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Klaus Richter showed no surprise when I agreed to a second eting. There was sothing almost like satisfaction in his steel-colored eyes—as if I had t his unspoken expectation.

We didn't et at the windy dock again, but in the back room of a quiet clockmaker's shop. The room was small, filled with the scent of machine oil and mahogany.

On the wall, a row of pendulum clocks ticked with a disturbing synchrony, like the chanical heartbeat of a giant machine.

"You ca alone," He said, puffing on a thin cigar that slled sharp and foreign. "Prudent."

"Don Miguel thinks I'm observing a Prussi stear shipnt at dock three," I replied, sitting in a hard wooden chair opposite him. "He likes it when activities have a logical alibi."

Richter gave a thin smile. "You learn fast. But now, let's speak as prospective partners."

He pulled a blank sheet of parchnt from the desk drawer, along with an ink bottle and a quill. "Write down your terms. All of them. Nothing held back."

He remained impeccably professional, despite the fact that the one negotiating with him was rely a boy.

I took the quill. It was cold and heavy in my hand. In the days since our last eting, I had thought this through—not just as a way to rescue Father, but as a blueprint for a new Republic Venez. Or at least, a version that could survive.

"Would you mind if I dictate?" I asked.

He raised an eyebrow. "You don't want to write it yourself?"

"Better if you write. Your handwriting will be proof of your involvent. And it makes us equal—you have my handwriting agreeing to a deal with Prussi, I have yours detailing the offer."

For the first ti, I saw sothing resembling admiration on Richter's face. He nodded, taking another quill. "Begin."

I took a deep breath, ordering my thoughts. This wasn't just negotiation—it was the re-architecture of a future.

"First," I began, my voice flat and asured, "Prussi military instructors. Twenty n. To train a new officer corps for the Republic Venez in modern tactics, logistics, and organization. Not just hired trainers, but ones who will be answerable to the Venez Defense Ministry."

Richter wrote quickly, his hand moving with machine-like precision. "Continue."

"Second, weaponry. The latest model Mauser bolt-action rifles for five thousand troops. Machine guns, light artillery, and sufficient ammunition for six months of operations. Not second-hand stock from your warehouses—new equipnt."

"Expensive."

"Venez is rich in resources. We will pay... with access."

He stopped writing, looked at . "Access to what?"

"Third: financial aid. A loan of five million Prussi mark, low interest, to stabilize the governnt during transition. Repaid over ten years through mineral exports."

He shook his head. "Too much. Our banks—"

"Your banks want guarantees. I will give more." I leaned forward, placing my fingertips on the desk. "Fourth: international legitimacy. Once my father is restored, Prussi must be the first nation to formally recognize his governnt. Followed by your allies in Central Europania."

"Politics is not my business."

"But it is your superiors' business in Berlim." I stared at him without blinking. "And fifth: technology transfer. Limited. Engineers to help build a small hydroelectric plant. Agricultural experts to improve cocoa and coffee yields. Not your core military tech—just enough to show goodwill."

Richter wrote again, but slower now. His mind was working, calculating cost, risk, gain. "Is there more?"

"Education. Ten scholarships per year for Venez best students to study at Prussi universities—engineering, dicine, law. And a mutually beneficial trade agreent: preferential tariffs for Prussi exports to Venez, and privileged access for Venez raw materials to Prussi."

I stopped, watching his reaction. His face was a stone mask, but his eyes—his eyes were calculating.

"You're asking for nearly everything," he said finally. "What do you offer in return? Besides that vague 'access'?"

This was the heart of it. The part I'd thought about all night, staring at the ceiling of my room on Calle Moránn.

"My father will lead until his death. He is a symbol of legitimacy, a unifying figure, a revolutionary leader." I paused, making sure each word was clear. "And after him, I will be the successor. As his son, as the inheritor of his... revolutionary spirit."

He froze. The quill in his hand stopped above the paper, dripping a single drop of black ink like blood.

"You plan to beco president."

"A president who understands the value of friendship with Prussi. A president who will ensure this contract—which we'll call the 'Caraccass-Berlim Cooperation and Friendship Treaty'—is honored for... at least the next thirty years."

