Crysos ground his teeth, listening to Saskia’s plea. Her tutors had certainly taught her well, her argument balanced and convincing, her dedication to her fate regardless of circumstance unwavering. That is what angered him - how dare his father rob both of his children of a life? How could he train his daughter to believe that her only duty, her only worth was to be sold to whoever sat on the Imperial throne, regardless of what that would mean for her own sanity and wellbeing? The fact that the Princess Royal of Lys, that his little sister was reduced to tears and begging to be sold into slavery was beyond what Crysos could comprehend.
“Please stand Saskia,” the young man’s eyes filled with sadness. “I am not here to tell you what is right or wrong for that is not my place. I love you and I want to see you happy. Regardless of your pure intentions and the burden you carry, being married to the Emperor will not bring you the peace or accomplishment you seek. Even if your belief in his character proves to be well placed, that does not mean that he will stop to do whatever he thinks is right. Whatever he deems he needs to do.”
Crysos stood to walk around the desk, crouching to look Saskia into her eyes before slowly helping her stand, his hands holding hers. “Before his coronation, Alistair de Vallois was a general with the Asterian army. He and his Flight, the Dragon Knights, were positioned in the Southern border of the Empire by the Tyrenease Conglomerate. Do I need to remind you what those Southern barbarians are capable of? Alistair and his men pushed the mercenaries out and made an example of them. That bastard…he didn’t leave anyone in his path. Women, children, the old, the crippled. No pleas or cries stopped him from protecting his lands and gaining ground, no sense of compassion.”
With a flourish of his fingers, the Prince pulled out his lace handkerchief, embroidered in the corner with the royal crest and his personal initials before offering it to the young woman. “I understand that our people had been preparing for the inevitable for years - and when Sebastian was alive, I would have been content enough to bow down to your wisdom and step aside though it wound me. Now however,” Crysos turned back to the window, his eyes growing hard. “Fate has altered the circumstances. I must also consider the good of our people, just like you. Has the most recent census reached your eyes recently? Have you looked at our citizens? Lys has always been home to more than our people - elves, dwarves, races much older and knowledgeable than us live in this land. Last year, they reached nearly half our citizens. The Empire has never been kind to them and the inflow of refugees from neighbouring lands has only increased, none more so than those from Asterious. Do you think that is a mere coincidence?”
“Let us assume that your marriage - if it is still in Asterious’ interest - goes through and Lys becomes part of the Empire,” Crysos spun on his heels, facing back to his sister, eyebrows raised. “Are our citizens to become slaves for the Asterians? Go back to being shunned and treated like garbage? Or are they to run and hope for another country to accept them? Is that the peace we are offering our people, those who asked for our protection? Is that how we keep our promises? And what about Theo? His heritage is hard to hide and while he may be protected, he will be shunned at court and constantly used as a scape goat. Will your influence at court be enough to shield him?”
“Peace may not be enough for Lys to continue to exist - not the kingdom but the soul of our country,” Crysos crossed his arms. “So, as you can see Saskia, I cannot allow you to sacrifice yourself for a marriage that may bring about the end of the country you love.”
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