Baltasar remained in silence for so ti.
His gaze rested upon the map, though he no longer seed to see it as lines and territories, but as weight—decisions layered upon decisions. Bogotá, in its present state, could not be held at full strength. That much was evident. To abandon it now, to redirect their forces toward Venezuela, was—purely in strategic terms—a sound course.
Venezuela offered sothing Bogotá no longer could: space, cohesion, access to the sea. A gateway. A foundation upon which a Reconquista might one day be built.
And yet—
The loss of the capital, in the year 1795, amid the turmoil of revolution and civil unrest, carried a significance that extended far beyond military calculation. It was not rely a withdrawal.
It was a statent.
In the Spanish world, power did not reside solely in armies. It rested in symbols—in seals, in institutions, in the visible presence of the Crown. Bogotá was not just a city; it was the seat of the Audiencia, the center of law and administration. To abandon it was not simply to move troops.
It was to admit, openly, that the King’s authority no longer governed the interior.
The consequences would be imdiate.
Without judges, without central administration, each town would begin to see itself as sovereign. Juntas would form—not in rebellion alone, but in necessity. What had once been a single imperial body would fracture into competing authorities, each claiming legitimacy.
Disorder would not follow.
It would multiply.
There were other considerations—no less pressing. Taxation would falter without control of the population. Coinage, already strained, would lose coherence. Recruitnt would suffer; without the capital, the ability to raise and train soldiers would diminish sharply.
And if Bogotá fell into the hands of Carlos—or the fanatics—the situation would worsen further. They would gain not only the city, but its people. Its voice.
Its legitimacy.
Prestige, too, hung in the balance. New Spain remained one of the most loyal colonies of the Crown—but loyalty was not immune to perception. If word spread that Spain had lost the capital of a viceroyalty, others might begin to imagine the sa outco for themselves.
The blow would be... considerable.
Too considerable to ignore.
"Give ti to consider," Baltasar said at last, his voice low but composed. "The weight of such a sacrifice is not mine alone to decide."
He paused, then turned his attention to the young man.
"What is your na?"
It was not a casual question.
The new viceroy would arrive with his own circle, as all n in such positions did. Yet even so, the administration depended upon those who understood the land—its distances, its tensions, its realities. Until now, Baltasar had found little of value among the locals assigned to him.
But this one—
This one was different.
Sharp. Controlled. Ruthless, when required.
The sort of mind a viceroy might value.
The young man drew a slow breath. His posture changed—subtly, but unmistakably. Where before he had stood as a clerk, he now held himself like a soldier under inspection. The candlelight flickered across the room, casting long shadows over the map.
"My na," he said, with quiet precision, "is Juan de Sámano."
Baltasar stilled.
The na struck sothing in his mory—not imdiately, but with a growing clarity, as though drawn from a distant shelf long untouched. His mind moved quickly, sifting through reports, dispatches, annotations.
Then—
Recognition.
The Pyrenees. 1793.
A report had crossed his desk during that campaign. It spoke of a young officer in the Cantabrian Regint. While the Spanish line faltered under the force of the French *levée en masse*, this man—then scarcely more than a scholar—had held a retreating pass with two deteriorating cannons and a handful of n.
Not through courage alone.
Through calculation.
He had asured the terrain, determined the arcs of fire, and constructed a killing ground so precise that the French believed themselves opposed by a force many tis its actual size.
Baltasar rembered the margin notes, written in a careful hand:
*Cold. Unflinching. Values the objective above the cost in blood. A man governed by iron logic.*
His eyes opened.
"Sámano..." he murmured, almost to himself. "The mathematician of the Pyrenees."
He looked at him more closely now.
"You were the one who advised the General to sacrifice the rearguard to preserve the artillery. Not rely advised—calculated it. You knew the cost in lives... and did not hesitate."
Sámano did not lower his gaze.
"An army that seeks to save everyone," he replied evenly, "saves no one, Excellency."
A brief pause followed.