The room was quiet, filled only by the ticking of the clocks on the wall. Tick-tock. Tick-tock. Like a countdown.

Richter set down his quill. "That is ambitious. Very ambitious for a boy who a year ago slept in a tannery."

"That boy died in that tannery, Mr. Richter. What sits before you now is soone who has seen how the world truly works. And decided to work with it, not against it."

He nodded slowly, then suddenly laughed—a short, sharp bark. "Don Miguel has no idea what he's created, does he?"

"Don Miguel taught how to trade information. But my father taught how to lead. And life itself taught how to survive."

Richter stood, walking to the small window overlooking a narrow alley. "ndez. He is a brute. But a predictable brute. He sells what he has to the highest bidder. You... you're selling what you don't yet have. That is bolder. Or more foolish."

"My father is still alive. The legitimacy is still there. And the Venez people are tired of ndez. They want stability, prosperity. They don't care if it cos with a Prussi or Brittonia or ADF label, as long as there's food on the table and their children are safe."

"A cynical view."

"A true view." I stood too, joining him at the window. Outside, an old woman was hanging laundry, her movents slow and deliberate like an ancient ritual.

"People don't want ideology. They want unpaved roads, clean water, and police who don't extort them. Give them that, and they'll support whoever provides it."

He studied for a long ti. "You're certain you can rescue your father?"

"You're the one who said you could."

"Yes. But once he's free... will he agree to all this? An old leader, with old ideas about sovereignty, national pride?"

I smiled, the first smile of this eting. "My father is an idealist. But a year in prison will change any idealist. Especially when he knows his son and wife and daughters have survived by negotiating with information brokers and foreign spies."

"You'll use your own suffering as leverage against him."

"I'll use reality as his guide." I turned from the window. "What is Prussi answer?"

This story originates from . Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.

He returned to the desk, looked at the list he'd written. "Military instructors... manageable. Weapons... harder, but possible. The loan... that will require approval from Berlim. Legitimacy, technology, education—all negotiable."

"But?"

"But all this depends on one thing: you must deliver proof you can fulfill your end. That your father consents to this. That ndez can be toppled. That you will be the successor."

I nodded. "Give instructors and weapons, and I'll deliver an army. Give legitimacy, and I'll deliver a stable governnt. Give the chance, and I'll deliver a Venez that will be a loyal Prussi ally for my lifeti."

Richter lifted a small bottle from a shelf, poured two glasses of a clear, water-like liquid. Prussi schnapps, slling of dicine.

"To the deal," he said, offering a glass.

I took it, observing the liquid within. "There's one more thing."

"There's more?"

"Electricity. San Marcos still uses oil lamps and gas. Give us a small power plant. To show the people that friendship with Prussi brings light, not just weapons. We'll also rena this city Puerto Cabello as a symbol of cooperation."

Richter tapped his glass against mine. "You think like a politician. Promises of visible progress."

"Politics is about perception, Mr. Richter. And electric lights at night are very powerful perception. So are nas and symbols."

We drank. The liquid burned like fire down my throat, but I didn't cough.

"When can you start?" I asked, setting down the empty glass.

"Instructors can arrive within a month. Hidden on cargo ships. Weapons will take longer—two or three months, shipped in stages via different Prussi vessels." Richter sat again, turning serious. "But first, your father. The rescue operation must be perfect. One mistake, and ndez will execute him."

"You have a plan?"

"We've been studying Loos Nevados for six months. Guard rotation every eight hours. There's a gap—two minutes between night guard changes when only three n guard the inner wall. A small team, four n, can enter via the southern cliff."

"Four n against fifty?"

"Not to fight. To slip in and out." Richter opened another drawer, pulled out a hand-drawn map. "Look. Old drainage tunnel here. Overgrown with vegetation, unguarded. Leads inside the compound, near the pavilion where your father is held."

I studied the map. The detail was impressive—elevations, sightlines, even floodlight positions. "This intelligence cos from...?"

