That was my second option, actually, and one I rather enjoy. A number of Britonian war criminals fled to San Dorado because, well, it's just an all round great place to flee to (no concept of nationality, no immigration restrictions, probably no extradition treaties to speak of, easy to change your face and name as long as you have enough money, etc.). So they set up shop here... And then certain interests in San Dorado promptly sold them up the river to Rheinland, maybe charging a 'disposal' or 'transport' fee for every criminal assassinated or renditioned to Rheinland.Thanas wrote:Rheinland generally does not conduct assassination missions. The Schwarzer Haufen or the Rheinland Geheimdienst are the only ones who are capable of doing so (discounting other military special forces) in foreign nations. I'd prefer it if the country didn't go all Israel on people who fled. Rheinland would have demanded extraction but we would not have violated the sovereignty of others, especially not considering the country was not in the mood for another war.
One thing that might have happened is that some wealthy noble house or business clan hired some San Dorado company to take their revenge but certainly no official or unofficial Rheinland state action.
That means the backstory can remain pretty much the same, it's just that the 'a piano fell on his head' incident is still heavily implied to have been ordered by someone in Rheinland, it's just that a discreet local removal specialist did the deed.
I dig your hardline stance about making royals swim the river by the way. But since the custom of killing folks this way was probably very well known, it to me makes it all the more likely that quite a few people of high rank tried to get the hell out of dodge when it became obvious that Rheinland was gonna win the war.
I'd like to have a few old Britonian families still survive in San Dorado, maybe because they bought their lives with suitcases full of gold, maybe because their complicity in war crimes was never conclusively proven, maybe both. Now, I take it from your description that after 300 people died ritually drowning in a river Rheinland's taste for blood was pretty much sated, and the country was probably glad to be rid of people like dukes and such long as they weren't obviously guilty of heinous crimes and they didn't make a big fuss in exile? And as a follow-up... This may be a very technical question that you're not prepared to answer yet and if so do tell me, but to what extent did the Britonians plunder South Rheinland during their occupation? And to what extent could, say, a bank in San Dorado have a vault owned by an exiled Britonian family stashed full of looted Rheinland art?
There's no immediate plans attached to the answer, I just would like to know for future reference how far I can go to make the Axum vaults a place full of gold proverbially dripping with blood and stamped with the seals of nations that no longer exist.