"Bogotá is our rearguard. If we remain to preserve its prestige, we will be consud with it. If we sacrifice it now, we purchase ti—ti enough to forge sothing stronger in Venezuela."
Baltasar studied him in silence.
Then, slowly, he nodded.
There was a certain grim reassurance in the man’s presence. Not kindness—never that—but clarity. Purpose. And above all, loyalty. Not the performative loyalty of court or rank, but the harsher kind, rooted in conviction.
Yes... the viceroy would value him.
Perhaps more than he yet realized.
"That will be all," Baltasar said at last, straightening. "You are dismissed. Inform the viceroy to prepare his departure. By May, the new viceroy will arrive to relieve Ezpeleta of his duties."
The officers bowed, though their expressions lingered—uncertain, wary.
Several glanced once more at Sámano.
Sothing had shifted.
He was no longer rely a clerk.
And on the far side of New Granada, beyond the reach of these deliberations, matters had begun to change as well.
On the other side of New Granada, within the territories held by Carlos, the situation had begun to deteriorate.
With his open defiance of the Spanish Crown, the export of raw materials had beco increasingly difficult. What had once moved through established routes now depended almost entirely upon smuggling—an uncertain, costly, and unreliable thod. It strained not only logistics, but diplomacy.
Negotiations suffered accordingly.
European rchants, well aware of his precarious position, had begun to lower their prices. They no longer bargained as equals, but as n who could afford to wait.
And wait they did.
"Sir," one of his advisors said carefully, "the families are... unsettled. Though your independence has granted them greater authority, they are losing money. And for most of them, money is not rely profit—it is necessity."
Carlos frowned.
He understood the complaint well enough. It was not born of disloyalty, but of habit—and of fear. Wealth, once threatened, rarely inspires patience. Yet there was little he could do in the imdiate term. The Europeans were not fools. They had recognized weakness and moved accordingly.
Had he stood in their place, he might have done the sa.
"How progresses the plan to take Maracaibo?" Carlos asked after a mont, his tone tightening despite his effort to remain composed.
The reply ca with hesitation.
"Mr. Krugger has been occupied with securing the army within our territories. It appears he has postponed the operation against Maracaibo in order to address internal disturbances."
Carlos’s expression darkened.
This was not a favorable developnt.
Without Maracaibo, their position remained incomplete—exposed. Control of the port would have shifted the balance, offering both security and leverage. Without it, they remained constrained, dependent on fragile channels and uncertain alliances.
He turned away slightly, his thoughts moving elsewhere.
A mory surfaced—unexpected, but persistent. A book, recomnded to him by his son: *The Wealth of Nations*. At the ti, he had regarded it with mild curiosity. Now, the principles within it returned with a sharper relevance.
Supply.
Demand.
He remained still for a mont longer.
Then, slowly, an idea began to take form.
To preserve what he had built, smuggling would not suffice. It was a asure of survival, not of strength. What he required was sothing else—sothing deliberate.
A counterweight.
If the Europeans sought to exploit his weakness through price, then he might answer not by yielding—but by denying.
Instead of accepting diminished offers, he could order the families to withhold their goods entirely. Tobacco, quinine, gold—let them remain where they were. If the Dutch and the British desired them, they would have to wait.
And markets did not wait well.
A controlled scarcity—artificial, but effective—might force a reaction. Panic, perhaps. Or, at the very least, reconsideration. Prices, once lowered, might rise again under pressure.
The logic was simple.
The execution—less so.
He exhaled quietly.
To succeed, the families would have to accept short-term loss. Two months, perhaps more, without profit. It was a difficult argunt to make to n accustod to imdiate return.
If he acted alone—purchasing the goods himself, holding them back—the risk would fall entirely upon him. If the strategy failed, the loss would be his alone, and likely ruinous.
But if it succeeded—
The profit would be his as well.
On the other hand, if he convinced the families to act together, the burden would be shared. The risk distributed. And so too, the reward.
Carlos remained silent, weighing the matter.
It was not rely a question of economics,
It depended almost completely on trust
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