"Soone on the inside. A dissatisfied guard. Na unimportant. What matters is he can unlock a side door at the right ti."

I looked at Richter. "And once my father is free?"

"We take him to a Prussi ship waiting at a secluded beach five miles from there. Then to a safe house inland. anwhile..." He flicked the map. "We begin building your rebellion network. Our instructors will train your handpicked n. Our weapons will arm them. And when the ti is right..."

"...we topple ndez." I finished for him.

"Exactly." Richter folded the map, handed it to . "Keep this. morize it. Then burn it."

"I want to be involved in the rescue operation."

"Impossible. Too risky."

"I won't go to Loos Nevados. But I want my contribution. There's soone in San Marcos who can help—a forr soldier, knows the mountain terrain. Loyal to my father."

He frowned. "Who?"

"Let that be my contribution. As a gesture of goodwill." I stood. "Do we have a deal, Mr. Richter?"

He stood too, extending his hand. It was large, rough, powerful. "We have a deal, Mateo Guerrero. Or should I call you 'líder'?"

"Mateo is enough for now. The titles will co later."

***

That night, I didn't go straight back to Calle Moránn. I walked along the harbor, absorbing the chill sea wind, feeling the weight of the decision I'd just made.

Ship lights blinked in the distance like fallen stars. Sowhere out there, on those ships, were people making decisions that moved the world—traders, diplomats, spies. And now, I was one of them.

I found myself standing before our old tannery warehouse. It was occupied by another family now—a kerosene lamp flickered through cracks, the sound of children laughing. Life moved on, indifferent to our dramas.

"Deep in thought?"

The voice made turn. Don Miguel stood ten feet away, wearing a dark coat that made him nearly invisible in the gloom.

"Don Miguel. I was... reminiscing."

He approached, his steps silent on the cobblestones. "A poor place for reminiscence. The sll is still the sa."

"But we are not the sa."

"No." He stood beside , gazing at the sa warehouse. "You have grown, Mateo. Like a wine stored too fast—strong, but perhaps too acidic."

"Is that a complint or a criticism?"

"An observation." He lit a cigar, the brief matchflare illuminating his lined face. "The Prussi. Klaus Richter. He is a dangerous contact."

I wasn't surprised he knew. "You're monitoring ."

"San Marcos is my city. I know when a new rat arrives at the port. Let alone a Prussi eagle." Don Miguel exhaled smoke. "He likely offered you a deal. To rescue your father."

"Will you try to stop ?"

"Why would I?" Don Miguel shrugged. "If you succeed, you beco a more valuable client. If you fail... well, failure is an expensive lesson."

"You're not angry I went behind your back?"

He laughed, a low, raspy sound. "Angry? Mateo, I taught you to hunt. Now you find bigger ga than I do. I should be proud." He looked at . "But be careful. The Prussi are not friends. They are a rising empire, hungry for colonies, for influence. They will use you, then discard you when you're no longer useful."

"Like you do?"

A thin smile touched his lips. "No. I will keep you. Because you are an investnt. The Prussi? They consider you a consumable resource."

"And my deal with them?"

Don Miguel studied for a long mont. "What did you ask for?"

I told him. Instructors, weapons, loan, legitimacy. Everything except the succession detail—that was my own secret.

He listened without comnt, only nodding occasionally. When I finished, he tossed his half-smoked cigar into a puddle. "Ambitious. Too ambitious. But if anyone could do it, you could." He paused. "Except for one thing."

"What?"

"The people. You speak of perception, of electric lights. But the Venez people are not fools. They will know when their country is being sold. And they might prefer a ruler who sells them to a local rather than a foreigner."

It was the sa fear Mother had voiced. "ndez is selling too. Just too many buyers, not one."

"And does that make it more acceptable? Or just more chaotic?" Don Miguel patted my shoulder, an almost affectionate gesture. "Do what you must, Mateo. But rember: a throne built on a contract with foreigners will always be shaky. Because contracts can be broken. And foreigners... they always have their own interests."

