Party To Treason
Frost 28, 123
True to Valentin's warning, Darus of Haqs found the gentry of Dardouen to be self-centered, insecure popinjays with more gall than spine. What Valentin likely did not realize was that this hardly distinguished them from any of the other dozen or so courts of intrigue in which Aurin had occasionally been embroiled.
Indeed, the good people of the province had more cause for their worries than most. The Great Eclipse had ravaged the whole world alike, but each realm had been afflicted differently. The cities of the world had adapted well, bringing phenomenal magic and divine resources to bear to abate the appearance of the shadow beasts and the ill effects of reduced sunlight. But Dardouen was widespread and chiefly agricultural. While the great lords in Gel'Grandal had kept safe behind sunstone lamps and the Kathar legion, the farmers had suffered the brunt of it. And as the fortunes of the farms declined, so too did the wealth of their parasites.
"It's preposterous!" declared one man, whip-thin and dressed in notably worn dark silks, anger overcoming a perpetually nervous demeanor, "They won't even consider a reduction in the excise? Haven't they heard that you get no blood from a stone?"
"Of course not." said a companion, a heavy-set woman with delicate features and an absurd hat featuring a live nesting dove, "Their lordships have not the faintest notion of privation, behind his Majesty's generous shield. D'you foresee the privy council traipsing out in the mud and cold to survey conditions on the ground themselves? No. They see the numbers on paper going down and send yapping dogs to hound us, unwilling to breathe the common air long enough to notice reality."
Aurin had chosen this party carefully. The Allsteads had been what might be termed very upper-middle class, in life. Command of a profitable shipping enterprise had landed Sir Allstead in that most precarious and strange social position, where he had no family connections to the great men of the government, but far more money than many of the decrepit and declining houses which stuffed the lower ranks of the nobility. Some merchants were able to leverage this by marrying into decaying houses and effectively purchasing titles, but the Allsteads had not quite managed that feat. As a result, Tupin's brother could seldom secure an invitation to the balls frequently held by Duke Dardouen.
On the other hand, a fish rejected from a big pond could make itself quite comfortable in a smaller one. Herr Allstead had become a popular fixture at the regular parties held by the Duchy's Chamber of Commerce, where he could command a crowd of folks desperate to establish some link to the perceived power and wealth of his notoriously reclusive sister-in-law. These were semi-formal affairs, meriting a single dour doorman checking coats and turning away the sufficiently unfashionable sorts, but they had a reputation for increasing bawdiness as the nights waned.
But the evening was young when Darus of Haqs arrived for his date, and there was, as yet, no sign of the murderous brother-in-law. Only disgruntled merchants, complaining bitterly about the lack of fellowship from the realm's great lords.