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The room fell into a heavy, asured silence.

The advisors had expected a defense—perhaps even an imitation—of British liberal thought. Instead, they found themselves confronted with sothing far more deliberate: a vision that did not borrow, but assembled. A state not rely political, but civilizational in its ambition.

Carlos had, with careful precision, dissolved the suspicion of English influence—not by denying it outright, but by surrounding his proposal with sothing older, deeper, and more difficult to challenge.

"If the fanatics—or the Empire—call us anglófilos," Carlos added, a faint, controlled smile crossing his face, "then let them be told this: we are more Spanish than the King, and more Arican than the Viceroy."

He paused.

"We are the Mancomunidad de los Andes. Our authority does not co from a fleet in Jamaica, but from the mountains themselves—and from the ancient liberties of the behetrías."

The words settled into the room with quiet force.

At length, the eldest advisor rose slowly to his feet. He inclined his head in a asured bow.

"It is... a dangerous construction, Carlos," he said, choosing his words with care. "You bind together the cross, the compass, and the sun."

A brief pause.

"But if it holds... no one will be able to dismiss us as a re rchant faction again."

Carlos watched them depart, one by one.

When the last had gone, his expression shifted—subtly, but completely. The warmth, the persuasion, the careful appeal... all receded. What remained was sothing harder. More precise.

He knew, with full clarity, what he had offered them.

A narrative.

A vision they could accept—one that spoke to their sense of history, of identity, of purpose.

But beneath it—

Sothing else would be built.

While he spoke of ancient liberties and Andean traditions, Francisco’s schools would teach a different discipline: the calculus of power. Order, efficiency, structure—principles less poetic, but far more enduring.

The Mancomunidad would rest upon many foundations. Incan labor. Castilian law. Yet it would not remain untouched by other influences. The German thods introduced by Francisco and Krugger—discipline, organization, and technical rigor—would shape it in ways not yet fully visible.

And there were other factors still.

Population.

Carlos understood its value more clearly now—an understanding sharpened by Francisco’s influence. A nation required people as much as it required ideas. At present, most immigrants were Irish, though a number of French and Germans had begun to appear in the region. Their flow, however, had slowed under the pressure of Spanish blockades.

But that, too, could change.

Once Maracaibo was secured, the ports would open again. And with them, the possibility of drawing in the population the land so urgently required.

Beyond the walls of the mansion, word of the discussions spread quickly.

The term mancomunidad began to circulate among the people—uncertain at first, then with growing familiarity. It was new, yet not entirely foreign. It carried a certain weight, even for those who did not fully grasp its aning.

A na, at last.

Yet a na alone was not enough.

Carlos now turned his thoughts toward the declaration itself. It would require careful timing—and careful hands. Who would sign it? When should it be made public?

Two paths lay before him.

To wait until Spain was driven entirely from the continent would offer a asure of safety. Yet delay carried its own risk—foreign powers might intervene in support of the Crown, altering the balance before independence could be secured.

To declare during the war, however, was another matter entirely.

It would transform rebellion into treason.

Those who signed would no longer be insurgents, but enemies of the King in the clearest sense. And if they failed—

There would be no pardon.

For now, the conflict could still be called a civil war. Even in defeat, lesser leaders might hope for indulto—a royal pardon, granted to those deed misguided rather than traitorous.

But a formal declaration would close that path.

Carlos understood the distinction well. For n of lesser rank, it might an survival.

For himself—

There would be no such rcy.

He accepted this without hesitation.

Outside, in the streets of dellín, life had begun to change.

The city grew more animated with each passing week. Traders, laborers, and travelers moved through its streets, their voices carrying a mixture of languages. Though Carlos had declared Spanish the official tongue, the reality was less orderly. Irish, French, German—each could be heard in passing, fragnts of distant lands carried into the heart of the Andes.

Amid this movent walked a girl—no longer quite a child.

Isabella.

Nearly a year had passed since she began her training under Krugger and his officers. It had changed her. There was a new confidence in her step, a steadiness that had not been there before. Yet she remained young, and under watch.

Two of Krugger’s most trusted soldiers followed at a respectful distance.