He turned to leave, then stopped. "Oh, and Mateo? If you plan to overthrow ndez... you'll need more than just Prussi instructors and new rifles. You'll need a reason. A story. Sothing that will make the people rise up, not just the soldiers."

"Like what?"

"Ask your mother. She understands people's hearts better than you or I." Don Miguel vanished into the darkness, leaving alone with my thoughts and the sound of waves.

***

Calle Moránn was quiet when I arrived. Only the oil lamp in Eleanor's window still burned—she often woke because of her cough.

I found Mother in the small kitchen, heating milk for Eleanor. She turned as I entered, her eyes imdiately reading my face.

"You've decided," she whispered.

"Yes."

"And Don Miguel?"

"He knows. Didn't try to stop."

Mother nodded, as if she had predicted this. "Then it begins. War. Again."

"Not war, Mother. Liberation."

She looked at , and in her eyes I saw all the years we'd lived through—the fear, the flight, the hunger, and now, the cold ambition.

"When your father and I married, he promised to bring prosperity to the Republic Venez. He dread of schools, hospitals, roads. Look where his dream ended."

"And where we ended. But we're still alive. And now we have a chance to make it right."

"On whose backs?" Mother poured the hot milk into a cup. "The Prussi will demand their price. The people will pay. As always."

I sat in the wooden chair opposite her. "Don Miguel said the sa. He said we need a story. A reason for the people to rise up."

Mother stopped, the cup in her hands. "He's right. ndez is a villain, but he's our villain. The Prussi are foreigners. The people won't follow foreigners."

"Then what's the story?"

Mother looked at , and for the first ti since the eting with Richter, I saw a flash of strategy in her eyes—the legacy of years as a general's wife, as a woman who understood court politics in a short ti.

"The story is family. A family torn apart by a traitor. A father imprisoned. A mother and children fleeing. And now, the son returning to rescue his father, to reunite his family—and in doing so, reunite the nation."

I froze. It was... perfect. Not about Prussi, not about contracts, not about politics. About family. About love. About sacrifice.

"You're brilliant, Mother," I whispered.

"Not brilliant. Just a mother." She picked up the milk cup, then paused at the doorway. "But rember, Mateo: the story only works if you believe it. If you're truly doing this to save your father, to reunite our family. Not just for power."

She went to Eleanor's room, leaving alone in the dark kitchen.

I sat there for a long ti, thinking about the story. Mother was right. It had to be truth, not just tactic.

And it was truth, wasn't it? I wanted to save Father. I wanted our family together again. If that also ant power... that was just a consequence.

But sowhere inside, a small, honest voice whispered: You're enjoying this. The planning. The strategy. The power ga. You're enjoying it like Don Miguel enjoys his gas.

I pushed the voice away. Not now. Later, when Father was safe, when ndez was fallen, when Venez was stable. Later I'd question my own motives.

For now, there was work to be done.

Tomorrow, I'd contact Captain Raúl ndoza—the forr soldier loyal to Father who now worked as a night watchman at a cotton warehouse. He knew the mountains. He had n he could trust.

And I would start writing a speech. The story of a family torn apart, of a son returning, of reunion.

On the kitchen table was a leftover piece of bread. I picked it up, feeling its hard texture. A year ago, we would have fought over a piece like this. Now, we had a house, a doctor, security.

But we still weren't free. Not truly.

The deal with Prussi was the key. The key to unlocking Don Miguel's gilded cage. The key to freeing Father. The key to... everything.

I bit into the bread, chewing slowly. It was bland, like all heavy decisions—not sweet, not bitter, just necessary to swallow.

Outside, dawn was beginning to break. Pale orange washed over the rooftops of San Marcos.

A new day. The start of everything. Or the end of everything.

I stood, brushing crumbs from my hands. There was no turning back now. Only forward. Through the negotiations with Prussi. Through Father's rescue. Through ndez's overthrow.

And then... then we'd see if the new cage we built would be a ho, or just a larger cage with a tighter-locked door.

But for the first ti since the truck hit in my previous life, I felt... in control. Not a victim of fate, but its architect.

And that, I realized as I walked to my room to begin planning, was a feeling far more dangerous than fear.

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