And in twenty days, give or take, I shall see my beloved Jhayka again....