She moved through the streets with a quiet sense of relief, observing the life around her.

"What do you think, Hans? Willi?" she asked, a faint smile forming. "What my father has built... it is remarkable, is it not?"

Hans and Willi marched beside her with practiced discipline, their movents precise, almost chanical against the restless energy of the crowd.

"What do you an, little miss?" Hans asked, his brow furrowing beneath his shako. "I see only people coming and going. Mud, noise... confusion."

Isabella stopped and turned slightly, raising a gloved hand toward the central plaza.

"You see disorder," she replied, "but look more closely."

She gestured toward the edge of the street, where the ground t the buildings.

"A year ago, these were little more than dirt tracks for mules. Now—observe the stone. That grey surface."

Hans followed her indication, though without much conviction.

"My brother Roman Cent," Isabella continued. "It does not dissolve in the mountain rains like the old Spanish li. It hardens like rock—even under water. My father says it is the foundation he left behind."

They stepped aside as a heavy carriage passed, its wheels grinding against the newly laid surface. The driver, dressed in a Dutch rchant’s coat, shouted instructions to a group of stizo laborers in a confused mixture of Spanish and German.

"Listen," Isabella said, her expression brightening slightly. "Not just with your eyes—with your ears."

She turned her head, taking in the sounds of the street.

"In the markets, they trade Incan gold for Swedish steel. They argue over the price of coffee in French. And in the evenings, they sing songs from the Rhine."

A faint pause.

"dellín is no longer a quiet village of the Viceroyalty. It is... sothing else. A heart, perhaps—pumping the blood of Europe into the lungs of the Andes."

Willi, walking just behind them, inhaled sharply. His expression shifted.

"I sll sothing else, Fräulein," he said, his nose wrinkling. "Sothing sharper than the mountain air."

Isabella blinked, montarily puzzled. Then she followed his gaze—and scent.

"Ah," she said, with a small nod. "Aguardiente."

She folded her hands lightly before her as she spoke.

"It has beco more common of late. My father authorized the sale of certain distillation apparatus—copper stills—to local families. Under strict conditions, of course. Only they may produce it within our territory, while the right to export remains... centralized."

She glanced briefly at Hans.

"A form of monopoly, you might say. The families sell locally. My father controls what leaves our borders. So have already begun building their livelihoods upon it."

Willi hesitated, then cleared his throat.

"Would it be... permissible to acquire so?" he asked, almost cautiously. "We have been confined to camp for months. Though we are given spirits from ti to ti, I cannot recall the last occasion we were permitted to... enjoy them freely."

Isabella considered this for a mont, then inclined her head.

"Yes," she said. "We may go."

Her expression sharpened slightly.

"But you will not forget your duty. You are to remain capable of protecting ."

Her tone, though asured, carried enough firmness to leave no room for misunderstanding.

The three of them turned down a narrower street, moving with so effort through the press of bodies, until they reached a tavern marked by a painted sign: a gilded mountain beside a copper still.

The Andean Alembic.

Unlike the older chicha houses—dim, enclosed, and heavy with smoke—this establishnt stood open and well-lit. Large windows admitted what light they could, and within, heavy oak tables filled the space. Lanterns burned with a steady amber glow, their fuel drawn from high-proof spirits.

As they entered, the air shifted.

Anise. Roasted at. And beneath it all, the sharp, almost dicinal scent of freshly distilled aguardiente.

"A table," Isabella said, her voice calm but authoritative, "in the corner."

The tavern keeper straightened at once.

"And your finest bottle of the triple-distilled," she added. "My guardians have earned it."

There was no hesitation in his response.

Hans and Willi required no further encouragent. When the clear liquid was brought and poured into simple clay mugs, they accepted it with restrained eagerness. The first drink carried a sharp bite, followed by a warmth that spread quickly through the chest.

For a mont, the discipline of months—the endless drilling under General Krugger’s severe command—began to ease.

But dellín, for all its vitality, was not a place of simple peace.

At a large table near the center of the room sat a group of French volunteers—engineers, forr officers, n shaped by the upheavals of their own revolution. Their coats were worn, their tricolor cockades frayed, but their voices carried with confidence.

They drank deeply.

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